EMLYN’S CURSE
Just before the wild dawn broke on
the morrow of the burning of the Towers, a corpse,
roughly shrouded, was borne from the village into the
churchyard of Cranwell, where a shallow grave had been
dug for its last home.
“Whom do we bury in such haste?”
asked the tall Thomas Bolle, who had delved the grave
alone in the dark, for his orders were urgent, and
the sexton was fled away from these tumults.
“That man of blood, Sir Christopher
Harflete, who has caused us so much loss,” said
the old monk who had been bidden to perform the office,
as the clergyman, Father Necton, had gone also, fearing
the vengeance of the Abbot for his part in the marriage
of Cicely. “A sad story, a very sad story.
Wedded by night, and now buried by night, both of them,
one in the flame and one in the earth. Truly,
O God, Thy judgments are wonderful, and woe to those
who lift hands against Thine anointed ministers!”
“Very wonderful,” answered
Bolle, as, standing in the grave, he took the head
of the body and laid it down between his straddled
feet; “so wonderful that a plain man wonders
what will be the wondrous end of them, also why this
noble young knight has grown so wondrously lighter
than he used to be. Trouble and hunger in those
burnt Towers, I suppose. Why did they not set
him in the vault with his ancestors? It would
have saved me a lonely job among the ghosts that haunt
this place. What do you say, Father? Because
the stone is cemented down and the entrance bricked
up, and there is no mason to be found? Then why
not have waited till one could be fetched? Oh,
it is wonderful, all wonderful. But who am I
that I should dare to ask questions? When the
Lord Abbot orders, the lay-brother obeys, for he also
is wonderful a wonderful abbot.
“There, he is tidy now straight
on his back and his feet pointing to the east, at
least I hope so, for I could take no good bearings
in the dark; and the whole wonderful story comes to
its wonderful end. So give me your hand out of
this hole, Father, and say your prayers over the sinful
body of this wicked fellow who dared to marry the maid
he loved, and to let out the souls of certain holy
monks, or rather of their hired rufflers, for monks
don’t fight, because they wished to separate
those whom God I mean the devil had
joined together, and to add their temporalities to
the estate of Mother Church.”
Then the old priest, who was shivering
with cold, and understood little of this dark talk,
began to mumble his ritual, skipping those parts of
it which he could not remember. So another grain
was planted in the cornfields of death and immortality,
though when and where it should grow and what it should
bear he neither knew nor cared, who wished to escape
from fears and fightings back to his accustomed cell.
It was done, and he and the bearers
departed, beating their way against the rough, raw
wind, and leaving Thomas Bolle to fill in the grave,
which, so long as they were in sight, or rather hearing,
he did with much vigour. When they were gone,
however, he descended into the hole under pretence
of trampling the loose soil, and there, to be out of
the wind, sat himself down upon the feet of the corpse
and waited, full of reflections.
“Sir Christopher dead,”
he muttered to himself. “I knew his grandfather
when I was a lad, and my grandfather told me that he
knew his grandfather’s great-grandfather say
three hundred years of them and now I sit
on the cold toes of the last of the lot, butchered
like a mad ox in his own yard by a Spanish priest
and his hirelings, to win his wife’s goods.
Oh! yes, it is wonderful, all very wonderful; and the
Lady Cicely dead, burnt like a common witch.
And Emlyn dead Emlyn, whom I have hugged
many a time in this very churchyard, before they whipped
her into marrying that fat old grieve and made a monk
of me.
“Well, I had her first kiss,
and, by the saints! how she cursed old Stower all
the way down yonder path. I stood behind that
tree and heard her. She said he would die soon,
and he did, and his brat with him. She said she
would dance on his grave, and she did; I saw her do
it in the moonlight the night after he was buried;
dressed in white she danced on his grave! She
always kept her promises, did Emlyn. That’s
her blood. If her mother had not been a gypsy
witch, she wouldn’t have married a Spaniard
when every man in the place was after her for her beautiful
eyes. Emlyn is a witch too, or was, for they say
she is dead; but I can’t think it, she isn’t
the sort that dies. Still, she must be dead,
and that’s good for my soul. Oh! miserable
man, what are you thinking? Get behind me, Satan,
if you can find room. A grave is no place for
you, Satan, but I wish you were in it with me, Emlyn.
You must have been a witch, since, after you,
I could never fancy any other woman, which is against
nature, for all’s fish that comes to a man’s
net. Evidently a witch of the worst sort, but,
my darling, witch or no I wish you weren’t dead,
and I’ll break that Abbot’s neck for you
yet, if it costs me my soul. Oh! Emlyn,
my darling, my darling, do you remember how we kissed
in the copse by the river? Never was there a woman
who could love like you.”
So he moaned on, rocking himself to
and fro on the legs of the corpse, till at length
a wild ray from the red, risen sun crept into the
darksome hole, lighting first of all upon a mouldering
skull which Bolle had thrown back among the soil.
He rose up and pitched it out with a word that should
not have passed the lips of a lay-brother, even as
such thoughts should not have passed his mind.
Then he set himself to a task which he had planned
in the intervals of his amorous meditations a
somewhat grizzly task.
Drawing his knife from its sheath,
he cut the rough stitching of the grave-clothes, and,
with numb hands, dragged them away from the body’s
head.
The light went out behind a cloud,
but, not to waste time, he began to feel the face.
“Sir Christopher’s nose
wasn’t broken,” he muttered to himself,
“unless it were in that last fray, and then
the bone would be loose, and this is stiff. No,
no, he had a very pretty nose.”
The light came again, and Thomas peered
down at the dead face beneath him; then suddenly burst
into a hoarse laugh.
“By all the saints! here’s
another of our Spaniard’s tricks. It is
drunken Andrew the Scotchman, turned into a dead English
knight. Christopher killed him, and now he is
Christopher. But where’s Christopher?”
He thought a little while, then, jumping
out of the grave, began to fill it in with all his
might.
“You’re Christopher,”
he said; “well, stop Christopher until I can
prove you’re Andrew. Good-bye, Sir Andrew
Christopher; I am off to seek your betters. If
you are dead, who may not be alive? Emlyn herself,
perhaps, after this. Oh, the devil is playing
a merry game round old Cranwell Towers to-night, and
Thomas Bolle will take a hand in it.”
He was right. The devil was playing
a merry game. At least, so thought others beside
Thomas. For instance, that misguided but honest
bigot, Martin, as he contemplated the still senseless
form of Christopher, who, re-christened Brother Luiz,
had been safely conveyed aboard the Great Yarmouth,
and now, whether dead or living, which he was not sure,
lay in the little cabin that had been allotted to
the two of them. Almost did Martin, as he looked
at him and shook his bald head, seem to smell brimstone
in that close place, which, as he knew well, was the
fiend’s favourite scent.
The captain also, a sour-faced mariner
with a squint, known in Dunwich, whence he hailed,
as Miser Goody, because of his earnestness in pursuing
wealth and his skill in hoarding it, seemed to feel
the unhallowed influence of his Satanic Majesty.
So far everything had gone wrong upon this voyage,
which already had been delayed six weeks, that is,
till the very worst period of the year, while he waited
for certain mysterious letters and cargo which his
owners said he must carry to Seville. Then he
had sailed out of the river with a fair wind, only
to be beaten back by fearful weather that nearly sank
the ship.
Item: six of his best men had
deserted because they feared a trip to Spain at that
season, and he had been obliged to take others at hazard.
Among them was a broad-shouldered, black-bearded fellow
clad in a leather jerkin, with spurs upon his heels bloody
spurs that he seemed to have found no time
to take off. This hard rider came aboard in a
skiff after the anchor was up, and, having cast the
skiff adrift, offered good money for a passage to
Spain or any other foreign port, and paid it down
upon the nail. He, Goody, had taken the money,
though with a doubtful heart, and given a receipt
to the name of Charles Smith, asking no questions,
since for this gold he need not account to the owners.
Afterwards also the man, having put off his spurs and
soldier’s jerkin, set himself to work among
the crew, some of whom seemed to know him, and in
the storm that followed showed that he was stout-hearted
and useful, though not a skilled sailor.
Still, he mistrusted him of Charles
Smith, and his bloody spurs, and had he not been so
short-handed and taken the knave’s broad pieces
would have liked to set him ashore again when they
were driven back into the river, especially as he
heard that there had been man-slaying about Blossholme,
and that Sir John Foterell lay slaughtered in the forest.
Perhaps this Charles Smith had murdered him. Well,
if so, it was no affair of his, and he could not spare
a hand.
Now, when at length the weather had
moderated, just as he was hauling up his anchor, comes
the Abbot of Blossholme, on whose will he had been
bidden to wait, with a lean-faced monk and another
passenger, said to be a sick religious, wrapped up
in blankets and to all appearance dead.
Why, wondered that astute mariner
Goody, should a sick monk wear harness, for he felt
it through the blankets as he helped him up the ladder,
although monk’s shoes were stuck upon his feet.
And why, as he saw when the covering slipped aside
for a moment, was his crown bound up with bloody cloths?
Indeed, he ventured to question the
Abbot as to this mysterious matter while his Lordship
was paying the passage money in his cabin, only to
get a very sharp answer.
“Were you not commanded to obey
me in all things, Captain Goody, and does obedience
lie in prying out my business? Another word and
I will report you to those in Spain who know how to
deal with mischief-makers. If you would see Dunwich
again, hold your peace.”
“Your pardon, my Lord Abbot,”
said Goody; “but things go so upon this ship
that I grow afraid. That is an ill voyage upon
which one lifts anchor twice in the same port.”
“You will not make them go better,
captain, by seeking to nose out my affairs and those
of the Church. Do you desire that I should lay
its curse upon you?”
“Nay, your Reverence, I desire
that you should take the curse off,” answered
Goody, who was very superstitious. “Do that
and I’ll carry a dozen sick priests to Spain,
even though they choose to wear chain shirts for
penance.”
The Abbot smiled, then, lifting his
hand, pronounced some words in Latin, which, as he
did not understand them, Goody found very comforting.
As they passed his lips the Great Yarmouth began
to move, for the sailors were hoisting up her anchor.
“As I do not accompany you on
this voyage, fare you well,” he said. “The
saints go with you, as shall my prayers. Since
you will not pass the Gibraltar Straits, where I hear
many infidel pirates lurk, given good weather your
voyage should be safe and easy. Again farewell.
I commend Brother Martin and our sick friend to your
keeping, and shall ask account of them when we meet
again.”
I pray it may not be this side of
hell, for I do not like that Spanish Abbot and his
passengers, dead or living, thought Goody to himself,
as he bowed him from the cabin.
A minute later the Abbot, after a
few earnest, hurried words with Martin, began to descend
the ladder to the boat, that, manned by his own people,
was already being drawn slowly through the water.
As he did so he glanced back, and, in the clinging
mist of dawn, which was almost as dense as wool, caught
sight of the face of a man who had been ordered to
hold the ladder, and knew it for that of Jeffrey Stokes,
who had escaped from the slaying of Sir John escaped
with the damning papers that had cost his master’s
life. Yes, Jeffrey Stokes, no other. His
lips shaped themselves to call out something, but
before ever a syllable had passed them an accident
happened.
To the Abbot it seemed as though the
whole ship had struck him violently behind so
violently that he was propelled headfirst among the
rowers in the boat, and lay there hurt and breathless.
“What is it?” called the captain, who
heard the noise.
The Abbot slipped, or the ladder slipped, I know not which, answered
Jeffrey gruffly, staring at the toe of his sea-boot. At least he is safe
enough in the boat now, and, turning, he vanished aft into the mist, muttering
to himself
“A very good kick, though a
little high. Yet I wish it had been off another
kind of ladder. That murdering rogue would look
well with a rope round his neck. Still I dared
do no more and it served to stop his lying mouth before
he betrayed me. Oh, my poor master, my poor old
master!”
Bruised and sore as he was and
he was very sore within little over an
hour Abbot Maldon was back at the ruin of Cranwell
Towers. It seemed strange that he should go there,
but in truth his uneasy heart would not let him rest.
His plans had succeeded only far too well. Sir
John Foterell was dead a crime, no doubt,
but necessary, for had the knight lived to reach London
with that evidence in his pocket, his own life and
those of many others might have paid the price of it,
since who knows what truths may be twisted from a
victim on the rack? Maldon had always feared
the rack; it was a nightmare that haunted his sleep,
although the ambitious cunning of his nature and the
cause he served with heart and soul prompted him to
put himself in continual danger of that fate.
In an unguarded moment, when his tongue
was loosed with wine, he had placed himself in the
power of Sir John Foterell, hoping to win him to the
side of Spain, and afterwards, forgetting it, made
of him a dreadful enemy. Therefore this enemy
must die, for had he lived, not only might he himself
have died in place of him, but all his plans for the
rebellion of the Church against the Crown must have
come to nothing. Yes, yes, that deed was lawful,
and pardon for it assured should the truth become
known. Till this morning he had hoped that it
never would be known, but now Jeffrey Stokes had escaped
upon the ship Great Yarmouth.
Oh, if only he had seen him a minute
earlier; if only something could it have
been that impious knave, Jeffrey? he wondered had
not struck him so violently in the back and hurled
him to the boat, where he lay almost senseless till
the vessel had glided from them down the river!
Well, she was gone, and Jeffrey in her. He was
but a common serving-man, after all, who, if he knew
anything, would never have the wit to use his knowledge,
although it was true he had been wise enough to fly
from England.
No papers had been discovered upon
Sir John’s body, and no money. Without
doubt the old knight had found time to pass them on
to Jeffrey, who now fled the kingdom disguised as
a sailor. Oh! what ill chance had put him on
board the same vessel with Sir Christopher Harflete?
Well, Sir Christopher would probably
die; were Brother Martin a little less of a fool he
would certainly die, but the fact remained that this
monk, though able, in such matters was a fool,
with a conscience that would not suit itself to circumstances.
If Christopher could be saved, Martin would save him,
as he had already saved him in the shed, even if he
handed him over to the Inquisition afterwards.
Still, he might slip through his fingers or the vessel
might be lost, as was devoutly to be prayed, and seemed
not unlikely at this season of the year. Also,
the first opportunity must be taken to send certain
messages to Spain that might result in hampering the
activities of Brother Martin, and of Sir Christopher
Harflete, if he lived to reach that land.
Meanwhile, reflected Maldon, other
things had gone wrong. He had wished to proclaim
his wardship over Cicely and to immure her in a nunnery
because of her great possessions, which he needed for
the cause, but he had not wished her death. Indeed,
he was fond of the girl, whom he had known from a
child, and her innocent blood was a weight that he
ill could bear, he who at heart always shrank from
the shedding of blood. Still, Heaven had killed
her, not he, and the matter could not now be mended.
Also, as she was dead, her inheritance would, he thought,
fall into his hands without further trouble, for he a
mitred Abbot with a seat among the Lords of the realm had
friends in London, who, for a fee, could stifle inquiry
into all this far-off business.
No, no, he must not be faint-hearted,
who, after all, had much for which to be thankful.
Meanwhile the cause went on that great cause
of the threatened Church to which he had devoted his
life. Henry the heretic would fall; the Spanish
Emperor, whose spy he was and who loved him well,
would invade and take England. He would yet live
to see the Holy Inquisition at work at Westminster,
and himself yes, himself; had it not been
hinted to him? enthroned at Canterbury,
the Cardinal’s red hat he coveted upon his head,
and oh, glorious thought! perhaps
afterwards wearing the triple crown at Rome.
Rain was falling heavily when the
Abbot, with his escort of two monks and half-a-dozen
men-at-arms, rode up to Cranwell. The house was
now but a smoking heap of ashes, mingled with charred
beams and burnt clay, in the midst of which, scarcely
visible through the clouds of steam caused by the
falling rain, rose the grim old Norman tower, for on
its stonework the flames had beat vainly.
“Why have we come here?”
asked one of the monks, surveying the dismal scene
with a shudder.
“To seek the bodies of the Lady
Cicely and her woman, and give them Christian burial,”
answered the Abbot.
“After bringing them to a most
unchristian death,” muttered the monk to himself,
then added aloud, “You were ever charitable,
my Lord Abbot, and though she defied you, such is
that noble lady’s due. As for the nurse
Emlyn, she was a witch, and did but come to the end
that she deserved, if she be really dead.”
“What mean you?” asked the Abbot sharply.
“I mean that, being a witch, the fire may have
turned from her.”
“Pray God, then, that it turned
from her mistress also! But it cannot be.
Only a fiend could have lived in the heat of that furnace;
look, even the tower is gutted.”
“No, it cannot be,” answered
the monk; “so, since we shall never find them,
let us chant the Burial Office over this great grave
of theirs and begone the sooner the better,
for yon place has a haunted look.”
“Not till we have searched out
their bones, which must be beneath the tower yonder,
whereon we saw them last,” replied the Abbot,
adding in a low voice, “Remember, Brother, the
Lady Cicely had jewels of great price, which, if they
were wrapped in leather, the fire may have spared,
and these are among our heritage. At Shefton they
cannot be found; therefore they must be here, and
the seeking of them is no task for common folk.
That is why I hurried hither so fast. Do you understand?”
The monk nodded his head. Having
dismounted, they gave their horses to the serving-men
and began to make an examination of the ruin, the Abbot
leaning on his inferior’s arm, for he was in
great pain from the blow in the back that Jeffrey
had administered with his sea-boot, and the bruises
which he had received in falling to the boat.
First they passed under the gatehouse,
which still stood, only to find that the courtyard
beyond was so choked with smouldering rubbish that
they could make no entry for it will be
remembered that the house had fallen outwards.
Here, however, lying by the carcass of a horse, they
found the body of one of the men whom Christopher had
killed in his last stand, and caused it to be borne
out. Then, followed by their people, leaving
the dead man in the gateway, they walked round the
ruin, keeping on the inner side of the moat, till
they came to the little pleasaunce garden at its back.
“Look,” said the monk
in a frightened voice, pointing to some scorched bushes
that had been a bower.
The Abbot did so, but for a while
could see nothing because of the wreaths of steam.
Presently a puff of wind blew these aside, and there,
standing hand in hand, he beheld the figures of two
women. His men beheld them also, and called aloud
that these were the ghosts of Cicely and Emlyn.
As they spoke the figures, still hand in hand, began
to walk towards them, and they saw that they were
Cicely and Emlyn indeed, but in the flesh, quite unharmed.
For a moment there was deep silence; then the Abbot asked
“Whence come you, Mistress Cicely?”
“Out of the fire,” she answered in a small,
cold voice.
“Out of the fire! How did you live through
the fire?”
“God sent His angel to save
us,” she answered, again in that small voice.
“A miracle,” muttered the monk; “a
true miracle!”
“Or mayhap Emlyn Stower’s
witchcraft,” exclaimed one of the men behind;
and Maldon started at his words.
“Lead me to my husband, my Lord
Abbot, lest, thinking me dead, his heart should break,”
said Cicely.
Now again there was silence so deep
that they could hear the patter of every drop of falling
rain. Twice the Abbot strove to speak, but could
not, but at the third effort his words came.
“The man you call your husband,
but who was not your husband, but your ravisher, was
slain in the fray last night, Cicely Foterell.”
She stood quite quiet for a while, as though considering his words, then
said, in the same unnatural voice
“You lie, my Lord Abbot.
You were ever a liar, like your father the devil,
for the angel told me so in the midst of the fire.
Also he told me that, though I seemed to see him fall,
Christopher is alive upon the earth yes,
and other things, many other things;” and she
passed her hand before her eyes and held it there,
as though to shut out the sight of her enemy’s
face.
Now the Abbot trembled in his terror,
he who knew that he lied, though at that time none
else there knew it. It was as though suddenly
he had been haled before the Judgment-seat where all
secrets must be bared.
“Some evil spirit has entered into you,”
he said huskily.
She dropped her hand, pointing at him.
“Nay, nay; I never knew but one evil spirit,
and he stands before me.”
“Cicely,” he went on,
“cease your blaspheming. Alas! that I must
tell it you. Sir Christopher Harflete is dead
and buried in yonder churchyard.”
“What! So soon, and all
uncoffined, he who was a noble knight? Then you
buried him living, and, living, in a day to come he
shall rise up against you. Hear my words, all.
Christopher Harflete shall rise up living and give
testimony against this devil in a monk’s robe,
and afterwards afterwards ”
and she laughed shrilly, then suddenly fell down and
lay still.
Now Emlyn, the dark and handsome,
as became her Spanish, or perhaps gypsy blood, who
all this while had stood silent, her arms folded upon
her high bosom, leaned down and looked at her.
Then she straightened herself, and her face was like
the face of a beautiful fiend.
“She is dead!” she screamed.
“My dove is dead. She whom these breasts
nursed, the greatest lady of all the wolds and all
the vales, the Lady of Blossholme, of Cranwell and
of Shefton, in whose veins ran the blood of mighty
nobles, aye, and of old kings, is dead, murdered by
a beggarly foreign monk, who not ten days gone butchered
her father also yonder by King’s Grave yonder
by the mere. Oh! the arrow in his throat! the
arrow in his throat! I cursed the hand that shot
it, and to-day that hand is blue beneath the mould.
So, too, I curse you, Maldonado, evil-gifted one,
Abbot consecrated by Satan, you and all your herd of
butchers!” and she broke into the stream of
Spanish imprecations whereof the Abbot knew the meaning
well.
Presently Emlyn paused and looked
behind her at the smouldering ruins.
“This house is burned,”
she cried; “well, mark Emlyn’s words:
even so shall your house burn, while your monks run
squeaking like rats from a flaming rick. You
have stolen the lands; they shall be taken from you,
and yours also, every acre of them. Not enough
shall be left to bury you in, for, priest, you’ll
need no burial. The fowls of the air shall bury
you, and that’s the nearest you will ever get
to heaven in their filthy crops. Murderer,
if Christopher Harflete is dead, yet he shall live,
as his lady swore, for his seed shall rise up against
you. Oh! I forgot; how can it, how can it,
seeing that she is dead with him, and their bridal
coverlet has become a pall woven by the black monks?
Yet it shall, it shall. Christopher Harflete’s
seed shall sit where the Abbots of Blossholme sat,
and from father to son tell the tale of the last of
them the Spaniard who plotted against England’s
king and overshot himself.”
Her rage veered like a hurricane wind.
Forgetting the Abbot, she turned upon the monk at
his side and cursed him. Then she cursed the hired
men-at-arms, those present and those absent, many by
name, and lastly greatest crime of all she
cursed the Pope and the King of Spain, and called
to God in heaven and Henry of England upon earth to
avenge her Lady Cicely’s wrongings, and the murder
of Sir John Foterell, and the murder of Christopher
Harflete, on each and all of them, individually and
separately.
So fierce and fearful was her onslaught
that all who heard her were reduced to utter silence.
The Abbot and the monk leaned against each other,
the soldiers crossed themselves and muttered prayers,
while one of them, running up, fell upon his knees
and assured her that he had had nothing to do with
all this business, having only returned from a journey
last night, and been called thither that morning.
Emlyn, who had paused from lack of breath, listened to him, and said
“Then I take the curse off you
and yours, John Athey. Now lift up my lady and
bear her to the church, for there we will lay her out
as becomes her rank; though not with her jewels, her
great and priceless jewels, for which she was hunted
like a doe. She must lie without her jewels;
her pearls and coronet, and rings, her stomacher and
necklets of bright gems, that were worth so much more
than those beggarly acres those that once
a Sultan’s woman wore. They are lost, though
perhaps yonder Abbot has found them. Sir John
Foterell bore them to London for safe keeping, and
good Sir John is dead; footpads set on him in the
forest, and an arrow shot from behind pierced his throat.
Those who killed him have the jewels, and the dead
bride must lie without them, adorned in the naked
beauty that God gave to her. Lift her, John Athey,
and you monks, set up your funeral chant; we’ll
to the church. The bride who knelt before the
altar shall lie there before the altar Clement
Maldonado’s last offering to God. First
the father, then the husband, and now the wife the
sweet, new-made wife!”
So she raved on, while they stood
before her dumb-founded, and the man lifted up Cicely.
Then suddenly this same Cicely, whom all thought dead,
opened her eyes and struggled from his arms to her
feet.
“See,” screamed Emlyn;
“did I not tell you that Harflete’s seed
should live to be avenged upon all your tribe, and
she stands there who will bear it? Now where
shall we shelter till England hears this tale?
Cranwell is down, though it shall rise again, and Shefton
is stolen. Where shall we shelter?”
“Thrust away that woman,”
said the Abbot in a hoarse voice, “for her witchcrafts
poison the air. Set the Lady Cicely on a horse
and bear her to our Nunnery of Blossholme, where she
shall be tended.”
The men advanced to do his bidding,
though very doubtfully. But Emlyn, hearing his
words, ran to the Abbot and whispered something in
his ear in a foreign tongue that caused him to cross
himself and stagger back from her.
“I have changed my mind,”
he said to the servants. “Mistress Emlyn
reminds me that between her and her lady there is the
tie of foster-motherhood. They may not be separated
as yet. Take them both to the Nunnery, where
they shall dwell, and as for this woman’s words,
forget them, for she was mad with fear and grief, and
knew not what she said. May God and His saints
forgive her, as I do.”