‘Yes. Next year came the harvest failure and the great dearth. I buried many parishioners then.’ His eyes wandered again to the window. I turned, but there was only a little garden with a cherry tree.
‘That day was cold and cloudy, as it had often been that summer. I was here. It was getting dark, I remember I had lit a candle, when there came a frantic hammering at the door. I thought it was someone needing the last rites, but it was poor Ellen that staggered in. Her hood was gone, her hair wild, her dress torn and stained with grass. She must have fallen on her way from the foundry in the dark.’
But, I thought, something else could have happened to explain that.
‘I could get no sense from her. Her eyes were staring, she kept taking great whooping breaths but could not speak. Then she said fire, fire at the foundry. I ran and shouted for help and soon half Rolfswood was running there. I stayed with Ellen. They told me after that by the time people got there the whole enclosure was ablaze. All they found of Master Fettiplace and his man Peter Gratwyck was some charred bones. God rest their poor souls.’
‘Goodman Harrydance said Ellen moved in here afterwards?’
‘Yes.’ He raised his chin. ‘But there was nothing improper, I got Goodwife Wright, one of the Fettiplace servants, to come and stay.’
‘How long did she remain?’
‘Near two months. She never recovered from that night. At first she would barely talk at all, and would say nothing about what happened. If we asked her she would start crying or even screaming. It alarmed us. If someone knocked on my door she would jump or even scream and run to her room. After a while she could be got to talk a little of commonplace things, the weather and suchlike, but only to me or Goodwife Wright. And she wouldn’t go outside, she would just shake her head wildly if I suggested it. She refused to see anyone else. Not even the young man people had said she would marry, Master Philip West, though he came several times. You could see in his face how troubled he was. I think he loved her.’
‘He went to the King’s ships, Goodman Harrydance said.’
‘Yes, soon after. I think he had a broken heart. You see, the word was Philip West was going to propose to Ellen. His family had obtained a junior position for him at the King’s court. He was often in London, but that summer the King had come on Progress to Sussex and Master West had ridden over to visit for the day.’ Seckford shook his head sadly. ‘Master Fettiplace would have been pleased for them to marry, for the Wests are a wealthy landowning family. And Master West was a handsome young fellow.’
‘Are the West family still here?’
‘Philip West’s father died some years ago. His mother, Mistress Beatrice West, still manages his lands. He owns much round here, but leaves all the management in his mother’s hands, only visiting when he is home from sea. She is a – formidable woman. She lives in a big house outside the town. Philip was here last month, when his ship arrived at Portsmouth.’ He looked at me. ‘I hear all the King’s ships are coming there, and the King himself is on his way to review them.’ The curate shook his head sorrowfully. ‘We live in terrible times.’
‘We do, sir.’
‘I saw Philip West last month, passing down the main street on his horse. Still a handsome man but middle-aged now, and stern faced.’ Seckford stood abruptly. ‘Forgive me, sir. I made a resolution to drink no strong beer till the shadow on that cherry tree strikes the gate. But remembering all this – ’ He stepped to the buffet and took two pewter mugs. ‘Will you drink with me, sir?’
‘Thank you.’
He filled the mugs from the jug. He drank his straight off in a few gulps, sighed deeply and refilled it, before passing the other to me and lowering himself back into the chair.
‘It was after they took Ellen away that I started drinking too much. It seemed so cruel, the foundry burning down, that poor girl with her wits gone. And I have to preach that God is merciful.’ His plump face sagged into an expression of great sadness.
‘And was Ellen the only witness to what happened?’ I asked quietly.
Seckford frowned. ‘Yes, and the coroner was very persistent in trying to get the story out of her.’ His voice took on a harsh note. ‘Mistress West wanted the matter out of the way so her son would not be reminded of it, and it would cease to be the talk of the locality.
And the Wests could help Coroner Priddis’s advancement. An ambitious man, our former coroner,’ he concluded bitterly.
‘I know of Priddis,’ I said. ‘He is now Sir Quintin, feodary of Hampshire. A post of some power.’
‘So I have heard. The Priddis family were mere yeomen, but they were ambitious for their son and sent young Quintin to law.’ The curate drained his mug. ‘Ambition, sir, I believe it a curse. It makes men cold and hard. They should stay in the station God set them.’ He sighed. ‘Perhaps you will not agree.’