“The baby was born before I got there, madam. A lovely girl. Our Etty’s all right.”

” What’s wrong, then?”

” It was when I was coming home. I came round by the Abbey. And I saw it, madam. It gave me a turn. You see. it was nearly dark …”

” You saw … what?” I cried.

” n, madam. The monk. It looked at me and it beckoned.”

“Oh, Mary-Jane, how wonderful I What did you do? What did you do?”

” I stood for a second or two staring. I didn’t seem as if I could move. I was struck all of a heap. Then … I ran. It didn’t follow me.

I thought it was going to. “

I put my arms about her and hugged her. ” Oh, Mary Jane I only needed this.”

She looked at me in some astonishment, and I stood back to gaze at her.

She was about my height and the cloak was all-enveloping. She had been mistaken for me, because she was wearing my cloak, the well-known cloak which had been put over the parapet.

She was loyal; there was a bond between us; I knew that she looked upon me as the kindest mistress she had ever had. Ruth was too cold to win affection; Aunt Sarah too strange. Mary-Jane had enjoyed working for me because the relationship between us was warmer than that which usually existed between a maid and her mistress. I decided that I would take Mary-Jane into my confidence to some extent.

” Mary-Jane,” I said, ” what did you think it was? A ghost?”

” Well, madam, I don’t rightly believe in such things.”

” Nor do I. I believe that what is inside that monk’s robe is no ghost.”

” But how did it get into your bedroom, madam?”

” That’s what I’m going to find out.”

“And did it pull the curtains and take the warming-pan away?”

” I believe it did. Mary-Jane, for the time being will you please say nothing to anyone of what you have seen. Our monk thinks that it was I who was hurrying home through the Abbey ruins at dusk. He has no idea that it was you. I want to keep him in ignorance … for a while.

Will you do this? “

” I always want to do as you say, madam.”

Christmas morning dawned bright and frosty. I lay in bed happily reading my letters and greetings. There was one from the man whom I still thought of as my father. He sent me, Christmas greetings and hoped that his previous letter had not upset me. A letter from my real father had arrived on the previous day and in tfais he told me that he hoped to be home in the spring.

That longed-for spring I Then I should have my child What else? But I did not want to look beyond that. Thai was enough.

As I lay in bed my thoughts went back indeed they were never far away to the desire to discover the identity of the person who was trying to harm my child, and I went over the various monk incidents in detail, for those were the ones in which I was sure I should find the clue to the identity of my persecutor.

The monk had appeared in my room, sped along the corridor when I hurried after him, and then disappeared. The more I thought of this, the more excited I became. Was there some secret hiding-place in the gallery? The monk had been seen not only in the house but in the Abbey ruins. What if there was some connecting passage between the Abbey and the house? What if two people played the role of monk? What if Luke and Damaris had both worn the robe Damaris, on the first night I had seen it, thus enabling Luke to appear in his dressing-gown on the second floor; Luke, when I was with Damaris in the ruins?

I remembered the old plan of the Abbey which I had seen when I first came to the Revels. It was somewhere in the library. If I could find some indication on that plan where a connecting passage could possibly be, I might have begun to solve the problem. I did possess two vital clues. There was the arcade in the ruins where the monk had been seen on two occasions by Damaris and me and by Mary-Jane. I would study the plan very closely at that spot. And there was the minstrels’ gallery in the house.

I was so excited, I could scarcely wait to dress.

Why should I?

I slipped on a robe and hurried down to the library. I had little difficulty in finding the plan. It was in a leather binding with a few details about the Abbey; the parchment roll on which these were written, was yellow with age.

As I took the roll and tucked it under my arm I heard a movement behind me and, turning sharply, I saw Luke standing in the doorway.

He was looking at me with that alertness which I had noticed m people’s faces recently and which had once filled me with alarm but now had no power to hurt me. “Why, if it isn’t Catherine! Happy Christmas, Catherine . and a fruitful New Year.”

“Thank you, Luke.”

He was standing in the doorway barring my way. I felt embarrassed, not only because of what I was carrying but because I had only a robe over my nightdress.

“What’s wrong, Catherine?” he asked.

” But nothing.”

” You look as though you’re afraid I’m going to gobble you right up.”

“Then my looks are deceptive.”

” So you really feel quite benevolent towards me on this Christmas morning?”

” Shouldn’t one feel so towards the whole world on this of all mornings?”

” You’re taking the words out of old Cartwright’s mouth. We shall have to go and hear him preaching his Christmas sermon.” He yawned. ” I always feel I’d like to time him by stop-watch. I heard of someone doing that the other day. Some local bigwig. It’s a fact. He’d go to church, set his watch … ten minutes’ sermon and no more…. When the ten minutes were up he’d snap his fingers and that sermon had to stop—and it did, for the parson had his living to think of.” His eyes narrowed and he went on: ” I’m thinking of doing it myself one day, when …”

I looked at him sharply. I knew very well what he meant: when he was in command.

I felt uneasy even though the library was full of daylight.

“Well, what are you reading?” His firm fingers were on the leather case.

” Oh, it’s just something I’ve seen in the library. I wanted to have another look.”

He had taken the roll, in spite of my efforts to retain it, for I had to let it go; I could not indulge in a tug-o’-war here in the library for no apparent reason at all.

“The old Abbey again!” he murmured.

“Do you know, Catherine, you’ve got an obsession for abbeys … monks and such like.”

” Haven’t you?” I asked.

” I? Why should I? I was born here. We take all that for granted.

It’s the people who are new to the place who think it’s all so marvelous.”

He put the roll under my arm. ” Why, Catherine,” he went on, ” we’re standing under mistletoe.”

Then he put his arms round me and kissed me quickly the lips.

” Merry Christmas, Catherine, and a happy New Year!”

Then he stood aside and bowed ironically. I went past him with as much dignity as I could, and started up the stairs:;

He stood at the library door watching me. ;

I wished that he had not seen what I had been carrying. I wondered how much of my thoughts he had read. Luke bothered me. I didn’t understand him; and I had the feeling | that he was the one who resented my presence here more | than any . he and Ruth together. If it were Ruth and i Luke, I thought, it would be easier for them than anyone; | and the fact that Damaris had lied as she did could mean that ; she had done so for Luke.

When I reached my room I got into bed again and studied the plan.

It was headed Kirkland Abbey with the date 1520, and as I looked at it, it was as though the place came alive under my eyes, as though walls were built up where they had decayed, as though roofs were miraculously replaced. There it was a series of buildings which housed a community, sufficient unto itself, which had no need of outside resources, since it was completely self-supporting. It was so easy to picture it all.

I realised that I had learned the topography of the Abbey fairly well.

It was not that I had visited the place so much but my impressions had been so vivid. The central Norman tower was an excellent landmark. I traced it with my finger. The north and south transept, the sanctuary, the gallery, the chapter house, the monks’ dorter. And the arcade, with its buttresses, where I had seen the monk, was that which led to the dining hall, to the bake houses and malt-house. Then my eyes fell on the words: ” Entrance to the cellars.”

As there were cellars beneath the Abbey, there would almost certainly be tunnels connecting them with other underground chambers. Such a labyrinth was a feature of abbeys of the period. I knew this because I had read accounts of our well-known abbeys such as Fountains, Kirkstall and Rjevaulx. I noticed with rising excitement that the cellars were on that side of the Abbey which was nearest to the Revels.

I was so intent that I did not hear a knock on my door, and Ruth had come in before I realised she was there. She stood at the end of my bed in the spot where the inonis had stood.

” Merry Christmas,” she said.

” Thank you, and the same to you.”

” You seem absorbed.”

” Oh … yes.” Her eyes were on the roll and I guessed she recognised it.

” How are you feeling?”

“Much, much better.”

” That’s good news. Are you going to get up? Our guests will be arriving very soon.”

” Yes,” I said, ” I shall get up now.”

She nodded; and her eyes went once more to the plan. ( fancied she looked a little anxious.

By the time the family was ready to go to church, Simon and Hagar had still not arrived.

” They are usually here before this,” said Ruth. ” Perhaps something has happened to delay them. However, we shall go to church. We must be in our pew on Christmas morning.”