As Bart held Ned, Rollo started to hit him. Ned tried to duck and dodge but he was pinned, and Rollo was able to punch his face and belly and kick him in the balls, painfully, again and again. Bart laughed with delight. Margery screamed and tried to restrain her brother, but without much effect: she was fierce enough, but too small to stop him.
 
 After a minute Bart tired of the game and stopped laughing. He shoved Ned aside, and Ned fell on the floor. He tried to get up, but for a moment he could not. One eye was closed, but through the other he saw Rollo and Bart take Margery by either arm and march her away down the stairs.
 
 Ned coughed and spat blood. A tooth came out with the blood and landed on the floor, he saw with his one good eye. Then he vomited.
 
 He hurt all over. He tried again to get up, but it was too agonizing. He lay on his back on the cold marble, waiting for the pain to go away. ‘Shit,’ he said. ‘Shit.’
 
 *
 
 ‘WHERE HAVE YOUbeen?’ Lady Jane asked Margery as soon as Rollo brought her into the house.
 
 Margery yelled: ‘Rollo punched Ned while Bart held him still – what kind of animal does that?’
 
 ‘Calm down,’ said her mother.
 
 ‘Look at Rollo, rubbing his knuckles – he’s proud of himself!’
 
 Rollo said: ‘I’m proud of doing the right thing.’
 
 ‘You couldn’t fight Ned on your own, though, could you?’ She pointed at Bart, who followed Rollo in. ‘You had to have his help.’
 
 ‘Never mind that,’ said Lady Jane. ‘There’s someone to see you.’
 
 ‘I can’t speak to anyone now,’ Margery said. She wanted nothing more than to be alone in her room.
 
 ‘Don’t be disobedient,’ said her mother. ‘Come with me.’
 
 Margery’s power of resistance melted away. She had watched the man she loved being beaten up, and it was her fault for loving him. She felt she had lost the ability to do the right thing. She shrugged listlessly and followed her mother.
 
 They went to Lady Jane’s parlour, from which she managed the house and directed the domestic servants. It was an austere room, with hard chairs and a writing table and a prie-dieu. On the table stood Jane’s collection of ivory carvings of saints.
 
 The bishop of Kingsbridge was waiting there.
 
 Bishop Julius was a thin old man, perhaps as much as sixty-five, but quick in his movements. His head was bald and Margery always thought his face looked like a skull. His pale blue eyes flashed with intelligence.
 
 Margery was startled to see him. What could he possibly want with her?
 
 Lady Jane said: ‘The bishop has something to say to you.’
 
 ‘Sit down, Margery,’ said Julius.
 
 She did as she was told.
 
 ‘I’ve known you since you were born,’ he said. ‘You’ve been brought up a Christian and a good Catholic. Your parents can be proud of you.’
 
 Margery said nothing. She hardly saw the bishop. In her mind she watched again while Rollo viciously punched Ned’s dear face.
 
 ‘You say your prayers, you go to Mass, you confess your sins once a year. God is pleased with you.’
 
 It was true. Everything else in Margery’s life seemed wrong – her brother was hateful, her parents were cruel, and she was supposed to marry a beast – but at least she felt she was right with God. That was some consolation.
 
 ‘And yet,’ said the bishop, ‘suddenly you seem to have forgotten everything you were taught.’
 
 Now he had her attention. ‘No, I haven’t,’ she said indignantly.
 
 Her mother said: ‘Speak when the bishop asks you to, not otherwise, you impudent child.’
 
 Julius smiled indulgently. ‘It’s all right, Lady Jane. I understand that Margery is upset.’