Celebrity Death Match- What To Read After Harry Potter

When life gives you lemons, make lemonade.

Make hay while the sun shines. 

And when fate gives you a class of 4th/5th grade Potterheads, it is your bounden duty to have a Harry Potter themed class day because the odds of those percentages happening again is probably very low. 

Everyone dressed up, I assigned houses and house cups and awarded points in my best McGonagall voice. I made wands (who chose the wizard!).  We turned math into Potions and presentations into wand duels.  Latin was Spells and the types of clouds were sung to the theme song. etc etc  It was the highlight of my teaching career.  I can brag about it now, because it was last year and all of those Harry Potter fans (including my own) have moved on and now need new books to get sucked into.  

So in honor of my old students, I went through my book shelves color by color, block by block and these are the ones that jumped up and down, reminding me of their awesome addictiveness and possible similarities to Harry Potter. Some of these books are far better, older and wiser than anything JK Rowling will ever write, but Harry Potter remains firmly entrenched as a gateway drug into a lifelong love of reading, so you won't find me bashing Harry (rarely...cough cough). 

The winners are: 

1. Howl's Moving Castle
This one comes in first place because it's whimsical, funny, full of magic, has a crazy wizard who's always dyeing his hair different colors, and the plot and ending is pure perfection. It's not a series, but a nice fast paced easy read.  If you've seen the movie, it's also wonderful but totally totally different...so different they bear almost no resemblance but the name.  

Howl's Moving Castle
By Diana Wynne Jones



2. Crown Duel/Court Duel
All of Sherwood Smith's books will eventually be consumed by Potter lovers...it's just a matter of which ones come first.  I chose Crown Duel/Court Duel because it's the easiest one to find at the library, has an accessible story and characters, and works well to familiarize you with the world of Sartorias-deles.  There are lots of books and series within this world and really you can't get enough of them. I wish she'd written a dozen more.  The magic is more Lord of the Rings or Narnia (more high fantasy), but her writing style is a little more like JK. 

3. Prydain Chronicles
Prydain should really be in first place. The series deserves to sit right under Narnia, but the writing is a little older and my anecdotal observation has been it's harder for some kids to get sucked into this series.  It's another high fantasy story though about a boy named Taran who dreams of being a grand hero even though he's slugging away in the trenches as a pig-keeper.  Most are probably familiar with at least the title of the 2nd book which boasts of its own Disney movie. The Black Cauldron. Every kid needs to read these books at least once in their childhood.  



4. Tiffany Aching (Wee Free Men/Hat Full Of Sky etc) 
This is one of those series every girl should read (and boy too probably, but I can only speak for girls). It follows the adventures of a young witch who is the most practical and non drama minded girl to walk the planet...er Discworld in this case. She learns to do hard things and be unselfish (but in the most humorous and nail biting way ever).  Full Disclosure: Some object to the tiny leprechaun creatures who act like drunk highlanders on steroids...what can I say, it's Terry Pratchett. sob sob
 

5. Gregor The Overlander
Gregor doesn't have a lot of magic, witches and wizards, but it is the most similar to Harry Potter in theme and style.  It follows the story of a boy who is watching his baby sister, and they both fall through a hole (Alice style) and end up in a world with giant intelligent bats and lovable cockroaches.  You probably will recognize the author Suzanne Collins as the person who gave us Hunger Games.  But Gregor came first, is way more child appropriate, and is arguably better in my opinion.  There are five books in this series, so it should keep your kids busy for awhile. 


Honorable Mentions: 

Percy Jackson (or anything else written by Rick Riordon).  If Harry Potter is Greys Anatomy, then Percy Jackson is Scrubs.  Fun, fast paced, but a lot more fluff.  

Eragon. Written by a homeschooler who basically smooshed every single fantasy/scifi plot device into one book/series.  It will drive you crazy if you're an adult, but will keep you busy and entertained for a long while if you're a kid.  

The Mysterious Benedict Society. These have a very tight, small plot which I think bums out Harry Potter fans who are looking for that big magical world building feel. But they are entertaining and intelligent in their own right and I think they appeal especially to kids who like puzzles or mysteries as well as fantasy/magic.  

 

Enjoy! 
(P.S. These are Amazon Affiliate links, so if you were going to buy books anyway, clicking through from here helps me.) 

Nanowrimo Story- Chapter 10

No poll for this chapter...I haven't quite caught up to the last poll, but thought I'd put this chapter out anyway so it doesn't get too long. 

Candlelight-007.jpg

Chapter Ten

I don’t believe in accidents. There either was a God who was completely in charge, or there was no God at all.  At least that’s what I decided when I was eight.  I’d been standing on a wrinkle of imitation grass wondering how close I could get to the edge without falling into the hole in the middle. I wasn’t entirely sure I didn’t want to fall into the hole even though I decided it was deep enough I would probably break at least one leg.  People were throwing roses into the hole and I couldn’t understand why. Didn’t they know my mother couldn’t see or smell them anymore?  Didn’t they see the yellow bulldozer behind the tree waiting to pour dirt over all their roses? Why would you waste roses like that?  My Aunt Lynn had told me they cost $14.99 a dozen and that it was highway robbery.  

People kept patting me on the head and giving me hugs. It was like being attacked by an army of octopuses, but I didn’t ask them to stop. Another set of arms went around me in a quick squeeze. “Everything happens for a reason...” I looked up to see it was another person who had forgotten to use their waterproof mascara. Aunt Lynn said you always had to remember waterproof mascara for weddings and funerals and I worried my mom was up in heaven feeling gypped I wasn’t wearing any.

“You know they say not to tell people that anymore!” My aunt Lynn stepped in indignantly shielding me. The woman froze and then scurried off...which was the usual reaction to my Aunt Lynn.  

“Don’t pay any attention to them, they’re idiots.” she said patting me on the head.  I wondered if that was also in the book she’d read on “Ten ways to talk to kids about grief”.  I had wanted to ask her why there were only ten ways, and why there weren’t any pictures in the book, but Aunt Lynn had already walked away to yell at the harpist.

I inched my toes a little closer to the hole and whispered defiantly “There’d better be reason.”  

And that’s when I pretty much figured out that my brain was broken and didn’t work like everyone else’s.  

There’d better be a reason, I thought both twelve years later and nine hundred and sixty seven years earlier as my brain registered Graventseen’s heir had his calloused hand over my mouth.

I yelled at him as loud as I could with my eyeballs since that was all I had available.  

“I’m not going to touch you.” he growled, dropping his hand as if he realized a bit late he was contradicting himself.  “Don’t think I came up here to ride the crupper with ye.”

Well all right then.  He looked so fierce and determined, I almost felt slighted. I scooted as far away from him as possible, sitting up as straight and as dignified as one could in a thin linen shift. I’d definitely been in the eleventh century too long. I felt more naked covered head to toe than I did waltzing around in a bikini all day at the beach. “Why did you come up here then?” I asked.  

“I came through the window...there’s stuff that needs to be said, and there doesn’t need to be anyone else who hears it.”  

I swallowed.  He didn’t seem to feel nearly as uncomfortable as I was...but then again, he was standing on his stones in his castle, and he wasn’t the one being accosted in his bedroom. He was only wearing leggings and shirt that billowed around him like the cover of a bad romance novel. The chest was undone and the sleeves were rolled up, I could see the thick sinew and muscles on his forearms. He should have looked absolutely gay, but somehow managed to look more like a tired CEO with his sleeves rolled up and tie askew.  


“First of all, I’m having honey and wine sent up for you and I expect you to drink it so your chances are better…”

So that’s what the sludgy black stuff had been? Apparently he’d also noticed I’d sent it back down with Hairy Henry.

“...second, let me know what you need stocked up in the way of healer sewry for yourself and I’ll see to its end. Third, I’ve sent mad Frank away on the water circuit so at least you’ll be spared him…”

“Wait, what?...” I tried to find my voice because my brain couldn’t keep up. I felt like I must have missed part of the conversation...maybe he’d climbed through the wrong window.  

“I jest need to know what ye think ye can handle.” He said, and for the first time I could see a little bit of desperation creeping in around the edges of his eyes.  Eyes that looked way older than the rest of him.

Handle?” I repeated, “Handle what?”

“Your ordeal.”  

“My ordeal?” Evidently I had turned into a parrot in my disorientation. I gave a sort of hysterical laugh that tried to turn into a sob on its way out.

He didn’t seem amused.  

“They are building the wooden court-leet down there right now.” He ran his hand through his hair, “in two mornings hence you’ll be standing on it in your wee feet and I’ll be sitting in my Grandfather’s chair while God and everyone else watches to see what I’ll do with you!”  

Oh right, my date with death. See, that was the problem. I’d already given up. Moved on.

It was a failing of mine. Once I’d decided there’s was nothing to be done, my brain moved on to other problems. Dr. Attiva would have poured some Dr. Pepper down my throat and made me go think of three new labs to draw or something else to snap me out of it… but she wasn’t here and it was much easier for me to persevere for a patient  than for myself.  

“I’m sure you’ll think of something.” I said.

He stood by the bed, arms crossed. The tiny bit of moonlight hitting his face made me suddenly think of the scandinavian cheekbones of my Finnish surgery resident friend. I wondered how much Norse blood went into the making of the budding Lord in front of me.

"Well cherié, I’m afraid it’s not as easy as that, and I’m not leaving until we’ve settled it.”  A scampering chill of foreboding went down my spine. I really didn’t want to talk about this.

"What?"

He studied my face, not answering right away. He stood facing me and I could see I wasn’t the only one fighting with myself.

"Do ye realize" he said softly, "that you put everyone’s livelihood in jeopardy with your pretendin’ antics?”

I looked down at my tapestried bedding that featured lots of deer being shot by crude bows. I traced one with my finger “I didn’t mean to" I said shamefaced.  I really hadn’t, but of course that was exceptionally difficult to explain..especially in your nightgown in the middle of the night with a man who you didn’t know very well.

“Do ye not realize that before my grandfather drained the swamp lands, more babies died than lived? More chillen starved to death than had food? This land is a harsh tutor...do ye want to go back to that?”

I shook my head.   

“Well since you’re clearly a foreigner of some kind…” He trailed off and raised an eyebrow as if inviting me to finish the sentence.  I almost sarcastically replied “San Luis Obispo” just to see what he’d say, but the mood was too serious. “…I don’t want to punish you too harshly. I think most would be willing to let ye get off with a whipping or dunking unless you want a manorial trial by ordeal?"

“What kind of ordeal?” my voice sounded faint and strangled even to my own ears.

“…of course ol’ Pierre doesn’t like you and he’s likely to rile up the rest of thee falconers and huntsmen. So if we have to live off bread and carrots, the rest of the folk will blame me for you.  He says you put a hex on his best bird, gamekeepers are leetle vindictive like…”

“I did not!” I said, finally finding something I could unequivocally say as true.

“He says ye’ve been stealing lots of lamb gut… for spell catchers to wile people with?”

Oh gosh.  “Yes, it’s in your chest right now, lot of good that’s doing me.”

He paused, looking down at his billowy shirt a look of surprise on his face.  

“It is my devoir...my responsibility...so help me God.”  He crossed himself. “If a man had done what ye did, your bones would already be hanging on the old church spire as a warning.”

I swallowed hard at this.  

“I didn't know. I'm sorry.”

Nicolas dismissed this with a snort.  “Aye I can see you are, and I’ve been trying to think of how I can smooth it all out, but ye’ve shamed the law and will have to deal with the consequences.”

I wish I could put the dress on for him and let him see for himself, but Madame Gilfre had folded it back up and tied it in the pocket around her dress.  I desperately wanted him to understand.

After a long moment of silence, he sighed and took out his knife.

I scrambled backwards towards the furthest corner of the bed.  “I will scream.” I said in what I hoped was a calm voice. I knew for a fact Hairy Henry and Jakob would pluck out their pubic hairs to make a rope with which to hang themselves if that’s what Nicolas asked them to do, but I was hoping he still didn’t want them involved.

"I told ye I’m not going to hurt you cherié.”  He said, “I mean only to show you something.”  He walked over to the one square of moonlight in the room.

"Now, our options are trial by boiling rock, trial by dunking—" he began, making marks on the stone floor. “Trial by hanging in a cage, trial by a notch out of yer ear.”

"I've said I'm sorry!" I burst out. "And I am. I'll never do such a thing again!" I was gripping the bed now, so hard I was surprised it didn’t splinter into a hundred pieces.

"Well, that's the problem," he said slowly. "It doesn’t matter. I think you don’t quite understand how things work here. I’ve decided maybe life is a lot easier wherever you’re from--it must be. Tis perhaps not so big of a deal to play something you’re not. But here, the safety of the castle and these lands only work if everyone dez their piece. A Lord can’t do what he wants without inadvertently getting people killed in the long run, do you see?” He looked so imploring and yet so wicked with that knife in his hands I felt lightheaded.

"It's the hard truth that something like this can have serious consequence—especially a man in my position."  Seeing I was close to panicking, he put the knife down and held his palms out like someone trying to calm down a hysterical mare.

"All right," I said, forcing my heart to act like a sane part of my body and slow down.” I understand.”

"Good." He picked the knife back up "Now then, get off the bed, and choose what punishment ye want?."

My mouth dropped open in horror. But I shut it again.  He thought he was being nice! He was treating me as if we were equals-- as if I were every bit as high ranking as him.  Granted, he couldn’t do that in public, but whatever everyone else thought, the Count’s firstborn son had evidently decided I really was highborn. But how was I supposed to pick a barbaric punishment? I don’t think I could conjure that level of masochism. It was insane! Deranged!

He sighed, exasperated.”Look, I know this tisn’t exactly pleasant conversation, and believe me when I say I’d rather be fondling yer white breasts in private rather than flaying them open with a whip with ye naked it front of everyone ye know...which is why I’m here.”  

I nodded. Welted flesh would need arnica and spruce sap boiled into a gel if I could get it.   A notch in my ear or nose probably couldn’t be repaired, but I could keep it from getting infected. These people viewed infection as a sign of guilt, and I intended to keep the possibility as far away as possible.  

“Ok,” I breathed “Any compound fractures or third degree burns are out.” The medical part of my brain was taking over, even though I felt like I was planning a crime scene. “I would prefer anything that is psychologically traumatizing vs physical, but if it has to be physical…” I paused shuddering “Then I suppose a whipping is probably my best bet.”  

I was more talking to myself, I’m sure the modern vocabulary was lost on him, but he looked at me not unsympathetically as he watched me struggle and try to rally.  “Unfortunately, I worry they’ll think whipping too common, that’s more for petty crime, not an unusual one like this.  And even if you’re not a lady, you look like one and your punishment has to fit the crime. There’s such a thing as justice.”

I had strong objections to this conversation on so many levels, but I wasn’t too illogical I couldn’t see the reason in it.

“You tell me then what you think.” I said.

He raised his eyebrows. "Well, I think I could manage hanging ye in the wimmers basket over the moat for a few days but I’d worry you’ll die from the elements….some do.”  He eyed me critically as if to judge my hardiness.  I wasn’t sure what my odds were with dehydration, but I really didn’t want to find out.

“How bout the dunking?” I said “What does that mean?”

“Never. No one ever survives that.” He said vehemently. “Ye’ll drown. They drop you in the moat with a stone tied to your ankle.”  

“Well I can swim, and if you gave me a knife... “ I said pointedly

“Ye can swim?” He looked like I’d just told him I could fly or walk on water.  “I’ll tell you what….I think the hot stones would be the best, I can make sure the water is more tepid than boiling.”

“Hot stones?” It was my turn to query.

“Yeah, do you not have that? You pluck stones from a boiling pot, and your hands are bandaged...if after a week you’re hands are healing then God has had mercy, but if they’re festering then he’s found ye guilty.”  

“You’re kidding.” I was trying to calculate the odds of infection setting into the burns was probably directly related to how dirty the bandages were. This whole thing was too barbaric for me to grasp. “I can’t...I can't do this.”

He grabbed me roughly by both arms. “Ye can and ye will.” He said giving me a small shake. My eyes welled up with tears, having reached their max capacity of insanity. In one swift motion he pulled me to his chest and held me tightly like I was a wounded bird. "You can, you have to." He whispered. 

Chapter 11

 

Source: http://www.mrsxerxes.com/blog-2/2016/12/12...

Nanowrimo Story- Chapter 7

 I had to slow down and let research and brainstorming catch up with the story, so the delay for this chapter was vexatious but necessary.  Diana Gabaldon has my utmost awe... I don't know how she does it.  

Chapter 7

I finally figured out what year it was.  It had been the friday before Nones and we were all in the chapel hall.  I had known the church held massive influence in the middle ages, but I hadn’t realized how little they realized the church had massive influence.  It would be like telling somebody from the 21st century there would eventually be written histories about how we worshipped our iphones.  In our minds we didn’t worship them at all, we barely even noticed our lives revolved around them.  It was the same way here.  The church wasn’t important, the church was merely life.

If I’d thought medieval women were as chaste, proper and modest as women were in the Victorian age, I was sadly mistaken. Women worked fields, ran guilds and got into such fights about theology, I wished I could record it and play for my gender studies Professor from my freshman year...

And that’s how I found myself jerking my head up in astonishment in chapel when the Priest put out his hand as a blessing for the feast of Nomes and said “In the year of our lord 1049, Eternal Father, we humbly offer Thee our poor presence, and that of the whole of humanity, from the…”

1049.  Did I know anything about that century? No, not really. Well that was anticlimactic. But I did think vaguely it was definitely before the bubonic plague (that was a relief) and it was certainly before the all of the fancy Renaissance Faire type stuff that first came to mind when I thought of castles and stuff.  No wonder it still felt like a biblical age...it practically was still the biblical age.  

I was sitting in the valetudinaria trying to make sense of what I was supposed to do with a square dark corridor with pallets all lined up.  What did the previous physicker know that I didn’t? A small boy Johanne called “Mon petit chou” but who everyone else called Guarin, came racing in, his eyes wide in excitement or fear, I wasn’t sure.  

“Come quick!”

“What happened?” I asked, grabbing the puny basket of medical supplies I’d managed to gather under the tutelage of Madame Gilfre.  

“...we were playing la poule” He dragged me along with him, going down a staircase I hadn’t known existed.  I would have added it to my map except it was now long gone and washed (if it had survived a washing), and I couldn’t bring myself to desecrate this new kirtle with wine doodles.  Oh what I wouldn’t give for paper… or even better, a computer.  

As soon as I saw the prostrate figure in the middle of a group of boys, my heart sank.  Forget the paper or computer...i would give my right eye for an ambulance. He held a balloon in his hand, or rather a sheep’s stomach that had been appropriated for balloon-like purposes.  A patch of blood soaked his thigh. At first i thought he was unconscious, but his eyes turned their glassy stare my way and I realized he was in shock.  

This was where it got tricky. Normally I would stabilize his spine, recheck his breathing and pulse, and then start cutting clothing looking for major injury.  But scissors were a luxury unheard of, I didn’t have a knife, and wool was a very difficult fabric to rip.  I thought all of this in the fraction of a second, before I realized my hands were already working.  I applied pressure with one hand and ripped off the linen shirt since that at least was simple enough and would give me more of an idea.

“Knife...surely one of you has one.” I kept my tone congenial and calm, no reason to freak the rest of the boys out more than they already were.  One of them handed me his knife as if he was solemnly making a most worthy sacrifice.  

With a quick twist I got the knotted cord around the waist cut, and I yanked the pants off. I was totally in that “in-the-moment” zone where every cell in my body was focused on the patient in front of me.  I was trying to talk myself into this being a minor injury, and it really wasn’t that bad now that I could see it.  A wooden stave had sliced open a pretty deep gash in the boy's leg and had finished it’s violent journey by being stuck firmly in the vastus lateralis  A good cleaning, stitches, tetanus shot and possible round of antibiotics and he wouldn’t even miss a day of school.  

...except there were no antibiotics or tetanus shot. Germ theory had yet to be discovered, and it was astonishingly difficult to thread a needle with sheep gut because the gut was all variable thicknesses. Plus, I’d need to get my patient to the valetudinaria somehow, procure a needle from Aimee’s sewing basket in the women’s drawing room, and send someone to beg precious sheep gut from Martén in falconry.   ...and of course hope it would all work.  

What should have been fifteen minutes of straightforward work, was more like running a 5k...backwards...in a dress.  Oh well, I was just grateful it wasn’t worse. I’d been having nightmares of holding people’s intestines in while screaming for tranexamic acid.

I saw the soldier...Nicolas out of the corner of my eye. I was busy navigating twenty small boys who were all trying very valiantly to help me carry their injured friend one hundred feet, up two flights of stairs through three rooms and down a passageway. Nicolas pushed his way through and mercifully did not ask any stupid questions. I gave him an A plus for his quick observation skills, because he swooped the correct child up in his arms and the rest fell in line behind him like ducklings.  I leaned up against the column on a landing and took sucked in some air.  I wasn’t as in shape as everyone else...having come from a place with these things called elevators. .

I found him in the valetudinaria with the boy on the mat, as he fumbled with the piece of shirt tied around the wound.  .

"Don’t touch that" I said, moving him out of the way before he could mess up my wound care.  

It was then I realized he was injured too.  Either that or my smaller patient had lost more blood than he possessed. .

“Have you been stabbed too?” I asked, pure astonishment overcoming any awkwardness or politeness.  

“Don’t worry mon chérie, it’s nothing.”  

I doubted very seriously this was the case, and so I ripped his shirt to reveal a long thin line of blood...awesome, I was going to need a lot more sheep’s gut.  

I turned to my audience of boys.  “Who can run the fastest?” asked, hoping this would result in an immediate competition.  

“I am! Me...me...me!” Came a chorus of voices.  

“Perfect” I made a mental list, “You and you, go to Madame Johanne and get me a bottle of cognac” The two boys scampered off and I pointed my finger at the next two.”You go to Martén and tell him Lady Matilda has need of two spools of his finest sheep’s gut. “  I turned to the last boy who I knew was the son of Matilda’s favorite maid.  “You…” I crouched down in front of him “Do you know how to sneak like a cat?”  He nodded, his eyes perking up thinking maybe he hadn’t been left out after all. “I need you to slip into the lady’s salon and get me a needle out of Mademoiselle Aimee’s sewing...oui?”   

He hesitated, weighing the odds if it was worth the whipping if he got caught, but pride and peer pressure won in my favor.  He nodded and disappeared.  

“I hope you had been already on your way up here?” I said in what I hoped was my best physician’s voice.  It was much easier to talk to male patients when they were wearing hospital gowns and you had the full weight of all that entailed.  It was a lot different when you were alone in a castle with one who smelled like sweat, leather and wood smoke (and wore a rather sinister sword).  

“Who gave you the keys?” He seemed unable to get over the fact I was here at all.  “I was coming up for some lavender salve Madame Gilfre keeps in the stone crocks.”  

“The Lady Matilda, if you want to take it up with her you’re more than welcome.”  I felt seriously underprepared for the position myself.  

“I will.” He said with such a note of authority, I thought he must not have run into Matilda very often if he thought he could talk her out of anything.

“Thoracic trauma...5mm deep, no arterial or organ involvement...fortyfive stitches I’d guess” I murmured as my fingers worked over him quickly, trying to ignore the quick intake of breath and goose bumps that formed under my touch. I looked up, he was looking at me with such a strange expression, I turned back to my other patient who appeared to be a much safer option.  Poor wee lad had fainted somewhere on the last staircase...not from blood loss I thought, but from the sight of his own blood. Apparently haemophobia wasn’t just relegated to more modern folk.

“Do you know the boy’s name?” I straightened the small skinny legs out and then sat on them, getting a good grip on the wooden stave, my other hand ready with a fistful of wool for bleeding.

“Josef’s boy.” He knelt down and held the boy’s shoulder’s down for me, which he shouldn’t have done.  A new stream of blood dripped down his chest and onto ‘Josef’s boy’.  My first year clinical instructor would have died.  

“Oh please stop, you’re hurt.” I said, knowing full well he wouldn’t.  

He laughed. “This is nay the worst scratch I’ve had..None of it’s killed me yet.”

I had dubious opinions about that, but ignored him and focused on the task at hand.  I yanked the wooden stave out quickly, and applied the wool dressing and pressure.  He let go of the boy and brushed the blood off with his hand, smearing it around his chest, making it look worse.  

Seriously, what I wouldn’t give for antiseptic swabs right now. I swallowed, feeling a bit queasy which was ridiculous considering I’d gotten over the sight of blood a long time ago.  

“You go on now.’  He nodded towards the door. “I’ll dress the boy’s leg and take him back to his parents.”  

“You can stitch?” I asked astonished.  I didn’t know when sewing people up became a thing, but I doubted very seriously they did it in this century.  

He looked more surprised I wasn’t instantly obeying him. “ Well It’s nay maiden embroidery or anything, but my skills usually stand up pretty well to abuse. Go on, I’m sure the lady needs attending or you have other things to do.”  

That he was so sure I would be of little use, made my blood boil.  

"Thank you, but I’m staying.”

He looked down at me and for once (at least around this place) I felt very small. He seemed astonished... not in an angry way, but as if he was slightly amused anyone dared disagree with him.  He was disconcertingly self assured for a soldier.  Wasn’t he used to being ordered about?

“You really have such a love for gore?” He asked. “Aren’t potions and spicy mixtures more your and Madame Gilfre’s forte?”

I had no idea where exactly Madame Gilfre’s skills began and ended, but I for one had spent an entire quarter in the ER stitching up everything my resident hadn’t wanted to do. ...I would stitch up this boy and I would stitch up his chest too, if it was the last thing I did.  

At that moment, my troop of helpers arrived back on the scene. There were a few moments of pure chaos as they immediately started pouring cognac down young Josef’s throat (which wasn’t my intended usage at all).  The poor kid came to, sputtering and coughing, limbs flailing about as I tried to grab his leg and calm him down before he injured himself further.  

‘Hush...shh...there, hold still” I said. I lined up my needle, gut and alcohol and thanked everyone profusely before ordering them out into the passageway.  

“Are you going to order me to leave too?” He asked, standing in front of me shirtless, bloody, arms crossed and a bemused expression on his face.  

“No, of course not.” I said crossly, “I still have to stitch you up too.”  

He threw back his head and let out a deep laugh at that. “And what if I won’t let you?”

“Oh you hush too.”  I needed to concentrate. The gut string was uneven and threading the needle in this light was going to take a fair bit of luck.  It wasn’t going to feel fun, but I had to pour a fair bit of cognac on the wound to hopefully kill any hint of incoming infection. Young Josef to his credit, whimpered but didn’t flail or thrash around.  Maybe the ingested cognac forced upon him by his young friends had helped.  


I finished and bandaged him up, cringing at the unsanitary linen strips I’d found in the supplies.  Hopefully the cognac was enough.  Maybe I could have a fire made up in here somehow, then I could boil things.  The castle was so smokey already, surely a little more wouldn’t kill us of carbon monoxide poisoning.  

Ok, deep breaths. Now for the hard part, stitching up this drat soldier’s chest. At least he seemed to have decided to let me do it. Young Josef was watching me with tearful wide eyes. Hopefully sir soldier man wouldn’t do anything too bad with a child watching?  I swallowed hard.

“I’m not going to hurt you.”

“I know.” Although I really didn’t know...he sat down on a stool, looking all the world like a bloody barbarian. As I started to pull the needle in and out of his skin though, he gave a sharp hiss.

“How in the world did this happen?” I asked, hoping to distract him from my work.  

“Just a small tussle with a...neighbor.”  

I hurrumphed at him, but he didn’t elaborate with any further details. Thirty nine stitches. I had been close.  He took out his knife helpfully at the end and cut the gut string.  I poured cognac over it my handiwork.

“Merde!”  

I wasn’t sure if this meant “why are you wasting decent liquor!” or “Damn that hurts” ...or maybe both.   

“Are you finished now woman?” Not waiting for an answer.  He stood up and pulled his bloody linen shirt over his head and strapped on his leather breastplate.  I cringed when it banged against his stitches, he didn’t.  

“I’ll take the boy back to his parents.”  

“No! You’ll rip open your stitches.”  I felt like I’d barely survived doing them once!

Castle rooms were so dimly lit, it was hard to read expressions but I do believe he rolled his eyes at me.

“Oh are you going to carry him down then?”  He asked.  

“Yes.” I said stubbornly. Or I’d figure out something. He didn’t stop me, but watched as I attempted to help young Josef limp towards the door. I was triumphant with how well we were managing when the poor kid stumbled over a higher stone sticking out in the passageway.  We would have pitched head first down the first set of stairs if the drat man hadn’t caught us.  

“I think you’ve proved your point.” He said as he pulled me towards him by my elbow.  

If Matilda could see me now, I’m sure she’d take the key back and throw up her hands in dismay. It was mortifying how difficult everything was for me to do.  I’m sure it was like watching a child attempt to act like an adult.  I felt so out of my element.  How would Madame Gilfre have gotten the child home?  

As if he read my mind, he said “I’ll send Stefan up tomorrow...he helps Madame Gilfre.”

He grinned. "If you don’t let me take yon Josef, I’ll have no choice but to take the both of thee over me shoulder.”  

I snorted.

“I suppose that means you’re agreeable?" I wanted to protest and remind the damn man he had thirty nine stitches in his chest, but he didn’t wait for an answer. He picked up Josef like he was a sack of potatoes and steered me in front of him.  His hand was still firmly grasped on my elbow.

We popped out into the sunshine and ran smack into the herald I knew only as “Hairypants Henry”.

“There you are mi’lord” He looked surprised to see me there. “You’re with the demens girl?”  

“Ach, she’s not demens… just shy.” He threw a wry grin my direction… the woman who’d just nearly sat on him while sewing him up like a stuffed fowl. Shy indeed.  Who said they weren’t fond of sarcasm in the Middle Ages?

“Yer needed sir, Old Galen’s about to behead Turts and Goffrey over what happened this afternoon.’  

I raised my eyebrows, a minor skirmish with a neighbor hmm?

“Saddle Rouge, I’ll ride over and try to beat some reason into the whole idiot lot.”  

“You can’t go anywhere!”  Not caring that I wasn’t part of the conversation. “You literally split your chest wide open. You need to be in a hospital… or at least in bed… “

But neither of them paid the least bit attention to me.

“Are you too hurt to ride?”  

“Oh aye,” He thrust young Josef unceremoniously into Hairypants arms “Take the lad to his mam and I’ll meet you at the stables.”  

It wasn’t until I was standing all alone in the waning autumn sunshine, a bee buzzing on a clump of dandelion by the stone archway that I’d realized Hairypants Henry had called the soldier Nicolas “My Lord”? 

                                                              Chapter 8

To find our what happens next, vote in the poll! (and pray the fates let me write it)  

Nanowrimo Story- Chapter 6

Thirteen thousand, eight hundred and twenty seven words down...thirty six thousand one hundred and seventy three left to go (to win Nanowrimo)!  Progress was made today.  Nicolas is thusly named Nicolas. And I dropped some more crumbs about the red dress.  Read on and vote so we can all find out what happens next! 

 

Chapter Five

 

Foreign dignitaries were flooding into Graventsteen from all over the place.  France in my mind meant Paris... the Eiffel Tower, decadent food and cutting edge fashion, but apparently in the eleventh century it meant world super power.  I did have to admit, my vision of the Middle Ages was much more famine filled and I don’t know...cold and dark?  But France was the optimistic golden child that lived in the sun with wine and food...and apparently enough energy left over for all manner of manner of music and poetry.  

Every night the hall was filled with some new bard who had tales to spin and melodies to weave.  The native castle crowd seemed used to such events, but the visiting nobility couldn’t get enough of it. One night a Spanish princess laughed and laughed until she started crying and had to be carried to her bedroom.  Four servants, one for each limb.  Her blacked striped stockings and red kirtle plain for everyone to see.  

Also?  I had this idea half formed idea that the poor people worked hard, while the rich people sat around and ate bon bons or something.  Maybe that was true somewhere, but it wasn’t true at Graventsteen.  Matilda would put any CEO to shame.  I mean, I was used to running thirty six hour shifts at well organized 21st century hospitals and even I was impressed at the level of organization.  We all pitched in to ready rooms...and even build new rooms.  A whole new wing was being added in lieu of the upcoming wedding.  What was the saying “many hands make work light.”?

One day Matilda and I found ourselves hanging tapestries in one of the newly finished rooms.  I wasn’t much alone with her.  The nature of my suspicious heritage and rank (everyone was as confused as I was, as to where I came from and who exactly I was) meant that I wasn’t exactly at the bottom or the totem pole, but I wasn’t bosom buddies with the top either.  I decided to take the opportunity to thank her for the invaluable fabric she invested in covering my skin.  If I ever made it back to the twenty first century, I would never take my closet for granted again.  I guess I hadn’t realized when you saw paintings of long flowing robes in a museum it represented a year’s crop of flax or that a simple cloak meant someone had to chase sheep around and babysit them (and then sharpen a knife, pin them down and wrestle wool off them).  I mean I knew that, but I didn’t know that.

Well now I did, so as I stood on my tiptoes while Matilda leaned over my head and pounded a mallet into the wall, I decided to take advantage of our rare solitude.  

“I’m most grateful for the clothing mi’lady.” I said around the wooden wedges I was holding in my mouth for her.  

“Clothing?” She sounded bored and somewhat surprised. “What did I do?”

“You sent some clothing down with that young soldier….not that I was ungrateful for the donation from the abbey.”  

“I didn’t send you any sech thing, although I should have I suppose.  Wait… were you wearing a red mantle before?” Her sudden sharpness pierced my rambling thoughts.  

“Well yes, that day on the road, when we first met...”

She stepped off the stool she was on and clapped her hand to her forehead. “Where is that red mantle, do you know?”  It seemed to be a matter of great importance to her although I couldn’t imagine why.  It was far rattier and older than anything she would be interested in, but I did have it.  The patched hosiery and kirtle had gone to wherever Madame Gilfre had seen fit (the old woman and I had been like two peas in a pod since met the other evening) but I’d kept the dress.  Even though it was old, it felt like the only thing still connecting me to my own time.  Full confession, I had all kinds of fantasies about putting it on and somehow reappearing back in my house in San Luis Obispo.  Unfortunately, so far, every time I put it on though, it had been exactly that: fantasy.

“I still have it… I wouldn’t throw it away.” I assured her, thinking that ‘waste not, want not’ was where this conversation was going.  

“Maybe I should lock it up in one of the portmanteus.” I got the impression she was trying to keep her voice intentionally nonchalant and calm. She gave the tapestry we had just hung a whack, and a cloud of dust came out making us both cough.  

"Come by my boudoir tonight," Matilda said conversationally, “and bring the old red thing.” she picked up the next tapestry with strong, calloused hands.  I had noticed she didn’t shrink in the slightest from work or trouble… a trait that would probably serve her well when married to William of Normandy I thought dryly.  

“Ok...er...yes mi’lady” I said.  

I had promised Aimee and another girl Melisande I would help them comb the batch of wool we’d just died with the red gill’s I’d brought.  It was one of the many hundreds of little steps that went into Matilda’s wedding attire and I didn’t feel like I could skip out on it.  Everyone was so stressed about getting it down in time.

So I arrived a bit out of breath and without the red dress.  I’d been thinking about it and had decided I really would rather keep it near me.  

“Madame Johanne says that you’re keeping company with Mistress Gilfre these days, you mended the stable boy’s hand?”

“It just needed some binding and a bandage.” I said, trying not to make a big deal of it.  I’d had enough strange looks in the stables when I’d asked for sheep gut and a needle.  

She smiled. “Maybe not, but it does take a fair bit of skill to do embroidery on human skin I’d think.”  

Drat.  She’d already heard about the particulars then.  

“And I heard you also delivered Mrs. Berger of a most unfortunate tumor.”

“She had gallstones.” I said “....nothing very difficult.” I amended when I saw Matilda’s confused expression.

“Are you a physicker then?” She asked. I remembered Nicolas’s soldier had asked me the same thing and I didn’t know how to answer.  I hadn’t quite figured out the line yet between science and superstition and I really wanted to steer clear of any superstitious wonderings that might get me into trouble.  I figured I had enough mystery surrounding me as it was, being a disenfranchised woman from a small manor.  I still hadn’t figured out why people assumed they knew my father or where I was from.  Especially since the Count himself didn’t seem all to sure who I was.

“No, what does a physicker do?” I asked, risking the shame of not knowing something obvious.

Matilda gave a surprised start. “Why you’ve been spending nearly every day with one. Madame Gilfre is the best in Gravensteen...and probably all of Flandres too.”  

"She’s your healer?” I asked, somewhat surprised. For some reason I couldn’t imagine Matilda and Madame Gilfre in the same room together.  “She seems very competent”.  Which was putting it mildly.  She’d put most internal medicine specialists to shame. Yesterday I’d seen her pull a croupy child back from a spasm that would have surely led to intubation at my hospital.  I still wasn’t sure how she’d done it.

“Yes she is, but I see you’ve forgotten the red mantle!”  She finally realized my arms were empty.  

A straightened up and shook my head. “It’s so dirty mi’lady, I didn’t think you really wanted it with your things.”  

She eyed me as I said this as if sizing me up.  

“What if I ordered you to go get it right now.”  If she was testing me, she’d probably win, but I’d already decided I wasn’t going to let it go without a fight.

“I would tell you to let me clean it first.”  

“And after it was cleaned?”

“Then you might want it mended as well.”  

She stared at me, then dropped her gaze pretending to be super entranced the next tapestry we needed to hang.  She was repairing a picture of a boy in green breeches with a sickle in one hand and a bolt of lightening in the other. It looked very Norse mythology to me, and I reminded myself these swamps combined with centuries of ever pillaging Vikings had created a race of exceptionally stubborn people.   

"Oh, I see.” And I had no doubt she did see, though what, I wasn’t sure. “May I ask where you got the mantle?” She asked.  

“It was given to me by an old woman.” Which was true in a manner of speaking.  

“She didn’t perchance have the name Madame Gilfre?”  

I couldn’t tell if she was joking or not.  “No?” I said, answering honestly which was what I usually did when I was caught off guard.  It was a bad habit.

I’d been over that day at the fair so many times in my head I wasn’t sure now what was fact and what was fiction.  I was pretty sure though, Madame Gilfre and her arthritic foot had not been featured anywhere in my twenty first century world.  That I was even contemplating the question was beyond madness.  I wanted to hold out hope that I would somehow someway get back, but considering I didn’t know how I got here, did nothing to give me hopeful odds.  

All I remembered was that I’d put on the dress, there had been a loud crash, and I’d gone outside to find myself in medieval France with a raging concussion.  It was possible, I supposed that the dress’d had something to do with it.  I didn’t know if it had anything to do with the old proprietor or not, maybe it didn’t even have anything to do with the dress, but it was the only unusual thing that happened in my schedule.  I was a creature of habit. I’d get up, eat cheese and olives for breakfast, go to hospital, and study.  There didn’t seem any room in there for explaining my reality right now.  

It had been so wholly cataclysmal, I was actually considering maybe there was some force at work I didn’t understand.  I wouldn’t go so far to call it magic.  I’d spent too many years studying medicine and cold hard science to believe in magic like Harry Potter or something.  But a niggling thought in the back of my head reminded me that at one point everyone thought Galileo was bonkers for thinking the world was round and revolved around the sun.  Maybe what had happened to me would make sense to some future generation.  Not that it mattered what I believed or didn’t believe.  As much as I wanted to be back home, the truth of the matter was I was sitting in the boudoir of a little person who was likely the most powerful eighteen year old female alive in the western world.  ...and she was waiting for an answer.  

“Do you not like Madame Gilfre?” I asked. It seemed that Matilda was definitely driving at something, but what I couldn’t tell.  

“No, of course I like her…” She started to say something then stopped.  “...I am not sure what to make of you Emilie of Durand who knows not French and wouldn’t know a zegedine if she stepped on one.”

Well yes, all that was definitely true.  I held my breath, was I discovered?

“I might as well tell you...I don’t know why it’s so discomfiting.”  She handed me the corner of the next tapestry because of course there was no such thing as just sitting around idly.  That would have been as preposterous as using toilet paper.  

“...I’ve seen that red mantle of yours before.”  

That made me pay closer attention.  I felt like something creepy had just put a hand on my shoulder and handed me a missing puzzle piece.  My astonished look must have convinced her of something.

“You weren’t at the Chateau de Domfront for the feast of fools?” She asked sharply.  

“No, of course not...you know I wasn’t!” I didn’t know where that last part came. Matilda looked surprised at my audacity too.

“I don’t trust you.”  She said.

Apparently now we were being honest with each other.  

“The feeling is mutually, I assure you.” I didn’t add that I couldn’t trust anybody, whereas she had such an intense network of handmaidens and servants she was like a long armed octopus controlling every piece of gossip and industry in Gravensteen.  

She laughed, “Fair enough.” She shook the dust out of her dress.  There was a smudge of soot on her nose leftover from whatever work she’d been doing, and it contrasted so much with the richness of the gold and blue birds woven into her gown I couldn’t quite come to terms this barely grown half fairy, half executive she-beast. She also wasn’t done with her surprises either.  

“Madame Gilfre is leaving.”  

“What?” This was astonishing as I’d just been cataloging stomach roots with her this morning. “Why?”

“I thought we agreed not to trust each other.” She said coolly.

Fine. I nodded my head in acknowledgement.  I didn’t want to be at odds with Matilda, but I also wasn’t going to give up the red dress… at least not until I knew what she wasn’t telling me.  

“Madame Gilfre is quite effervescent in her praises of your skills.”  She took her enormous ring of keys out of some deep pocket I hadn’t realized existed. Seriously, people around here carried so much stuff all the time, they were like pack mules.  She took off a small bronze key and handed it to me.  “That is the key to the valetudinaria.  Madame Gilfre was hoping you’d look after things while she was gone.”

I didn’t know what to say, it wasn’t posed as a question, and no wasn’t an allowable answer.  This much I knew.  But how much danger was I putting myself into by saying yes? Despite all of my map drawing, list making and studying, I could still barely eat a meal without committing some major faux pas.  “Yes mi’lady.”

Oh, and there were all the foreign dignitaries and noblemen coming in from Rome and Gaul bringing in all kinds of new viruses and microorganisms to an already ingrown microbiome.  It was a recipe for disaster.  

But like it or not, it looked like Gravensteen had a new physicker.

Chapter Seven

To find out what happens next, vote because I need to know too! 

Nanowrimo Story- Chapter 5

The banquet/matilda/red dress scene tied with the old woman/herbs/Becon scene so I'll write both. But I hit a huge wall when I realized I absolutely could not write a believable character named "Becon" I mean, really. It looks like "Bacon".  One scene with the word "salty" in it and I'd never recover from laughter.  So my "Jamie" character needs a new name.  I replaced it with "Nicolas" for tonight, but I'm taking suggestions if that doesn't seem to work (I suck with names...Jim named all of our children).  

 

Chapter Five

 

It turned out being in the wrong time and place in history was more lonely than full of intrigue. You didn’t realize how much you depended on all of the little things to connect as human beings. Put me in a room with a deaf patient from Calcutta and in five minutes we would be bonding over microbreweries and flash mob videos on youtube.  Put me in a room with another twenty two year old female right now and I sat quietly in the corner while she played stoolball with her three children.  

 

I couldn’t even figure out how to use the restroom.  Oh, they were easy enough to find! Your nose led you straight to them no matter where you were inside Gravensteen. It was the wiping and hand washing I couldn’t reconcile and couldn’t discard.  I’d taken to tying a satchel of anise to my belt which I rubbed between my hands with a few drops from the bottle of vinegared wine I’d hidden behind a statue of St. Theobald (who I thought probably wouldn’t be thrilled by his post sainthood bathroom assignation...poor guy).

 

I’d drawn myself a map of the castle on the the underside of my kirtle...in wine.  The basement had three rooms for wine (which is where my map making and antibacterial handsoap aspirations  began).  I always wondered how they fed everyone without grocery stores. The answer was, they had grocery stores, they were called castle coffers.  The larders were on the next floor up and they were more like pantries that housed the immediate foodstuffs. The Comte Himself also lived on the first floor in the center like a spider in a web.  It was all really quite logical.  Valuables and the lord were ensconced on the first story with kitchens and common rooms tucked in like pillows.  Everyone else called the second floor home.  Boys had their own wing, girls had their own wing and servants had their own wing (and never the three shall meet). Matilda had her own spider web going on, with her rooms in the center of the girls wing and everyone else’s room rippling off of it.  I was such a far off ripple I was more like glimmer of a shadow.  Maybe I was the dead fly at the edge of the web.  

 

Madame Johanne didn’t seem much interested in my help (probably because she’d asked me to cure the bread and I had to ask the scullery maid what she meant, which ended with the scullery maid getting her ears boxed and my banishment from the lower kitchens).  I may have been forgotten entirely if it was for Nicolas

I’d run into the blonde haired soldier in room off of a room off of one of the wasting rooms. Unlike my quarters, this small room had long windows with enough light coming in for me to try to mend the holes in my shabby attire.  It had been a thorny problem of mine for days.  I didn’t want to ask for new clothes, and no one was offering any, and the ones I had would quite literally leave me naked by Christmas if I didn’t do something to keep them from falling off me.

I’d found the room by accident on one of my map making treks.  It had an inch of dust and cobwebs so I felt pretty confident no one had been in there for at least a year.  Since I couldn’t very well mend my clothes while wearing them, and I didn’t dare show my lack of medieval sewing abilities, I decided this dust blizzard room was my best bet. Which is how I was found with bare legs, no dress, and one completely bare arm out of my kirtle by none other than that soldier I hadn’t seen since the first day. Sun glinted off his leather frock and blonde beard. I froze, needle poised in mid air. He glanced down at my naked thigh, then my naked shoulder, laughed then turned around and walked out.  

Well then.

I had been about to leap to my feet apologizing profusely as I attempted to stuff all my limbs back in their proper casings, but his laugh had triggered a wave of fury I hadn’t realized I possessed. I was doing the darn-freaking best I could under the circumstances, not that he knew that.  I stabbed my needle back in sleeve of my dress and vowed to finish my mending even if he brought all of his men in to laugh too (Lord have mercy).

But I didn’t see him again until two days later when I was practically skipping for joy because Aimee had asked me to gather two buckets of red gill mushrooms with which to make dye. I was knee deep in sow thistle with my hands on a particularly good clump of fungi, when I saw him striding across the small clearing beside me.  I lost my head entirely and sank to the ground hoping he’d not notice the overgrown ratty foreigner with stained red hands.  

No luck.  He came straight towards me.  

“Lady Durand” he said, I noticed he didn’t bow or show any of the other signs of chivalry everyone else seemed wont to parade.  I wasn’t sure if he was more arrogant than others, or it was just me he had so little regard for.  I stood awkwardly.

“Yes...sir..” I realized I didn’t know his name.  

He wasn’t offering it, instead he thrust a wool bundle into my arms.  “The most estimable Lady Matilda sent these for you.”  

I sensed a note of sarcasm on his voice, I wondered why? I shook out the what I assumed to be something else Aimee wanted done.  It wasn’t.  It was a blue kirtle of soft linen, a deep yellow tunic and a brown wool cloak.

Clothes?

I had been threatened, assaulted, questioned and effectively banished. I had successfully not been burned as a witch or locked up in a loony bin. I had gone without food, not spoken to a human being for days at a time, and had memorized (thus far) seven hundred and thirty two ways to walk, talk and carry myself in public.  I should have been plenty up to the task of accepting a bundle of raiment with at least some measure of control.  But no, my lip quivered and my eyes glassed over despite my stern inward lecture to the contrary.  

“Thank you” I said, keeping my head down to hide my face, but it was too late.  I felt a finger under my chin, forcing my head up to face him.  

“Is someone treating you poorly?” The words were so calm and commanding, tears began to slide down my cheeks in total rebellion.  I wiped them away, and straightened by back.

“No, everyone is fine... I’ll be alright... It’s nothing...please forgive me.”

"Ah, is it your father then?" His voice had that deep reverberating quality that sounded sympathetic just because it had won the genetic lottery in attractiveness.  I made the mistake of looking up and making eye contact. Next thing I knew, I’d lost control entirely.

"No...I mean yes… I mean… I don’t know!" Overcome by the exhaustion of keeping everything together for the last few months, I gave up and collapsed sobbing like I hadn’t since...well ever really.

The poor guy (to his credit), held me awkwardly as I cried.  He gingerly patted my head as if I were an injured hound or hawk rather than a strange girl.  Instead of holding me at arm's length or calling for his loathsome men, he held me tight, muttering soothing ‘shhhh’ sounds that didn’t at all match his clanking swords, knives and leather person. I gave up trying to pull myself together, I surrendered to the grief I’d been holding in check for days...months.  

Eventually I came to my senses and realized what I was doing.  He was a soldier...and more importantly a man in an era before male female friendships were a cultural norm.  I pushed myself away, apologizing profusely.  

I dashed away the tears with the sleeve of my ratty kirtle and was nearly overcome all over again. Ugh, it was mortifying.

“I’m sorry...er...beg penance.”  I couldn't think of the proper way to apologize as I backed away from him.  His high cheekbones were stained with color, but he otherwise was the picture of composure.  

“You don’t need to be scared of me.” As if this ought to be self evident.  I didn’t dare argue with him, although I was a little offended he thought there was so little chance he’d do anything untoward with me.


Voices came down the dirt path that led from the fore building.

“Nicolas man… are ye with some tirlirly-puffkin?”

A man in heraldry clothing and a mail shirt popped into view.  I no longer thought of anyone as dirty or unkempt...it had become the new normal.  Besides, the pot couldn’t call the kettle black.  

Nicolas. So that was his name...or christian name at least…which wasn’t much helpful when you came down to it. I still didn’t know his rank or address.

I didn’t quite have Aimee’s two buckets of red gills, but I didn’t think it wise to stick around here any longer, with a quiet curtsey (which I now knew how to do) I scampered back up the path towards the fore gate.

“If you’re trying to off thyself, I might recommend a different strain.” It was a croaky old lady sitting on the clay stairs to one of the many indiscriminate cottages that blended into the landscape.  Startled, I looked down at my bucket...realization dawning slowly.  

“Oh no, madam..” I was horrified, “... It’s for dye.” She beckoned me towards her, and I was either too stunned or too starved for conversation to disobey.

“You’ll not be wanting red gills for dye, it’s the pink poxies that hold fast the most you just have to add a touch of vinegar.” I noticed she had her foot propped up and swathed in bandages...or rather, I mainly noticed the bandages were a shocking shade of white hitherto unseen except in Matilda’s attire.  

“May I inquire after thy foot?” I said the words slowly, going over them in my head to make sure they came out right.  

“Oui, it’s nothing, just a touch of the ache and euel.”

Arthritis likely or gout perhaps? “Do you mind if I look at it.” My fingers were twitching to do what they were trained to do, despite the unconventional setting.  

She eyed me sharply.  “Usually it’s me asking that question mi’lady.” But she tilted her leg in my direction as if to offer it as an exam of my abilities.  

I unwrapped the bandages gently. They’d been holding a poultice that reeked of camphor and peppermint.  Her foot was gnarled and twisted, with minor edema and stiffness.  Definitely arthritis, and no wonder. No ice, no ibuprofen, no way to manage it with diet or exercise.  I set her foot down feeling useless.  

“Giving up so quickly.”  She sounded disappointed but not surprised.  

I lifted my chin “Have you tried gelatin?” I asked, trying to remember what they called it “...aspic?”

She nodded her head, a little more pleased.  “Aye, good…” she seemed to be waiting expectantly for more, so I went on.

“If you have turmeric, try that with a little cayenne, and avoid tomatoes.” I was totally exhausting all of my folk medicine...mainly gleaned from Natasha who was the resident health nut.  Honestly I couldn’t see how her bones or skin were holding themselves together at all, I didn’t think anything short of a triplicate was going to offer any measure of relief.  

“I think I’m a leetle too far gone to care about the tomatees, but you’ll do mi’lady...you’ll do...”  She trailed off lost in thought. “What does Mistress Johanne have you doing, or are you solely in the attendance of The Ladyship?”

“Gravensteen is large and I am small.”  I said.  

“Not too small, methinks” She laughed “Tales of your grand height have gotten as far as Barges Hollow. “  I blushed, maybe I wasn’t so inconspicuous as I thought.

“Meet me here after the morning sup my dear.” She rewrapped her foot in its poultice, smoothing and tucking here and there with skill that would have made an orthopedic specialist jealous.  Finally, she was finished and eyed me with such a stentoriously piercing look I was reminded suddenly of the proprietor of the photo booth at the festival.  

"Be careful…” She had several chins and they all waggled as if in agreement “...there are those who know who you are.”  

“Who I am?” I said “Besides a misfortuned stranger with possible leanings of madness?” I couldn’t keep in the bitterness and frustration.

"I did not say otherwise” she answered evenly “But if I were you, I’d mebbe not stay here too long.”  

“I haven’t anywhere else to go!” Surely she knew that unless she was completely out of the loop, and she appeared to be anything but that.  

“That,” she said “is unfortunate.”  The great bell rang, sound reverberating through the walls, calling the arrival of evening and duties within the castle.  She dismissed me with a nod, though I wanted to stay and argue with her.  

The herald,  who’d attended the soldier Nicolas, found me walking back to the castle.”

“You shouldn’t be walking out here unattended mi’lady.”

What, because there might be people like you about? I thought, but didn’t say aloud.  

“My lord says it’s not safe.”

Apparently for me, nothing was safe.  

 

Chapter Six

To find out what happens next, help me nail down Matilda's brother's name so I can write the dress and banquet scene without cringing!

 

Nanowrimo Story- Chapter 4

Whew...this one was hard.  Like Emilie is prone to doing, I had at least 20 tabs on three different windows going...all in an attempt to keep it as real feeling as possible.  Enjoy! 

 

Chapter Four

The Count’s office was less impressive than the rest of the castle, but that was only because the castle was like ten hospitals hooked to each other with no helpful signs in three languages or maps saying “you are here”. If you could judge the personality of a person by their most intimate room, then the Count of Flanders was a logical statistician in a stark kind of way that didn’t hint at the excessive opulence which would later define the nobility.  This harshness probably didn’t bode well for me. I think I would have preferred the detached frivolity I imagined fancy lords and ladies having, better to slide under the radar.  I had a feeling there would be no ha’ha-ing here.  Gravensteen was the name Aimee told me when we came through the South gates, and it was an apt description, they were all as serious as the grave.  I’d been whisked up to this room without a maid, bath or wardrobe change which flew in the face of every novel I had ever read (which I know was ridiculous, but novels and movies were really my only reference at this point...I was a lowly med student, not a history PhD).

I was standing alone because the rest of the girls had carried Matilda off to bed.  I wanted to follow them to make sure she didn’t need any further medical attention, but I was stopped by a half dozen soldiers who weren’t carrying fake swords and hadn’t bothered to wipe the old blood off the knives that hung casually on leather straps across their chests.  I’m sure it was sheep’s blood, or something equally mundane I told myself.  Right?

A dark blonde soldier seemed to be the presiding decision maker.  He wasn’t quite as tall as William had been, but his shoulders were broader and he had the same menacing “I’m in charge” look, and I took an involuntary step backwards with visions of ravaging kisses and mud puddles in my head.  

“Come.” He had said, and I didn’t dare say no.  I could only hope I wasn’t being taken to some dungeon or some room to be molested.  My feet turned and padded obediently along with dirty wool clad men who smelled like sheep and unwashed testicles, even though I really would have preferred to sit down and fall apart. Unfortunately I’d already learned life didn’t work that way.  If I could have hit the pause button or quit, I would have done it when I was an eight year old standing under a pop up tent in the rain, throwing cheap Costco roses into a hole in the ground where my mother’s coffin lay waiting to be covered up with dirt.  

“Wait here.” The keys were roughly made, but solid iron, the circle they hung on was as thick as my thumb. It struck me how heavy it must have been, that even keys which only did one thing, were more cumbersome than my phone which did everything. In this age you had to wear so much stuff.   The blonde captain (or lieutenant or whatever he was) looked furious about something, but he remained scrupulously stoic as he led me into the inner study. He must be pretty high up if he had keys to his Lordship’s private office.  I waited politely, not daring to move from the spot he pointed to, but I couldn’t help ask on his way out. “Wait! how do I address...er..his lordship?”  

His mouth may have crinkled into the barest hint of amusement, but if it did, he erased it too fast for me to say for sure.  “You may call him ‘my most esteemable Lord Comte de Flandres’ “

Oh was that all? Sheesh. I really wanted to ask what was to become of me, but I was sure he wouldn’t know, and I didn’t think I could credibly get the words out without sounding as terrified as I felt.  

I thought he was going to stand guard over me like some sort of menacing bronze warrior, but he turned heel and marched out. The heavy wooden door barely sent a tremor through the stone floor...that’s how thick and big this beast of a castle was.

“She looks more like a whore than demens.”

“Mebbe she’s both.”  

“Shet your mouth Gosse, I’ll not let ye talk that way about someone I plan on stickin’ me cock into later”  this casual declaration was followed by muffled hoots and laughter.  

“Whatta ye mean, puteresse are the only kind yeh ever get.”

“...and they make him pay double yeh know, because his hoisere smell so bad.”

“Well you’re nen expert never having rutted anything but a sheep yeself.”  

I shifted my weight from one side to the other, nervous at the openly lascivious conversation going on a door’s width away.  

“Shut up, the lot of you.” came a firm reply.  “Nobody’s touching her.”

“Oh, keepin her fer yourself… never share the good stuff.”

“...it’s that baby deer innocent thing she’a got... ticklin’ yer bullocks, eh?”

There was a dull thud, and everything stayed quiet after that. I was pleased to note at least someone out there didn’t hold to rape, but I would have been a lot more at ease if I could have assessed exactly how serious and rampant sexual crimes were in this time period.  I tried to remember what Natasha had said (she being the resident anthropology expert in our group), but it was hopeless. I did know beyond a shadow of a doubt, I’d take a fast walk out one of these high windows before I let myself be taken by that group of men out there.  I shivered and swallowed bile.  I could almost  feel the epinephrine and cortisol reaching apoplectic levels in my bloodstream.  Too much more of this, and it wouldn’t matter what happened to me. I needed to calm down and fast.  The human body could only physiologically handle so much stress before it shut down involuntarily...and I needed it to stay voluntary.  

And that’s how the his most holy excellent esteemable lordship Comte de Flandres found me, sucking in great gulps of air and doing the yoga “tree” pose, patched kirtle, tattered red dress and all.  

He cocked an eyebrow, and in my flurry to regain my composure, I bowed deeply like I’d learned from my childhood violin teacher.  Halfway down I belatedly  remembered I probably should have curtsied.  Did they curtsy in the Middle Ages or was that more of a Baroque thing?  Gah.

“Well mademoiselle, you must tell me of this charming custom.” He said laughing.  “Or are you too demens to use your tongue?”

“Uh, no sir...I mean your lordship.” I said forgetting entirely what I was supposed to call him.  

“Your father said you were a great belle, but he should have also disclosed you’re touched in the head.”  He circled around me like a hawk surveying its prey, trying to decide if it was worth diving in.  “But I think perchance you’re not crazy, just foreign?”  

There was a dangerous gleam in his eye, as I tried to discern which was worse...being foreign or crazy.  

“No your excellency…”  During my impromptu yoga I had decided a childhood illness and life of seclusion was probably my best bet.  What did they call polio before they knew it was polio?

“...I was a weak child, and not able to leave my quarters.  I suffered from ...Apoplexy of the Anterior Horns.”  I held my breath, waiting for him to laugh, but either he was familiar with the name or he didn’t want to reveal his ignorance.  

“And your father hired no tutors, you had no servants?”  

“Our Manor was not rich. My mother, she was English and had...opinions.”  I said delicately, hoping he would read between the lines and fill it in with something that made sense to him.  

“Ah” He nodded as if he could picture a English woman doing this.  It didn’t seem like he was falling for it entirely, but whatever he was thinking, he hadn’t tossed me out...yet..

“I will honour your father’s last will, my sincéres condoléances” He stroked his chin, “But I must warn you…” He leaned forward and I saw where Matilda got her steely demeanor. “.. if I find you’re not what you say, or if you’re really a diseased ratiere in the brain, I will not hesitate to execute judgement for the good of de Flandres. Oui?”

“Yes your excellency.” I nodded respectfully. Not wanting to risk saying anything that would incriminate me more. I made a mental note to start a list. There would be categories. Food vocabulary, horse vocabulary, sheep vocabulary, terms of address, indoor customs, outdoor customs, female vocabulary, male vocabulary. I would be extensive and it would be glorious even if I had to write it on the floor with a damn piece of charcoal and memorize it like it was anatomy lab finals.

He called out “Becon!”

“Yes mi’lord.” The blonde soldier instantly appeared. “Take mademoiselle Emilie to Matilda’s quarters and tell her to have her things put in the third bedroom of the charté .”

I didn’t dare tell them I had no things. My presence seemed to be hanging by a mere thread as it was.  I hastily bowed, cringing inwardly at how awkward it all was.  I’d spent a large part of my life working very hard not to stick out like a sore thumb. Now this? It was like one of those nightmares where you show up to school naked, but in this case it wasn’t one big thing, but hundreds of little things I was doing wrong every thirty seconds.  

“And make sure she’s given an treacle draught and bathed in the white mare’s urine. I won’t have her bespoiling the household if she is demens...or diseased.”  

Horse urine? I thought with dismay.  Treacle?  

The soldier grimly took me by the elbow and steered me out into the passageway where the rest of his men were still waiting for us. I braced myself for more bawdy comments, but they behaved themselves minus the random muttering about babysitting wimmin.”  

Thankfully they turned me over to Madame Johanne whose exact job I was unsure about.  She didn’t look like your standard bustling head housekeeper, but she seemed to have a fair level of authority within the castle and I could have thrown my arms around her neck and wept.  Of course that was before she poured a bucket of horse piss over my head.  If i had any visions of keeping 21st century standards of cleanliness, all of those pipe dreams went out the window as I wrung the strong smell of ammonia out of my hair and fantasized about the technological brilliance of terry cloth.  I didn’t get new clothes either although i did get a pair of hosiery that were darned and mended so many times I wasn’t sure what their original color was.  

Surprisingly it turned out to have a positive affect, as people were smiling at me and making eye contact now.  Apparently all one needed to do was smell like animal waste in order to fit in.  Who knew.   There was a wide moat around one side of the castle. On the way in I had turned up my nose and made a mental note to assume there was giardia and other parasites in the water, but now I was reversing that snobbishness and calculating the earliest possible swim I could take. Fully clothed.  

It was my assumption I would eat wherever the servants ate, so I stuck close to Madame Johanne for fear I would get lost and they’d find my skeleton in a few hundred years. I could have done with an IV of electrolytes right now, but would settle for anything in the form of hydration and sustenance. I hadn’t eaten anything much since the funnel cake this morning...whoa...had that been this morning? Impossible.  For a second dizziness overcame me again, and I clutched the rough hewn table in the secondary kitchen where Johanne was trying to juggle giving me a tour while yelling at some poor girl for preserving garlic incorrectly.  She cut a side glance at me, pursed her lips and set me down.  A second later someone pressed a warm mug in my hand and ordered me to drink.  I think I was expecting coffee, and nearly choked when I got a blast of spicy greasy broth and piece of feather got stuck in my teeth. Well then, beggars couldn’t be choosers. I guzzled it down. My paleo friends back at home would be so impressed with me right now.  

“There you are!” Aimee sounded surprised.  What, she wasn’t expecting to find the demens girl in the lower kitchen drinking feathers and smelling of horse urine?  I wanted to laugh hysterically.  “They’re waiting for us in the upper hall.”

We?” It didn’t compute.  

“Yes, you idiot… the prayers can’t be read until everyone is there. Father Pierre is very scrupulous.”  

“Oh, but...can’t I just stay here? I don’t think I’m… suitable for dinner.”  

She looked at me like I’d grown three heads.  Ok ok, i thought, I’m coming. I’d added mandatory dinner to my master list.  

The blonde haired soldier was not in the great hall I noted. But everyone else was.  The Comte himself was at the head. I recognized some of the girls, and a few of the people I’d run into in the stairways and passages. There was a seat next to his Lordship that was empty.  I wondered if that belonged to his wife or Matilda.  As if to answer me, Matilda swept in.  She (lucky girl) had changed and her hair had been washed and re braided.  There was a fiery glint in her eye though, and I knew she was not ‘over’ the episode from earlier.  

“Uh oh, we’re all about to get an earful.” Aimee started shoveling food onto her plate as if it would be her only chance. Was it rude to help yourself when the lady of the house spoke?  I waffled, wanting to follow Aimee’s lead because I was starving, but also not wanting to be terribly rude.  I settled for the shameful practice of slipping what looked like a date off the edge of a platter and into my mouth. It exploded in a burst of tangy goodness. Sweet mother of mercy.  I reached for another.    

“Father, I have something to tell you.  On the way home from Mass, his lordship the Duke of Normandy…”

“Yes, I heard... barbarian. Indefensible.  Shall I demand reparations? Take him to the high court?” The Comte’s voice was level, but something in the way he said it made me realize just how serious the whole altercation on the road was. There was a cadence to the conversation that made it seem more official. Like they were saying this specifically in front of us witnesses for a reason.   William may have been the duke of Normandy but he apparently actually was a bastard and if Aimee’s long recitation of suitors could be believed, Matilda was the most sought after bride in western Europe right now.  The whole hall held its breath.  

“No father.  Unless that is... you want to seek redress of your son in law.”

I was wrong.  Now the hall was truly quiet.

The Comte too, seemed to have been turned to stone.  

“I know..." She said calmly, "...I turned him down.  But I changed my mind.”  And with that she sat down and began ladling herself some soup as if she’d just casually announced she was going to have eggs for breakfast.  

The Comte pushed his chair back and stood up.  “I warn you daughter, what you say here cannot be changed. Do you want to discuss this?”

So I was right, stuff in the main hall did have a sort of legal officialese to it.  

Matilda cheeks were flaming crimson, but her knuckles were white as she put her spoon down. “I am sure. Let the banns be read.”

It felt like something had just been written in stone. The word “banns” seemed to be the spell that broke the silence and dinner resumed.

The Comte though was silent.  

Chapter Five

As usual, to find out what happens next, vote in the poll because you never know who's getting doused in horse urine next. :P

On a historical note...here is the real castle Gravensteen where the Counts of Flanders lived and ruled with a sometimes unbenevolent iron fist. In Matilda's father's defense...he helped bring Flanders out of poverty and into the high Middle Ages. i.e. if you had to live during the Medieval times, France was (for the most part) safe, warm and where you wanted to be. 

Nanowrimo Story- Chapter 3

Disclaimer: The following chapter is somewhere between PG-13 and R rated, read at your own risk.  

Also, I made a typo...Matilda's father was one of the most powerful men in France, but he he was Count of Flanders...not a Duke (count being several steps below duke).  I corrected it in the previous chapters.   

The winner for this chapter was the "Matilda runs into William the Conqueror, drama ensues and Emilie has to use her modern medical knowledge".   Interestingly this scene is also actually true (with some dramatic embellishment).

Enjoy!

 

 

Chapter Three

“Alard, there you are!” Matilda raised an imperious eyebrow at a disheveled reprobate with a three day beard and puffy eyes.  As if to punctuate this fact, he had a biblical looking wineskin in one hand, and a hunk of bread in the other.

“Sorry…” he said giving her a sarcastic cheer with his wine,  “... our dearest father sent me to the Cottard to explanate the benefits of their preevous agreement.”   Clearly chewing with one’s mouth closed wasn’t a current sensibility.  I could smell his rotting teeth from five feet away and I had a sudden pang for the big bottle of antibacterial hand sanitizer at every corner of the hospital.  

“Who’s this large one?” He asked sauntering up to me. He shoved my cheek to the side with his hand and grabbed my shoulder to turn me around.  “Is she’a man?”

“No, she’s Sir Robert’s daughter, Lady Emilie Durand of Bruges come to serve as handmaiden… don’t tell Papa, but I’m pretty sure she’s demens.”   

His eyes were nearly black.  A fact I could plainly see because I was the same height as him, which was ludicrous considering back at home I had to shove my way to the front during rounds in order to be seen.  I tried to back up, but he shoved the rest of the bread in his mouth and grabbed my butt with his now free hand.  I yelped and slapped his hand away out of pure instinct, and then froze remembering that wherever I was...it wasn’t the twenty first century. .  

He laughed. “She seems pretty normal to me.”  He said “Send her up before father gets a hold of her.”  

“Don’t be a glos pautonnier” Matilda rolled her eyes at her brother and shooed him away from me. I wracked my brain for anything I knew about the middle ages.  This was patriarchy’s heydey right?  I got a sudden vision of myself old as an old and worn out piece of property that had a row of tiny markers in a graveyard as the only thing to show for my life.  I panicked.  Deep breaths… deep breaths.  

“See what I mean?” Matilda had evidently had enough of this conversation, because she gestured to her handmaidens and swept out of the courtyard of the church with all the authority of an attending physician.  I was carried along with them, feeling a lot like the time I’d foolishly dressed up for a halloween party, complete with fairy wings and butterfly makeup only to find out we were going to a pretentious wine bar where everyone was still wearing their corporate uniforms and discussing the dow (when they weren’t taking sideways glances at the perambulating butterfly nerd in the corner).  My current duds consisting of the tattered red dress and patched up kirtle, plus my newfound height made our group an object of interest as we walked through the town back towards wherever Matilda was going.  

Alard walked with us, and I wasn’t sure if he was the chaperone, or the person for whom we needed a chaperone. I kept busy trying to keep from tripping over my flopping shoes and keeping my head down.   The girls around me were talking in hushed tones about the same thing girls talked about in the 21st century.  Boys.  Apparently there was high drama going on about someone who had proposed to Matilda.  She’d turned him down after her father had said yes, but I couldn’t catch all of it.  Honestly I was surprised a woman could turn down a marriage proposal in this time.  And they didn’t seem all that shocked by it, like it was an abnormal occurrence or anything.  I tucked that away for future reference.  Of course it probably helped she was the daughter of the Count of Flanders.

Nobody here looked like I expected them to look and that scared me more than anything else. I tried to put my finger on it...it was kinda like when you watched an older movie and laughed at how dated everyone looked...the poofy bangs and blue eyeshadow of the 80’s on a supposedly Egyptian Cleopatra.  It looked ridiculous.  Well that’s how even the authentically accurate movie felt right now in comparison to what I was seeing with my eyes.  People here were shorter and less hearty looking than the Hollywood extras in historical films.  The colors were somehow more vibrant and real than they looked in paintings.  And the clothes looked more related to the last Nativity play I’d seen vs the last King Arthur movie.  When was I?  Had the Roman Empire even fallen yet?  It had to have, I remembered the nun had mentioned something about Charlemagne, plus the church seemed to have a pretty firm grasp on the culture.  That would put me what...somewhere between 900 and 1400 AD?  I wondered if I would ever know.  It wasn’t like they had calendars around, and I was getting the impression cloth and paper were a precious commodity.  I felt guilty just thinking of all the junk mail I tossed in the trash every day.  

It was all so menacing.  A tightrope of unfamiliar customs and normal behavior and I was wearing metaphorical high heels.  The road we traveled on wasn’t exactly rush hour traffic, but it was busier than I expected.  Wagons and people walking with wicker cages, more wooden contraptions for carrying stuff than I ever dreamed could exist, and sheep.  Lots and lots of sheep.  I was got so lost in thought over the engineering of a baby carrier a young mother was wearing.  It was such a genius design, perfectly balanced with hooks for buckets and holes with leather straps, that I almost completely missed the group of riders who came galloping over the hill until I noticed it had gotten abnormally quiet.

The handmaiden next to me (I’d learned her name was Aimee) gasped, and I saw a wave of pure red rush of Matilda who straightened her back and met the incoming melee straight on.  

“Sir.” She nodded her head gracefully, as the man in front leapt off his horse practically mid stride.  He was as large as she was small.  I could see how he would go on to be the most powerful man in western Europe.  He had that swagger and insolence that didn’t take no for an answer.  

“You letter says no!?” He looked like he wanted to throttle her right there on the spot, but Matilda to her credit, eyed him coolly (now if she were offering groupon lessons, I would sign up in a hot second).  

“Go find a baroness or a comtesse, she’d be much more suited for you.”  She said it in a charmingly self deprecating manner, but her lip curled slightly at “for you” and I got the impression it was an insult of some kind. 

One that plainly met its mark.  The man’s eyes narrowed, his russet hair and swarthy jawline made me think he must have a fair bit of viking in his blood.  “You would do well to remember who you’re talking to.”  The way he said it sent shivers down my spine.  Everything about him screamed power. He was wearing boots that when compared to my sad leather slippers, must have cost at least a year’s wage. His cloak and jacket had all manner of accessories that I’m sure had uses, but also worked to make him look crushingly affluent in comparison to the rest of us.  I was duly impressed.

None of it seemed to have the desired effect on Matilda.  “Yes, mi”lord...” She smoothed out her skirts and flicked an invisible piece of grass away “I am well aware you’re the Duke of Normandy… you’re also a bastard.”  

Even though guns didn’t exist yet, it was as if she’d shot him. He stood stock still for a moment, and we all held our collective breaths...even the sheep  on the road didn’t make a noise.  

"Who the devil do you are, wench?" he demanded. A thick lock of russet hair had come loose and hung down across his brow making him look all the more disconcertingly like a ravaging norseman.

He reached forward and seized her by the arms. She gasped for breath and struggled against him, but succeeded only in looking like a very tiny kitten in the grasp of a lion.

She tried to kick him in the balls.  A time honored defense apparently. He almost lost his balance and staggered backwards, pulling her with him.  He recovered and she slammed into him.

"Oh, like that, is it?" he said, with a grim laugh. "Well, I'd be most willing to oblige you my puterelle...since I am a bastard after all." He pressed her squirming body against him and ground his hips against her.  I moved forward purely out of instinct and not out of any formed plan, but the loathsome Alad yanked me back “Oh no you don’t” he hissed. My mouth fell open in outrage, but I closed it again without saying anything.  He was right, I would likely get both Matilda and myself killed.  

“Why you bloody bast…” Matilda began, but he ducked his head and kissed her hard, cutting off any more insults she might have stored up for him.  He yanked her hair, his tongue roving and pushing in and out, as if he meant to consume her right there on the spot. Then just as quickly as it had began, he pulled back and hurled her to the ground by her braids, dragging her through the mud to toward his horse.

“Put that in your hedge born brain and suck on it when you’re married to some pasty faced liver eater”. He let go of her hair and turned to his horse and men who were all grim faced and deadly serious. His steward handed him the reigns and he leaped up.  He paused, and I thought for a second he might turn around and say something else, but he dug his heels in with a ya! and was off.  

I rushed to Matilda before anyone else could stop me.  While I most certainly did not have any fighting prowess, I made it my goal to get to her and assess her injuries before anyone else had a chance to make them worse.  She lay face down in the mud, and I rolled her over gingerly.  I didn’t think she had any spinal injuries, but if she was unconscious I didn’t want to make anything worse.  Her eyes were open and she was conscious. Definitely conscious.  She trembled like a leaf as I took her pulse and looked for signs of serious injury.  She was going into shock, but I didn’t see anything that looked broken or needed stitches.  Her lips were swollen and would probably be bruised, and it looked like she had a few scrapes.  

“Someone give me their cloak, is there water?”  I knew absolutely nothing about the local countryside and what grew here, and next to zero knowledge about herbs except for one kooky class I took on eastern medicine because I needed an easy filler class.  But I took a chance and asked, “Is there any mint or something spicy growing anywhere? But that was met with headshakes and fear so I shut up and reminded myself that I hadn’t learned the right ways to ask things and what not to say.  “Are you ok my lady?” I kept my voice low and put on my best beside manner, but it was wasted.


Matilda leaped to her feet and I realized belatedly that she wasn’t trembling from shock, but from rage.  She waited for no one, but stalked off at such a determined pace, the rest of us had to hurry to catch up.  I hastily gave the cloak back to the young mother with the contraption I’d admired earlier.  “Thank you” I said, and she smiled shyly, I liked her instantly.  Maybe I had a better shot of surviving if I stayed around sane looking people like her. Matilda and her man troubles looked like anything but sanity.   “Who was that?” I wasn’t going to ask, but if anyone was going to give me strange looks, I’d rather it be this girl.  She didn’t laugh, but her eyes did get as big as saucers and her eyebrows shot up into her head.  “Why miss, that was William, Duke of Normandy...he call hi’self William-The-Conqueror.”  

She said it with such awe I wondered if she could possibly kick it up a notch for the King. I wanted to ask her more, but Matilda and company were already over the next hill and I was going to have to run to catch up.  As I turned to go though, I noticed her baby was fussing and sticking it’s tongue out in pathetic wails of hunger.  The baby’s tongue was covered in white fuzz.  

“Does your baby cry a lot? Does it hurt to feed...him?” I asked taking a wild guess.  They didn’t do pink or blue clothes here.  I hopped back and forth from one foot to the other. I really needed to go, but I couldn’t keep my damn nose out of other people’s business when I saw an easily solvable issue.  

She looked at me in surprise and then suspicion.  Crap. “No no… my baby brother had that once..my mam said genetian violet helped...and apple cider vinegar if you have any….and don’t feed the baby ale.” I added as an afterthought as I backed away. One stark fact stuck in my mind from a book on infant mortality saying the very first baby formula was bread soaked in beer.  If this poor mom’s nipples looked half as bad as her baby’s mouth then I had to assume she might be avoiding nursing.   I wanted to stay, but I couldn’t  “I’ll be at the…” I realized I didn’t actually know where I would be “...with The Lady Matilda. Please come find me if you need anything else.”  Not waiting for an answer, I picked up my skirts and ran to catch up.  Alard was waiting for me at the crest of the hill, he offered his arm quite gallantly.  I couldn’t think of a polite way to refuse him, and I figured he couldn’t be any worse than William-The-Conqueror, current Duke of Normandy and spurned suitor of one particularly pertinacious Matilda.  

At least I knew where I was.

Chapter Four

To find out what happens next, vote below!  

Also, on an interesting note, a few hundred years after William The Conqueror died, they dug up his remains which were reportedly "amazingly" preserved and they had an artist draw a portrait up of him.  It heavily resembled what we think of as Henry the 8th who allegedly later used William's portrait as propaganda inspiration so everyone would mentally associate him with William The Conqueror who was still in everybody's mind as the last word in manliness and power.