The sleeping villagers didn’t know their history was about to come alive again. It was Bank Holiday Monday, the last day of August 1992. The ancient church of St. Mary and its adjacent vicarage basked in the early morning sun under a bright blue dome of sky just north of London.

“It doesn’t seem the kind of day to be mucking about in damp tombs,” Vicar Hamilton said aloud to the picture of his dead wife atop his chest of drawers as he dressed. “But there’s no going ahead without sacrifice. No gain without pain, dear Delia.”

Delia Howard had married him less than six months after he took up his post as vicar back in 1966. At first, it was something of a scandal. He was the bright young new vicar, and she was the daughter of the local gentry who had lorded over the town for the past five hundred years. But any disapproval vanished as for more than twenty-five years the two of them double-handedly kept the parish vibrant and relevant in an England where most churches were only embarrassing remnants of a medieval fantasy. The youth program flourished, with skiffle bands banging guitars and tambourines to the tunes of Cliff Richard, Tommy Steele, the Beatles, and the Stones. The married-couples ministry kept many local couples together past bumps in the road. And the Al-Anon and Nar-Anon groups countered the new realities with hope.

With everything that was going on, it was only fair to expect some trouble, and this morning Vicar Hamilton was putting on his old plaid shirt and stained work trousers to face down another challenge.

Over the last few weeks of summer, the Mothers Morning Out group he started had morphed into a proper child-care program. It was yet another of his quixotic efforts to keep the church front and center for the parish. Now the old church was making a real connection with young families in the town, giving mothers a place to get together and have their tots intermingle. The future of our parish, thought the vicar. Two groups now—about twenty-five babies—and new faces at the Sunday service as well. He had even gotten approval from the bishop to advertise for a program director, and now the CVs were flooding in for interviews with the playschool committee. That would mean even more commotion in the church office.

Inside the old church, the Lady Chapel was now sectioned off sacrilegiously, with portable red-gray office dividers between the rounded Norman arches. Green linoleum sheets covered the stone floors. Blackboards on wheels lined up in front of the tables and small chairs clustered below the ancient stained-glass windows and wall memorials to eighteenth-century benefactors.

In front of the altar with the fourteenth-century statue of Our Lady and Baby Jesus—the most famous relic of the church—a brown-cloth Brunswick billiards table was pushed in as a barrier to block the children of the crèche. The beauty and innocence of that stone carving had preserved it even through the rough days of the English Civil War, when New Model Army soldiers smashed ornaments in churches all around the country—but not that one. Now the danger was from the children of the town. And they had just made their first serious assault on the past two days before.

On the Friday afternoon of the long weekend, something went wrong in the loo next to the tearoom on the old porch of the church. Later the workmen found a disposable nappy had been stuffed into the toilet, which kept it running. And so a steady stream of cold water overflowed unseen and unheard all night, seeping onto the stone floor, under the walls, and down into the burial vaults below.

By the time Andrew James, the verger who took care of the church, found it Saturday morning, several burial vaults were flooded with water covering the old coffins and remains. Worst off was the largest vault in the nave, which had been sealed since the 1840s. Also wet was the small vault in the Lady Chapel—the final resting place of so-called Lady Anne, an Elizabethan benefactor of the old church and an ancestor of Mrs. Hamilton herself, the vicar’s late wife.

Now that side of the family had almost died out, thought the vicar. His daughter, Margaret, was the last of that bloodline now, but there was no sign of her settling down yet.

Well, the flood canceled Lucy Worthington’s Saturday afternoon wedding service—at least for a stormy hour or two. Her father and the best man turned up early at the vicar’s door, red-faced and livid with rage in their gray morning coats. But they calmed down when the vicar came up with Plan B, moving the service to Roman Catholic St. Luke’s just across the green. Father O’Brien was very decent about lending the hall to his pagan Protestant neighbors on such short notice, thought the vicar.

Actually it worked out quite well, thanks to the Catholics’ new central air-conditioning and the bright light coming through their newer stained glass windows. And Vicar Hamilton probably wouldn’t have gotten the extra two-hundred-pound cheque from Mister Worthington if the bride’s father hadn’t felt guilty about his earlier display in the hall of the vicarage.

The Catholics were very up-to-date—but the Protestants had the history, and that’s just what the vicar would be dealing
with today.

He reached for the silver-topped hairbrush on his dresser and gave three brisk strokes to smooth his yellow-white hair from left to right. Then he let his eyes move across the lace to the other dresser against the bedroom wall there, now holding his wife’s treasures and keepsakes. On the top was a small cluster of her favorite photos of their daughter. There was Margaret around age eight, with her chums in school uniforms collecting donations for Bangladesh, already showing signs of a fierce determination to raise awareness of the wrongs in the world and intervene personally to set things right. What a commotion those young girls had made marching up and down the high street after school and on weekends, he remembered. Then there was a snapshot taken a few years later in her games uniform for field hockey, with one of her signature smiles, in spite of the cuts and gashes on each leg. Next to that, another photo showed her as a young teenager volunteering behind the counter in the Oxfam shop in the village, fighting world poverty. And then there was his wife’s favorite portrait of herself, taken five years ago, standing together with Margaret who was just back from her university year abroad immersing herself in her beloved France. One never knows what moments turn out to be the height of happiness, he thought. But then the kettle whistled and he had to hurry downstairs.

From the kitchen window over the sink, he could see hoses running out the side door of the church, across the vicarage garden, and down into the drain at the side of the road. There was a steady purring from the petrol-driven pump working away beneath puffs of gray smoke.

He saw the carefully planned flower beds were in their full glory. Each planting was a different specimen, placed according to its natural height, and blooming at just the right time of the year with its neighbors—Delia’s grand scheme. And the thick turf of the lawn, wet with dew, was bursting with life, now greener than green—emerald really, and soft and deep as a down duvet.

It was a shame they’d have to dig across the lawn and the beds to put in a drainage line from the troublesome church addition, but they had to prevent another flood from happening if one of the children again stuffed up the toilet. The vicar planned to draw a map showing where each plant sat so they could restore it all later. At least they wouldn’t be digging across the churchyard, disturbing all those graves as well. There were enough spirits stirred up already down in the vaults. And the lawn would grow back, thick as ever by next spring, God willing.

Seven o’clock. Just time for a quick cup of tea before Verger Andrew and the workmen came back, the vicar thought.

Well, it was better to have a playschool in the chapel and a tearoom on the porch than no one in the church at all.

~

 

Ten minutes later, Vicar Hamilton joined Verger Andrew and the village plumber at the side of the pavement where the pump and hoses were hooked up. “Let’s see what’s gone on down there,” said the vicar, ending his words with a sigh. And God preserve the old church’s foundation, he prayed silently to himself.

They turned off the pump, restoring the morning calm to the fresh air, and walked inside the church, stepping over the hoses.

The afternoon before, masons had opened up the floor in two parts of the church. First they had freed up several large slabs of Purbeck marble in the nave atop the burial vault extending out from the old thirteenth-century wall of the church. It had been very hard to pry the slabs up from where they had been sealed over a century and a half before, but the workmen finally succeeded in shifting them, and now they were angled widthwise across the narrow opening in the floor.

The slabs were also part of the ceiling of the vault below. At first, only coal-black water could be seen down there, settling roughly two feet below the opening—so it was impossible to tell just how wide and how deep was the vault. No record of the room’s measurements remained in the otherwise meticulous church archives—only the dates of interments through the years until its final sealing in 1845, with the notation that it was then full.

A few hours later, the vicar had leaned over and shone a hand torch around. Then he could see the water was lower by at least four feet and several objects were piercing the surface at different heights and angles.

Now this morning, the plumber lowered down a miner’s lamp, testing the air and illuminating the damp and debris. All clear. There was only a wet and musty smell—very similar to things that sit in a basement too long—and no whiff of any decay from decomposition, as one might fear. That had all disappeared long ago. The three men angled a ladder down into the space, and when it hit the floor only about five inches of its base was covered by the receding water.

Finally, Vicar Hamilton could see the chaos of mortality. Dozens of caskets and iron coffins were stacked up in piles of four or five on top of one another. The coffins at the top were newer than the ones below and were covered with fragments of faded purple velvet. They were lined with hundreds of brass studs. Brass or golden coffin handles jutted out, embellished with the heads of cherubim. Centered on the top of one perched a coronet from which the velvet or ermine had disappeared, leaving six silver orbs protruding on long stems from the edges of a crown.

The coffins below were in worse shape. The wooden end panel of one had fallen off onto the floor, revealing a coal-black leaden shell inside. The lead explained why the other coffins were crushed like accordions: they had been broken by the terrific weight above. Most were sized for adults, but around the edges of the stacks was a circle of small boxes. A few were the repositories of funerary organs from embalming, but most were the doleful remains of infants and small children—sad reminders of high hopes unfulfilled. Here they rested, awaiting the resurrection with their elders.

“Another hour or so of pumping and she’ll be empty,” said Andrew. “Then we’ll go down and have a look ’round before we set up fans to dry out the damp.”

Around the corner, in the Lady Chapel, was a second hole, this one in the plain stone floor just in front of the memorial to Lady Anne. Vicar Hamilton went over and looked down at the words carved on a stone slab lying akimbo to this much smaller hole: “Vavasour,” the family name, and then “Constantia et fide” just below. He translated the Latin to himself: “Constant and faithful”—a very good motto indeed, for both the living and the dead. There hadn’t been nearly as much water here as in the larger vault, but it had still had a bit of a soaking. Bending down to try to see into the hole, he felt dizzy, so he straightened up slowly, deciding to take a closer look later.

The vicar turned to Verger Andrew and said, “Well, there are several centuries of our village history down there. And my dear wife’s ancestors as well.” Then his profound musings were interrupted by the sounds of the workmen restarting the pump in the nave.

~

 

Stephen didn’t recognize it at first. A noise…a bell…a buzzer…repeating…and staying there…coming back…again and again. Go away!

He turned over onto his back and opened his eyes, squinting. Light was streaming in to his bedroom—the morning was incredibly bright, hard to focus. And still the ringing.

Oh Christ! It’s the phone.

Up now on two elbows he looked across the bed. Miranda was still sleeping, one arm cocked up, hand back under her head—a fetching, but almost ludicrous pose while asleep—her mouth slightly open, her left breast and nipple peeking out from under the covers. She could sleep through a train wreck, he thought.

One giant effort and he stretched over her, carefully pushing himself up to not wake her. He grabbed the phone just as he saw the clock: 0740, and it was a bloody Bank Holiday Monday morning as well.

“Hello!”

Just the dial tone. Damn!

He put the receiver back in the stand and sank back into the bed, closing his eyes. Back to sleep, or up now? The light was
so strong.

No use for it—he was awake. Pushing off the blankets, he angled himself up to sit on the side of the bed.

Stephen’s bedroom was crammed full with books—some new but the vast majority old, booty bought over the last ten years from secondhand bookstores all across Britain. Smallish ones were lined up in double rows on the wide shelves of the bookcases that were his bedside tables. Other larger ones were stacked up in piles about three feet high along the walls, festooned with discarded neckties.

In his front room, a large bookcase with glass doors held his treasures. What would be old and obscure books for almost anyone else were vibrant and alive with delights for Stephen: old leather backs, many crumbling but still dignified and proud of their frequent use. And some important ones, like his Third Folio of Shakespeare, printed in 1664. That one had come to him from his late father, along with the edition of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales printed by William Morris at his Pre-Raphaelite Kelmscott Press. A smaller bookcase held his sixteen-volume set of the Oxford English Dictionary.

By the bay window looking out over the common garden and courtyard of the apartment complex, Stephen’s ancient refectory table was also piled with books, computer equipment, cigarette packs, and a circular rack with six or seven well broken-in pipes.

Just next to this, on the wall was a map of Switzerland and Italy with pins marking the spots from Geneva to Naples he planned to visit the following spring, following in the footsteps of Byron, Keats, and the Shelleys. He used his holidays to make history come alive by visiting the places where great events happened. In fact, planning the trips was almost as good as going, since it kept his enthusiasm growing all through the winter. And what Englishman wouldn’t want to end up in Italy in the spring?

Here and there a tennis racquet and sports bag challenged the books along the walls. And one corner was consumed with cricket gear: kit bag, gloves, bats, batting pads, and a set of wickets and bails, with one wicket jauntily wearing his tricolor club hat of white, purple, and black.

Higher on the walls, Stephen also had a few prints of the buildings and deer park around his Oxford alma mater, Magdalen College (pronounced “maudlin”), plus a poster from a favorite show at the Tate Gallery and, most important, two framed pages from a medieval manuscript with lovely gold-leaf illumination, his graduation gift from his parents over four years ago.

Just below all of that, on top of the glass-doored bookcase, was his favorite photo of his parents. They smiled at the camera from their rented chairs on the sandy Riviera beach in front of the Hotel Martinez in Cannes—he called it his carpe diem reminder to seize the day before adversity strikes, just as it had struck them soon after.

And also, with pride of place so he saw it from his table, was a small framed poster from the Schools County Cricket Tournament two years before, signed by all the boys on his winning team. Stephen had been their coach and also had just become their unlikely headmaster at St. George’s School in the village, just as he was today.

He stood up naked from the bed, stretched, and tiptoed across the archipelago of abandoned clothing he and Miranda had slipped out of six or seven hours before, and headed toward the hall and the loo. He looked a sight in the mirror, with his thick brown hair askew and standing in spikes. He splashed his face with cold water and then patted down his head.

I’ll just put on the kettle before I take a shower, he thought. The kitchen was a tight space opening off from the front room, but it and the bath were kept almost hospital clean by Mrs. Case, who came in to tidy and take the laundry once a week. She applied most of her attentions to the kitchen and the loo, having been forbidden to rearrange much of anything else in the place. Since Stephen never cooked, the kitchen was always standing at attention for him to make a quick cuppa or heat up some takeaway.

Kettle on now. And then the phone again.

Stephen walked into the front room and sank into the sofa next to the other telephone. The fabric was scratchy against his bare skin.

“Hello?” Of all people, it was Vicar Hamilton from St. Mary’s Church.

“Stephen, hello. Sorry to call so early on a holiday…but there’s something really quite extraordinary I want you to take a look at.” The vicar paused, but then moved ahead excitedly in the silence. “This morning I’ve had workmen over about some flooding in the vaults and among all the rubble and mess I’ve found two chests full of old papers. I can’t quite make out the writing, but I’d say sixteenth or seventeenth century from the little I know—you can tell me after you see them—and most still in very good shape. They were buried right in the Vavasour vault underneath the Lady Chapel—my late wife’s relatives, you know. Quite amazing, wouldn’t you say?”

“Papers?” asked Stephen, the haze quickly lifting. “You mean books and so forth?”

“No. Actually, these are handwritten papers. Some seem to be letters with fold lines, salutations, signatures, and such. Other sheets seem to be lists and poetry—quite an assortment. And a few other things, like a few journals and an embroidered bag. Anyway, I thought you could take a look and help me understand what we’ve got here. Can you come over and take a look?”

“You mean to say these are original manuscripts?” Stephen said, with his voice pointedly rising into the phone.

“Yes, it seems so. I’ve moved most of them. But some are still down in the vault and rather damp—so I’d like some help getting them out before the workmen take over. Can you come straight over?”

“Sure…of course! I’ll be right over. Fifteen minutes. Cheers.”

Manuscripts from the tombs, Stephen thought. Seems too fantastic for words. I wonder how were they protected, and how would they have lasted? Well, probably only old inventories, wills, deeds, and so forth. Really nothing much else was ever saved from those centuries except for legal documents that seemed to have unquestionable value to their owners. They would be astonished to find out those had only questionable value today. We’d see the personal jottings and keepsakes as the real treasures, but hardly anything like that survived. Well, maybe he’s got the dates wrong. I’ll have to wait until I see them. Bloody fantastic!

Getting ready for the shower, he went back into his bedroom. Oh Christ…Miranda! And she’d wanted to spend the Bank Holiday together.

“Miranda, Miranda love, wake up. It’s morning.” He gave her a gentle touch on her upraised arm, and she brought it right down.

“Hmmmmm,” she exhaled, turning away on to her side, still deeply asleep.

Stephen didn’t date much. He had tried a few girlfriends after Margaret, the vicar’s daughter. None really clicked, but Miranda was the one he was with the most. She was just the reverse of himself, unschooled, lowbrow, and incredibly lively and saucy. He had often thought she lived with an intensity that had eluded him. Maybe he had passed too much of his life inside, spending too much time planning, working, and thinking while Miranda was seizing the day and dancing on tabletops. That’s why he always had fun and felt drawn out when he was with her—and last night had been lived to the fullest, as much as he could recall. He remembered belting out song after song down at the annual County Cricket Club dinner, the best one being an old ballad where you went round the room with everyone adding their own bawdy four-line verse before the chorus. His last one had been pretty good, but Miranda had left them all blushing, if he remembered right—which wasn’t at all a sure thing this morning.

Well, I better just leave her. No need to ruin her lie-in this morning and I’ll leave her a note on the sofa. Besides if I woke her, it would be harder to just go off over to the church.

So Stephen hopped in and out of the shower, into his clothes, and down the stairs to where his aged yellow Mini awaited, parked across the street. He literally hurdled across the small hedge separating the entry of the apartments from the pavement beyond, and then skipped between parked cars to his own.

Amazing what that call did, he thought. One minute I’m probably headed for a hangover, and now I’m hopping around like a fool. Adrenaline, I suppose, or maybe just buried treasure.

And so he drove off toward St. Mary’s.