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"I cannot sign, My Lord Prior."
Then he sat back with closed eyes and waited.
He heard movements about him, steps, the crackle of parchment, and at last Dr. Petre's voice; but he scarcely understood what was said. There was but one thought dinning in his brain, and that was that he had refused, and thrown his defiance down before the King--that terrible man whom he had seen in his barge on the river, with the narrow eyes, the pursed mouth and the great jowl, as he sat by the woman he called his wife--that woman who now--
Chris s.h.i.+vered, opened his eyes, and sense came back.
Dr. Petre was just ending his speech. He was congratulating the Community on their reasonableness and loyalty. By an overwhelming majority they had decided to trust the King, and they would not find his grace unmindful of that. As for those who had not signed he could say nothing but that they had used the liberty that his Grace had given them. Whether they had used it rightly was no business of his.
Then he turned to the Prior.
"The seal then, My Lord Prior. I think that is the next matter."
The Prior rose and lifted it from the table. Chris caught the gleam of the bra.s.s and silver of the ponderous precious thing in his hand--the symbol of their corporate existence--engraved, as he knew, with the four patrons of the house, the cliff, the running water of the Ouse, and the rhyming prayer to St. Pancras.
The Prior handed it to the Commissioner, who took it, and stood there a moment weighing it in his hand.
"A hammer," he said.
One of the secretaries rose, and drew from beneath the table a sheet of metal and a sharp hammer; he handed both to Dr. Petre.
Chris watched, fascinated with something very like terror, his throat contracted in a sudden spasm, as he saw the Commissioner place the metal in the solid table before him, and then, holding the seal sideways, lift the hammer in his right hand.
Then blow after blow began to echo in the rafters overhead.
CHAPTER V
THE SINKING s.h.i.+P
Dr. Petre had come and gone, and to all appearance the priory was as before. He had not taken a jewel or a fragment of stuff; he had congratulated the sacristan on the beauty and order of his treasures, and had bidden him guard them carefully, for that there were knaves abroad who professed themselves as authorised by the King to seize monastic possessions, which they sold for their own profit. The offices continued to be sung day and night, and the ma.s.ses every morning; and the poor were fed regularly at the gate.
But across the corporate life had pa.s.sed a subtle change, a.n.a.logous to that which comes to the body of a man. Legal death had taken place already; the unity of life and consciousness existed no more; the seal was defaced; they could no longer sign a doc.u.ment except as individuals.
Now the _rigor mortis_ would set in little by little until somatic death too had been consummated, and the units which had made up the organism had ceased to bear any relation one to the other.
But until after Christmas there was no further development; and the Feast was observed as usual, and with the full complement of monks. At the midnight ma.s.s there was a larger congregation than for many months, and the confessions and communions also slightly increased. It was a symptom, as Chris very plainly perceived, of the manner in which the shadow of the King reached even to the remotest details of the life of the country. The priory was now, as it were, enveloped in the royal protection, and the people responded accordingly.
There had come no hint from headquarters as to the ultimate fate of the house; and some even began to hope that the half-promise of a re-foundation would be fulfilled. Neither had any mark of disapproval arrived as to the refusal to sign on the part of the two monks; but although nothing further was said in conversation or at chapter, there was a consciousness in the minds of both Dom Anthony and Chris that a wall had arisen between them and the rest. Talk in the cloister was apt to flag when either approached; and the Prior never spoke a word to them beyond what was absolutely necessary.
Then, about the middle of January the last process began to be enacted.
One morning the Prior's place in church was empty.
He was accustomed to disappear silently, and no astonishment was caused on this occasion; but at Compline the same night the Sub-Prior too was gone.
This was an unheard-of state of things, but all except the guest-master and Chris seemed to take it as a matter of course; and no word was spoken.
After the chapter on the next morning Dom Anthony made a sign to Chris as he pa.s.sed him in the cloister, and the two went out together into the clear morning-suns.h.i.+ne of the outer court.
Dom Anthony glanced behind him to see that no one was following, and then turned to the other.
"They are both gone," he said, "and others are going. Dom Bernard is getting his things together. I saw them under his bed last night."
Chris stared at him, mute and terrified.
"What are we to do, Dom Anthony?"
"We can do nothing. We must stay. Remember that we are the only two who have any rights here now, before G.o.d."
There was silence a moment. Chris glanced at the other, and was rea.s.sured by the steady look on his ruddy face.
"I will stay, Dom Anthony," he said softly.
The other looked at him tenderly.
"G.o.d bless you, brother!" he said.
That night Dom Bernard and another were gone. And still the others made no sign or comment; and it was not until yet another pair had gone that Dom Anthony spoke plainly.
He was now the senior monk in the house; and it was his place to direct the business of the chapter. When the formal proceedings were over he stood up fearlessly.
"You cannot hide it longer," he said. "I have known for some while what was impending." He glanced round at the empty stalls, and his face flushed with sudden anger: "For G.o.d's sake, get you gone, you who mean to go; and let us who are steadfast serve our Lord in peace."
Chris looked along the few faces that were left; but they were downcast and sedate, and showed no sign of emotion.
Dom Anthony waited a moment longer, and then gave the signal to depart.
By a week later the two were left alone.
It was very strange to be there, in the vast house and church, and to live the old life now stripped of three-fourths of its meaning; but they did not allow one detail to suffer that it was possible to preserve. The _opus Dei_ was punctually done, and G.o.d was served in psalmody. At the proper hours the two priests met in the cloister, cowled and in their choir-shoes, and walked through to the empty stalls; and there, one on either side, each answered the other, bowed together at the _Gloria_, confessed and absolved alternately. Two ma.s.ses were said each day in the huge lonely church, one at the high altar and the other at our Lady's, and each monk served the other. In the refectory one read from the pulpit as the other sat at the table; and the usual forms were observed with the minutest care. In the chapter each morning they met for mutual confession and accusation; and in the times between the exercises and meals each worked feverishly at the details that alone made the life possible.
They were a.s.sisted in this by two paid servants, who were sent to them by Chris's father, for both the lay-brothers and the servants had gone with the rest; and the treasurer had disappeared with the money.
Chris had written to Sir James the day that the last monk had gone, telling him the state of affairs, and how the larder was almost empty; and by the next evening the servants had arrived with money and provisions; and a letter from Sir James written from a sick-bed, saying that he was unable to come for the present, for he had taken the fever, and that Morris would not leave him, but expressing a hope that he would come soon in person, and that Morris should be sent in a few days. The latter ended with pa.s.sionate approval of his son's action.
"G.o.d bless and reward you, dear lad!" he had written. "I cannot tell you the joy that it is to my heart to know that you are faithful. It cannot be for long; but whether it is for long and short, you shall have my prayers and blessings; and please G.o.d, my poor presence too after a few days. May our Lady and your holy patron intercede for you both who are so worthy of their protection!"
At the end of the second week in March Mr. Morris arrived.
Chris was taking the air in the court shortly before sunset, after a hard day's work in church. The land was beginning to stir with the resurrection-life of spring; and the hills set round the town had that faint flush of indescribable colour that tinges slopes of gra.s.s as the sleeping sap begins to stir. The elm-trees in the court were hazy with growth as the buds fattened at the end of every twig, and a group of daffodils here and there were beginning to burst their sheaths of gold.