can. Adam will be looked after now and I will see what can be done for his poor mind. I will be in touch again very soon. And tell me at once if his care does not improve.'
'I will. We visit every day.' She curtsied, and went out after her husband. I turned to see Cissy looking at me, a spark of curiosity in her dull eyes, but when I met her gaze she dropped her head to her sewing. I heard footsteps, and the woman keeper came in, looking concerned.
'I heard raised voices,' she said. 'Is Cissy all right;'
'Yes.' I smiled ruefully. 'It was only my clients.'
She went and looked at Cissy's sewing. 'This is good work, t'will be as good as new.' She was rewarded by a fleeting smile from the old woman. She turned to me again.
'You have been visiting Adam Kite, sir?'
‘ Ay.'
'His poor parents.' She hesitated, glancing at the open door. Then she said quietly, 'Many here are afraid of Adam, fear he is possessed. And Keeper Shawms hopes that without care he will waste away and die.' She frowned. 'He is a bad man.'
'I have just given Keeper Shawms a warning. He will find him self in trouble with the courts if he does not give Adam proper care. Thank you for your information.' I smiled at her. 'What is your name?'
'Ellen Fettiplace, sir.' She hesitated, then added, 'What ails poor young Adam, sir? I have never heard of a case like his.'
'Nor I. I am having a doctor come to look at him. A good man.'
'Dr Frith is no use.'
'I am glad to see at least one keeper here cares for her patients.' She blushed. 'You are kind, sir.' 'How did you come to work here, Ellen?' She looked at me, then smiled sadly. 'I used to be a patient.' 'Oh,' I said, taken aback. She had seemed the sanest person I had met there today.
'They offered me a position as an under - keeper when I was — was better.'
'You did not want to leave?'
The sad smile again. 'I can never leave here, sir,' she said. 'I have not been outside in ten years. I will die in the Bedlam.'
Chapter Four
I was busy in court over the next two days, but Thursday after noon was free and I had arranged to take Roger to see Guy. It was Maundy Thursday, the day before Easter, and as I walked back from the court at Westminster to Lincoln's Inn I saw the churches were again full. Tomorrow the great veil that shrouded the chancels during Lent would be removed, and those who cleaved to the old traditions would creep to the Cross on their knees. After Mass the altars would be stripped of their vestments in commemoration of Christ's betrayal after the Last Supper, while down at Whitehall the King would wash the feet of twelve poor men. I felt sad at how little any of it meant to me now. There were four days' holidays to come, but to me they would be empty and dull. At least when Lent was over Joan, my housekeeper, had promised me roast saddle of beef.
The weather was still cold, the sky iron-grey although there had been no more snow. I called in at my chambers before going to fetch Roger, and was pleased to see that a large fire had been lit. Barak and my junior clerk, Skelly, were both busy at their desks. Barak looked up as I took off my fur - edged coat and warmed my hands before the fire. He had had a shave on Sunday, but I noticed his brown doublet had a button missing, and there was what looked like a beer stain on the chest. I wondered if he had been out all night, and thought again about Tamasin. The two lived quite near Guy's shop, and I resolved that on the way back from taking Roger I would call in on them, as though by chance.
'I called at the court office,' Barak said. 'They're going to hear
Adam Kite's application next Tuesday, at the same time as the Collins case.'
'Good.' I was tempted to tell him to get his doublet cleaned up, but did not want to sound like an old woman. And he knew enough not to come carelessly dressed to court. I looked quickly through a couple of new briefs that had come in, then donned my coat again.
'I am going to take Master Elliard to Guy,' I
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