Winchester Geese.
Copyright oggbashan October 2021
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
Historical Background: Even before the Norman Conquest, the City of London had its own rules and regulations within the so-called City Liberties. Among other things it banned anything deemed sinful like the theatre, bull baiting, and in theory, prostitution, except there were small streets in the City that were wholly brothels.
At the time, and for hundreds of years afterwards including Shakespeare's time, Southwark, south of the River Thames, was outside the City's laws. That is why the Globe theatre was built in Southwark.
In 1161, the Bishop of Winchester, who had his London Palace in Southwark, was granted "The Liberty of the Clink". That ordinance as signed by Thomas A Becket before he became Archbishop of Canterbury. That allowed the Bishop of Winchester and his successors to licence and claim a fee from various places of entertainment and more to the purpose of this story, to regulate brothels and prostitutes in Southwark. The prostitutes were known as 'Winchester's Geese'. Apart from his license fees he collected fines if a prostitute broke the rules for example by pulling a customer off the street by any of his clothing.
But because not just the prostitutes but anyone involved with the theatre or bear baiting etc. was assumed to be living in constant sin, if they died, they could not be buried in consecrated ground. They were buried in a large plot of unconsecrated ground called Cross Bones. It is estimated that over 500 years more than 15,000 bodies were buried there.
In the 1990s the London underground lines were being extended and a route passed under Cross Bones. That is where the story starts.
Some conservations are assumed to be in the English of Chaucer's time, retold in modern English.
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I am a lecturer in Archaeology at the University of London. During the summer vacation and beyond I have been employed by Transport for London (TFL) to lead a team of archaeologists working along the route of the extended underground line. Normally I would come to the site each day and go back to my flat at night. But my flat is empty. My girlfriend, Gail, had decided our relationship was going nowhere, despite my frequent proposals of marriage and has gone to Thailand for six months 'to sort my head out' as she said.
Gail's decision was a painful reminder that my wife had divorced me because I preferred to spend my holiday times as an archaeologist, often staying in a draughty tent instead of travelling the world as my wife, and now Gail, wanted to do.
TFL wanted someone on site overnight and offered me more money than I earn as a lecturer to live in a caravan on site. It is a large modern residential three-bedroom caravan with all facilities, even better equipped than I am at home, so it is no hardship to live there. I have to patrol the site about midnight and listen for any sounds during the night. That's all. It seems and easy way to earn money.
Today, the 31st of October, we started to gradually remove some of the bodies from Cross Bones. We won't need to move more than a small percentage, only those which would be in the way of construction traffic. Even so, that might be five hundred bodies at least. Though it was Halloween, I wasn't worried about ghosts. I had handled too many burials to be afraid of ghosts walking.
After my evening meal I opened the box which contained our first complete skeleton, spread an old sheet across the table and started to arrange the bones as they should be. It was the skeleton of a woman, probably in her 30s, but her skeleton showed signs of poor nutrition, early hard labour and a leg had been broken and not reset properly. Infection from that broken leg might have killed her. There were no obvious signs of any other trauma that could have caused death. I turned on the voice recorder on my laptop and dictated notes to myself.
The students had carefully washed the bones. I was handing them carefully wearing cotton gloves and marvelling at how complete she was even after hundreds of years. When I had all the bones in the right places, I stood back to take many pictures, with a measuring rod beside her.
She had been about five feet four inches tall, tallish for a woman of her time, and had a slim torso, elegant limbs, except for the broken leg, and must have had a regular face. On my laptop I had tools to reconstruct a face from just a skull, but I thought I'd just let the bones speak for themselves first.
I sat down and looked carefully. I picked up a magnifying glass to look more closely at the fractured leg. It had splintered badly and showed no signs of regrowth, just traces of infection. If so, she must have died within hours or a couple of days of the break.
Suddenly I was aware of a very strong smell of rancid sweat and musty clothing. It was so strong that I sneezed and couldn't stop myself for a few minutes. I held a handkerchief to my nose before the sneezing stopped.
"OK, now, Alan?" A female voice said from behind me. I swung my chair around.
Standing just inside the caravan's door was a woman. She was wearing a floor length faded black skirt, ragged at the hem, and an equally threadbare cloak falling to her knees. Her face was grey with ingrained dirt. Her shoulder length hair was greasy, lank and looked as if it had never seen a comb for years.
"Who are you?" I asked cautiously.
"I'm Molly, one of the Winchester Geese," She replied. "You have been studying my bones. Thank you for treating them with respect. I never had such gentle treatment when I was alive. But..."
I had to adjust my understanding because she spoke Chaucer's English. I had studied Anglo-Saxon and Middle English as subsidiaries at university and the Professor had insisted that we should be able to speak those languages. Molly spoke Middle English.
She walked past me. The smell was almost intolerable. I picked up my mobile phone and took a few pictures of her. I was surprised that they registered. How could I take pictures of a ghost? But it seemed that I could.
"There." She pointed. "Two finger bones are in the wrong place. That one is part of my middle finger, not my index finger."
She swapped the two small bones over.
I started sneezing again.
"What's wrong, Alan?"
"Your smell is too strong for me. When did you last have a bath of a change of clothes, Molly?"
"A bath? Never. Except perhaps as a new-born baby. A change of clothes? I've been wearing these for three months. But in my time, everyone smelled like me. We didn't notice."
"If we are going to continue to talk, without me sneezing all the time, I think perhaps you ought to have a bath and clean clothes, Molly."
It wasn't as easy as that. It took me sometime to persuade Molly to have a bath, and when she did, I had to wash her. She didn't mind the nudity. After all she is a prostitute and by seeing her bones, I had seen her more naked than she had ever been in life. Once she was over her fear, she enjoyed herself and there was a lot of giggling. I had to change the bath water twice because it got so dirty. I had put her clothes in the washing machine for the hottest wash, with added disinfectant because they were crawling with lice and fleas, as was her hair. I shampooed her hair three times over. Instead of greasy black her hair was a nice deep brown. I was worried that her clothes might not survive the wash.