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Granny Meg kept staring into the flames as she slowly shook her head. “No. You were not.”

He was completely taken aback by her reply. It did not seem possible. He had been so certain. “ ‘Tis not poison?” he said. “Are you certain?”

“I should think I ought to know,” Granny Meg replied. “I had prepared it myself.”

“What?” He stared at her, eyes wide with astonishment. “You prepared this flask?”

“Not the flask,” she replied, “but ‘twas I who mixed the potion that went into it. ‘Tis an ancient blend of certain rare herbs and distillations, comingled with some common plants that can be found simply growing wild by the roadside. But the effect that it produces is not common at all.”

“But… you just said ‘twas not a poison,” Shakespeare said. “And yet Catherine Middleton is dead!”

Granny Meg turned back towards him and shook her head. “ ‘Twas not the name she gave me, though I had a feeling that the name she gave was false. That alone might have dissuaded me from helping her, yet she came well recommended. If she was the bride of whom you speak, the one who drank this potion, then most assuredly it did not kill her.”

Shakespeare pushed back his chair and stood. “Granny Meg, I was there! With my own eyes, I saw her lifeless body! She neither moved nor took a breath! Tuck listened at her chest and said her heart had ceased to beat! Odd’s blood, if she came to you for some sort of tonic and by mishap you had made some dreadful error in the concoction that resulted in her death, why then… this terrible tragedy is your responsibility!”

“There has been no error, Master Shakespeare, I assure you,” Granny Meg said calmly. “Hear me out before you rush to judgement of me. The potion I had mixed at the woman’s own request has, by your own report, produced precisely the result that was desired.”

“Good God!” he said. “Are you saying that Catherine Middleton wanted to kill herself?”

“No. Far from it. She had the best reason in the world to want to live. But she wanted to produce the illusion that she did not. She asked me if I could prepare a potion that could, for a certain length of time, produce the appearance of death, and yet not bring it about. I hesitated to perform the task she asked of me, and warned her that such a ruse was not without its dangers, but she and your friend who brought her to me both beseeched me, and said it was the only chance she had to avoid a life of hopeless misery.”

“You said that a friend of mine had brought her to you?” Shakespeare said. “What do you mean? Which friend?”

“Why, the one you brought to see me once before,” Granny Meg replied. “Young Mistress Darcie.”

“ Elizabeth?”

“Aye, she is the one who brought her to me.”

“Then you mean to say that Catherine Middleton is not truly dead, but merely in a sort of morbid slumber?”

“Her heart still beats, but so weakly that one may not easily discern it,” Granny Meg replied. “And she still breathes, but only barely, and to all outward appearances seems not to breathe at all. She will lie thus for at least a day or more, and then she will awake as if from an ordinary slumber, and should be no worse for wear.”

“But… the funeral…” Shakespeare said.

“I was assured that there would be no burial,” said Granny Meg, “but that she would be laid to rest within her family vault, where she could sleep in safety until the effects of the potion had worn off.”

“Of course!” said Shakespeare. He remembered then Elizabeth ’s insistence that the funeral should take place as soon as possible, while the guests were still assembled, so that Catherine could be laid to rest inside the family vault, the better to ease her father’s grief… and aid in the deception. “So there has been no murder after all!”

“And yet,” said Granny Meg, as she reached out slowly and picked up the flask, “I have a strong presentiment of death.” Her brow was deeply furrowed and her eyes had an unfocused, distant look. “Something is very wrong. I see death where there should be no death.” She looked at him. “Go back,” she said. “And ride with all due haste. Death comes; there is no time to waste.”

7

The news of the bride’s death had cast a pall over the festivities, but not quite to the extent that Smythe might have expected. For one thing, rather to his surprise, it had not brought the festivities to an end. Quite the contrary, it seemed to add a morbid stimulation to them. Instead of offering their condolences to their host, or at least sending them through servants and then leaving quietly, as Smythe had expected most of them to do, the guests had all, without exception, chosen to remain, no doubt out of curiosity to see what would develop and because there was still a fair they could attend, with the added spice of new rumors and gossip to exchange.

None of the merchants had packed up and left, mainly because no one had told them to go and the fair was still on so far as they were concerned. There were still good profits to be made and they continued to do a brisk business as the day wore on. When Godfrey Middleton’s steward came out to announce formally that Catherine’s funeral would be held that very afternoon, and that banqueting would follow for the guests, then anyone who might have considered leaving chose instead to stay. As Shakespeare had remarked wryly just before he left for London, “ ‘Tis thrift, Tuck, thrift. The baked meats of the wedding feast shall now coldly furnish forth the tables for the wake.”

Smythe thought that was rather cold of his friend to make the observation in such bitter terms, yet he had to admit that it was accurate. His eldest daughter had just apparently been murdered on the very day of her wedding, and Godfrey Middleton, however distraught he might have felt, was nevertheless allowing the fair to continue. Was it because he had already made a commitment to the merchants, who had indeed gone to some trouble and expense to come out to Middleton Manor from London, or did he have more mercenary motives because he would, as owner of the grounds on which the fair was held, pocket a percentage of the merchants’ profits?

“If ‘twere my daughter,” Smythe said to Sir William, “I would have shut down the fair and asked everyone to leave, albeit kindly, so that I could be left alone with my grief. Instead, the fair proceeds as planned, even with Catherine lying dead upstairs in the house.” He shook his head. “I simply cannot see how Middleton can continue with it.”

“ ‘Tis said the rich are different, Tuck,” Sir William replied, “and having started out in life quite poor, I have seen both sides of fortune, good and ill. There is, indeed, a lot of truth to what they say. A poor man may not have a rich man’s luxuries, but then neither does he have his obligations. And while ‘tis true that money may beget more money, ‘tis also true that it takes money to maintain money. Godfrey Middleton is a rich man, but his estate is frightfully expensive to keep up, as is his business and his home in London, too. All must be staffed, provisioned and supplied, and otherwise maintained. There are many people who depend upon him for their livelihoods. Just because a man is rich, Tuck, does not mean that he is without care or duty.”

“I can see your point, Sir William,” Smythe replied. “And yet, I still cannot help but think that there are times when a man can simply be past caring, and when duty can just be damned.”

Worley nodded. “I can see your point, as well, lad. And ‘tis well taken, too. For my own part, I have no children, so I cannot say for certain that I know how I would feel were I in Godfrey’s place. But I have known what it is to love, and then to lose that love, and if such pain can in any measure be akin to the pain of a lost child, then I believe that I would feel much the same as you.”