Trouble at the Priory (A "Better Than Cadfael" Story)
He was a thin, sinewy bastard called Brother Derek. Very sanctimonious, he was. Very solemn. I suppose it was the air of sanctity we couldn't stand. You know, that smug, holier-than-thou, "I've read the Bible more times than you've had hot turnip soup" sort of hair-shirt wearing, self-flagellating superiority that makes you want to break your vow of silence and tell it to him like it is. You know what I mean. He never wore any shoes neither, did Brother Derek. He was just this great big pair of dirty feet with gnarly toenails sticking out the bottom of his grubby cassock with a greasy swirl of brownish hair on top. You may have an air of sanctity, I thought, but you stink like the Devil.
Spent most of his time out in the garden ... just digging. You'd see him through the chancel window picking up all these wriggling worms and moving them from one place to another. After putting them down on another bit of dirt he'd make the sign of the cross over them as if they were people or something who'd come for a blessing or whatever.
One day I was in my cell trying to do the most elaborate illuminated manuscript this side of Lindesfarne when he walked in with the Abbot. Now we're not allowed to speak, obviously, so I just did this "Yeah, what do you want, Brother?" sort of thing with my eyes, and the Abbot wrinkled his nose in a manner meant to imply. "Brother, Brother Derek tells me you, Brother, have been looking at him, Brother Derek, in a funny way. Is this true, Brother?" So I glared back at him, you know, like, "Don't waste my time with churlish nonsense, Brother, can't you see that I'm much too busy illuminating the Gospels According To Chad to waste my valuable time looking at Brother Derek in a funny way. If he wants to spend all his time delving around in the mud with a bunch of worms like he's the Patron Saint of Wriggling Things or whatever, well, Brother, that's up to him isn't it. I mean, who does he think he is anyway?"
At this point, Brother Derek, unable to contain himself any longer, suddenly rushed forward and scribbled all over my manuscript with his horrible bit of black pencil. So I poked him in the eye with end of my paint brush, kneed him in the groin, and then forced him to drink green paint, "Try that again," I indicated to him by waving my fist in front of his nose. "And next time I'll illuminate your stupid bloody face."
"Brothers! Brothers!" the Abbot screamed ineffectively by waving his hands in the air and jumping up and down on the flagstones.
Afterwards, despite all the rosary beads I had to shuffle for the next six months, I felt much better about everything, and peace at last returned to the Priory.