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Edward Marston

The Serpents of Harbledown

…the way of a serpent upon a rock; the way of a ship in the midst of the sea; and the way of a man with a maid.

PROVERBS 30.19

PROLOGUE

The search began at dawn. It was led by Alwin, the distraught father of the missing girl, a big, brawny man with a dark beard fringing his weathered face. No sleep had relieved his anxiety that night. He simply stood at the open shutters and gazed up at the heavens in mute supplication. Alwin was an experienced sailor.

He had endured hostile elements a hundred times in his small vessel and shown the routine bravery of his occupation. But he also had the strange fatalism of the seafaring man.

“She is gone, Brother Martin. I know it.”

“Do not believe that,” said the monk with a consoling hand on his arm. “Have faith, Alwin. We will find her.”

“Alive or dead?”

“Alive-God willing!”

“Why did she not come home last night?”

“We will chide her with that very question.”

“It can only be that she was prevented by force.”

“No, my son.”

“Bertha met with some terrible accident. I sense it.”

“Be calm. There may yet be another explanation for her disappearance. The girl is young and sometimes headstrong.

Adventure may have directed her feet farther than she intended to go. Finding herself lost, Bertha sheltered for the night and is even now taking her bearings.”

Alwin was beyond comfort. “She is gone,” he said with a shudder of resignation. “My daughter is dead.”

They left Canterbury as the first faint beams of light were being heralded by cockcrow. Alwin strode purposefully along but the ancient monk kept pace without difficulty. Time had robbed Brother Martin of many things but it had left his vigour untouched.

Beneath the black cowl of the Benedictine Order, his sinewy legs had a tireless rhythm. It was in the wrinkled benevolence of his face that sixty years had scrawled a larger signature.

He sought in vain to soothe his companion with words.

“She may have spent the night with friends.”

“Bertha made no mention of it to me,” grunted Alwin.

“What if she met someone on her way home?”

“That is my fear, Brother Martin.”

“Someone she knew,” said the monk. “A chance encounter with a close acquaintance. They fell into conversation, time raced by, the friend’s house was nearer than yours …”

“No,” insisted Alwin. “Bertha would have sent word.”

“Has she stayed out before?”

“Only once.”

“With whom, pray?”

“Her aunt. In Faversham.”

“Then that is where she is now,” decided Martin with a surge of hope. “Instead of returning to Canterbury, she first went on to visit her aunt. Bertha is in Faversham. Even for legs as brisk as hers, it is a tidy walk and left her no time to get home before dark. Is this not possible, Alwin?”

“Possible,” conceded the other. “But unlikely.”

“Why?”

The question hung unanswered in the air. Alwin’s gaze had been distracted by a group of figures conjured out of the gloom.

They were waiting at the base of the hill and stiffened at the approach of the two men. A voice rang out.

“We are ready, Brother Martin.”

“God bless you, Bartholomew!”

“Tell us what we must do.”

“First, we will offer up a prayer.”

“Who are they?” whispered Alwin, looking around the faces that now took on shape and character.

“Friends,” said Martin.

“But I do not recognise any of them. Do they know Bertha?”

“They know that she has gone astray. It is enough.”

Alwin was touched. There were over a dozen of them. Three monks, two novices, a priest, a woodcutter, a shepherd, a couple of yawning boys, a blacksmith and three men with vacant grins, whose distinctive garb and pungent smell identified them as swineherds. All had heard and all had come to help in the search, asking for no reward beyond that of finding the girl safe and well.

Brother Martin led them in a short prayer. Brother Bartholomew, a square-jawed monk in his thirties, gave Alwin an encouraging smile.

“Take heart, my friend,” he said. “We are with you.”

“I thank you all.”

“Brother Martin will teach us where to look but you must lend some guidance. We know your daughter by name but not by sight.

Describe her to us that we may recognise Bertha, if and when we find her.”

“As assuredly we will,” added Martin. “Alwin?”

They waited a full minute as the tormented father wrestled with his tongue. It was ironic. In the midst of biting rain and howling tempest, Alwin never lacked voice. When his boat was tossed helplessly on the waves, he would rant and curse for hours on end. Put his own life in danger and his defiance was ear-splitting. Yet now that his daughter was at risk, now that he was caught up in another crisis, now that he had equal cause to hurl profanities at a malign twist of destiny, he was numbed into silence. Shrugging his shoulders, he threw a helpless glance at Brother Martin and the monk came to his aid.

“Bertha is seventeen,” he explained. “Tall, fair and as comely as any young maid. Dressed in a blue that matches her eyes and a white wimple. Thus it stands. Bertha gathered herbs for me yesterday and brought them to the hospital of St. Nicholas, as she had done many times before. She talked with me then lingered to speak to my charges, for she is the soul of compassion and her very presence is a medicine to the minds of our poor guests.” He took a deep breath. “At what time she left Harbledown, we do not know but one thing is certain. She did not return to Canterbury by nightfall.”

“We searched,” said Alwin, finding his voice at last and eager to dispel any suspicion of lack of paternal concern. “Brother Martin and I searched in the darkness with a torch but it was hopeless.

We need daylight.”

“You have it,” noted Bartholomew, as the sky slowly cleared above them. “And you have several pairs of eyes to make best use of it. Let us begin.”

Alwin nodded with gratitude. “Spread out,” he urged. “Move forward together. And I beg of you, search thoroughly.”

They fanned out in a line that covered well over a hundred yards then ascended the hill with careful footsteps. Most of them used a stick or a staff to push back the brambles or prod among the bushes.

One of the swineherds had brought a mattock and he sang tunelessly to himself as he hacked a way through thick undergrowth.

A long iron poker was pressed into service by the blacksmith.

Alwin and Brother Martin were at the centre of the search party, moving upward either side of the track which Bertha habitually used on her way home from Harbledown. Trees and shrubs offered countless hiding places but none disclosed any trace of the girl.

Progress was slow and painstaking. A shout of alarm from one of the novices brought them all running but Bertha had not been found. The boy had simply stumbled on the half-eaten remains of a dead dog. When the line formed again, they picked their way steadily on.

Morning dew glistened as the sun took its first full look at the day. Birdsong covered the hillside. Far below them, Canterbury had come noisily to life and carts trundled into the city with produce for the market. Alwin searched on with mounting desperation, his fear now mixed with a scalding guilt. As they got nearer to the crest of the hill, he felt as if his heart were about to burst asunder.

His mind was a furnace of recrimination. Pain forced him to drop down on one knee. Brother Martin came across to the stricken father at once.

“What ails you, my son?” he asked.

“Nothing.”

“Is the sorrow too heavy to bear?”

“I am well now,” said Alwin, struggling upright again.