Read A Summer of Discontent Online

Authors: Susanna Gregory

Tags: #Mystery, #Historical, #blt, #rt, #Cambridge, #England, #Medieval, #Clergy

A Summer of Discontent (8 page)

‘Good morning,’ said Michael, taking the proffered hand and shaking it warmly. ‘Why are you keeping these young fellows inside,
when the rest of the priory is busy making ready for the impending arrival of Lady Blanche?’

‘He wanted to show us this urine,’ said one of the novices resentfully. He was a sulky-faced youth, with an unprepossessing
smattering of white-headed spots around his mouth. ‘Its colour is unusual, apparently.’

‘It is,’ said Bartholomew, who had noticed the orange hue from across the room. ‘If you were to use Theophilus’s guidelines,
you would diagnose whoever produced this as having a disease of the kidneys.’

‘Precisely!’ exclaimed Henry eagerly. He turned to his
charges, who remained unimpressed. ‘You see? Urine is a valuable tool for us physicians. It tells us a great deal about our
patients and should never be disregarded or forgotten.’

‘But I do not want to be a physician,’ objected the youth. ‘I am only working here because Prior Alan ordered me to.’

‘Then you should not have tied the cockerel and the cat together, Julian,’ said the other youngster, regarding the spotty-faced
lad with cool dislike. ‘It was a vile thing to do. I cannot imagine what possessed you.’

Julian’s sigh suggested he was bored by the discussion. He placed his elbows on the table, plumped his pox-ravaged face into
his hands, and stared ahead of him in silent disgruntlement.

‘I thought we had agreed to say no more about that unfortunate incident, Welles,’ said Henry admonishingly to the other lad.
Unlike Julian, Welles had a pleasant face, with fair curls and a mouth that looked far too ready for laughter to belong to
a novice. ‘Julian has apologised to the Prior for committing an act of such cruelty, and we are all hoping he learns some
compassion by working with the sick.’

Julian said nothing, but cast Henry a glance so full of malice that Bartholomew saw the physician would have his work cut
out for him if he thought he could instil a modicum of kindness in a youth who was clearly one of those to whom the suffering
of others meant little. It was clever of Alan to send Julian to the hospital, where he might be moved by the plight of the
inmates, but Bartholomew suspected the plan would not work. He did not usually jump to such rapid conclusions, but there was
something hard and cruel about Julian that was obvious and unattractive, even to strangers.

‘What particular ailment would you predict, judging from the colour of this urine?’ asked Henry of Bartholomew, bringing the
topic of conversation back to medicine.

‘I would not make a diagnosis on the basis of the urine alone,’ said Bartholomew. ‘I would want to speak to the patient—’

‘To make his horoscope,’ agreed Henry, nodding eagerly.

‘No,’ replied Bartholomew, a little tartly. He did not believe that the stars told him much about a person’s state of health,
and he certainly did not base his diagnoses on the movements of the celestial bodies, although many physicians did precisely
that and charged handsomely for the privilege. ‘I would ask him whether he had experienced pain in his stomach or back, what
he had eaten recently, whether he drank water from the river or ale that was cloudy—’

‘What does ale or the river have to do with his urine?’ asked Welles, intrigued.

‘In this case, probably nothing,’ said Bartholomew, holding the flask near his nose to smell it. The two novices exchanged
a look of disgust. ‘I would say, however, that whoever produced this should not be quite so greedy with the asparagus, and
that next time he should use a different dye to prove his point. Theophilus said that redness in the urine is caused by blood,
but this is orange and was caused by the addition of some kind of plant extract.’

Henry gave a shout of excited laughter, and clapped his hands in delight. ‘Excellent! Excellent! That is indeed my urine,
and I did add a little saffron to make it a different hue. I wanted to show these boys that the colour of urine is vital knowledge
for a physician. I see now I should have used a little pig’s blood instead. I am not usually so careless, but none of us is
perfect.’

‘Did you really eat asparagus?’ asked Michael distastefully. ‘Why?’

Henry laughed again. ‘Not everyone loathes vegetables, Michael. And your friend is right: asparagus does produce a distinctive
odour in the urine. You should have smelled the latrines this morning! He would have known at once what we all ate last night.’

‘There is very little about urine that Matt does not know,’ said Michael drolly. ‘I knew you would like him. And that is just
as well, because he will be staying here with you for the next week, since Blanche is going to hog all the beds in the priory
guesthouse.’

‘Lady Blanche is generous to the priory, so we are obliged to give her the entire Outer Hostry when she visits,’ Henry explained.
‘But this time I stand to benefit – by having a fellow physician to entertain. I am sure I shall teach him a great deal.’

‘Oh, good!’ muttered Julian facetiously to Welles. ‘Now there will be endless discussions about piss and how to puncture pustules
every time we move.’

‘I am glad
I
do not have to sleep here, like you do,’ replied Welles in an undertone. ‘Listening to them would give me nightmares.’

‘Matt is from Michaelhouse,’ said Michael to Henry, pretending not to hear their complaints. ‘He has some strange notions
about medicine, so you should find a lot to talk about.’

‘We will,’ said Henry, grasping Bartholomew’s hand in welcome. He turned to Michael. ‘But what brings you to Ely, my friend?
Have you come to rest from your onerous duties in Cambridge?’

‘Unfortunately not,’ said Michael. ‘De Lisle sent for me because he is accused of murder.’

Henry’s brown hands flew to his mouth in horror. ‘No! Do not tell me that you have agreed to investigate on his behalf? Oh,
Michael! How could you do such a thing?’

‘I am his agent,’ replied Michael irritably, growing tired of hearing this. ‘I have no choice but to do what he asks.’

‘I admire de Lisle,’ said Henry sincerely. ‘He was not afraid to visit the sick during the Great Pestilence, and he gives
fabulous sermons – but powerful men have powerful enemies. Let de Lisle clear his own name. He is innocent, so it should not
be difficult.’

‘You believe de Lisle is innocent?’ asked Bartholomew, wondering why he was so surprised to hear this from a monk.

‘Of course,’ said Henry, as though it were obvious. ‘He is proud and arrogant, but he has a gentle heart. This charge has
been invented to harm him by someone who is strong
and resourceful, and Michael should not become embroiled in it. De Lisle can always petition for the Archbishop’s support
if matters grow too hot for him, but Michael has no such luxury. Do not accept this commission, Brother. Go home.’

Michael smiled gently. ‘I cannot. But I am no longer the youth you protected when I first came to Ely, Henry. I can look after
myself, and I have good friends in you and Matt.’

Shaking his head in disapproval, Henry turned to his apprentices. ‘Tidy this room, and then you can join your friends preparing
to receive Lady Blanche. Meanwhile, Michael and I have much to talk about. It has been months since I last saw him.’

‘Free at last!’ mumbled Julian, leaping to his feet. ‘These duties are like a sentence of death. Who wants to spend all day
wiping up old men’s drool, and helping them to the garderobe every few moments? I would rather work in the kitchens.’

‘I am sure you would,’ said Henry tartly. ‘There are dead animals and sharp knives in the kitchens, and I imagine it would
suit you very well. But you have been committed to my care to learn how to care for the sick, and I shall do everything in
my power to ensure that you do.’

Julian cast him another dark look, and then began to help Welles with the tidying, although Bartholomew noted that he left
the more unpleasant messes for his classmate.

‘Julian does not seem to appreciate what you are trying to teach him,’ he remarked, as he followed Henry through the infirmary
towards the other end of the hall, where the physician had a small bedchamber that also served as an office.

Henry agreed. ‘I fear he will never be a physician. I do not think there is a single shred of compassion or kindness in him.
Alan gave him to me as a last resort: if he fails here, he will be released from the priory, but I do not think that will
be a good thing.’

‘Why not?’ asked Michael. ‘It seems to me that he has no business being in a monastery.’

‘I do not like to think of a cruel and vicious lad like that loose in the town,’ said Henry. ‘At least while he is here we
can control him. He would commit all manner of harm without someone like me to watch him.’

He gave a cheerful wave to an old man who occupied one of the beds. The inmate waved back, revealing a battery of pink gums.
The other four were either asleep or did not seem to be aware of anything around them. All were ancient, some perhaps as much
as ninety years, and Bartholomew supposed that life as monks had been kind to them. It was not a bad way to end their days,
although he personally did not relish the prospect of lying in a bed while he slowly lost all his faculties.

‘Roger is deaf,’ explained Henry as they walked. ‘Two of the others are blind, and most have lost their wits. They are our
permanent residents. Usually, we have half a dozen monks who are recovering from being bled, but the Prior has suspended bleeding
for this month.’

‘Why is that?’ asked Bartholomew. ‘Is it because he is aware of new evidence from French and Italian medical faculties that
indicates bleeding is not always healthy?’

‘Certainly not,’ said Henry stiffly, indicating that he disapproved of such notions. ‘It is because Blanche is coming, and
we will be too busy to have monks resting in the infirmary. But
I
believe bleeding is a very healthy thing to do. You only need to compare the monks, who are bled regularly, to the townsfolk,
who are not, to see the difference.’

‘That is because the monks’ food is better than that of the townsfolk,’ argued Bartholomew. ‘And they probably have more sleep,
better beds, cleaner water—’

Henry grinned in delight, and slapped Bartholomew’s shoulders. ‘You are quite wrong, but I can see we shall enjoy some lively
debates on the subject. It is always refreshing to converse with another medical man. And I anticipate we shall learn a great
deal from each other.’

‘I am sure you will,’ said Michael. ‘But I do not want to be present when you do it. Julian and Welles are right: you
can keep your pustules and your flasks of urine to yourselves!’

Michael found it impossible to drag Bartholomew away from Henry once the two physicians had started to talk. Seeing he would
be unable to prise them apart until they had been granted at least some time to exchange opinions, he left them to their own
devices, while he wandered around the priory renewing acquaintances and listening to the latest gossip. When the afternoon
faded to early evening, and the sun was more saffron than the hot silver-gold of midday, he brought his socialising to an
end and turned his mind to the Bishop’s problem.

Daylight in August lasted from about five-thirty in the morning until around eight o’clock at night, and Michael sensed there
was probably a little more than two hours of good light left in which to inspect bodies. Since he had no desire to do it in
the dark, he hurried towards the infirmary, intending to remove Bartholomew from his discussion with Henry and complete the
unpleasant task of corpse-inspecting as soon as possible. Briefly, he entertained the notion of going alone, but, despite
his blustering confidence when he had spoken to Bartholomew earlier that day, he knew he would miss vital clues that would
be obvious at a mere glance to his friend. Reluctant though he was to involve him in the enquiry, Michael knew he needed the
physician’s help.

‘Perhaps I should come, too,’ offered Henry uneasily. ‘I have little experience with corpses – as a physician I prefer to
deal with the living – but I may be able to help.’

‘No,’ said Michael immediately. ‘I do not want both my friends involved in this. And anyway, although you know nothing about
corpses, Matt is very good with them. He peels away their secrets as one might the layers of an onion.’

‘Hardly,’ began Bartholomew in protest, not liking the way Michael made him sound so sinister. Although he had discovered
that he and Henry disagreed about many aspects
of medicine, he liked the man and wanted to make a good impression on him. This description of his skill with corpses would
be unlikely to raise him in anyone’s estimation.

‘Come on,’ said Michael, taking his arm and steering him towards the door. ‘The sooner we examine this body, the sooner we
shall have this case resolved and the Bishop’s name cleared.’

‘Then God go with you,’ said Henry, sketching a benediction at him. ‘If I cannot persuade you to leave Ely, then I urge you
to prove de Lisle’s innocence quickly, so that we can all be done with this unpleasant situation.’

Promising to bring Bartholomew back as soon as they had finished with the body of Glovere, Michael set off to the Bone House,
where Prior Alan had said the corpse was being stored until Lady Blanche came to bury it.

‘We have been told that de Lisle was accused of this murder two days ago,’ said Bartholomew, walking with Michael along the
path that wound through the monks’ cemetery towards the cathedral. ‘But when did the victim die? I thought the Bishop said
ten days, but that cannot be right – if he died that long ago, he would have been buried by now, and we would not be going
to look at his body.’

‘Luckily for us, Glovere is still above ground, or we would have found ourselves obliged to do a little midnight digging.’

‘We did that once, and I have no intention of doing it again,’ said Bartholomew shortly. ‘But why so long between Glovere’s
death and this accusation against de Lisle?’

‘Lady Blanche was at her other estates near Huntingdon, and it took some time for the news to reach her about her servant’s
death. When she did hear what had happened, she sent a missive to Alan, informing him that de Lisle was responsible for Glovere’s
death. It arrived on Friday.’

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