The agents of william ma.., p.30

The Agents of William Marshal Volume I: A Medieval Romance Bundle, page 30

 

The Agents of William Marshal Volume I: A Medieval Romance Bundle
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  The more poison, the better.

  It was double the amount she’d been instructed to use, but she wanted to make sure it did the job it was supposed to do. She wanted no room for error. As the very strong poison was flushing into the wine, she’d gathered two more pitchers of wine from the kitchen and used mulling spices to flavor all three of the pitchers, so that all of them would essentially taste the same. She even marked the poison pitcher with a scratch across the bottom of it, and she marked a second pitcher of untainted wine with a gouge on the handle.

  It was a gouge she would tell the Mother Abbess that the marked pitcher was meant for the king, but she wasn’t finished with it. Into that gouged pitcher, she put a second sachet that mimicked the one she’d put the poisonous plants in, only this cheesecloth sachet held harmless dead rose petals and dried grass. It would trick the sisters into believing that particular pitcher was the poisoned one. Only Andressa would know which wine was truly poisoned.

  And that was the wine destined for the Mother Abbess.

  With all three pitchers of wine ready and waiting, Andressa went about her duties of supervising the coming feast. The kitchen nuns, older women who were so bereft of all hope that they moved around like mindless ghosts, had been up before dawn as well, without the supervision of Sister Blanche. The women were boiling beef in a great pot over an open flame in preparation of the coming feast, and the smell of baking bread filled the crisp morning air.

  The smells of cooking weren’t unusual at St. Blitha, but it was food always meant for the Mother Abbess’ fine table. Even this morning, as Andressa had worked, she saw at least four or five pledges and postulates slip from the postern gate in their morning hunt for food and she felt sorry that the smells of cooking were making those poor starving women miserable.

  But it was misery, Andressa hoped, that would soon be ended.

  Ironic how she had no guilt about poisoning the Mother Abbess and anyone else who drank the poisoned wine. She knew it might also be Sisters Agnes and Petronilla, but still, she felt no remorse. Murder was a sin, and she knew that, but she hoped that when she stood before God on Judgement Day, he would understand that what she did had been for the greater good. Unless the Mother Abbess and her kind were stopped, more women were going to die. Murder would continue.

  Andressa hoped that God would understand that.

  Because of her management duties in the kitchen this morning, Andressa was able to steal a piece of beef under the guise of tasting it to see if it was fit for the feast. She had the cook add more salt to the water to flavor the meat after she’d stuffed several morsels into her mouth, feeding her rumbling belly. It was good beef, bought with the Mother Abbess’ ill-gotten money, and the bread was made with the finest flour. All of it fit for a kingly feast, as the wine in the laundry area continued to leech more and more poison out of the ingredients that had been placed in it.

  It was turning into a potion unto itself.

  The morning began to deepen and the sun began to make its march across the sky as there was some commotion over by the chapel, specifically at the Abbot’s Lodge as the Bishop of Essex made his arrival for the feast day.

  The chapel, and the garden, filled with the bishop’s men because he traveled with a massive entourage. Horses were stuffed into the barnyard on the east side of the kitchen, and as Andressa stood back in her shaded laundry area, stirring the poison wine with a stick to ensure the ingredients were melding well with the wine itself, she could see the bishop himself and the Mother Abbess, with Sister Agnes, and Sister Petronilla, standing between the garden and the Abbot’s Lodge.

  Andressa watched the scene closely, noting that they seemed to be in discussion. She was positive that the Mother Abbess hadn’t told the bishop of the directive from the Holy Father because the bishop and the king were friends, and the bishop was one of the man’s advisors.

  Aatto de Horndon was a loud man, obvious in manner and in mood, and he was greatly disliked by almost everyone. The Mother Abbess enjoyed a close relationship with him, probably too close, and the woman surely wasn’t going to jeopardize that by telling him of the Holy Father’s order. He may very well try to stop it.

  And there was no stopping wheels that were already in motion.

  Therefore, Andressa went back to work as the sun continued to rise and the day turned surprisingly mild from the icy temperatures they’d been having this season. She went back and forth between the kitchens and the laundry area, alternately making sure the food was being well-prepared and tending to her concoction of wines. In fact, she was busily tending to the poisoned wine, stirring and stirring, when she heard a noise from the postern gate. Although she knew it was locked, she turned to see what the noise was.

  A familiar face was staring back at her.

  Andressa recognized one of Maxton’s knightly friends, dressed in full mail and a tunic of scarlet with three lions, the royal standard. He was up against the gate, looking right at her, and she could see more soldiers milling around behind him, which told her that the king had arrived.

  The realization made her stomach lurch, nerves becoming evident now. Everything would soon be coming to a head and if it wasn’t executed properly, it would be a bloodbath of legendary proportions that she would find herself caught up in. But the time was upon her and she knew she had to act quickly before her duties took her away from any direct communication with Maxton and his men.

  Picking up a bucket, the one she’d used to rinse away the dirt from the dwale roots, she went to the postern gate and unlocked it.

  Pushing through the gate, pretending to be going to the stream, she could see several royal soldiers milling around and a few of them turned to look at her as she emerged from the gate. So did the knight she had seen; as soon as she came through the gate, he hung back, letting her move to the stream before closing the gap and making his way to her.

  “My lady?” he asked quietly, his eyes on the gate to ensure no one was watching them. “What happened to you? Why are you bandaged?”

  Andressa was having difficulty drawing water with only one working hand. When he saw this, he quickly took the bucket from her and dunked it into the stream.

  “It is of no consequence,” she answered softly. “You must tell Maxton that the Mother Abbess will only be helped by two of her attendants today. The third one is gravely injured. The two are with her right now as she speaks to the bishop and I imagine they will continue to remain with her for the duration of the mass. One woman is fat and round, and the other woman has very dark eyebrows. That is the only way you can distinguish them, considering they are wearing the same habits.”

  The knight, a very tall man with enormous shoulders and piercing, dark eyes, stood up from the stream with the full water bucket. “I will tell him,” he said as he handed the bucket back to her and she grasped it with her good hand. “Tell me what happened to you, my lady. Maxton must know.”

  Andressa didn’t have time to explain everything. Besides, if she did, she had a feeling it might enrage Maxton. She didn’t know the man’s moods or reactions very well, but given he’d killed Douglas so quickly when she’d been threatened, she imagined he didn’t have much self-control. He probably acted on anger very easily, and that wasn’t something they needed at the moment. They had to get through the mass without Maxton running amok because of her injuries.

  “I will heal,” she said, taking her water and turning away. “Go and tell Maxton what I told you.”

  “But…”

  She cut him off. “Hurry, now,” she said. “Tell Maxton to prepare for what is to come. Be shocked by nothing.”

  “What does that mean, my lady?”

  “You will know when you see it.”

  Struggling with the weight of the water, she carried the sloshing bucket back to the postern gate and opened it, slipping inside with her water but leaving the gate unbolted from the inside. She did that for one very good reason – if Maxton and his men needed to enter the complex.

  Andressa didn’t even turn to see if the knight had run off, as she’d told him to. She kept her attention on her area, on the three wine pitchers she could see sitting up on the table she used to lay out her dried laundry.

  Setting the water aside, she checked the pitchers again, stirring the poisoned wine once more and noticing that the crushed leaves had all but dissolved, and the cheesecloth containing the mashed roots was the same color of the wine. Everything was blending quite nicely. Just as she set the stick aside and covered up the poisoned wine again, she could see Sister Petronilla heading in her direction.

  Her heart began to race.

  Keeping calm, she bent over the bucket of water and pretended to wash her good hand in it just as Sister Petronilla approached. She casually looked up at the woman as she dried off her hand.

  “I see that the bishop has arrived,” she said before Sister Petronilla could speak. “Is the mass to begin soon?”

  Sister Petronilla nodded. “The king has arrived, also,” she said. “He is moving into the chapel as we speak. Is everything prepared as we have instructed?”

  Now was the moment. God help her, Andressa was feeling more nerves than she had hoped she would. She could only pray that Sister Petronilla was so preoccupied that she wouldn’t question anything at all about the wines and their differences, or check up on Andressa’s work. She turned for the three wine pitchers that were back in the shade.

  “Everything is ready,” she said quietly, moving for the pitcher with the big gouge in the handle. Quickly, she pulled out the cheesecloth sachet full of leaves and petals, now stained dark with wine that disguised what they really were. “This is for the king. See the mark on the handle? This will tell you that this is the wine meant for him. Give it to no one else unless you wish to kill them.”

  Fortunately, Sister Petronilla wasn’t paying attention to anything other than the pitcher Andressa was handing her. She seemed busy and distracted, perhaps feeling her nerves for this day of days as well. Whatever the case, it was working to Andressa’s advantage.

  “Excellent,” she said quietly. “And you did exactly as I told you?”

  Andressa nodded firmly. “Exactly, Sister. I rose before dawn to complete the task. The ingredients have been soaking in the wine for hours.”

  A smile flickered on Sister Petronilla’s pale lips. “Well done, Andressa,” she said, looking her over as if pleased the beating had whipped her into acquiescence. Perhaps she could have been more suspicious of her, but she simply didn’t have the time or the will. There was too much happening at the moment. “I will ensure this is the only wine the king drinks.”

  Andressa nodded. “It is a full pitcher, so it is enough for the feast afterwards, too,” she said. “I will bring your wine to the chapel myself. It tastes of spices, as you instructed, and so does the king’s wine. In fact, they should taste nearly the same, so make sure you give him the wine with the gouged handle. That is the only way you are to know for certain.”

  Sister Petronilla didn’t question her further, about anything. It was clear that she believed Andressa had been properly punished and was now properly submissive. She simply took the wine with her, heading across the cloister towards the chapel entry. Andressa watched her go, still palming the rose sachet she’d pulled from the wine because she hadn’t wanted Sister Petronilla to get a good look at it. The less she saw, the better.

  Breathing a sigh of relief, Andressa called over one of the kitchen nuns, instructing her to take the third wine pitcher, the one that was only mulled but not poisoned. That would be the wine for the masses. As the woman collected it and headed for the chapel to ensure the acolytes had it, Andressa turned to the remaining pitcher, the one full of poisoned wine. She looked at it a moment, feeling no doubt at all in what she was about to do.

  For every pledge, postulate, and nun who had suffered The Chaos, she would do it for them.

  For ever terror and sin the Mother Abbess had committed or inflicted, she would seek vengeance.

  For the beating she received yesterday at the hands of the wicked, she would seek a reckoning.

  For the good of everyone at St. Blitha, she was about to play God.

  There was no turning back.

  Maxton had never really seen St. Blitha in the daylight and now that he had, it looked worse than it did at night.

  It was constructed out of a mixture of beige sandstone and gray granite, an amalgam of building materials because some of the rocks had been pilfered from an old pagan temple built by the Romans centuries ago. That meant the façade was tall, ugly, and uneven, and a growth of moss grew up from the base of it, covering the stones about halfway up with a moist, green growth.

  The church itself was squat and slender, but very long, running the full length of the cloister into which it had been built. There was a big entry, double-doored, with panels that had seen better days. In all, the entire structure conveyed the same rot and deterioration that plagued the occupants inside. It looked like it belonged somewhere on the purgatory plain.

  Andressa has been living in this horrible place, he thought grimly.

  When they’d first arrived with the advance group of the king’s contingent, Maxton had positioned himself by the entry door to the church as the rest of the men-at-arms spread out around the entire complex, covering the walls from the outside to ensure that the king was amply protected. As Maxton remained by the doors, the king himself finally arrived and he caught sight of Sean, Kevin, Alexander, and Cullen among the king’s body guards, an elite group akin to the Praetorian Guard of old. It also gave Maxton an opportunity to study Richard the Lionheart’s brother, a man he’d not had a high opinion of for many years.

  In truth, he’d seen John before, but back when he was merely a prince, known as “Lackland” by most of the nobles in England for the mere fact he literally had no lands, no possessions worth note, and coveted everything his father and older brothers had earned or inherited. Dark-haired, and dark-eyed, with one droopy eyelid, he wasn’t very tall, an oddly meek stature from a man who wielded so much power.

  Maxton watched the king arrive and then shortly thereafter, so did William Marshal, Christopher and David, and Gart. The two parties mingled in the entry area outside of the church. The king greeted The Marshal amiably, deliberately ignored the de Lohr brothers because of their vast and turbulent history together, and made a point of trying to convince Gart to join his elite guard. Gart refused, so John ignored him, too.

  As Maxton stood right outside the door, seemingly standing at attention as the king passed by him, he made sure to make eye contact with Christopher and David, and finally William, as they passed inside the church. He cast Gart a long look as well, watching the men file into the church for the mass to begin. Because of the king’s attendance at St. Blitha, the streets were blocked off, preventing pilgrims from reaching the church, so it was a very small and very elite crowd inside. Once the king, his courtiers, and a few honored guests disappeared inside the church, Maxton broke from his position and went on the prowl.

  There was a certain pledge, in particular, he was looking for.

  He headed off to the west, which was the south side of St. Blitha’s compound. Just past the church was the main entry to the cloister, and he immediately saw Dashiell and Bric at their posts. He made his way towards them.

  “Nothing unusual to report?” he asked.

  Dashiell answered. “Nothing unusual, except the door to the cloister is still locked,” he said. “Wasn’t de Lohr supposed to have someone unlock it for us?”

  Maxton nodded, looking at the enormous, fortified door. “He was, but I do not know what became of that. He may have a man on it as we speak.”

  Bric cocked a pale eyebrow. “If we have to get in there any time soon, we’ll have to use an ax to break the door down.”

  Maxton realized they couldn’t wait for de Lohr’s man, if there even was one, to unlock the door because it was a key component to the operation. Therefore, he remembered the layout of the complex, the one that Andressa had drawn for them in the ashes and the one he’d later sketched on parchment so they could all study it. He remembered it all down to the last detail.

  “As I recall, there is an entrance into the cloister compound just inside the entry of the church,” he said. “It is a door used by the nuns. It is not too far from the cloister entry door, so you may be able to slip in and unlock the door without being seen. Are you willing to try?”

  Young and hungry for a challenge, Dashiell nodded. “Indeed,” he said. “I remember seeing the cloister entry on her sketch.”

  “Then go, man. Make haste.”

  As Dashiell rushed off, Maxton turned to Bric. “Keep watch that he returns shortly,” he said. “If he does not, you have my permission to go in and save him. Just try not to make any noise and bring the entire church running.”

  Bric’s silver eyes glimmered. “I’ve saved many a man before and have never made any noise,” he said. “But if he gets into trouble inside of a nunnery, I will never let him forget it.”

  Maxton grinned. “As well you should not.”

  A reluctant smile spread across Bric’s lips but, as he turned away, Maxton spoke. “The Marshal told me that every word out of my mouth to you would be considered a challenge, given our rough introduction,” he said. “He also said you throttle men at the slightest provocation. Is this true?”

  Bric looked at him, a somewhat appraising expression on his face. “Depends on the provocation.”

  Maxton snorted. “My first words to you yesterday were not a provocation,” he said. “They were an honest assessment, given the situation. I hope you realize that. If I mean to provoke you, you will know it.”

  Bric faced him full-on, looking him over as if sizing him up. “So I’ve been told.”

  “Then I do not have to be on my guard with you, waiting for a great Irish fist to come flying out at me?”

 

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