Priscilla Royal - A Killing Season

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Priscilla Royal

A Killing Season

To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:

A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;

A time to kill, and a time to heal…

— Ecclesiastes 3:1–3 (King James Version)

Chapter One

The travelers and their armed escort halted near the cliff’s edge. Far below them, the moss-green sea lashed the black rocks and roared with the fury of a creature enraged beyond all reason.

Brother Thomas grimaced, his face stinging from the wind as if the air had been filled with ice shards. Even his thick woolen cloak did not protect him from the chill, and his horse shook, eager to be away from this inhospitable place. Whispering promises of imminent relief in a warm stable with dry straw, the monk stroked her bristled neck and silently prayed that his confidence would not prove false.

Out of the corner of his eye, Thomas glimpsed a well-bundled, square-shaped rider edging closer to him on an equally thickset horse. It was Master Gamel, the physician.

“What has caused this delay?” the man shouted. The screaming wind and thundering surf muted his words.

The monk pointed toward the front of the huddled company.

A single horseman separated himself from the others and rode slowly into the swirling grey mist. Within moments he had faded from sight.

“Sir Hugh just left to announce our arrival,” Thomas yelled back to the physician. “The fortress is on an island, and we cannot enter until the soldiers lower the drawbridge over the chasm.”

Squinting, Gamel peered ahead. “I see no island. Neither can I see Sir Hugh.” Nervously, he laughed. “Were I not in the safe company of Prioress Eleanor, Sister Anne and you, I might conclude that we had arrived at the mouth of Hell. This thunderous noise must be little different from the howling of damned souls.”

After Father Eliduc’s visit to Tyndal last summer, Thomas was not as inclined to believe that those vowed to God’s service offered protection from evil, but the physician knew nothing of those events. The monk replied with a comforting smile.

Master Gamel’s horse inched nearer to Thomas’ mount, seeking a fellow creature’s warmth. The physician took advantage of this to incline his head and say, in a tone as discreet as the crashing sea would permit, “I would not have troubled you with my questioning had my true concern not been for the welfare of Sister Anne.”

Alarmed, the monk straightened and looked over the physician’s shoulder.

Seated on a docile mare just a few feet away, the sub-infirmarian of Tyndal Priory bent almost double against the wind’s assault. Although her face was obscured by the hood of a cloak, her posture expressed great suffering from the bitter cold.

“A man must endure these circumstances,” Gamel continued. “Women are tender creatures. As a physician, I am obliged to warn you that she might suffer a deadly chill if she remains here much longer.” Suddenly his cheeks flushed, perhaps more than the wind had provoked. “I offered my extra blanket, and she refused.” His fingers twitched as they played with the loose ends of the reins. “I swear I meant no offence to her virtue. The blanket may have warmed me often enough, but surely the intended charity washed the wool clean of my touch, sinful mortal that I am.”

“God knows when a man’s heart is pure,” Thomas replied as he noticed the physician’s reddened face. His acquaintance with this Master Gamel had been short, but he had no cause to conclude he was anything except the worthy man his reputation suggested.

Without doubt he was a physician who took his oaths seriously. Why else would he have left his warm hearth in London, at Sir Hugh’s request, and journeyed to this storm-blasted, decidedly eerie castle in the midst of the winter season? And despite the significant amount of time the man spent riding at Sister Anne’s side, the monk did believe that Gamel’s offer of a blanket was rooted in nothing more than charity.

Had she not been a nun, some might have concluded that the pair had found a delight in each other that exceeded the pleasure of a traveling companionship. Yet Thomas had no doubts about Sister Anne’s virtue or her good understanding of a man’s ways. The woman might be vowed to God, but she had also been a wife, mother, and a well-regarded apothecary before she left the secular world in her third decade to heal the sick in God’s name.

She was quite capable of dealing firmly with Master Gamel if he had done or said anything against propriety. And if the physician’s conduct went beyond her ability to correct, she would have told both Thomas and Prioress Eleanor. She had not done so. He himself had ridden close to the pair for most of the journey and noted only the routine of innocent conversation. Although appearances could belie the truth, the monk thought all had been seemly between nun and physician.

Gamel twisted around in his saddle to look at the nun. “My fears for her health grow, Brother.”

A wind surge struck them with force. The horses whinnied nervously. The whites of their eyes showed fear.

“This weather will surely kill the good woman!” Extending his hand in supplication, Gamel shouted: “Would she accept something from you that she dare not from me?”

“I shall speak with her,” the monk replied. With some effort, he urged his horse away from the warming flank of the physician’s mount.

As he approached the nun, Sister Anne raised her head with evident reluctance. Her eyes narrowed in the icy air. “Have I caused some difficulty?”

“If my hands and feet have grown numb, yours must have too.”

“And Master Gamel cannot understand why I rejected his offer to wrap me in a blanket.” Her mouth was hidden, but small wrinkles at the corners of her eyes deepened with gentle amusement.

Thomas chuckled. “Since I would have welcomed it, I wonder myself!”

Another malevolent burst of wind slashed at them, forcing the pair to turn their backs against it and curl inward to conserve body heat.

“My mother bore me during a North Sea gale, Brother,” the nun shouted. “This woman’s skin has been hardened by long exposure to these storms. You and Master Gamel are London men and own far more tender flesh.” She straightened and urged her reluctant mount to turn around.

Teeth gritted, Thomas tried to grin. “How many years must I reside on the East Anglian coast before my soft youth be forgotten?”

“Never, I fear.” Her kind eyes softened the retort.

He nodded. “Master Gamel has cause for concern. Your face is very white, and you have taught me…”

She touched her cheek. “I can feel my fingers…” Suddenly, she pointed to the thick mist. “Is Sir Hugh returning?”

At the front of the company, a tall rider drew up next to a tiny figure.

Thomas strained to see. “He is speaking with Prioress Eleanor.”

The knight raised his hand and gestured for the travelers to follow him.

“We shall have the relief of hearth fires before long,” Anne said, then directed her horse toward the waiting Master Gamel.

Struck with vague apprehension, Thomas hesitated and patted his mare’s neck as he watched the nun and physician ride off together.

His mount sensed the journey’s end had finally come and snorted, indicating impatience with this unwarranted lingering.

Thomas smiled. “Did I not promise you a warm stall and a good meal to follow?” he whispered. When her ears flicked, he signified agreement with her desire and let her join the other horses on the road to comfort.

***

The party moved slowly, no more than two abreast. The path to the castle gate was narrow, just wide enough in places for one supply wagon to pass.

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