Ariana Franklin - Grave Goods aka Relics of the Dead

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Starred Review. Set in 1176, Franklin's excellent third Mistress of the Art of Death novel (after The Serpent's Tale) finds Adelia Aguilar, a qualified doctor from the School of Medicine in Salerno, in the holy town of Glastonbury, where Henry II has sent her to inspect two sets of bones rumored to be those of Arthur and Guinevere. Henry is hoping that an unequivocally dead Arthur will discourage the rebellious Welsh. The bones have been uncovered by the few monks, under the saintly Abbot Sigward, who remain after a terrible and mysterious fire devastated the town and abbey. Adelia's party includes her loyal Arabian attendant, Mansur, whose willingness to play the role of doctor allows Adelia to be his translator and practice the profession she loves; and Gyltha, Mansur's lover and the caretaker of Adelia's small daughter, Allie. Eloquently sketched characters, including a ragtag group of Glastonbury men down on their luck, and bits of medieval lore flavor the constantly unfolding plot.

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Captain Bolt and his men cleared a way through with the flat of their swords.

In a vast field outside the Bishop’s Palace, the itinerant justices-the earls, barons, and bishops whom Henry trusted to administer his laws-sat on benches in the shade of striped awnings, the accused, the witnesses, and juries in front of them. Executioners stood to their gallows beside tables holding blinding irons and axes.

Clattering over the bridge crossing the bishop’s moat, Captain Bolt’s cavalcade trotted through the rose-scented orderliness of the bishop’s gardens to draw up outside the grandeur of the Bishop’s Palace.

Mansur helped Adelia and Millie dismount and took the long basket out of the saddlebag. “Keep tight hold of it,” Adelia told him.

A groom took their horses but flinched at the sight of the tithing’s donkeys. “I ain’t putting them mokes in my stables.”

Captain Bolt produced a summons. “The bishop of Saint Albans wishes to see these men.”

“What, them?” The groom looked from the seal to the tithing, then to Mansur. “And him?”

“Just get on with it,” the captain said.

The exchange had to be repeated several times before they were allowed up the steps of the palace and into its entrance hall. They waited while the bishop of Saint Albans was fetched. The tithing used the time to wander around and stare at the hall’s decoration and ornaments, watched by the majordomo with the air of a man whose carpets were being trampled by a flock of muddy sheep.

“Look at that, Will.” Alf was staring at a particularly fine tapestry. “That’s Noah building the ark, ain’t it?”

“ Lot of needlework gone into that, Alf. Fetch all of ten shilling, I reckon,” Will said knowledgeably.

“Well, he ain’t going to get the ark built that way; he’s holding the adze all wrong.”

Rowley came striding toward them. In full mitered regalia, he looked imposing but tired. He bowed to Mansur. “What on earth have you got there?”

“It is a basket for holding fishing rods,” Mansur answered truthfully, in Arabic. Other people were listening.

Rowley raised his eyebrows but accepted it. He bowed in Adelia’s direction and nodded at the tithing. “Come along.”

Captain Bolt said, “My lord, I got to present Mistress Adelia here to the king soon as possible.”

“The king is in conclave with the papal legate and will be for some time yet,” Rowley told him. “In the meantime, the lady must translate for my lord Mansur, should it be necessary. We shan’t be long.”

He led the way out and along a back path going to the field of judgments. It was like threading a way through hundreds of scattered bees. Juries, that innovation demanded by the king, buzzed their accounts to the judges of what they knew of the accused and the case. A woman was up for having badly beaten her neighbor for throwing mud at her washing on a clothesline…

“But we do reckon as there’s always been bad blood betwixt ’em,” the foreman was saying, “ Alice havin’ previous attacked Margaret over the matter of a milk jug. Both as bad as each other, we reckon…”

Adelia would have liked to linger to hear the judgment on Alice and Margaret, but Rowley was hurrying her.

Further on, a wretch was being ordered to leave the realm, the jury having declared that though he’d been acquitted of rape because his accuser couldn’t prove it, to their personal knowledge he was of bad character and a pest to all women.

Adelia found herself softening toward Henry Plantagenet. How much fairer it was to employ a jury rather than throwing people into ponds to see if God made them float (guilty) or sink (innocent)-a form of trial the king hoped to get rid of eventually.

She heard the judge say, “And his goods to be confiscated to the Crown.”

Well, yes, that too. Always the opportunist, Henry, when it came to money.

Adelia was followed by Millie, whose darting eyes were taking in what her ears could not. They reached their destination, an ash tree under which a judge on a dais was bad-temperedly flicking a fly whisk in front of his sweating face. Four men were being brought out of a nearby very crowded pound, which held the day’s accused-Adelia assumed they were the remainder of Eustace’s tithing who’d been kept in custody.

A tonsured clerk sat by the judge at a lower table, a high pile of scrolls in front of him.

Will, Alf, Toki, Ollie, and the tithing member whose name Adelia had learned was Jesse were pushed alongside their fellows by an usher with the dimensions of a Goliath.

The clerk picked up one of the scrolls. “My lord, this is a frankpledge case wherein the abbot of Glastonbury accused a certain Eustace of Glastonbury belonging to this tithing before you of having started the great fire…”

The judge glared at the tithing. “I expect he did, the monster. They all look like arsonists to me.”

“Yes, my lord, but…”

“And those rogues there kept me waiting.” The judge pointed at Will’s group. “That’s an offense in itself.”

“Yes, my lord, but the charge has been withdrawn.”

“Withdrawn?” It was the bark of a vixen robbed of her whelps.

“Both the abbot of Glastonbury and Eustace being dead, my lord, and…”

The judge’s choler abated slightly. “Good man, Abbot Sigward. Met him at Winchester one Easter. Saintly man.” He gathered himself. “But because accuser and accused are dead doesn’t mean Eustace didn’t do it, nor that these rogues should be let off their pledges for him.”

“Apparently he didn’t do it, my lord.”

“He didn’t? How do we know? Did anybody see him not doing it? The fire was a tragedy; somebody’s got to pay for it.”

“Yes, my lord, but…”

Rowley stepped forward. “I represent the abbey in this case, my lord. Its monks are still in mourning for their abbot and cannot appear. On their behalf, the charge is withdrawn.”

The judge got up and bowed. “My lord bishop.”

“My lord.” Rowley bowed back. “It has been proved that Eustace was innocent of the fire…”

“Who by?” The judge was refusing to let go of his prey.

“It was started by one of the monks accidentally.” Rowley produced a document from a pocket attached to the gold cord around his waist. “This is the deposition by a Brother Titus…”

“Taking the blame out of Christian charity, no doubt. You sure this Eustace didn’t have a hand in it?”

The clerk intervened, beckoning to twelve men who’d been standing by. “My lord, to make sure, a jury was summoned and has been to the abbey to see the proof of Eustace’s innocence…” The usher gestured to twelve men who’d been waiting nervously nearby.

In the judge’s opinion, they didn’t rate much higher than the tithing, being of the same class. “Summoned by good summoners, were they?”

“Excellent, my lord, and have been to view both the abbey fire and the evidence.”

“There was evidence, then?”

The jury foreman stepped out. “My lord, that dark gentleman there showed us and explained… It was all to do with fingers an’ a trap, very clever it was…”

The judge had turned his attention to Mansur. “A Saracen? And what’s that he’s holding? Some outlandish weapon?”

The foreman pressed on. “Course, the lady had to tell us what he was saying, her bein’ able to jabber the same language as what he does…”

“Speaks Arabic, does she?” The judge’s eyes rested on Adelia. “Probably no more Christian than he is. And they’re witnesses?”

“My lord,” the bishop of Saint Albans said, “the lord Mansur is used by the king as his special investigator…”

“Where does he find them?” the judge asked the sky. And then, “I don’t care if he’s used by the Angel Gabriel. It’s up to the jury here. If they’re satisfied…”

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