I have never talked about this to anyone before. Whenever it comes to my mind I am again overwhelmed by the guilt of it. I certainly did not tell what I knew at the time because it was all my fault.
It happened when I was in my last year at Benton Towers which is one of the lesser known boarding schools for girls. My best friend was a lovely girl called Gilly Parker and, as two eighteen year olds who shared a room, we were inseparable. Well that Easter holiday Gilly invited me to spend a week staying on the Dorset farm where her family had lived and worked for generations. Gilly was a proper country girl, slim and fresh faced with a silvery laugh. I always thought her a bit of an innocent but then I suppose we all were; we talked and giggled about boys but most of us knew very little about – that side of things.
Anyway it was a lovely week, like something out of an Enid Blyton book but there was that fateful afternoon. The two of us climbed to the top of Treech Hill from where we could lean on a fence and look down at the surrounding countryside. We picked out Gilly's family farm and I noticed a think patch of woodland bordering the farm. It was dense and dark and triangular and made me think a bit of the soft furry bush inside my knickers. Anyway I asked Gilly if the woods were part of her land and if we could explore there as I love woodland even though there was something about the sight of these woods which somehow gave me an uncomfortable feeling.
She hesitated and I had the feeling which one gets when one knows one has said something wrong. I could tell that she did not want to talk about the subject but, fool that I was, I kept asking about it.
"It's a bad place," she said. "We don't go there."
It sounded to me like a bit of old country folklore. "Don't go near the witch's cottage." But I could tell that Gilly took it seriously. Well she didn't want me to think she was a fool so she began to tell me the tale and I tell it to you as far as I remember her words.
It all goes back to Sir Francis Walsingham who was Queen Elizabeth I's spymaster. Walsingham had spies everywhere mainly to uncover Catholic plots against The Queen but what hardly anyone knows is that he unofficially started or at least sanctioned something called The Guild of Inquisitors. It was said that these men were ingenious at dreaming up horrible ways of getting information out of anyone and their leader was a man called Sir John Favenham whose history is obscure if not downright nonexistent. No-one knows where he came from or how he came to the attention of Walsingham; many said that he was an agent sent direct from the devil or even that he was the devil so great was his evil reputation. It is certainly amazing how many of the "plotters" whom he discovered and broke in his torture chambers were nubile young girls.
Well Favenham and his guild uncovered one plot which had been so secret and came so near to succeeding in assassinating The Queen that she, in gratitude for saving her life, gave him the right to build himself Treech Castle on the site of the woodland at which we were looking. It has since been suggested that Favenham himself had started the plot against The Queen just so that he could discover it and profit from her gratitude but, of course, no-one knows.
Treech Castle was built and is said to have been a squat dark tower incorporating a prison and The Convent of The Sisters of St Sade. Once built the castle did not remain static but it grew organically and mainly underground not from stone but from the very evil which came out of Favenham's mind. The castle and its miles of cellars, torture chambers and dark passages was actually the visible form of Favenham's mind itself and he peopled it with torturers, agents of evil pleasure and demons.