top of page
ChatGPT Image May 8, 2026, 11_45_24 AM.png

Chronicle V

The bells struck eight as rain swept across the square outside Saint Michael and All Angels Church.

 

Villagers gathered beneath the drizzle carrying candles through the mud, eager to witness the punishment of the two travelling coney-catchers exposed inside the King’s Arms.

 

The crowd jeered while nails were driven through flesh and into timber beneath the dim glow of torchlight.

 

Some came seeking justice.

 

Others came for the spectacle.

ChatGPT Image May 10, 2026, 10_45_06 AM.png

 

Rain swept across Haworth while villagers followed the torchlight through mud and darkness toward the pillory outside the church.

​​

Beneath the drizzle, the two coney-catchers stood shackled before the crowd, blood mixing with rainwater as insults echoed across the square.

Some watched with satisfaction.

Others watched because they feared one day the crowd might gather for them instead.

​​

In Yorkshire, punishment was never simply about justice.

​​

It was about reminding ordinary people what happened to those who found themselves on the wrong side of power.

The rain fell harder as the bells struck eight across Haworth.

Inside the King’s Arms, the warmth of the fire had long since given way to something darker — suspicion, humiliation, and the slow excitement of a crowd sensing punishment close at hand.

The gamblers had pushed their luck too far.

What began as whispers over marked cards and easy winnings quickly became accusation, fury, and spectacle beneath the steward’s hand.

One man reached for the steward’s gold ring believing the night belonged to him.

A moment later, the steward’s fist crashed down upon his hand.

“I AM THE STEWARD. NOW PAY THY DEBT!”

The tavern erupted.

Men overturned stools in the scramble while the toothless trickster collided with Thomas trying desperately to reach the door before the deputies seized him by the scruff of the neck.

Spittle flew from his mouth as he struggled.

“LET ME GO!”

But Haworth had little mercy left for travelling coney-catchers.

Within moments, both men sat shackled beneath the candlelight while the tavern crowd gathered around them with the excitement of villagers sensing blood in the air.

Outside, the watchman’s calls drifted through the muddy streets warning of strangers, sickness, and the dangers carried north from York.

Inside, nobody cared much for mercy.

The steward scraped the winnings back into his purse while the room buzzed with rumours of plague, trickery, and punishment.

One of the prisoners lowered his head in silence.

The other threatened anybody who would listen.

But even his bravado began to fail once the manor court assembled beneath the smoke-blackened rafters.

Twelve jurors took their places.

Ale sloshed across the tables as locals crowded closer to hear the steward condemn the two outsiders before the parish.

Some called for hanging.

Others simply wanted entertainment.

The accused pleaded desperation, hunger, and madness brought on by hardship in York.

The crowd answered with laughter.

Then came the sentence.

The pillory.

Then the ear.

The villagers followed the deputies out into the drizzle carrying candles through the mud toward Saint Michael and All Angels Church where the wooden frame waited in the darkness like an old warning nobody ever truly escaped.

The prisoners begged.

Nobody listened.

Nails were driven through flesh and into timber beneath the cheering of the crowd while blood mixed with rainwater and dripped slowly into the mud below.

Some turned away.

Most watched closely.

Thomas stood among them understanding for the first time that Haworth’s justice depended less upon fairness than spectacle.

The crowd eventually drifted back toward the warmth of the tavern leaving the two men pinned beneath the night sky with only pain, rain, and humiliation for company.

But before the villagers disappeared into the alehouse once more, the toothless one lifted his bloodied face toward the square and made a promise nobody there would easily forget.

“They’ll pay for this… ALL OF ‘EM…”

And when his eyes settled upon Thomas Rushworth, the threat no longer felt like tavern bravado.

It felt personal.

                                                                -V-

From Readers 

Readers and reviewers have described the novel as immersive, atmospheric, and vividly grounded in the harsh realities of 17th-century Yorkshire.

Read the reader reviews and discussion here.

bottom of page