“God’s work it may be,” Whittington said, forcing a brisk, businesslike tone into his voice, “but it will be man’s work to deal with it. Unless,” he gave the bishop an enquiring look, “the bishop knows some prayers that will drive the pestilence from among us?”
There was a silence. Then the bishop folded his hands before his corpulent belly, looked down, and muttered: “Prayers will be said in churches, of course, but if this is God’s work, then it is His way of punishing sinners and there is little that we—”
“Don’t tell me that this pestilence is God’s means of carrying off sinners,” Bolingbroke snapped. “The innocent are dying as readily as anyone else. Besides, if this pestilence was meant to carry away only the sinners amongst us… then why are most of London’s damned priests and friars still alive?”
There was a twitter of laughter, quickly subdued, and the bishop flushed.
Bolingbroke stared at the bishop a moment longer, then turned back to Whittington. “Well? What can we do?”
“We can do some things to make life safer for those still well,” Whittington said. “Already I have sent orders to set up pest houses here,” his finger stabbed at the map, “and here, and here.”
“Good,” Bolingbroke said. “They are well beyond the city walls. But should people be moving their infected through the streets?”
Whittington shook his head. “The pest houses will be used for people travelling into London, or those trying to leave, to isolate them until we are sure they are not infected. For those families already suffering within the city walls… well, men are even now moving through the streets, hanging bundles of straw from the windows of infected houses, and daubing their front doors with red paint.”
Bolingbroke flinched. “Cursed by a daub of red paint and a bundle of straw.”
“No one is allowed to leave or enter those houses,” Whittington continued. “Not even to deliver food.”
“Then pray this pestilence passes quickly,” one of the clerks muttered, “or else people will starve within their homes.”
“What else?” said Bolingbroke. He waved towards the fire. “Should we… ?”
“Already done,” Whittington said. “Great bonfires salted with brimstone and saltpetre have been set up in all major intersections. With sweet Jesu’s aid they will burn the pestilence from the air. Anyone who has to walk the streets, and they are precious few—the watch, those carting away the dead, and physicians and their apprentices—have been given nosegays of herbs and waxed cloaks to help the pestilence slide away from their persons.”
None of which will protect them against God’s black hound, thought Bolingbroke, but he did not speak his thoughts, for it was better to give people hope that something useful was being done, than to dash such hope away.
“All stray dogs are being killed,” Whittington said. “Cats as well. Perhaps they contribute to the spread of the pestilence.”
“Perhaps,” Bolingbroke said. “Is there nothing else we can do?”
Whittington looked to one of the clerks. “Well… someone has suggested that we fill a barge with peeled onions and float it down the Thames when the winds are southerly. Then the tart scent of the onions will blow over London and—”
“Then set whoever thought that one up to the peeling of the several tons of onions needed to fill a barge,” Bolingbroke said. “When he is done, and finished his weeping, I shall be willing to consider the proposition in more detail.” He paused. “Dick, this is something I would rather not speak of, but I think we must… what of the dead?”
“They are being collected in grave carts,” Whittington said, now looking out the window with unfocused eyes, “and being trundled to plague pits even now being dug in the fields beyond London.”
“Sweet Jesu help us all,” Bolingbroke whispered.
Mary read the short, terse letter the courier had given her wordlessly, then handed it out with a shaking hand to Neville.
Neville exchanged a glance with Margaret, took the letter, read it, then cursed under his breath.
“Pestilence,” he said, and handed the letter on to Margaret, who read it aloud for the benefit of the other of Mary’s ladies who crowded about with huge, frightened eyes. Rumours from London had reached them early in the morning, but to now have confirmation of the worst…
“Beloved Queen,” Margaret read in a low voice, “I greet you well. Know that pestilence has gripped London since yesterday afternoon. Many have died, more are infected, and the city tosses in the throes of torment. I beg you to remain in Windsor, where I might be more assured of your safety. Know that I am well, and in the Tower, whose walls have thus far kept the pestilence at bay. Pray to Lord Jesus for our deliverance. Your loving husband and king, Bolingbroke.”
Margaret lowered the letter, staring at Neville. “Sweet Jesu,” she breathed as several of the ladies about her exchanged shocked looks.
Mary, lying as usual on her couch by the window, now struggled to sit up straight. “I must go to London,” she said.
“Mary!” Neville and Margaret said together.
“No,” Neville continued, risking a hand on Mary’s shoulder. “You are too ill—”
“No, I am not,” Mary said.
“—and you can do little to help,” Neville finished. “Sweet Jesu, madam, what do you think you can do?”
Mary regarded Neville steadily. “I can give comfort, Tom. I can be with my people.”
“Mary,” Neville said, abandoning all attempts at formality, “You can barely walk now. You are in too much pain. You—”
“I am going, Tom. I cannot sit here and twiddle my thumbs while London dies.”
“Then I’m going with you,” Neville said.
Mary hesitated, then smiled. “Thank you, Tom. Your adeptness with the last rites will no doubt be more than useful.”
“And I,” Margaret said.
“No!” Neville stared at her. “You cannot. The children—”
“The children shall stay here safe with Agnes. Mary will need me as much as you.” Margaret looked Neville directly in the eye. “You know both of us will be safe.”
The archangel needs both of us alive to play out the final drama, Neville thought, and he nodded. They would both live.
He did not see Mary’s thoughtful gaze move between him and Margaret.
Emma Hawkins hurried down Carter Lane by St Paul’s, then ducked into a small alley. The streets were deserted save for a few scurrying people, and those wretched souls manning the plague carts on which were piled the dead. Fires coughed and spluttered on their diet of wood, brimstone and saltpetre at intersections and in marketplaces: their noxious fumes twisted and writhed into the air, tangling about eaves and overhangs before rising into a sky made scarlet with the sunset and the smoke of the fires.
There was the faint sound of wailing and sobbing in the air, anguish seeping out from behind closed doors and shuttered windows where men and women and children lay dying in unspeakable agony. Occasionally the muted, sombre tones of shroud-wrapped bells tolled indifferently from one of the city’s parish churches.
Death lurked everywhere: in the stench of uncollected corpses upon the air, in the miasma of the fires, in the sewage choking the