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One Corpse Too Many
One Corpse Too Many
In the summer of 1138, war between King Stephen and the
Empress Maud takes Brother Cadfael from the quiet world of his garden to the
battlefield of passions, deceptions, and death. Not far from the safety of the
abbey walls, Shrewsbury castle falls, leaving its ninety-four defenders loyal
to the Empress to hang as traitors. With a heavy heart, Brother Cadfael agrees
to bury the dead, only to make a grisly discovery: ninety-five bodies lie in a
row, and the extra victim has not been hanged, but cruelly strangled. This
ingenious way of disposing of a corpse tells Cadfael that the killer is both
clever and ruthless. But one death among so many seems unimportant to all but
the good Benedictine. He vows to find the truth behind disparate clues: a girl
in boy’s clothing, a missing treasure, and a single broken flower—the tiny bit
of evidence that Cadfael believes can most easily expose a murderer’s black
heart.
One Corpse Too Many
The Second Chronicle of Brother Cadfael,
of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, at Shrewsbury
By
Ellis Peters
Chapter
One
BROTHER
CADFAEL WAS WORKING IN THE SMALL KITCHEN GARDEN by the abbot’s fishponds when
the boy was first brought to him. It was hot August noon, and if he had had his
proper quota of helpers they would all have been snoring in the shade at this
hour, instead of sweating in the sun; but one of his regular assistants, not
yet out of his novitiate, had thought better of the monastic vocation and taken
himself off to join his elder brother in arms on King Stephen’s side, in the
civil war for the crown of England, and the other had taken fright at the
approach of the royal army because his family were of the Empress Maud’s
faction, and their manor in Cheshire seemed a far safer place to be than
Shrewsbury under siege. Cadfael was left to do everything alone, but he had in
his time laboured under far hotter suns than this, and was doggedly determined
not to let his domain run wild, whether the outside world fell into chaos or
no.
In
this early summer of 1138 the fratricidal strife, hitherto somewhat desultory,
was already two years old, but never before had it approached Shrewsbury so
closely. Now its threat hung over castle and town like the shadow of death. But
for all that, Brother Cadfael’s mind was firmly upon life and growth, rather
than destruction and war, and certainly he had no suspicion that another manner
of killing, simple murder, furtive and unlicensed even in these anarchic times,
was soon to disrupt the calm of his chosen life.
August
should not, in normal circumstances, have been one of his busiest times in the
gardens, but there was more than enough for one man to do properly, and the
only relief they had to offer him was Brother Athanasius, who was deaf,
half-senile, and not to be relied upon to know a useful herb from a weed, and
the offer had been firmly declined. Better by far to manage alone. There was a
bed to be prepared for planting out late cabbages for succession, and fresh
seed to be sown for the kind that can weather the winter, as well as pease to
be gathered, and the dead, dried haulms of the early crop to be cleared away
for fodder and litter. And in his wooden work-shed in the herbarium, his own
particular pride, he had half a dozen preparations working in glass vessels and
mortars on the shelves, all of them needing attention at least once a day,
besides the herb wines that bubbled busily on their own at this stage. It was
high harvest time among the herbs, and all the medicines for the winter
demanding his care.
However,
he was not the man to let any part of his kingdom slip out of his control,
however wastefully the royal cousins Stephen and Maud contended for the throne
of England outside the abbey walls. If he lifted his head from digging compost
into the cabbage bed he could see the sluggish plumes of smoke hanging over the
abbey roofs and the town and castle beyond, and smell the acrid residue of
yesterday’s fires. That shadow and stink had hung like a pall over Shrewsbury
for almost a month, while King Stephen stamped and raged in his camp beyond the
Castle Foregate, the one dry-foot way into the town unless he could get
possession of the bridges, and William FitzAlan within the fortress held on
grimly, keeping an anxious eye on his dwindling supplies, and left the
thundering of defiance to his incorrigible uncle, Arnulf of Hesdin, who had
never learned to temper valour with discretion. The townspeople kept their
heads low, locked their doors, shuttered their shops, or, if they could, made
off westwards into Wales, to old, friendly enemies less to be feared than
Stephen. It suited the Welsh very well that Englishmen should fear
Englishmen—if either Maud or Stephen could be regarded as English!—and let
Wales alone, and they would not grudge a helping hand to the fleeing
casualties, provided the war went on merrily.
Cadfael
straightened his back and mopped the sweat from a tonsured scalp burned to the
colour of a ripe hazel-nut; and there was Brother Oswald the almoner bustling
along the path towards him, with skirts flapping, and propelling before him by
the shoulder a boy of about sixteen, in the coarse brown cotte and short summer
hose of the countryside, barelegged but very decently shod in leather, and
altogether looking carefully scrubbed and neat for a special occasion. The boy
went where he was directed, and kept his eyes lowered with nervous meekness.
Another family taking care to put its children out of reach of being pressed
for either side, thought Cadfael, and small blame to them.
“Brother
Cadfael, I think you have need of a helper, and here is a youngster who says
he’s not afraid of hard work. A good woman of the town has brought him in to
the porter, and asked that he be taken and taught as a lay servant. Her nephew
from Hencot, she says, and his parents dead. There’s a year’s endowment with
him. Prior Robert has given leave to take him, and there’s room in the boys’
dortoir. He’ll attend school with the novices, but he’ll not take vows unless
he himself comes to wish it. What do you say, will you have him?”
Cadfael
looked the boy over with interest, but said yes without hesitation, glad enough
to be offered someone young, able-bodied and willing. The lad was slenderly
built, but vigorous and firm on his feet, and moved with a spring. He looked up
warily from under a cropped tangle of brown curls, and his eyes were
long-lashed and darkly blue, very shrewd and bright. He was behaving himself
meekly and decorously, but he did not look intimidated.
“Very
heartily I’ll have you,” said Cadfael, “if you’ll take to this outdoor work
with me. And what’s your name, boy?”
“Godric,
sir,” said the young thing, in a small, gruff voice, appraising Cadfael just as
earnestly as he was being appraised.
“Good,
then, Godric, you and I will get on well enough. And first, if you will, walk
around the gardens here with me and see what we have in hand, and get used to
being within these walls. Strange enough I daresay you’ll find it, but safer
than in the town yonder, which I make no doubt is why your good aunt brought
you here.”
The
blue, bright eyes flashed him one glance and were veiled again.
“See
you come to Vespers with Brother Cadfael,” the almoner instructed, “and Brother
Paul, the master of the novices, will show you your bed, and tell you your
duties after supper. Pay attention to what Brother Cadfael tells you, and be
obedient to him as you should.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the boy virtuously. Under the meek accents a small bubble of
laughter seemed to be trying, though vainly, to burst. When Brother Oswald
hurried away, the blue eyes watched him out of sight, and then turned their
intent gaze upon Cadfael. A demure, oval face, with a wide, firm mouth shaped
properly for laughter, but quick to revert to a very sombre gravity. Even for
those meant to be light-hearted, these were grave times.
“Come,
see what manner of labour you’re taking on yourself,” said Cadfael cheerfully,
and downed his spade to take his new. boy round the enclosed garden, showing
him the vegetables, the herbs that made the noon air heady and drunken with fragrance,
the fish ponds and the beds of pease that ran down almost to the brook. The
early field was already dried and flaxen in the sun, all its harvest gathered,
even the later-sown hung heavy and full in pod.
“These
we should gather today and tomorrow. In this heat they’ll pass their best in a
day. And these spent ones have to be cleared. You can begin that for me. Don’t
pull them up, take the sickle and cut them off low to the ground, and the roots
we plough in, they’re good food for the soil.” He was talking in an easy,
good-humoured flow, to pass off peacefully whatever residue of regret and
strangeness there might be in this abrupt change. “How old are you, Godric?”
“Seventeen,”
said the husky voice beside him. He was on the small side for seventeen; let
him try his hand at digging later on, the ground Cadfael was working was heavy
to till. “I can work hard,” said the boy, almost as though he had guessed at
the thought, and resented it. “I don’t know much, but I can do whatever you
tell me.”
“So
you shall, then, and you can begin with the pease. Stack the dry stuff aside
here, and it goes to provide stable litter. And the roots go back to the
ground.”
“Like
humankind,” said Godric unexpectedly.
“Yes,
like humankind.” Too many were going back to the earth prematurely now in this
fratricidal war. He saw the boy turn his head, almost involuntarily, and look
across the abbey grounds and roofs to where the battered towers of the castle
loomed in their pall of smoke. “Have you kin within there, child?” asked Cadfael
gently.
“No!”
said the boy, too quickly. “But I can’t but think of them. They’re saying in
the town it can’t last long—that it may fall tomorrow. And surely they’ve done
only rightly! Before King Henry died he made his barons acknowledge the Empress
Maud as his heir, and they all swore fealty. She was his only living child, she
should be queen. And yet when her cousin, Count Stephen, seized the throne and
had himself crowned, all too many of them took it meekly and forgot their
oaths. That can’t be right. And it can’t be wrong to stand by the empress
faithfully. How can they excuse changing sides? How can they justify Count
Stephen’s claim?”
“Justify
may not be the apt word, but there are those among the lords, more by far than
take the opposite view, who would say, better a man for overlord than a woman.
And if a man, why, Stephen was as near as any to the throne. He is King
William’s grandchild, just as Maud is.”
“But
not son to the last king. And in any ease, through his mother, who was a woman
like Maud, so where’s the difference?” The young voice had emerged from its
guarded undertone, and rang clear and vehement. “But the real difference was
that Count Stephen rushed here and took what he wanted, while the empress was
far away in Normandy, thinking no evil. And now that half the barons have
recollected their oaths and declared for her, after all, it’s late, and what’s
to come of it but bloodshed and deaths? It begins here, in Shrewsbury, and this
won’t be the end.”
“Child,”
said Cadfael mildly, “are you not trusting me to extremes?”
The
boy, who had picked up the sickle and was swinging it in a capable, testing
hand, turned and looked at him with blue eyes suddenly wide open and unguarded.
“Well, so I do,” he said.
“And
so you may, for that matter. But keep your lips locked among others. We are in
the battlefield here, as sure as in the town, our gates never being closed to
any. All manner of men rub shoulders here, and in rough times some may try to
buy favour with carrying tales. Some may even be collectors of such tales for
their living. Your thoughts are safe in your head, best keep them there.”
The
boy drew back a little, and hung his head. Possibly he felt himself reproved.
Possibly not! “I’ll pay you trust for trust,” said Cadfael. “In my measure
there’s little to choose between two such monarchs, but much to be said for
keeping a man’s fealty and word. And now let me see you hard at work, and when
I’ve finished my cabbage patch I’ll come and help you.”
He
watched the boy set to work, which he did with immense vigour. The coarse tunic
was cut very full, turning a lissome body into a bundle of cloth tied at the
waist; possibly he had got it from some older and larger relative after the
best of the wear was out of it. My friend, thought Cadfael, in this heat you
won’t keep up that pace very long, and then we shall see!
By
the time he joined his assistant in the rustling field of bleached pea-stems,
the boy was red in the face and sweating, and puffing audibly with the strokes
of the sickle, but had not relaxed his efforts. Cadfael swept an armful of cut
haulms to the edge of the field, and said earnestly: “No need to make a penance
of it, lad. Strip off to the waist and be comfortable” And he slid his own
frock, already kilted to the knee, down from powerful brown shoulders, and let
the folds hang at his middle.
The
effect was complex, but by no means decisive. The boy checked momentarily in.
his stroke, said: “I’m well enough as I am!” with admirable composure, but
several tones above the gruff, young-mannish level of his earlier utterances,
and went on resolutely with his labours, at the same time as a distinct wave of
red arose from his collar to engulf his slender neck and the curve of his
cheek. Did that necessarily mean what it seemed to mean? He might have lied
about his age, his voice might be but newly broken and still unstable. And
perhaps he wore no shirt beneath the cotte, and was ashamed to reveal his lacks
to a new acquaintance. Ah, well, there were other tests. Better make sure at
once. If what Cadfael suspected was true, the matter was going to require very
serious thought.
“There’s
that heron that robs our hatcheries, again!” he cried suddenly, pointing across
the Meole brook, where the unsuspecting bird waded, just folding immense wings.
“Toss a stone across at him, boy, you’re nearer than I!” The heron was an
innocent stranger, but if Cadfael was right he was unlikely to come to any
harm.
Godric
stared, clawed up a sizeable stone, and heaved it heartily. His arm swung far
back, swung forward with his slight weight willingly behind it, and hurled the
stone under-arm across the brook and into the shallows, with a splash that sent
the heron soaring, certainly, but several feet from where he had been standing.
“Well,
well!” said Cadfael silently, and settled down to do some hard thinking.
In
his siege camp, deployed across the entire land approach to the Castle
Foregate, between broad coils of the river Severn, King Stephen fretted, fumed
and feasted, celebrating the few loyal Salopians—loyal to him, that is!—who
came to offer him aid, and planning his revenge upon the many disloyal who
absented themselves.
He
was a big, noisy, handsome, simple-minded man, very fair in colouring, very
comely in countenance, and at this stage in his fortunes totally bewildered by
the contention between his natural good nature and his smarting sense of
injury. He was said to be slow-witted, but when his Uncle Henry had died and
left no heir but a daughter, and she handicapped by an Angevin husband and far
away in France, no matter how slavishly her father’s vassals had bowed to his
will and accepted her as queen, Stephen for once in his life had moved with
admirable speed and precision, and surprised his potential subjects into
accepting him at his own valuation before they even had time to consider their
own interests, much less remember reluctant vows. So why had such a successful
coup abruptly turned sour? He would never understand. Why had half of his more
influential subjects, apparently stunned into immobility for a time, revived
into revolt now? Conscience? Dislike of the king imposed upon them?
Superstitious dread of King Henry and his influence with God?
Forced
to take the opposition seriously and resort to arms, Stephen had opened in the
way that came naturally to him, striking hard where he must, but holding the
door cheerfully open for penitents to come in. And what had been the result? He
had spared, and they had taken advantage and despised him for it. He had
invited submission without penalty, as he moved north against the rebel holds,
and the local baronage had held off from him with contempt. Well, tomorrow’s
dawn attack should settle the fate of the Shrewsbury garrison, and make an
example once for all. If these midlanders would not come peacefully and loyally
at his invitation, they should come scurrying like rats to save their own
skins. As for Arnulf of Hesdin… The obscenities and defiances he had hurled
from the towers of Shrewsbury should be regretted bitterly, if briefly.
The
king was conferring in his tent in the meads in the late afternoon, with
Gilbert Prestcote, his chief aide and sheriff-designate of Salop, and Willem
Ten Heyt, the captain of his Flemish mercenaries. It was about the time that
Brother Cadfael and the boy Godric were washing their hands and tidying their
clothing to go to Vespers. The failure of the local gentry to bring in their
own Levies to his support had caused Stephen to lean heavily upon his Flemings,
who in consequence were very well hated, both as aliens and as impervious
professionals, who would as soon burn down a village as get drunk, and were not
at all averse to doing both together. Ten Heyt was a huge, well-favoured man
with reddish-fair hair and long moustaches, barely thirty years old but a
veteran in warfare. Prestcote was a quiet, laconic knight past fifty,
experienced and formidable in battle, cautious in counsel, not a man to go to
extremes, but even he was arguing for severity.
“Your
Grace has tried generosity, and it has been shamelessly exploited to your loss.
It’s time to strike terror.”
“First,”
said Stephen drily, “to take castle and town.”
“That
your Grace may consider as done. What we have mounted for the morning will get
you into Shrewsbury. Then, if they survive the assault, your Grace may do what you
will with FitzAlan, and Adeney, and Hesdin, and the commons of the garrison are
no great matter, but even there you may be well advised to consider an
example.”
The
king would have been content enough then with his revenge on those three who
led the resistance here. William FitzAlan owed his office as sheriff of Salop
to Stephen, and yet had declared and held the castle for his rival. Fulke
Adeney, the greatest of FitzAlan’s vassal lords, had connived at the treason
and supported his overlord wholeheartedly. And Hesdin had condemned himself
over and over out of his own arrogant mouth. The rest were pawns, expendable
but of no importance.
“They
are noising it abroad in the town, as I’ve heard,” said Prestcote, “that
FitzAlan had already sent his wife and children away before we closed the way
north out of the town. But Adeney also has a child, a daughter. She’s said to
be still within the walls. They got the women out of the castle early.”
Prestcote was a man of the shire himself, and knew the local baronage at least
by name and repute. “Adeney’s girl was betrothed from a child to Robert
Beringar’s son, of Maesbury, by Oswestry. They had lands neighbouring in those
parts. I mention it because this is the man who is asking audience of you now,
Hugh Beringar of Maesbury. Use him as you find, your Grace, but until today I
would have said he was FitzAlan’s man, and your enemy. Have him in and judge
for yourself. If he’s changed his coat, well and good, he has men enough at his
command to be useful, but I would not let him in too easily.”
The
officer of the guard had entered the pavilion, and stood waiting to be invited
to speak; Adam Courcelle was one of Prestcote’s chief tenants and his
right-hand man, a tested soldier at thirty years old.
“Your
Grace has another visitor,” he said, when the king turned to acknowledge his
presence. “A lady. Will you see her first? She has no lodging here as yet, and
in view of the hour… She gives her name as Aline Siward, and says that her
father, whom she has only recently buried, was always your man.”
“Time
presses,” said the king. “Let them both come, and the lady shall have first
word.”
Courcelle
led her by the hand into the royal presence, with every mark of deference and
admiration, and she was indeed well worth any man’s attention. She was slender
and shy, and surely no older than eighteen, and the austerity of her mourning,
the white cap and wimple from which a few strands of gold hair crept out to
frame her cheeks, only served to make her look younger still, and more touching.
She had a child’s proud, shy dignity. Great eyes the colour of dark irises
widened wonderingly upon the king’s large comeliness as she made her reverence.
“Madam,”
said Stephen, reaching a hand to her, “I am sorry indeed for your loss, of
which I have this minute heard. If my protection can in any way serve you,
command me.”
“Your
Grace is very kind,” said the girl in a soft, awed voice. “I am now an orphan,
and the only one of my house left to bring you the duty and fealty we owe. I am
doing what my father would have wished, and but for his illness and death he
would have come himself, or I would have come earlier. Until your Grace came to
Shrewsbury we had no opportunity to render you the keys of the two castles we
hold. As I do now!”
Her
maid, a self-possessed young woman a good ten years older than her mistress,
had followed into the tent and stood withdrawn. She came forward now to hand
the keys to Aline, who laid them formally in the king’s hands.
“We
can raise for your Grace five knights, and more than forty men-at-arms, but at
this time I have left all to supply the garrisons at home, since they may be of
more use to your Grace so.” She named her properties and her castellans. It was
like hearing a child recite a lesson learned by heart, but her dignity and
gravity were those of a general in the field. “There is one more thing I should
say plainly, and to my much sorrow. I have a brother, who should have been the
one to perform this duty and service.” Her voice shook slightly, and gallantly
recovered. “When your Grace assumed the crown, my brother Giles took the part
of the Empress Maud, and after an open quarrel with my father, left home to
join her party. I do not know where he is now, though we have heard rumours
that he made his way to her in France. I could not leave your Grace in
ignorance of the dissension that grieves me as it must you. I hope you will not
therefore refuse what I can bring, but use it freely, as my father would have
wished, and as I wish.”
She
heaved a great sigh, as if she had thrown off a weight. The king was enchanted.
He drew her by the hand and kissed her heartily on the cheek. To judge by the
look on his face, Courcelle was envying him the opportunity.
“God
forbid, child,” said the king, “that I should add any morsel to your sorrows,
or fail to lift what I may of them. With all my heart I take your fealty, as
dear to me as that of earl or baron, and thank you for your pains taken to help
me. And now show me what I can do to serve you, for there can be no fit lodging
for you here in a military camp, and I hear you have made no provision as yet
for yourself. It will soon be evening.”
“I
had thought,” she said timidly, “that I might lodge in the abbey guest house,
if we can get a boat to put us across the river.”
“Certainly
you shall have safe escort over the river, and our request to the abbot to give
you one of the grace houses belonging to the abbey, where you may be private
but protected, until we can spare a safe escort to see you to your home.” He
looked about him for a ready messenger, and could not well miss Adam
Courcelle’s glowing eagerness. The young man had bright chestnut hair, and eyes
of the same burning brown, and knew that he stood well with his king. “Adam,
will you conduct Mistress Siward, and see her safely installed?”
“With
all my heart, your Grace,” said Courcelle fervently, and offered an ardent hand
to the lady.
Hugh
Beringar watched the girl pass by, her hand submissive in the broad brown hand
that clasped it, her eyes cast down, her small, gentle face with its
disproportionately large and noble brow tired and sad now that she had done her
errand faithfully. From outside the royal tent he had heard every word. She
looked now as if she might melt into tears at any moment, like a little girl
after a formal ordeal, a child-bride dressed up to advertise her riches or her
lineage, and then as briskly dismissed to the nursery when the transaction was
assured. The king’s officer walked delicately beside her, like a conqueror
conquered, and no wonder.
“Come,
the lord king waits,” said the guttural voice of Willem Ten Heyt in his ear,
and he turned and ducked his head beneath the awning of the tent. The
comparative dimness within veiled the large, fair presence of the king.
“I
am here, my liege,” said Hugh Beringar, and made his obeisance. “Hugh Beringar
of Maesbury, at your Grace’s service with all that I hold. My muster is not
great, six knights and some fifty men-at-arms, but half of them bowmen, and
skilled. And all are yours.”
“Your
name, Master Beringar, is known to us,” said the king drily. “Your
establishment also. That it was devoted to our cause was not so well known. As
I have heard of you, you have been an associate of FitzAlan and Adeney, our
traitors, until very recently. And even this change of heart comes rather
belatedly. I have been some four weeks in these parts, without word from you.”
“Your
Grace,” said Beringar, without haste to excuse himself or apparent discomfort
at his cool reception, “I grew up from a child regarding these men whom you
understandably name your traitors, as my peers and friends, and in friendship
have never found them wanting. Your Grace is too fairminded a man not to admit
that for one like me, who has not so far sworn fealty to any, the choice of a
path at this moment may require a deal of thought, if it is to be made once for
all. That King Henry’s daughter has a reasonable claim is surely beyond
question, I cannot call a man traitor for choosing that cause, though I may
blame him for breaking his oath to you. As for me, I came into my lands only
some months ago, and I have so far sworn fealty to none. I have taken my time
in choosing where I will serve. I am here. Those who flock to you without
thought may fall away from you just as lightly.”
“And
you will not?” said the king sceptically. He was studying this bold and
possibly over-fluent young man with critical attention. A lightweight, not
above the middle height and slenderly built, but of balanced and assured
movement; he might well make up in speed and agility what he lacked in bulk and
reach. Perhaps two or three years past twenty, black-avised, with thin, alert
features and thick, quirky dark brows. An unchancy fellow, because there was no
guessing from his face what went on behind the deep-set eyes. His forthright
speech might be honest, or it might be calculated. He looked quite subtle
enough to have weighed up his sovereign and reasoned that boldness might not be
displeasing.
“And
I will not,” he said firmly. “But that need not pass on my word. It can be put
to the proof hereafter. I am on your Grace’s probation.”
“You
have not brought your force with you?”
“Three
men only are with me. It would have been folly to leave a good castle unmanned
or half-manned, and small service, to you to ask that you feed fifty more
without due provision for the increase. Your Grace has only to tell me where
you would have me serve, and it shall be done.”
“Not
so fast,” said Stephen. “Others may also have need of time and thought before
they embrace you, young man. You were close and in confidence with FitzAlan,
some time ago.”
“I
was. I still have nothing against him but that he has chosen one way, and I the
other.”
“And
as I hear, you are betrothed to Fulke Adeney’s daughter.”
“I
hardly know whether to say to that: I am! or: I was! The times have altered a
great many plans previously made, for others as well as for me. As at this
time, I do not know where the girl is, or whether the bargain still holds.”
“There
are said to be no women now in the castle,” said the king, eyeing him closely.
“FitzAlan’s family may well be clean away, perhaps out of the country by now.
But Adeney’s daughter is thought to be in hiding in the town. It would not be
displeasing to me,” he said with soft emphasis, “to have so valuable a lady in
safe-keeping—in case even my plans should need to be altered. You were of her
father’s party, you must know the places likely to be sheltering her now. When
the way is clear, you, of all people, should be able to find her.”
The
young man gazed back at him with an inscrutable face, in which shrewd black
eyes signalled understanding, but nothing more, neither consent nor resistance,
no admission at all that he knew he was being set a task on which acceptance
and favour might well depend. His face was bland and his voice guileless as he
said: “That is my intent, your Grace. I came from Maesbury with that also in
mind.”
“Well,”
said Stephen, warily content, “you may remain in attendance against the town’s
fall, but we have no immediate work for you here. Should I have occasion to call
you, where will you be found?”
“If
they have room,” said Beringar, “at the abbey guest house.”
The
boy Godric stood through Vespers among the pupils and the novices, far back
among the small fry of the house, and close to the laity, such as lived here outside
the walls on the hither bank of the river, and could still reach this refuge.
He looked, as Brother Cadfael reflected when he turned his head to look for the
child, very small and rather forlorn, and his face, bright and impudent enough
in the herbarium, had grown very solemn indeed here in church. Night was
looming, his first night in this abode. Ah well, his affairs were being taken
in hand more consolingly than he supposed, and the ordeal he was bracing
himself to master need not confront him at all, if things went right, and at
all events not tonight. Brother Paul, the master of the novices, has several
other youngsters to look after, and was glad to have one taken firmly off his
hands.
Cadfael
reclaimed his protйgй after supper, at which meal he was glad to see that
Godric ate heartily. Evidently the boy was of a mettle to fight back against
whatever fears and qualms possessed him, and had the good sense to fortify
himself with the things of the flesh for the struggles of the spirit. Even more
reassuringly, he looked up with relief and recognition when Cadfael laid a hand
on his shoulder as they left the refectory.
“Come,
we’re free until Compline, and it’s cool out in the gardens. No need to stay
inside here, unless you wish.”
The
boy Godric did not wish, he was happy to escape into the summer evening. They
went down at leisure towards the fish ponds and the herbarium, and the boy
skipped at Cadfael’s side, and burst into a gay whistling, abruptly broken off.
“He
said the master of the novices would want me, after supper. Is it really proper
for me to come with you, like this?”
“All
approved and blessed, child, don’t be afraid. I’ve spoken with Brother Paul, we
have his good word. You are my boy, and I am responsible for you.” They had
entered the walled garden, and were suddenly engulfed and drowned in all those
sun-drenched fragrances, rosemary, thyme, fennel, dill, sage, lavender, a whole
world of secret sweetness. The heat of the sun lingered, heady with scent, even
into the cool of the evening. Over their heads swifts wheeled and screamed in
ecstasy.
They
had arrived at the wooden shed, its oiled timbers radiated warmth towards them.
Cadfael opened the door. “This is your sleeping-place, Godric.”
There
was a low bench-bed neatly arrayed at the end of the room. The boy stared, and
quaked under Cadfael’s hand.
“I
have all these medicines brewing here, and some of them need tending regularly,
some very early, they’d spoil if no one minded them. I’ll show you all you have
to do, it’s not so heavy a task. And here you have your bed, and here a grid
you may open for fresh air.” The boy had stopped shaking, the dark blue eyes
were large and measuring, and fixed implacably upon Cadfael. There seemed to be
a smile pending, but there was also a certain aura of offended pride. Cadfael
turned to the door, and showed the heavy bar that guarded it within, and the
impossibility of opening it from without, once that was dropped into its
socket. “You may shut out the world and me until you’re ready to come out to us.”
The
boy Godric, who was not a boy at all, was staring now in direct accusation,
half-offended, half-radiant, wholly relieved.
“How
did you know?” she demanded, jutting a belligerent chin.
“How
were you going to manage in the dortoir?” responded Brother Cadfael mildly.
“I
would have managed. Boys are not so clever, I could have cozened them. Under a
wall like this,” she said, hoisting handfuls of her ample tunic, “all bodies
look the same, and men are blind and stupid.” She laughed then, viewing
Cadfael’s placid competence, and suddenly she was all woman, and startlingly
pretty in her gaiety and relief. “Oh, not you! How did you know? I tried so
hard, I thought I could pass all trials. Where did I go wrong?”
“You
did very well,” said Cadfael soothingly. “But, child, I was forty years about
the world, and from end to end of it, before I took the cowl and came to my
green, sweet ending here. Where did you go wrong? Don’t take it amiss, take it
as sound advice from an ally, if I answer you. When you came to argument, and
meant it with all your heart, you let your voice soar. And never a crack in it,
mind you, to cover the change. That can be learned, I’ll show you when we have
leisure. And then, when I bade you strip and be easy—ah, never blush, child, I
was all but certain then!—of course you put me off. And last, when I got you to
toss a stone across the brook, you did it like a girl, under-arm, with a round
swing. When did you ever see a boy throw like that? Don’t let anyone else trick
you into such another throw, not until you master the art. It betrays you at
once.”
He
stood patiently silent then, for she had dropped on to the bed, and sat with
her head in her hands, and first she began to laugh, and then to cry, and then
both together; and all the while he let her alone, for she was no more out of
control than a man tossed between gain and loss, and manfully balancing his
books. Now he could believe she was seventeen, a budding woman, and a fine one,
too.
When
she was ready, she wiped her eyes on the back of her hand, and looked up
alertly, smiling like sunlight through a rainbow. “And did you mean it?” she
said. “That you’re responsible for me? I said I trusted you to extremes!”
“Daughter
dear,” said Cadfael patiently, “what should I do with you now but serve you as
best I can, and see you safe out of here to wherever you would be?”
“And
you don’t even know who I am,” she said, marvelling. “Who is trusting too far
now?”
“What
difference should it make to me, child, what your name may be? A lass left
forlorn here to weather out this storm and be restored to her own people—is not
that enough? What you want to tell, you’ll tell, and I need no more.”
“I
think I want to tell you everything,” said the girl simply, looking up at him
with eyes wide and candid as the sky. “My father is either in Shrewsbury castle
this minute with his death hanging over him, or out of it and running for his
life with William FitzAlan for the empress’s lands in Normandy, with a hue and
cry ready to be loosed after him any moment. I’m a burden to anyone who
befriends me now, and likely to be a hunted hostage as soon as I’m missed from
where I should be. Even to you, Brother Cadfael, I could be dangerous. I’m
daughter to FitzAlan’s chief ally and friend. My name is Godith Adeney.”
Lame
Osbern, who had been born with both legs withered, and scuttled around at
unbelievable speed on hands provided with wooden pattens, dragging his
shrivelled knees behind him on a little wheeled trolley, was the humblest of
the king’s campfollowers. Normally he had his pitch by the castle gates in the
town, but he had forsaken in time a spot now so dangerous, and transferred his
hopeful allegiance to the edge of the siege camp, as near as he was allowed to
get to the main guard, where the great went in and out. The king was
notoriously open-handed, except towards his enemies-at-arms, and the pickings
were good. The chief military officers, perhaps, were too preoccupied to waste
thought or alms on a beggar, but some of those who came belatedly seeking
favour, having decided which way fortune was tending, were apt to give to the
poor as a kind of sop to God for luck, and the common bowmen and even the
Flemings, when off-duty and merry, tossed Osbern a few coppers, or the scraps
from their mess.
He
had his little wagon backed well into the lee of a clump of half-grown trees,
close to the guard-post, where he might come in for a crust of bread or a
drink, and could enjoy the glow of the field-fire at night. Even summer nights
can strike chill after the heat of the August day, when you have only a few
rags to cover you, and the fire was doubly welcome. They kept it partially
turfed, to subdue the glow, but left themselves light enough to scrutinise any
who came late.
It
was close to midnight when Osbern stirred out of an uneasy sleep, and straining
his ears for the reason, caught the rustling of the bushes behind and to his
left, towards the Castle Foregate but well aside from the open road. Someone
was approaching from the direction of the t9wn, and certainly not from the main
gates, but roundabout in cover from along the riverside. Osbern knew the town
like his own callused palm. Either this was a scout returning from
reconnaissance—but why keep up this stealth right into the camp?—or else
someone had crept out of town or castle by the only other way through the wall
on this side, the water-port that led down to the river.
A
dark figure, visible rather as movement than matter in a moonless night, slid
out from the bushes and made at a crouching, silent scurry for the guard-post.
At the sentry’s challenge he halted immediately, and stood frozen but eager,
and Osbern saw the faint outline of a slight, willowy body, wrapped closely in
a black cloak, so that only a gleam of pale face showed. The voice that
answered the challenge was young, high-pitched, tormentedly afraid and
desperately urgent.
“I
beg audience—I am not armed! Take me to your officer. I have something to
tell—to the king’s advantage…”
They
hauled him in and went over him roughly to ensure he bore no weapons; and whatever
was said between them did not reach Osbern’s ears, but the upshot of it was
that he had his will. They led him within the camp, and there he vanished from
view.
Osbern
did not doze again, the cold of the small hours was gnawing through his rags.
Such a cloak as that, he thought, shivering, I wish the good God would send me!
Yet even the owner of so fine a garment had been shaking, the quavering voice
had betrayed his fear, but also his avid hope. A curious incident, but of no
profit to a poor beggar. Not, that is, until he saw the same figure emerge from
the shadowy alleys of the camp and halt once more at the gate. His step was
lighter and longer now, his bearing less furtive and fearful. He bore some
token from the authorities that was enough to let him out again as he had
entered, unharmed and unmolested. Osbern heard a few words pass:
“I
am to go back, there must be no suspicion… I have my orders!”
Ah,
now, in pure thankfulness for some alleviating merry, he might be disposed to
give. Osbern wheeled himself forward hurriedly into the man’s path, and
extended a pleading hand.
“For
God’s love, master! If he has been gracious to you, be gracious to the poor!”
He
caught a glimpse of a pale face much eased, heard long breaths of relief and
hope. A flicker of firelight caught the elaborate shape of a metal clasp that
fastened the cloak at the throat. Out of the muffling folds a hand emerged, and
dropped a coin into the extended palm. “Say some prayers for me tomorrow,” said
a low, breathless whisper, and the stranger flitted away as he had come, and
vanished into the trees before Osbern had done blessing him for his alms.
Before dawn Osbern was roused again from fitful
sleep, to withdraw himself hastily into the bushes out of all men’s way. For it
was still only the promise of a clear dawn, but the royal camp was astir, so
quietly and in such practical order that he felt rather than heard the
mustering of men, the ordering of ranks, the checking of weapons. The air of
the morning seemed to shake to the tramping of regiments, while barely a sound
could be heard. From curve to curve of Severn, across the neck of land that
afforded the only dry approach to the town, the steady murmur of activity
rippled, awesome and exhilarating, as King Stephen’s army turned out and formed
its divisions for the final assault of Shrewsbury castle.
Chapter Two
LONG
BEFORE NOON IT WAS ALL OVER, the gates fired with brushwood and battered down,
the baileys cleared one by one, the last defiant bowman hunted down from the
walls and towers, smoke heavy and thick like a pall over fortress and town. In
the streets not a human creature or even a dog stirred. At the first assault
every man had gone to earth with wife and family and beasts behind locked and
barred doors, and crouched listening with stretched ears to the thunder and
clash and yelling of battle. It lasted only a short while. The garrison had
reached exhaustion, ill-supplied, thinned by desertions as long as there was
any possibility of escape. Everyone had been certain the next determined attack
must carry the town. The merchants of Shrewsbury waited with held breath for
the inevitable looting, and heaved sighs of relief when it was called to heel
peremptorily by the king himself—not because he grudged his Flemings their booty,
but because he wanted them close about his person. Even a king is vulnerable,
and this had been an enemy town, and was still unpacified. Moreover, his urgent
business was with the garrison of the castle, and in particular with FitzAlan,
and Adeney, and Arnulf of Hesdin.
Stephen
stalked through the smoky, bloody, steel-littered bailey into the hall, and
despatched Courcelle and Ten Heyt and their men with express orders to isolate
the ring leaders and bring them before him. Prestcote he kept at his side; the
keys were in the new lieutenant’s hands, and provisions for the royal garrison
were already in consideration.
“In
the end,” said Prestcote critically, “it has cost your Grace fairly low. In
losses, certainly. In money—the delay was costly, but the castle is intact.
Some repairs to the walls—new gates… This is a stronghold you need never lose
again, I count it worth the time it took to win it.”
“We
shall see,” said Stephen grimly, thinking of Arnulf of Hesdin bellowing his
lordly insults from the towers. As though he courted death!
Courcelle
came in, his helmet off and his chestnut hair blazing. A promising officer,
alert, immensely strong in personal combat, commanding with his men: Stephen
approved him. “Well, Adam. Are they run to earth? Surely FitzAlan is not hiding
somewhere among the barns, like a craven servant?”
“No,
your Grace, by no means!” said Courcelle ruefully. “We have combed this
fortress from roof to dungeons, I promise you we have missed nothing. But
FitzAlan is clean gone! Give us time, and we’ll find for you the day, the hour,
the route they took, their plans.”
“They?”
blazed Stephen, catching at the plural.
“Adeney
is away with him. Not a doubt of it, they’re loose. Sorry I am to bring your
Grace such news, but truth is truth.” And give him his due, he had the guts to
utter such truths. “Hesdin,” he said, “we have. He is here without. Wounded,
but not gravely, nothing but scratched. I put him in irons for safety, but I
think he is hardly in such heart as when he lorded it within here, and your
Grace was well outside.”
“Bring
him in,” ordered the king, enraged afresh to find he had let two of his chief
enemies slip through his fingers.
Arnulf
of Hesdin came in limping heavily, and dragging chains at wrist and ankle; a
big, florid man nearing sixty, soiled with dust, smoke and blood. Two of the
Flemings thrust him to his knees before the king. His face was fixed and
fearful, but defiant still.
“What,
are you tamed?” exulted the king. “Where’s your insolence now? You had plenty
to say for yourself only a day or two ago, are you silenced? Or have you the
wit to talk another language now?”
“Your
Grace,” said Hesdin, grating out words evidently hateful to him, “you are the
victor, and I am at your mercy, and at your feet, and I have fought you fair,
and I look to be treated honourably now. I am a nobleman of England and of
France. You have need of money, and I am worth an earl’s ransom, and I can pay
it.”
“Too
late to speak me fair, you who were loud-mouthed and foul-mouthed when there
were walls between us. I swore to have your life then, and have it I will. An
earl’s ransom cannot buy it back. Shall I quote you my price? Where is
FitzAlan? Where is Adeney? Tell me in short order where I may lay hands on
those two, and better pray that I succeed, and I may—may!—consider letting you
keep your miserable life.”
Hesdin
reared his head and stared the king in the eyes. “I find your price too high,”
he said. “Only one thing I’ll tell you concerning my comrades, they did not run
from you until all was already lost. And live or die, that’s all you’ll get
from me. Go hunt your own noble game!”
“We
shall see!” flared the king, infuriated. “We shall see whether we get no more
from you! Have him away, Adam, give him to Ten Heyt, and see what can be done
with him. Hesdin, you have until two of the clock to tell us everything you
know concerning their flight, or else I hang you from the battlements. Take him
away!”
They
dragged him out still on his knees. Stephen sat fuming and gnawing at his
knuckles. “Is it true, you think, Prestcote, the one thing he did say? That
they fled only when the fight was already lost? Then they may well be still in
the town. How could they break through? Not by the Foregate, clean through our
ranks. And the first companies within were sped straight for the two bridges.
Somewhere in this island of a town they must be hiding. Find them!”
“They
could not have reached the bridges,” said Prestcote positively. “There’s only
one other way out, and that’s by the water-gate to the river. I doubt if they
could have swum Severn there without being seen, I am sure they had no boat.
Most likely they are in hiding somewhere in the town.”
“Scour
it! Find them! No looting until I have them safe in hold. Search everywhere,
but find them.”
While
Ten Heyt and his Flemings rounded up the prisoners taken in arms, and disposed
the new garrison under Prestcote’s orders, Courcelle and others with their
companies pressed on through the town, confirmed the security of the two
bridges, and set about searching every house and shop within the walls. The
king, his conquest assured, returned to his camp with his own bodyguard, and
waited grimly for news of his two fugitives. It was past two o’clock when
Courcelle reported back to him.
“Your
Grace,” he said bluntly, “there is no better word than failure to bring you. We
have searched every street, every officer and merchant of the town has been
questioned, all premises ransacked. It is not such a great town, and unless by
some miracle I do not see how they can well have got outside the walls unseen.
But we have not found them, neither FitzAlan nor Adeney, nor trace nor word of
them. In case they’ve swum the river and got clear beyond the Abbey Foregate,
I’ve sent out a fast patrol that way, but I doubt if we shall hear of them now.
And Hesdin is obdurate still. Not a word to be got from him, and Ten Heyt has
done his best, short of killing too soon. We shall get nothing from him. He
knows the penalty. Threats will do nothing.”
“He
shall have what he was promised,” said Stephen grimly. “And the rest? How many
were taken of the garrison?”
“Apart
from Hesdin, ninety-three in arms.” Courcelle watched the handsome, frowning
face; bitterly angry and frustrated as the king was, he was unlikely to keep
his grudges hot too long. They had been telling him for weeks that it was a
fault in him to forgive too readily. “Your Grace, clemency now would be taken
for weakness,” said Courcelle emphatically.
“Hang
them!” said Stephen, jerking out sentence harshly before he wavered.
“All?”
“All!
And at once. Have them all out of the world before tomorrow.”
They
gave the grisly work to the Flemings to do. It was what mercenaries were for,
and it kept them busy all that day, and out of the houses of the town, which
otherwise would have been pillaged of everything of value. The interlude,
dreadful as it was, gave the guilds and the reeve and the bailiffs time to
muster a hasty delegation of loyalty to the king, and obtain at least a grim
and sceptical motion of grace. He might not believe in their sudden devotion,
but he could appreciate its urgency.
Prestcote
deployed his new garrison and made all orderly in the castle below, while Ten
Heyt and his companies despatched the old garrison wholesale from the
battlements. Arnulf of Hesdin was the first to die. The second was a young
squire who had had a minor command under him; he was in a state of frenzied
dread, and was hauled to his death yelling and protesting that he had been
promised his life. The Flemings who handled him spoke little English, and were
highly diverted by his pleadings, until the noose cut them off short.
Adam
Courcelle confessed himself only too glad to get away from the slaughter, and
pursue his searches to the very edges of the town, and across the bridges into
the suburbs. But he found no trace of William FitzAlan or Fulke Adeney.
From
the morning’s early alarm to the night’s continuing slaughter, a chill hush of
horror hung over the abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul. Rumours flew thick as
bees in swarm, no one knew what was really happening, but everyone knew that it
would be terrible. The brothers doggedly pursued their chosen rйgime, service
after service, chapter and Mass and the hours of work, because life could only
be sustained by refusing to let it be disrupted, by war, catastrophe or death.
To the Mass after chapter came Aline Siward with her maid Constance, pale and
anxious and heroically composed; and perhaps as a result, Hugh Beringar also
attended, for he had observed the lady passing from the house she had been
given in the Foregate, close to the abbey’s main mill.
During
the service he paid rather more attention to the troubled, childish profile
beneath the white mourning wimple than to the words of the celebrant.
Her
small hands were devoutly folded, her resolute, vulnerable lips moved silently,
praying piteously for all those dying and being hurt while she kneeled here.
The girl Constance watched her closely and jealously, a protective presence,
but could not drive the war away from her.
Beringar
followed at a distance until she re-entered her house. He did not seek to
overtake her, nor attempt as yet to speak to her. When she had vanished, he
left his henchmen behind, and went out along the Foregate to the end of the
bridge. The section that drew up was still lifted, sealing in the town, but the
clamour and shrieking of battle was already subsiding to his right, where the
castle loomed in its smoky halo beyond the river. He would still have to wait
before he could carry out his promised search for his affianced bride. Within
the hour, if he had read the signs aright, the bridge should be down, and open.
Meantime, he went at leisure to take his midday meal. There was no hurry.
Rumours
flew in the guest house, as everywhere else. Those who had business of
unimpeachable honesty elsewhere were all seeking to pack their bags and leave.
The consensus of opinion was that the castle had certainly fallen, and the cost
would run very high. King Stephen’s writ had better be respected henceforth,
for he was here, and victorious, and the Empress Maud, however legitimate her
claim, was far away in Normandy, and unlikely to provide any adequate
protection. There were whispers, also, that FitzAlan and Adeney, at the last
moment, had broken out of the trap and were away. For which many breathed
thanks, though silently.
When
Beringar went out again, the bridge was down, the way open, and King Stephen’s
sentries manning the passage. They were strict in scrutinising his credentials,
but passed him within respectfully when they were satisfied. Stephen must have
given orders concerning him. He crossed, and entered at the guarded but open
gate in the wall. The street rose steeply, the island town sat high.
Beringar
knew it well, and knew where he was bound. At the summit of the hill the row of
the butchers’ stalls and houses levelled out, silent and deserted.
Edric
Flesher’s shop was the finest of the row, but it was shuttered and still like
all the rest. Hardly a head looked out, and even then only briefly and
fearfully, and was withdrawn as abruptly behind barred doors. By the look of
the street, they had not so far been ravaged. Beringar thudded at the shut
door, and when he heard furtive stirrings within, lifted his voice: “Open to
me, Hugh Beringar! Edric—Petronilla—Let me in, I’m alone!”
He
had half expected that the door would remain sealed like a tomb, and those
within silent, and he would not have blamed them; but, instead, the door was
flung wide, and there was Petronilla beaming and opening her arms to him as if
to a saviour. She was getting old, but still plump, succulent and kindly, the
most wholesome thing he had seen in this siege town so far. Her grey hair was
tight and neat under its white cap, and her twinkling grey eyes bright and
intelligent as ever, welcoming him in.
“Master
Hugh—to see a known and trusted face here now!” Beringar was instantly sure
that she did not quite trust him! “Come in, and welcome! Edric, here’s
Hugh—Hugh Beringar!” And there was her husband, prompt to her call, large and
rubicund and competent, the master of his craft in this town, and a councillor.
They
drew him within, and closed the door firmly, as he noted and approved. Beringar
said what a lover should say, without preamble: “Where is Godith? I came to
look for her, to provide for her. Where has he hidden her?”
It
seemed they were too intent on making sure the shutters were fast, and
listening for hostile footsteps outside, to pay immediate attention to what he
was saying. And too ready with questions of their own to answer his questions.
“Are
you hunted?” asked Edric anxiously. “Do you need a place to hide?”
And:
“Were you in the garrison?” demanded Petronilla, and patted him concernedly in
search of wounds. As though she had been his nurse once, instead of Godith’s,
and seen him every day of his life instead of twice or thrice since the
childhood betrothal. A little too much solicitude! And a neat, brief
breathing-space while they considered how much or how little to tell him!
“They’ve
been hunting here already,” said Ethic. “I doubt if they’ll come again, they
had the place to pieces after the sheriff and the Lord Fulke. You’re welcome to
a shelter here if you need it. Are they close on your heels?”
He
was sure by that time that they knew he had never been inside the castle, nor
committed in any way to FitzAlan’s stand. This clever, trusted old servant and
her husband had been deep in Adeney’s confidence, they knew very well who had
held with him, and who had held aloof.
“No,
it’s not that. I’m in no danger and no need. I came only to look for Godith.
They’re saying he left it too late to send her away with FitzAlan’s family.
Where can I find her?”
“Did
someone send you here to look for her?” asked Edric.
“No,
no, none… But where else would he place her? Who is there to be trusted like
her nurse? Of course I came first to you! Never tell me she was not here!”
“She
was here,” said Petronilla. “Until a week ago we had her. But she’s gone, Hugh,
you’re too late. He sent two knights to fetch her away, and not even we were
told where she was bound. What we don’t know we can’t be made to tell, he said.
But it’s my belief they got her away out of the town in good time, and she’s
far off by now, and safe, pray God!” No doubt about the fervency of that
prayer, she would fight and die for her nurseling. And lie for her, too, if
need be!
“But
for God’s sake, friends, can you not help me to her at all? I’m her intended
husband. I’m responsible for her if her father is dead, as by now, for all I
know, he may well be…”
That
got him something for his trouble, at any rate, if it was no more than the
flicker of a glance passing between them, before they exclaimed their “God
forbid!” in unison. They knew very well, by the frenzied search, that FitzAlan
and Adeney had been neither killed nor taken. They could not yet be sure that they
were clean away and safe, but they were staking their lives and loyalty on it.
So now he knew he would get nothing more from them, he, the renegade.
Not,
at any rate, by this direct means.
“Sorry
I am, lad,” said Edric Flesher weightily, “to have no better comfort for you,
but so it is. Take heart that at least no enemy has laid hand on her, and we
pray none ever will.” Which could well be taken, reflected Beringar
whimsically, as a thrust at me.
“Then
I must away, and try what I can discover elsewhere,” he said dejectedly. “I’ll
not put you in further peril. Open, Petronilla, and look if the street’s empty
for me.” Which she did, nothing loth, and reported it as empty as a beggar’s
palm. Beringar clasped Edric’s hand, and leaned and kissed Ethic’s wife, and
was rewarded and avenged by a vivid, guilty blush.
“Pray
for her,” he said, asking one thing at least they would not grudge him, and
slipped through the half-open door, and heard it closed firmly behind him. Not
too loudly, since he was supposed to be affecting stealth, but still audibly,
he tramped with hasty steps along the street as far as the corner of the house.
Then, whirling, he skipped back silently on his toes to lay an ear to the
shutter.
“Hunting
for his bride!” Petronilla was saying scornfully. “Yes, and a fair price he’d
pay for her, too, and she a certain decoy for her father’s return, if not for
FitzAlan’s! He has his way to make with Stephen now, and my girl’s his best
weapon.”
“Maybe
we’re too hard on him,” responded Edric mildly. “Who’s to say he doesn’t truly
want to see the girl safe? But I grant you we dared take no chances. Let him do
his own hunting.”
“Thank
God,” she said fiercely, “he can’t well know I’ve hid my lamb away in the one
place where no sane man will look for her!” And she chuckled at the word “man.”
“There’ll
be a time to get her out of there later, when all the hue and cry’s forgotten.
Now I pray her father’s miles from here and riding hard. And that those two
lads in Frankwell will have a lucky run westward with the sheriff’s treasury
tonight. May they all come safe to Normandy, and be serviceable to the empress,
bless her!”
“Hush,
love!” said Edric chidingly. “Even behind locked doors…”
They
had moved away into an inner room; a door closed between. Hugh Beringar abandoned
his listening-post and walked demurely away down the long, curving hill to the
town gate and the bridge, whistling softly and contentedly as he went.
He
had got more even than he had bargained for. So they were hoping to smuggle out
FitzAlan’s treasury, as well as his person, and this very night, westward into
Wales! And had had the forethought to stow it away meantime, against this
desperate contingency, outside the walls of the town, somewhere in the suburb
of Frankwell. No gates to pass, no bridges to cross. As for Godith—he had a
shrewd idea now where to look for her. With the girl and the money, he
reflected, a man could buy the favour of far less corruptible men than King
Stephen!
Godith
was in the herbarium workshop, obstinately stirring, diluting and mixing as she
had been shown, an hour before Vespers, with her heart in anguished suspense,
and her mind in a twilight between hope and despair. Her face was grubby from
smearing away tears with a hand still soiled from the garden, and her eyes were
rimmed with the washed hollows and grimed uplands of her grief and tension. Two
tears escaped from her angry efforts at damming them, while both hands were
occupied, and fell into a brew which should not have been weakened. Godith
swore, an oath she had learned in the mews, long ago, when the falconers were
suffering from a careless and impudent apprentice who had been her close
friend.
“Rather
say a blessing with them,” said Brother Cadfael’s voice behind her shoulder,
gently and easily. “That’s likely to be the finest tisane for the eyes I ever
brewed. Never doubt God was watching.” She had turned her dirty, dogged,
appealing face to him in silence, finding encouragement in the very tone of his
voice. “I’ve been to the gate house, and the mill, and the bridge. Such ill
news as there is, is ill indeed, and presently we’ll go pray for the souls of
those quitting this world. But all of us quit it at last, by whatever way,
that’s not the worst of evils. And there is some news not all evil. From all I
can hear this side Severn, and at the bridge itself—there’s an archer among the
guard there was with me in the Holy Land—your father and FitzAlan are neither
dead, wounded nor captive, and all search of the town has failed to find them.
They’re clear away, Godric, my lad. I doubt if Stephen for all his hunting will
lay hand on them now. And now you may tend to that wine you’re watering, and
practise your young manhood until we can get you safely out of here after your
sire.”
Just
for a moment she rained tears like the spring thaw, and then she glinted
radiance like the spring sun. There was so much to grieve over, and so much to
celebrate, she did not know which to do first, and essayed both together, like
April. But her age was April, and the hopeful sunshine won.
“Brother
Cadfael,” she said when she was calm, “I wish my father could have known you.
And yet you are not of his persuasion, are you?”
“Child,
dear,” said Cadfael comfortably, “my monarch is neither Stephen nor Maud, and
in all my life and all my fighting I’ve fought for only one king. But I value
devotion and fidelity, and doubt if it matters whether the object falls short.
What you do and what you are is what matters. Your loyalty is as sacred as
mine. Now wash your face and bathe your eyes, and you can sleep for half an
hour before Vespers—but no, you’re too young to have the gift!”
She
had not the gift that comes with age, but she had the exhaustion that comes of
youthful stress, and she fell asleep on her bench-bed within seconds, drugged
with the syrup of relief. He awoke her in time to cross the close for Vespers.
She walked beside him discreetly, her shock of clipped curls combed forward on
her brow to hide her still reddened eyes.
Driven
to piety by shock and terror, all the inhabitants of the guest house were also
converging on the church, among them Hugh Beringar; not, perhaps, a victim of
fear, but drawn by the delicate bait of Aline Siward, who came hastening from
her house by the mill with lowered eyes and heavy heart. Beringar had, none the
less, a quick eye for whatever else of interest might be going on round about
him. He saw the two oddly contrasted figures coming in from the gardens, the
squat, solid, powerful middle-aged monk with the outdoor tan and the rolling,
seaman’s gait, with his hand protectively upon the shoulder of a slip of a boy
in a cotte surely inherited from an older and larger kinsman, a bare-legged,
striding youth squinting warily through a bush of brown hair. Beringar looked,
and considered; he smiled, but so inwardly that on his long, mobile mouth the
smile hardly showed.
Godith
controlled both her face and her pace, and gave no sign of recognition. In the
church she strolled away to join her fellow-pupils, and even exchanged a few
nudges and grins with them. If he was still watching, let him wonder, doubt,
change his mind. He had not seen her for more than five years. Whatever his
speculations, he could not be sure. Nor was he watching this part of the
church, she noted; his eyes were on the unknown lady in mourning most of the
time. Godith began to breathe more easily, and even allowed herself to examine
her affianced bridegroom almost as attentively as he was observing Aline
Siward. When last seen, he had been a coltish boy of eighteen, all elbows and
knees, not yet in full command of his body. Now he had a cat’s assured and
contemptuous grace, and a cool, aloof way with him. A presentable enough
fellow, she owned critically, but no longer of interest to her, or possessed of
any rights in her. Circumstances alter fortunes. She was relieved to see that
he did not look in her direction again.
All
the same, she told Brother Cadfael about it, as soon as they were alone
together in the garden after supper, and her evening lesson with the boys was
over. Cadfael took it gravely.
“So
that’s the fellow you were to marry! He came here straight from the king’s
camp, and has certainly joined the king’s party, though according to Brother
Dennis, who collects all the gossip that’s going among his guests, he’s on
sufferance as yet, and has to prove himself before he’ll get a command.” He
scrubbed thoughtfully at his blunt, brown nose, and pondered. “Did it seem to
you that he recognised you? Or even looked over-hard at you, as if you reminded
him of someone known?”
“I
thought at first he did give me a hard glance, as though he might be wondering.
But then he never looked my way again, or showed any interest. No, I think I
was mistaken. He doesn’t know me. I’ve changed in five years, and in this
guise… In another year,” said Godith, astonished and almost alarmed at the
thought, “we should have been married.”
“I
don’t like it!” said Cadfael, brooding. “We shall have to keep you well out of
his sight. If he wins his way in with the king, maybe he’ll leave here with him
in a week or so. Until then, keep far from the guest house or the stables, or
the gate house, or anywhere he may be. Never let him set eyes on you if you can
avoid.”
“I
know!” said Godith, shaken and grave. “If he does find me he may turn me to
account for his own advancement. I do know! Even if my father had reached
shipboard, he would come back and surrender himself, if I were threatened. And
then he would die, as all those poor souls over there have died…” She could not
bear to turn her head to look towards the towers of the castle, hideously
ornamented. They were dying there still, though she did not know it; the work
went on well into the hours of darkness. “I will avoid him, like the plague,”
she said fervently, “and pray that he’ll leave soon.”
Abbot
Heribert was an old, tired and peace-loving man, and disillusionment with the
ugly tendencies of the time, combined with the vigour and ambition of his
prior, Robert, had disposed him to withdraw from the world ever deeper into his
own private consolations of the spirit. Moreover, he knew he was in disfavour
with the king, like all those who had been slow to rally to him with vociferous
support. But confronted with an unmistakable duty, however monstrous, the abbot
could still muster courage enough to rise to the occasion. There were ninety-four
dead or dying men being disposed of like animals, and every one had a soul, and
a right to proper burial, whatever his crimes and errors. The Benedictines of
the abbey were the natural protectors of those rights, and Heribert did not
intend King Stephen’s felons to be shovelled haphazard and nameless into an
unmarked grave. All the same, he shrank from the horror of the task, and looked
about him for someone more accomplished in these hard matters of warfare and
bloodshed than himself, to lend support. And the obvious person was Brother
Cadfael, who had crossed the world in the first Crusade, and afterwards spent
ten years as a sea captain about the coasts of the Holy Land, where fighting
hardly ever ceased.
After
Compline, Abbot Heribert sent for Cadfael to his private parlour.
“Brother,
I am going—now, this night—to ask King Stephen for his leave and authority to
give Christian burial to all those slaughtered prisoners. If he consents,
tomorrow we must take up their poor bodies, and prepare them decently for the
grave. There will be some who can be claimed by their own families, the rest we
shall bury honourably with the rites due to them. Brother, you have yourself
been a soldier. Will you—if I speak with the king—will you take charge of this
work?”
“Not
gladly, but with all my heart, for all that,” said Brother Cadfael, “yes,
Father, I will.”
Chapter
Three
“YES,
I WILL,” SAID GODITH, “if that’s how I can best be useful to you. Yes, I will
go to my morning lesson and my evening lesson, eat my dinner without a word or
a look to anyone, and then make myself scarce and shut myself up here among the
potions. Yes, and drop the bar on the door, if need be, and wait until I hear
your voice before I open again. Of course I’ll do as you bid. But for all that,
I wish I could go with you. These are my father’s people and my people, I wish
I could have some small part in doing them these last services.”
“Even
if it were safe for you to venture there,” said Cadfael firmly, “and it is not,
I would not let you go. The ugliness that man can do to man might cast a shadow
between you and the certainty of the justice and mercy God can do to him
hereafter. It takes half a lifetime to reach the spot where eternity is always
visible, and the crude injustice of the hour shrivels out of sight. You’ll come
to it when the time’s right. No, you stay here and keep well out of Hugh
Beringar’s way.”
He
had even thought of recruiting that young man into his working-party of
able-bodied and devoutly inclined helpers, to make sure that he spent the day
away from anywhere Godith might be. Whether in a bid to acquire merit for their
own souls, out of secret partisan sympathy with the dead men’s cause, or to
search anxiously for friends or kin, three of the travellers in the guest house
had volunteered their aid, and it might have been possible, with such an
example, to inveigle others, even Beringar, into feeling obliged to follow
suit. But it seemed that the young man was already out and away on horseback,
perhaps dancing hopeful attendance on the king; a newcomer seeking office can’t
afford to let his face be forgotten. He had also ridden out the previous
evening as soon as Vespers was over, so said the lay brothers in the stables.
His three men-at-arms were here, idling their day away with nothing to do once
the horses were groomed, fed and exercised, but they saw no reason why they
should involve themselves in an activity certainly unpleasant, and possibly
displeasing to the king. Cadfael could not blame them. He had a muster of twenty,
brothers, lay brothers and the three benevolent travellers, when they set out
across the bridge and through the streets of the town to the castle.
Probably
King Stephen had been glad enough to have a service offered voluntarily which
he might otherwise have had to impose by order. Someone had to bury the dead,
or the new garrison would be the first to suffer, and in an enclosed fortress
in a tightly walled town disease can fester and multiply fearfully. All the
same, the king would perhaps never forgive Abbot Heribert for the implied
reproach, and the reminder of his Christian duty. Howbeit, the old man had
brought back the needful authority; Cadfael’s party was passed through the
gates without question, and Cadfael himself admitted to Prestcote’s presence.
“Your
lordship will have had orders about us,” he said briskly. “We are here to take
charge of the dead, and I require clean and adequate space where they may be
decently laid until we take them away for burial. If we may draw water from the
well, that’s all besides that we need ask. Linen we have brought with us.”
“The
inner ward has been left empty,” said Prestcote indifferently. “There is room
there, and there are boards you may use if you need them.”
“The
king has also granted that such of these unfortunates as were men of this town,
and have families or neighbours here, can be claimed and taken away for private
burial. Will you have that cried through the town, when I am satisfied that all
is ready? And give them free passage in and out?”
“If
there are any bold enough to come,” said Prestcote drily, “they may have their
kin and welcome. The sooner all this carrion is removed, the better shall I be
pleased.”
“Very
well! Then what have you done with them?” For the walls and towers had been
denuded before dawn of their sudden crop of sorry fruit. The Flemings must have
worked half the night to put the evidence out of sight, which was surely not
their idea, but might well be Prestcote’s. He had approved these deaths, he did
not therefore have to take pleasure in them, and he was an old soldier of
strict and orderly habits, who liked a clean garrison.
“We
cut them down, when they were well dead, and dropped them over the parapet into
the green ditch under the wall. Go out by the Foregate, and between the towers
and the road you’ll find them.”
Cadfael
inspected the small ward offered him, and it was at least clean and private,
and had room for all. He led his party out through the gate in the town wall,
and down into the deep, dry ditch beneath the towers. Long, fruiting grasses
and low bushes partially hid what on closer approach looked like a battlefield.
The dead lay piled deep at one spot close under the wall, and were sprawled and
scattered like broken toys for yards on either side. Cadfael and his helpers
tucked up their gowns and went to work in pairs, without word spoken,
disentangling the knotted skein of bodies, carrying away first the most
accessible, lifting apart those shattered into boneless embraces by their fall
from above. The sun climbed high, and the heat was reflected upon them from the
stone of the walls. The three pious travellers shed their cottes. In the deep
hollow the air grew heavy and stifling, and they sweated and laboured for
breath, but never flagged.
“Pay
close attention always,” said Cadfael warningly, “in case some poor soul still
breathes. They were in haste, they may have cut someone down early. And in this
depth of cushioning below, a man could survive even the fall.”
But
the Flemings, for all their hurry, had been thorough. There was no live man
salvaged out of that massacre.
They
had started work early, but it was approaching noon by the time they had all
the dead laid out in the ward, and were beginning the work of washing and
composing the bodies as becomingly as possible, straightening broken limbs,
closing and weighting eyelids, even brushing tangled hair into order, and
binding fallen jaws, so that the dead face might be no horror to some
unfortunate parent or wife who had loved it in life. Before he would go to
Prestcote and ask for the promised proclamation to be made, Cadfael walked the
range of his salvaged children, and checked that they were as presentable as
they could well be made. And as he paced, he counted. At the end he frowned,
and stood to consider, then went back and counted again. And that done, he
began a much closer scrutiny of all those he had not himself handled, drawing
down the linen wrappings that covered the worst ravages. When he rose from the
last of them, his face was grim, and he marched away in search of Prestcote
without a word to any.
“How
many,” demanded Cadfael, “did you say you despatched at the king’s order?”
“Ninety-four,”
said Prestcote, puzzled and impatient.
“Either
you did not count,” said Cadfael, “or you miscounted. There are ninety-five
here.”
“Ninety-four
or ninety-five,” said Prestcote, exasperated, “one more or less, what does it
matter? Traitors all, and condemned, am I to tear my hair because the number
does not tally?”
“Not
you, perhaps,” said Cadfael simply, “but God will require an accounting.
Ninety-four, including Arnulf of Hesdin, you had orders to slay. Justified or
not, that at least was ordered, you had your sanction, the thing is registered
and understood. Any accounting for those comes later and in another court. But
the ninety-fifth is not in the reckoning, no king authorised his removal out of
this world, no castellan had orders to kill him, never was he accused or
convicted of rebellion, treason or any other crime, and the man who destroyed
him is guilty of murder.”
“God’s
wounds!” exploded Prestcote violently. “An officer in the heat of fighting
miscounts by one, and you would make a coram rege case out of it! He was
omitted in the count delivered, but he was taken in arms and hanged like the
rest, and no more than his deserts. He rebelled like the rest, he is hanged
like the rest, and that’s an end of it. In God’s name, man, what do you want me
to do?”
“It
would be well,” said Cadfael flatly, “if you would come and look at him, to
begin with. For he is not like the rest. He was not hanged like the rest, his
hands were not bound like the rest—he is in no way comparable, though someone
took it for granted we would all see and think as you, and omit to count. I am
telling you, my lord Prestcote, there is a murdered man among your executed
men, a leaf hidden in your forest. And if you regret that my eyes found him, do
you think God had not seen him long before? And supposing you could silence me,
do you think God will keep silence?”
Prestcote
had stopped pacing by that time, and stood staring very intently. “You are in
good earnest,” he said, shaken. “How could there be a man there dead in some
other way? Are you sure of what you say?”
“I
am sure. Come and see! He is there because some felon put him there, to pass
for one among the many, and arouse no curiosity, and start no questions.”
“Then
he would need to know that the many would be there.”
“Most
of this town and all this garrison would know that, by nightfall. This was a
deed of night. Come and see!”
And
Prestcote went with him, and showed every sign of consternation and concern.
But so would a guilty man, and who was better placed to know all a guilty man
needed to know, to protect himself? Still, he kneeled with Cadfael beside the
body that was different, there in the confines of the ward, between high walls,
with the odour of death just spreading its first insidious pall over them.
A
young man, this. No armour on him, but naturally the rest had been stripped of
theirs, nail and plate being valuable. But his dress was such as to suggest
that he had worn neither mail nor leather, he was clad in lightweight, dark
cloth, but booted, the manner of dress a man would wear for a journey in summer
weather, to ride light, be warm enough by night, and shed the short cotte to be
cool enough by day. He looked about twenty-five years old, no more, reddish
brown in colouring and round and comely of face, if the eye could make
allowance for the congestion of strangulation, now partially smoothed out by
Cadfael’s experienced fingers. The bulge and stare of the eyes was covered, but
the lids stood large.
“He
died strangled,” said Prestcote, relieved to see the signs.
“He
did, but not by a rope. And not with hands bound, like these others. Look!”
Cadfael drew down the folds of the capuchon from the round young throat, and
showed the sharp, cruel line that seemed to sever head from body. “You see the
thinness of this cord that took his life? No man ever dangled from such a
noose. It runs level round his neck, and is fine as fishing line. It may well
have been fishing line. You see the edges of this furrow in his flesh,
discoloured, and shiny? The cord that killed him was waxed, to bite smooth and
deep. And you see this pit here behind?” He raised the lifeless head gently on
his arm, and showed, close to the knotted cord of the spine, a single, deep,
bruised hollow, with a speck of black blood at its heart. “The mark of one end
of a wooden peg, a hand-hold to twist when the cord was round the victim’s
throat. Stranglers use such waxed cords, with two hand-holds at the
ends—killers by stealth, highway birds of prey. Given strength of hand and
wrist, it is a very easy way of seeing your enemies out of this world. And do
you see, my lord, how his neck, where the thong bites, is lacerated and beaded with
dried blood? Now see here, both hands—Look at his nails, black at the tips with
his own blood. He clawed at the cord that was killing him. His hands were free.
Did you hang any whose hands were not tied?”
“No!”
Prestcote was so fascinated by the details he could not deny that the answer
escaped him involuntarily. It would have been futile to snatch it back. He
looked up at Brother Cadfael across the unknown young man’s body, and his face
sharpened and hardened into hostility. “There is nothing to be gained,” he said
deliberately, “by making public so wild a tale. Bury your dead and be content.
Let the rest be!”
“You
have not considered,” said Cadfael mildly, “that as yet there is no one who can
put a name or a badge to this boy. He may as well be an envoy of the king as an
enemy. Better treat him fairly, and keep your peace with both God and man.
Also,” he said, in a tone even more cloistrally innocent, “you may raise doubts
of your own integrity if you meddle with truth. If I were you, I would report this
faithfully, and send out that proclamation to the townsfolk at once, for we are
ready. Then, if any can claim this young man, you have delivered your soul. And
if not, then clearly you have done all man can do to right a wrong. And your
duty ends there.”
Prestcote
eyed him darkly for some moments, and then rose abruptly from his knees. “I
will send out the word,” he said, and stalked away into the hail.
The
news was cried through the town, and word sent formally to the abbey, so that
the same announcement might be made at the guest house there. Hugh Beringar,
riding in from the east on his return from the king’s camp, having forded the
river at an island downstream, heard the proclamation at the gate house of the
abbey, and saw among those anxiously listening the slight figure of Aline
Siward, who had come out from her house to hear the news. For the first time he
saw her with head uncovered. Her hair was the light, bright gold he had
imagined it would be, and shed a few curling strands on either side her oval
face. The long lashes shadowing her eyes were many shades darker, a rich
bronze. She stood listening intently, gnawed a doubtful lip, and knotted her
small hands together. She looked hesitant, and burdened, and very young.
Beringar
dismounted only a few paces from her, as if he had by mere chance chosen that
spot in order to be still and hear to the end what Prior Robert was saying.
“—and
his Grace the king gives free warranty to any who may wish, to come and claim
their kin, if there be any such among the executed, and give them burial in
their own place and at their own charge. Also, since there is one in particular
whose identity is not known, he desires that all who come may view him, and if
they can, name him. All which may be done without fear of penalty or
disfavour.”
Not
everyone would take that at its face value, but she did. What was troubling her
was not fear of any consequences to herself, but a desperate feeling that she
ought to make this dolorous pilgrimage, while equally earnestly she shrank from
the horrors she might have to see. She had, Beringar remembered, a brother who
had defied his father and run off to join the empress’s adherents; and though
she had heard rumours that he might have reached France, she had no means of
knowing if they were true. Now she was struggling to escape the conviction that
wherever there were garrisons of her brother’s faction fallen victims of this
civil war, she ought to go and assure herself that he was not among them. She
had the most innocent and eloquent of faces, her every thought shone through.
“Madam,”
said Beringar, very softly and respectfully, “if there is any way I can be of
service to you, I beg you command me.”
She
turned to look at him, and smiled, for she had seen him in church, and knew him
to be a guest here like herself, and stress had turned Shrewsbury into a town
where people behaved to one another either as loyal neighbours or potential
informers, and of the latter attitude she was incapable. Nevertheless, he saw
fit to establish his credentials. “You will remember I came to offer the king
my troth when you did. My name is Hugh Beringar of Maesbury. It would give me
pleasure to serve, you. And it seemed to me that you were finding cause for
perplexity and distress in what we have just heard. If there is any errand I
can do for you, I will, gladly.”
“I
do remember you,” said Aline, “and I take your offer very kindly, but this is
something only I can do, if it must be done. No one else here would know my
brother’s face. To tell the truth, I was hesitating… But there will be women
from the town, I know, going there with certain knowledge to find their sons.
If they can do it, so can I.”
“But
you have no good reason,” he said, “to suppose that your brother may be among
these unfortunates.”
“None,
except that I don’t know where he is, and I do know he embraced the empress’s
cause. It would be better, wouldn’t it, to be sure? Not to miss any
possibility? As often as I do not find him dead, I may hope to see him again
alive.”
“Was
he very dear to you?” asked Beringar gently.
She
hesitated to answer that, taking it very gravely. “No, I never knew him as
sister should know brother. Giles was always for his own friends and his own
way, and five years my elder. By the time I was eleven or twelve he was for
ever away from home, and came back only to quarrel with my father. But he is
the only brother I have, and I have not disinherited him. And they’re saying
there’s one there more than they counted, and unknown.”
“It
will not be Giles,” he said firmly.
“But
if it were? Then he needs his name, and his sister to do what’s right.” She had
made up her mind. “I must go.”
“I
think you should not. But I am sure you should not go alone.” He thought
ruefully that her answer to that would be that she had her maid to accompany
her, but instead she said at once: “I will not take Constance into such a
scene! She has no kin there, and why should she have to suffer it as well as
I?”
“Then,
if you will have me, I will go with you.”
He
doubted if she had any artifice in her; certainly at this pass she showed none.
Her anxious face brightened joyfully, she looked at him with the most ingenuous
astonishment, hope and gratitude. But she still hesitated. “That is kind
indeed, but I can’t let you do it. Why should you be subjected to such pain,
just because I have a duty?”
“Oh,
come now!” he said indulgently, sure of himself and of her. “I shall not have a
moment’s peace if you refuse me and go alone. But if you tell me I shall only
be adding to your distress by insisting, then I’ll be silent and obey you. On
no other condition.”
It
was more than she could do. Her lips quivered. “No—it would be a lie. I am not
very brave!” she said sadly. “I shall be grateful indeed.”
He
had what he had wanted; he made the most of it. Why ride, when the walk through
the town could be made to last so much longer, and provide so much more
opportunity to get to know her better? Hugh Beringar sent his horse to the
stables, and set out with Aline along the highway and over the bridge into
Shrewsbury.
Brother
Cadfael was standing guard over his murdered man in a corner of the inner ward,
beside the archway, where every citizen who came in search of child or kinsman
must pass close, and could be questioned. But all he got so far was mute
shaking of heads and glances half-pitying, half-relieved. No one knew the young
man. And how could he expect great concern from these poor souls who came
looking, every one, for some known face, and barely saw the rest?
Prestcote
had made good his word, there was no tally kept of those who came, and no
hindrance placed in their way, or question asked of them. He wanted his castle
rid of its grim reminders as quickly as possible. The guard, under Adam
Courcelle, had orders to remain unobtrusive, even to help if that would get the
unwelcome guests off the premises by nightfall.
Cadfael
had persuaded every man of the guard to view his unknown, but none of them
could identify him. Courcelle had frowned down at the body long and sombrely,
and shaken his head.
“I
never saw him before, to my knowledge. What can there possibly have been about
a mere young squire like this, to make someone hate him enough to kill?”
“There
can be murders without hate,” said Cadfael grimly. “Footpads and forest robbers
take their victims as they come, without any feeling of liking or disliking.”
“Why,
what can such a youth have had to make him worth killing for gain?”
“Friend,”
said Cadfael, “there are those in the world would kill for the few coins a
beggar has begged during the day. When they see kings cut down more than ninety
in one sweep, whose fault was only to be in arms on the other side, is it much
wonder rogues take that for justification? Or at least for licence!” He saw the
colour burn high in Courcelle’s face, and a momentary spark of anger in his
eye, but the young man made no protest. “Oh, I know you had your orders, and no
choice but to obey them. I have been a soldier in my time, and borne the same
discipline and done things I would be glad now to think I had not done. That’s
one reason I’ve accepted, in the end, another discipline.”
“I
doubt,” said Courcelle drily, “if I shall ever come to that.”
“So
would I have doubted it, then. But here I am, and would not change again to
your calling. Well, we do the best we can with our lives!” And the worst, he
thought, viewing the long lines of motionless forms laid out along the ward,
with other men’s lives, if we have power.
There
were some gaps in the silent ranks by then. Some dozen or so had been claimed
by parents and wives. Soon there would be piteous little hand-carts pushed up
the slope to the gate, and brothers and neighbours lifting limp bodies to carry
them away. More of the townspeople were still coming timidly in through the
archway, women with shawls drawn close over their heads and faces half-hidden,
gaunt old men trudging resignedly to look for their sons. No wonder Courcelle,
whose duties could hardly have encompassed this sort of guard before, looked
almost as unhappy as the mourners.
He
was frowning down at the ground in morose thought when Aline came into view in
the archway, her hand drawn protectively through Hugh Beringar’s arm. Her face
was white and taut, her eyes very wide and her lips stiffly set, and her
fingers clutched at her escort’s sleeve as drowning men clutch at floating
twigs, but she kept her head up and her step steady and firm. Beringar matched
his pace attentively to hers, made no effort to divert her eyes from the sorry
spectacle in the ward, and cast only few and brief, but very intent,
side-glances at her pale countenance. It would certainly have been a tactical
error, Cadfael thought critically, to attempt the kind of protective ardour
that claims possession; young and ingenuous and tender as she might be, this
was a proud patrician girl of old blood, not to be trifled with if once that
blood was up. If she had come here on her own family business, like these poor,
prowling citizens, she would not thank any man to try and take it out of her
hands. She might, none the less, be deeply thankful for his considerate and
reticent presence.
Courcelle
looked up, almost as though he had felt a breath of unease moving before them,
and saw the pair emerge into the sunlight in the ward, cruel afternoon sunlight
that spared no detail. His head jerked up and caught the light, his bright hair
burning up like a furze fire. “Christ God!” he said in a hissing undertone, and
went plunging to intercept them on the threshold.
“Aline!—Madam,
should you be here? This is no place for you, so desolate a spectacle. I
marvel,” he said furiously to Beringar, “that you should bring her here, to
face a scene so harrowing.”
“He
did not bring me,” said AIine quickly. “It was I insisted on coming. Since he
could not prevent me, he has been kind enough to come with me.”
“Then,
dear lady, you were foolish to impose such a penance on yourself,” said
Courcelle fiercely. “Why, how can you have business here? Surely there’s none
here belonging to you.”
“I
pray you may be right,” she said. Her eyes, huge in the white face, ranged in
fearful fascination over the shrouded ranks at her feet, and visibly the first
horror and revulsion changed gradually into appalled human pity. “But I must
know! Like all these others! I have only one way of being certain, and it’s no
worse for me than for them. You know I have a brother—you were there when I
told the king
“But
he cannot be here. You said he was fled to Normandy.”
“I
said it was rumoured so—but how can I be sure? He may have won to France, he
may have joined some company of the empress’s men nearer home, how can I tell?
I must see for myself whether he chose Shrewsbury or not.”
“But
surely the garrison here were known. Your name is very unlikely to have been
among them.”
“The
sheriff’s proclamation,” said Beringar mildly, speaking up for the first time
in this encounter, “mentioned that there was one here, at least, Who was not
known. One more, apparently, than the expected tally.”
“You
must let me see for myself,” said AIine, gently and firmly, “or how can I have
any peace?”
Courcelle
had no right to prevent, however it grieved and enraged him. And at least this
particular corpse was close at hand, and could bring her nothing but
reassurance. “He lies here,” he said, and turned her towards the corner where
Brother Cadfael stood. She gazed, and was surprised into the faint brightness
of a smile, a genuine smile though it faded soon.
“I
think I should know you. I’ve seen you about the abbey, you are Brother
Cadfael, the herbalist.”
“That
is my name,” said. Cadfael. “Though why you should have learned it I hardly
know.”
“I
was asking the porter about you,” she owned, flushing. “I saw you at Vespers
and Compline, and—Forgive me, brother, if I have trespassed, but you had such
an air—as though you had lived adventures before you came to the cloister. He
told me you were in the Crusade—with Godfrey of Bouillon at the siege of
Jerusalem! I have only dreamed of such service… Oh!” She had lowered her eyes
from his face, half abashed by her own ardour, and seen the young, dead face
exposed at his feet. She gazed and gazed, in controlled silence. The face was
not offensive, rather its congestion had subsided; the unknown lay youthful and
almost comely,
“This
a most Christian service you are doing now,” said Aline, low-voiced, “for all
these here. This is the unexpected one? The one more than was counted?”
“This
is he.” Cadfael stooped and drew down the linen to show the good but simple
clothing, the absence of anything warlike about the young man. “But for the
dagger, which every man wears when he travels, he was unarmed.”
She
looked up sharply. Over her shoulder Beringar was gazing down with frowning
concentration at the rounded face that must have been cheerful and merry in
life. “Are you saying,” asked AIine, “that he was not in the fight here? Not
captured with the garrison?”
“So
it seems to me. You don’t know him?”
“No.”
She looked down with pure, impersonal compassion. “So young! It’s great pity! I
wish I could tell you his name, but I never saw him before.”
“Master
Beringar?”
“No.
A stranger to me.” Beringar was still staring down very sombrely at the dead.
They were almost of an age, surely no more than a year between them. Every man
burying his twin sees his own burial.
Courcelle,
hovering solicitously, laid a hand on the girl’s arm, and said persuasively:
“Come now, you’ve done your errand, you should quit this sad place at once, it
is not for you. You see your fears were groundless, your brother is not here.”
“No,”
said Aline, “this is not he, but for all that he may—How can I be sure unless I
see them all?” She put off the urging touch, but very gently. “I’ve ventured
this far, and how is it worse for me than for any of these others?” She looked
round appealingly. “Brother Cadfael, this is your charge now. You know I must
ease my mind. Will you come with me?”
“Very
willingly,” said Cadfael, and led the way without more words, for words were
not going to dissuade her, and he thought her right not to be dissuaded. The
two young men followed side by side, neither willing to give the other
precedence. Aline looked down at every exposed face, wrung but resolute.
“He
was twenty-four years old—not very like me, his hair was darker… Oh, here are
all too many no older than he!”
They
had traversed more than half of the dolorous passage when suddenly she caught
at Cadfael’s arm, and froze where she stood. She made no outcry, she had breath
only for a soft moan, audible as a word only to Cadfael, who was nearest.
“Giles!” she said again more strongly, and what colour she had drained from her
face and left her almost translucent, staring down at a face once imperious,
wilful and handsome. She sank to her knees, stooping to study the dead face
close, and then she uttered the only cry she ever made over her brother, and
that very brief and private, and swooped breast to breast with him, gathering
the body into her arms. The mass of her hair slipped out of its coils and
spilled gold over them both.
Brother
Cadfael, who was experienced enough to let her alone until she seemed to need
comfort for her grief instead of decent reticence, would have waited quietly,
but he was hurriedly thrust aside, and Adam Courcelle fell on his knees beside
her, and took her beneath the arms to lift her against his shoulder. The shock
of discovery seemed to have shaken him fully as deeply as it had Aline, his
face was stricken and dismayed, his voice an appalled stammer.
“Madam!—Aline—Dear
God, is this indeed your brother? If I’d known… if I’d known, I’d have saved
him for you… Whatever the cost, I would have delivered him… God forgive me!”
She
lifted a tearless face from the curtain of her yellow hair, and looked at him
with wonder and compunction, seeing him so shattered. “Oh, hush! How can this
be any fault of yours? You could not know. You did only what you were ordered
to do. And how could you have saved one, and let the rest die?”
“Then
truly this is your brother?”
“Yes,”
she said, gazing down at the dead youth with a face now drained even of shock
and grief. “This is Giles.” Now she knew the worst, and now she had only to do
what was needful, what fell to her for want of father and brothers. She
crouched motionless in Courcelle’s arm, earnestly regarding the dead face.
Cadfael, watching, was glad he had managed to mould some form back into
features once handsome, but in death fallen into a total collapse of terror. At
least she was not viewing that hardly human disintegration.
Presently
she heaved a short, sharp sigh, and made to rise, and Hugh Beringar, who had
shown admirably judicious restraint throughout, reached a hand to her on the
other side, and lifted her to her feet. She was mistress of herself as perhaps
she had never been before, never having had to meet such a test until now. What
was required of her she could and would do.
“Brother
Cadfael, I do thank you for all you have done, not only for Giles and me, but
for all these. Now, if you permit, I will take my brother’s burial into my
charge, as is only fitting.”
Close
and anxious at her shoulder, still deeply shaken, Courcelle asked: “Where would
you have him conveyed? My men shall carry him there for you, and be at your
orders as long as you need them. I wish I might attend you myself, but I must
not leave my guard.”
“You
are very kind,” she said, quite composed now. “My mother’s family has a tomb.
at St. Alkmund’s church, here in the town. Father Elias knows me. I shall be
grateful for help in taking my brother there, but I need not keep your men from
their duties longer. All the rest I will do.” Her face had grown intent and
practical, she had work to do, all manner of things to take into account, the need
for speed, the summer heat, the provision of all the materials proper to decent
preparation for the grave. She made her dispositions with authority.
“Messire
Beringar, you have been kind, and I do value it, but now I must stay to see to
my family’s rites. There is no need to sadden all the rest of your day, I shall
be safe enough.”
“I
came with you,” said Hugh Beringar, “and I shall not return without you.” The
very way to talk to her now, without argument, without outward show of
sympathy. She accepted his resolve simply, and turned to her duty. Two of the
guards brought a narrow litter, and lifted Giles Siward’s body into it, and she
herself steadied and straightened the lolling head.
At
the last moment Courcelle, frowning down distressfully at the corpse, said
abruptly: “Wait! I have remembered—I believe there is something here that must
have belonged to him.”
He
went hastily through the archway and across the outer ward to the guard-towers,
and in a few moments came back carrying over his arm a black cloak. “This was
among the gear they left behind in the guardroom at the end. I think it must
have been his—this clasp at the neck has the same design, see, as the buckle of
his belt.”
It
was true enough, there was the same dragon of eternity, tail in mouth, lavishly
worked in bronze. “I noticed it only now. That cannot be by chance. Let me at
least restore him this.” He spread out the cloak and draped it gently over the
litter, covering the dead face. When he looked up, it was into Aline’s eyes,
and for the first time they regarded him through a sheen of tears.
“That
was very kindly done,” she said in a low voice, and gave him her hand. “I shall
not forget it.”
Cadfael
went back to his vigil by the unknown, and continued his questioning, but it
brought no useful response. In the coming night all these dead remaining must
be taken on carts down the Wyle and out to the abbey; this hot summer would not
permit further delay. At dawn Abbot Heribert would consecrate a new piece of
ground at the edge of the abbey enclosure, for a mass grave. But this unknown,
never condemned, never charged with any crime, whose dead body cried aloud for
justice, should not be buried among the executed, nor should there be any rest
until he could go to his grave under his own rightful name, and with all the
individual honours due to him.
In
the house of Father Elias, priest of St. Alkmund’s church, Giles Siward was
reverently stripped, washed, composed and shrouded, all by his sister’s hands,
the good father assisting. Hugh Beringar stood by to fetch and carry for them,
but did not enter the room where they worked. She wanted no one else, she was
quite sufficient to the task laid on her, and if she was robbed of any part of
it now she would feel deprivation and resentment, not gratitude. But when all
was done, and her brother laid ready for rest before the altar of the church,
she was suddenly weary to death, and glad enough of Beringar’s almost silent
company and ready arm back to her house by the mill.
On the following morning Giles Siward was interred
with all due ceremony in the tomb of his maternal grandfather in the church of
St. Alkmund, and the monks of the abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul buried with
due rites all the sixty-six soldiers of the defeated garrison still remaining in
their charge.
Chapter
Four
ALINE
BROUGHT BACK WITH HER THE COTTE and hose her brother had worn, and the cloak
that had covered him, and herself carefully brushed and folded them. The shirt
no one should ever wear again, she would burn it and forget; but these stout
garments of good cloth must not go to waste, in a world where so many went
half-naked and cold. She took the neat bundle, and went in at the abbey gate
house, and finding the whole courtyard deserted, crossed to the ponds and the
gardens in search of Brother Cadfael. She did not find him. The digging out of
a grave large enough to hold sixty-six victims, and the sheer repetitious
labour of laying them in it, takes longer than the opening of a stone tomb to
make room for one more kinsman. The brothers were hard at work until past two
o’clock, even with every man assisting.
But
if Cadfael was not there, his garden-boy was, industriously clipping off
flower-heads dead in the heat, and cutting leaves and stems of blossoming
savory to hang up in bunches for drying. All the end of the hut, under the
eaves, was festooned with drying herbs. The diligent boy worked barefoot and
dusty from the powdery soil, and a smear of green coloured one cheek. At the
sound of approaching footsteps he looked round, and came out in haste from
among his plants, in a great wave of fragrance, which clung about him and
distilled from the folds of his coarse tunic like the miraculous sweetness
conferred upon some otherwise unimpressive-looking saint. The hurried swipe of
a hand over his tangle of hair only served to smear the other cheek and half
his forehead.
“I
was looking,” said Aline, almost apologetically, “for Brother Cadfael. You must
be the boy called Godric, who works for him.”
“Yes,
my lady,” said Godith gruffly. “Brother Cadfael is still busy, they are not
finished yet.” She had wanted to attend, but he would not let her; the less she
was seen in full daylight, the better.
“Oh!”
said Aline, abashed. “Of course, I should have known. Then may I leave my
message with you? It is only—I’ve brought these, my brother’s clothes. He no
longer needs them, and they are still good, someone could be glad of them. Will
you ask Brother Cadfael to dispose of them somewhere they can do good? However
he thinks best.”
Godith
had scrubbed grubby hands down the skirts of her cotte before extending them to
take the bundle. She stood suddenly very still, eyeing the other girl and
clutching the dead man’s clothes, so startled and shaken that she forgot for a
moment to keep her voice low. “No longer needs… You had a brother in there, in
the castle? Oh, I am sorry! Very sorry!”
Aline
looked down at her own hands, empty and rather lost now that even this last
small duty was done. “Yes. One of many,” she said. “He made his choice. I was
taught to think it the wrong one, but at least he stood by it to the end. My
father might have been angry with him, but he would not have had to be
ashamed.”
“I
am sorry!” Godith hugged the folded garments to her breast and could find no
better words. “I’ll deliver your message to Brother Cadfael as soon as he
comes. And he would want me to give you his thanks for your most feeling
charity, until he can do it for himself.”
“And
give him this purse, too. It is for Masses for them all. But especially a Mass
for the one who should not have been there—the one nobody knows.”
Godith
stared in bewilderment and wonder. “Is there one like that? One who did not
belong? I didn’t know!” She had seen Cadfael for only a few hurried moments
when he came home late and weary, and he had had no time to tell her anything.
All she knew was that the remaining dead had been brought to the abbey for
burial; this mysterious mention of one who had no place in the common tragedy
was new to her.
“So
he said. There were ninety-five where there should have been only ninety-four,
and one did not seem to have been in arms. Brother Cadfael was asking all who
came, to look and see if they knew him, but I think no one has yet put a name
to him.”
“And
where, then is he now?” asked Godith, marvelling.
“That
I don’t know. Though they must have brought him here to the abbey. Somehow I
don’t think Brother Cadfael will let him be put into the earth with all the
rest, and he nameless and unaccounted for. You must know his ways better than
I. Have you worked with him long?”
“No,
a very short time,” said Godith, “but I do begin to know him.” She was growing
a little uneasy, thus innocently studied at close quarters by those clear iris
eyes. A woman might be more dangerous to her secret than a man. She cast a
glance back towards the beds of herbs where she had been working.
“Yes,”
said Aline, taking the allusion, “I must not keep you from your proper work.”
Godith
watched her withdraw, almost regretting that she dared not prolong this
encounter with another girl in this sanctuary of men. She laid the bundle of
clothing on her bed in the hut, and went back to work, waiting in some disquiet
for Cadfael to come; and even when he did appear he was tired, and still
burdened with business.
“I’m
sent for to the king’s camp. It seems his sheriff has thought best to let him
know what sort of unexpected hare I’ve started, and he wants an accounting from
me. But I’m forgetting,” he said, passing a hard palm over cheeks stiff with
weariness, “I’ve had no time to talk to you at all, you’ve heard nothing of all
that—“
“Ah,
but I have,” said Godith’ “Aline Siward was here looking for you. She brought
these, see, for you to give as alms, wherever you think best. They were her
brother’s. She told me. And this money is for Masses—she said especially a Mass
for this one man more than was looked for. Now tell me, what is this mystery?”
It
was pleasant to sit quietly for a while and let things slide, and therefore he
relaxed and sat down with her, and told her. She listened intently, and when he
was done she asked at once: “And where is he now, this stranger nobody knows?”
“He
is in the church, on a bier before the altar. I want all who come to services
to pass by him, in the hope that someone must know him, and give him a name. We
can’t keep him beyond tomorrow,” he said fretfully, “the season is too hot. But
if we must bury him unknown, I intend it to be where he can as easily be taken
up again, and to keep his clothes and a drawing of his face, until we discover
the poor lad.”
“And
you truly believe,” she questioned, awed, “that he was murdered? And then cast
in among the king’s victims, to hide the crime away for ever?”
“Child,
I’ve told you! He was taken from behind, with a strangler’s cord ready prepared
for the deed. And it was done in the same night that the others died and were
flung over into the ditch. What better opportunity could a murderer have? Among
so many, who was to count, and separate, and demand answers? He had been dead
much the same time as some of those others. It should have been a certain
cover.”
“But
it was not!” she said, vengefully glowing. “Because you came. Who else would
have cared to be so particular among ninety-five dead men? Who else would have
stood out alone for the rights of a man not condemned—killed without vestige of
law? Oh, Brother Cadfael, you have made me as irreconcilable as you are on
this. Here am I, and have not seen this man. Let the king wait a little while!
Let me go and see! Or go with me, if you must, but let me look at him.”
Cadfael
considered and got to his feet, groaning a little at the effort. He was not so
young as he once had been, and he had had a hard day and night. “Come, then,
have your will, who am Ito shut you out where I invite others in? It should be
quiet enough there now, but keep close to me. Oh, girl, dear, I must also be
about getting you safe out of here as soon as I may.”
“Are
you so eager to get rid of me?” she said, offended. “And just when I’m getting
to know sage from marjoram! What would you do without me?”
“Why,
train some novice I can expect to keep longer than a few weeks. And speaking of
herbs,” said Cadfael, drawing out a little leather bag from the breast of his
habit, and shaking out a six-inch sprig of sun-dried herbage, a thin, square
stem studded at intervals with pairs of spreading leaves, with tiny brown balls
set in the joints of them, “do you know what this one is?”
She
peered at it curiously, having learned much in a few days. “No. We don’t grow
it here. But I might know it if I saw it growing fresh.”
“It’s
goose-grass—-cleavers it’s also called. A queer, creeping thing that grows
little hooks to hold fast, even on these tiny seeds you see here. And you see
it’s broken in the middle of this straight stem?”
She
saw, and was curiously subdued. There was something here beyond her vision; the
thing was a wisp of brown, bleached and dry, but indeed folded sharply in the
midst by a thin fracture. “What is it? Where did you find it?”
“Caught
into the furrow in this poor lad’s throat,” he said, so gently that she could
take it in without shock, “broken here by the ligament that strangled him. And
it’s last year’s crop, not new. The stuff is growing richly at this season,
seeding wild everywhere, this was in fodder, or litter, grass cut last autumn
and dried out. Never turn against the herb, it’s sovereign for healing green
wounds that are stubborn to knit. All the things of the wild have their proper
uses, only misuse makes them evil.” He put the small slip of dryness away
carefully in his bosom, and laid an arm about her shoulders. “Come, then, let’s
go and look at this youngster, you and I together.”
It
was mid-afternoon, the time of work for the brothers, play for the boys and the
novices, once their limited tasks were done. They came down to the church
without meeting any but a few half-grown boys at play, and entered the cool
dimness within.
The
mysterious young man from the castle ditch lay austerely shrouded on his bier
in the choir end of the nave, his head and face uncovered. Dim but pure light
fell upon him; it needed only a few minutes to get accustomed to the soft
interior glow in this summer afternoon, and he shone clear to view. Godith
stood beside him and gazed in silence. They were alone there, but for him, and
they could speak, in low voices. But when Cadfael asked softly: “Do you know
him?” he was already sure of the answer.
A
fine thread of a whisper beside him said: “Yes.”
“Come!”
He led her out as softly as they had come. In the sunlight he heard her draw
breath very deep and long. She made no other comment until they were secure
together in the herbarium, in the drowning summer sweetness, sitting in the
shade of the hut.
“Well,
who is he, this young fellow who troubles both you and me?”
“His
name,” she said, very low and wonderingly, “is Nicholas Faintree. I’ve known
him, by fits and starts, since I was twelve years old. He is a squire of
FitzAlan’s, from one of his northern manors, he’s ridden courier for his lord
several times in the last few years. He would not be much known in Shrewsbury,
no. If he was waylaid and murdered here, he must have been on his lord’s
business. But FitzAlan’s business was almost finished in these parts.” She
hugged her head between her hands, and thought passionately. “There are some in
Shrewsbury could have named him for you, you know, if they had reason to come
looking for men of their own. I know of some who may be able to tell you what
he was doing here that day and that night. If you can be sure no ill will come
to them?”
“Never
by me,” said Cadfael, “that I promise.”
“There’s
my nurse, the one who brought me here and called me her nephew. Petronilla
served my family all her grown life, until she married late, too late for
children of her own, and she married a good friend to FitzAlan’s house and
ours, Edric Flesher, the chief of the butchers’ guild in town. The two of them
were close in all the plans when FitzAlan declared for the empress Maud. If you
go to them from me,” she said confidently, “they’ll tell you anything they
know. You’ll know the shop, it has the sign of the boar’s head, in the
butchers’ row.”
Cadfael
scrubbed thoughtfully at his nose. “If I borrow the abbot’s mule, I can make
better speed, and spare my legs, too. There’ll be no keeping the king waiting,
but on the way back I can halt at the shop. Give me some token, to show you
trust me, and they can do as much without fear.”
“Petronilla
can read, and knows my hand. I’ll write you a line to her, if you’ll lend me a
little leaf of vellum, a mere corner will do.” She was alight with ardour, as
intent as he. “He was a merry person, Nicholas, he never did harm to anyone,
that I know, and he was never out of temper. He laughed a great deal… But if
you tell the king he was of the opposite party, he won’t care to pursue the
murderer, will he? He’ll call it a just fate, and bid you leave well alone.”
“I
shall tell the king,” said Cadfael, “that we have a man plainly murdered, and
the method and time we know, but not the place or the reason. I will also tell
him that we have a name for him—it’s a modest name enough, it can mean nothing
to Stephen. As at this moment there’s no more to tell, for I know no more. And
even if the king should shrug it off and bid me let things lie, I shall not do
it. By my means or God’s means, or the both of us together, Nicholas Faintree shall
have justice before I let this matter rest.”
Having
the loan of the abbot’s own mule, Brother Cadfael took with him in this errand
the good cloth garments Aline had entrusted to him. It was his way to carry out
at once whatever tasks fell him, rather than put them off until the morrow, and
there were beggars enough on his way through the town. The hose he gave to an
elderly man with eyes whitened over with thick cauls, who sat with stick beside
him and palm extended in the shade of the town gate. He looked of a suitable
figure, and was in much-patched and threadbare nethers that would certainly
fall apart very soon. The good brown cotte went to a frail creature no more
than twenty years old who begged at the high cross, a poor feeble-wit with
hanging lip and a palsied shake, who had a tiny old woman holding him by the
hand and caring for him jealously. Her shrill blessings followed Cadfael down
towards the castle gate. The cloak he still had folded before him when he came
to the guard-post of the king’s camp, and saw Lame Osbern’s little wooden
trolley tucked into the bole of a tree close by, and marked the useless,
withered legs, and the hands callused and muscular from dragging all that dead
weight about by force. His wooden pattens lay beside him in the grass. Seeing a
frocked monk approaching on a good riding mule, Osbern seized them and
propelled himself forward into Cadfael’s path. And it was wonderful how fast he
could move, over short distances and with intervals for rest, but all the same
so immobilised a creature, half his body inert, must suffer cold in even the
milder nights, and in the winter terribly.
“Good
brother,” coaxed Osbern, “spare an alms for a poor cripple, and God will reward
you!”
“So
I will, friend,” said Cadfael, “and better than a small coin, too. And you may
say a prayer for a gentle lady who sends it to you by my hand.” And he unfolded
from the saddle before him, and dropped into the startled, malformed hands,
Giles Siward’s cloak.
“You
did right to report truly what you found,” said the king consideringly. “Small
wonder that my castellan did not make the same discovery, he had his hands
full. You say this man was taken from behind by stealth, with a strangler’s
cord? It’s a footpad’s way, and foul. And above all, to cast his victim in
among my executed enemies to cover the crime—that I will not bear! How dared he
make me and my officers his accomplices! That I count an affront to the crown,
and for that alone I would wish the felon taken and judged. And the young man’s
name—Faintree, you said?”
“Nicholas
Faintree. So I was told by one who came and saw him, where we had laid him in
the church. He comes from a family in the north of the county. But that is all
I know of him.”
“It
is possible,” reflected the king hopefully, “that he had ridden to Shrewsbury
to seek service with us. Several such young men from north of the county have
joined us here.”
“It
is possible,” agreed Cadfael gravely; for all things are possible, and men do
turn their coats.
“And
to be cut off by some forest thief for what he carried—it happens! I wish I
could say our roads are safe, out in this new anarchy, God knows, I dare not
claim it. Well, you may pursue such enquiries as can be made into this matter,
if that’s your wish, and call upon my sheriff to do justice if the murderer can
be found. He knows my will. I do not like being made use of to shield so mean a
crime.”
And
that was truth, and the heart of the matter for him, and perhaps it would not
have changed his attitude, thought Cadfael, even if he had known that Faintree
was FitzAlan’s squire and courier, even if it were proved, as so far it
certainly was not, that he was on FitzAlan’s rebellious business when he died.
By all the signs, there would be plenty of killing in Stephen’s realm in the
near future, and he would not lose his sleep over most of it, but to have a
killer-by-stealth creeping for cover into his shadow, that he would take as a
deadly insult to himself, and avenge accordingly. Energy and lethargy,
generosity and spite, shrewd action and incomprehensible inaction, would always
alternate and startle in King Stephen. But somewhere within that tall, comely,
simple-minded person there was a gram of nobility hidden.
“I
accept and value your Grace’s support,” said Brother Cadfael truthfully, “and I
will do my best to see justice done. A man cannot lay down and abandon the duty
God has placed in his hands. Of this young man I know only his name, and the
appearance of his person, which is open and innocent, and that he was accused
of no crime, and no man has complained of wrong by him, and he is dead
unjustly. I think this as unpleasing to your Grace as ever it can be to me. If
I can right it, so I will.”
At
the sign of the boar’s head in the butcher’s row he was received with the
common wary civility any citizen would show to a monk of the abbey. Petronilla,
rounded and comfortable and grey, bade him in and would have offered all the
small attentions that provide a wall between suspicious people, if he had not
at once given her the worn and much-used leaf of vellum on which Godith had,
somewhat cautiously and laboriously, inscribed her trust in the messenger, and
her name. Petronilla peered and flushed with pleasure, and looked up at this
elderly, solid, homely brown monk through blissful tears.
“The
lamb, she’s managing well, then, my girl? And you taking good care of her! Here
she says it, I know that scrawl, I learned to write with her. I had her almost
from birth, the darling, and she the only one, more’s the pity, she should have
had brothers and sisters. It was why I wanted to do everything with her, even
the letters, to be by her whatever she needed. Sit down, brother, sit down and
tell me of her, if she’s well, if she needs anything I can send her by you. Oh,
and, brother, how are we to get her safely away? Can she stay with you, if it
runs to weeks?”
When
Cadfael could wedge a word or two into the flow he told her how her nurseling
was faring, and how he would see to it that she continued to fare. It had not
occurred to him until then what a way the girl had of taking hold of hearts,
without at all designing it. By the time Edric Flesher came in from a cautious
skirmish through the town, to see how the land lay, Cadfael was firmly
established in Petronilla’s favour, and vouched for as a friend to be trusted.
Edric
settled his solid bulk into a broad chair, and said with a gusty breath of
cautious relief: “Tomorrow I’ll open the shop. We’re fortunate! Ask me, he rues
the vengeance he took for those he failed to capture. He’s called off all
pillage here, and for once he’s enforcing it. If only his claims were just, and
he had more spine in his body, I think I’d be for him. And to look like a hero,
and be none, that’s hard on a man.” He gathered his great legs under him, and
looked at his wife, and then, longer, at Cadfael. “She says you have the girl’s
good word, and that’s enough. Name your need, and if we have it, it’s yours.”
“For
the girl,” said Cadfael briskly, “I will keep her safe as long as need be, and
when the right chance offers, I’ll get her away to where she should be. For my
need, yes, there you may help me. We have in the abbey church, and we shall
bury there tomorrow, a young man you may know, murdered on the night after the
castle fell, the night the prisoners were hanged and thrown into the ditch. But
he was killed elsewhere, and thrown among the rest to have him away into the
ground unquestioned. I can tell you how he died, and when. I cannot tell you
where, or why, or who did this thing. But Godith tells me that his name is
Nicholas Faintree, and he was a squire of FitzAlan.”
All
this he let fall between them in so many words, and heard and felt their
silence. Certainly there were things they knew, and equally certainly this
death they had not known, and it struck at them like a mortal blow.
“One
more thing I may tell you,” he said. “I intend to have the truth out into the
open concerning this thing, and see him avenged. And more, I have the king’s
word to pursue the murderer. He likes the deed no more than I like it.”
After
a long moment Edric asked: “There was only one, dead after this fashion? No
second?”
“Should
there have been? Is not one enough?”
“There
were two,” said Edric harshly. “Two who set out together upon the same errand.
How did this death come to light? It seems you are the only man who knows.”
Brother
Cadfael sat back and told them all, without haste. If he had missed Vespers, so
be it. He valued and respected his duties, but if they clashed, he knew which
way he must go. Godith would not stir from her safe solitude without him, not
until her evening schooling.
“Now,”
he said, “you had better tell me. I have Godith to protect, and Faintree to
avenge, and I mean to do both as best I can.”
The
two of them exchanged glances, and understood each other. It was the man who took
up the tale.
“A
week before the castle and the town fell, with FitzAlan’s family already away,
and our plans made to place the girl with your abbey in hiding, FitzAlan also
took thought for the end, if he died. He never ran until they broke in at the
gates, you know that? By the skin of his teeth he got away, swam the river with
Adeney at his shoulder, and got clear. God be thanked! But the day before the
end he made provision for whether he lived or died. His whole treasury had been
left with us here, he wanted it to reach the empress if he were slain. That day
we moved it out into Frankwell, to a garden I hold there, so that there need be
no bridge to pass if we had to convey it away at short notice. And we fixed a
signal. If any of his party came with a certain token—a trifle it was, a
drawing, but private to us who knew—they should be shown where the treasury
was, provided with horses, all they might need, and put over there to pick up
the valuables and make their break by night.”
“And
so it was done?” said Cadfael.
“On
the morning of the fall. It came so early, and in such force, we’d left it all
but too late. Two of them came. We sent them over the bridge to wait for night.
What could they have done by daylight?”
“Tell
me more. What time did these two come to you that morning, what had they to
say, how did they get their orders? How many may have known what was toward?
How many would have known the way they would take? When did you last see them
both alive?”
“They
came just at dawn. We could hear the din by then, the assault had begun. They
had the parchment leaf that was the signal, the head of a saint drawn in ink.
They said there had been a council the night before, and FitzAlan had said then
he would have them go the following day, whatever happened and whether he lived
or no, get the treasury away safe to the empress, for her use in defending her
right.”
“Then
all who were at that council would know those two would be on the road the
following night, as soon as it was dark enough. Would they also know the road?
Did they know where the treasury was hidden?”
“No,
where we had put it, beyond that it was in Frankwell, no one had been told.
Only FitzAlan and I knew that. Those two squires had to come to me.”
“Then
any who had ill designs on the treasury, even if they knew the time of its
removal, could not go and get it for themselves, they could only waylay it on
the road. If all those officers close to FitzAlan knew that it was to be taken
westward into Wales from Frankwell, there’d be no doubt about the road. For the
first mile and more there is but one, by reason of the coils of the river on
either side.”
“You
are thinking that one of those who knew thought to get the gold for himself, by
murder?” said Edric. “One of FitzAlan’s own men? I cannot believe it! And
surely all, or most, stayed to the end, and died. Two men riding by night could
well be waylaid by pure chance, by men living wild in the forest…”
“Within
a mile of the town walls? Don’t forget, whoever killed this lad did so close
enough to Shrewsbury castle to have ample time and means to take his body and
toss it among all those others in the ditch, long before the night was over.
Knowing very well that all those others would be there. Well, so they came,
they showed their credentials, they told you the plan had been made the
previous evening, come what might. But what came, came earlier and more
fiercely than anyone had expected, and all done in haste. Then what? You went
with them over to Frankwell?”
“I
did. I have a garden and a barn there, where they and their horses lay in
hiding until dark. The valuables were packed into two pairs of saddle-bags—one
horse with his rider and that load would have been overdone—in a cavity in a
dry well on my land there. I saw them safe under cover, and left them there
about nine in the morning.”
“And
at what time would they venture to start?”
“Not
until full dark. And do you truly tell me Faintree was murdered, soon after
they set out?”
“Past
doubt he was. Had it been done miles away, he would have been disposed of some
other way. This was planned, and ingenious. But not ingenious enough. You knew
Faintree well—or so Godith gave me to think. Who was the other? Did you also
know him?”
Heavily
and slowly, Edric said, “No! It seemed to me that Nicholas knew him well
enough, they were familiar together like good comrades, but Nicholas was one
open to any new friend. I had never seen this lad before. He was from another
of FitzAlan’s northern manors. He gave his name as Torold Blund.”
They
had told him all they knew, and something more than had been said in words.
Edric’s brooding frown spoke for him. The young man they knew and trusted was
dead, the one they did not know vanished, and with him FitzAlan’s valuables,
plate and coin and jewellery, intended for the empress’s coffers. Enough to
tempt any man. The murderer clearly knew all he needed to know in order to get
possession of that hoard; and who could have known half so well as the second
courier himself? Another might certainly waylay the prize on the road. Torold
Blund need not even have waited for that. Those two had been in hiding together
all that day in Edric’s barn. It was possible that Nicholas Faintree had never
left it until he was dead, draped over a horse for the short ride back to the
castle ditch, before two horses with one rider set out westward into Wales.
“There
was one more thing happened that day,” said Petronilla, as Cadfael rose to take
his leave. “About two of the clock, after the king’s men had manned both
bridges and dropped the draw-bridge, he came—Hugh Beringar, he that was
betrothed to my girl from years back—making pretence to be all concern for her,
and asking where he could find her. Tell him? No, what do you take me for? I
told him she’d been taken away a good week before the town fell, and we were
not told where, but I thought she was far away by now, and safe out of
Stephen’s country. Right well we knew he must have come to us with Stephen’s
authority, or he would never have been let through so soon. He’d been to the
king’s camp before ever he came hunting for my Godith, and it’s not for love
he’s searching for her. She’s worth a fat commission, as bait for her father,
if not for FitzAlan himself. Don’t let my lamb get within his sight, for I hear
he’s living in the abbey now.”
“And
he was here that very afternoon?” pressed Cadfael, concerned. “Yes, yes, I’ll
take good care to keep her away from him, I’ve seen that danger. But there
could not have been any mention when he came here, could there, of Faintree’s
mission? Nothing to make him prick his ears? He’s very quick, and very private!
No—no, I ask your pardon, I know you’d never let out word. Ah, well, my thanks
for your help, and you shall know if I make progress.”
He
was at the door when Petronilla said grievingly at his shoulder: “And he seemed
such a fine young lad, this Torold Blund! How can a body tell what lies behind
the decent, ordinary face?”
“Torold
Blund!” said Godith, testing the name slow syllable by syllable. “That’s a
Saxon name. There are plenty of them up there in the northern manors, good
blood and old. But I don’t know him. I think I can never have seen him. And
Nicholas was on good, close terms with him? Nicholas was easy, but not stupid,
and they sound much of an age, he must have known him well. And yet…”
“Yes,”
said Cadfael, “I know! And yet! Girl dear, I am too tired to think any more.
I’m going to Compline, and then to my bed, and so should you. And tomorrow…”
“Tomorrow,”
she said, rising to the touch of his hand, “we shall bury Nicholas. We! He was
in some measure my friend, and I shall be there.”
“So
you shall, my heart,” said Cadfael, yawning, and led her away in his arm to
celebrate, with gratitude and grief and hope, the ending of the day.
Chapter
Five
NICHOLAS
FAINTREE WAS LAID, WITH DUE HONOURS, under a stone in the transept of the abbey
church, an exceptional privilege. He was but one, after so many, and his
singleness was matter for celebration, besides the fact that there was room
within rather than without, and the labour involved was less. Abbot Heribert
was increasingly disillusioned and depressed with all the affairs of this
world, and welcomed a solitary guest who was not a symbol of civil war, but the
victim of personal malice and ferocity. Against all the probabilities, in due
course Nicholas might find himself a saint. He was mysterious, feloniously
slain, young, to all appearances clean of heart and life, innocent of evil, the
stuff of which martyrs are made.
Aline
Seward was present at the funeral service, and had brought with her,
intentionally or otherwise, Hugh Beringar. That young man made Cadfael
increasingly uneasy. True, he was making no inimical move, nor showing any
great diligence in his search for his affianced bride, if, indeed, he was in
search of her at all. But there was something daunting in the very ease and
impudence of his carriage, the small, sardonic turn of his lip, and the
guileless clarity of the black eyes when they happened to encounter Cadfael’s.
No doubt about it, thought Cadfael, I shall be happier when I’ve got the girl
safely away from here, but in the meantime at least I can move her away from
anywhere he’s likely to be.
The
main orchards and vegetable gardens of the abbey were not within the precinct,
but across the main road, stretched along the rich level beside the river,
called the Gaye; and at the far end of this fertile reach there was a slightly
higher field of corn. It lay almost opposite the castle, and no great distance
from the king’s siege camp, and had suffered some damage during the siege; and
though what remained had been ripe for cutting for almost a week, it had been
too dangerous to attempt to get it in. Now that all was quiet, they were in
haste to salvage a crop that could not be spared, and all hands possible were
mustered to do the work in one day. The second of the abbey’s mills was at the
end of the field, and because of the same dangers had been abandoned for the
season, just when it was beginning to be needed, and had suffered damage which
would keep it out of use until repairs could be undertaken.
“You
go with the reapers,” said Cadfael to Godith. “My thumbs prick, and rightly or
wrongly, I’d rather have you out of the enclave, if only for a day.”
“Without
you?” said Godith, surprised.
“I
must stay here and keep an eye on things. If anything threatens, I’ll be with
you as fast as legs can go. But you’ll be well enough, no one is going to have
leisure to look hard at you until that corn is in the barns. But stay by
Brother Athanasius, he’s as blind as a mole, he wouldn’t know a stag from a hind.
And take care how you swing a sickle, and don’t come back short of a foot!”
She
went off quite happily among the crowd of reapers in the end, glad of an outing
and a change of scene. She was not afraid. Not afraid enough, Cadfael
considered censoriously, but then, she had an old fool here to do the fearing
for her, just as she’d once had an old nurse, protective as a hen with one
chick. He watched them out of the gate house and over the road towards the
Gaye, and went back with a relieved sigh to his own labours in the inner
gardens. He had not been long on his knees, weeding, when a cool, light voice
behind him, almost as quiet as the steps he had not heard in the grass, said:
“So this is where you spend your more peaceful hours. A far cry and a pleasant
change from harvesting dead men.”
Brother
Cadfael finished the last corner of the bed of mint before he turned to
acknowledge the presence of Hugh Beringar. “A pleasant change, right enough.
Let’s hope we’ve finished with that kind of crop, here in Shrewsbury.”
“And
you found a name for your stranger in the end. How was that? No one in the town
seemed to know him.”
“All
questions get their answers,” said Brother Cadfael sententiously, “if you wait
long enough.”
“And
all searchers are bound to find? But of course,” said Beringar, smiling, “you
did not say how long is long enough. If a man found at eighty what he was
searching for at twenty, he might prove a shade ungrateful.”
“He
might well have stopped wanting it long before that,” said Brother Cadfael
drily, “which is in itself an answer to any want. Is there anything you are
looking for here in the herbarium, that I can help you to, or are you curious
to learn about these simples of mine?”
“No,”
owned Beringar, his smile deepening, “I would hardly say it was any simplicity
I came to study.” He pinched off a sprig of mint, crushed it between his
fingers, and set it first to his nose and then closed fine white teeth upon its
savour. “And what should such as I be looking for here? I may have caused a few
ills in my time, I’m no hand at healing them. They tell me, Brother Cadfael,
you have had a wide-ranging career before you came into the cloister. Don’t you
find it unbearably dull here, after such battles, with no enemy left to fight?”
“I
am not finding it at all dull, these days,” said Cadfael, plucking out
willowherb from among the thyme. “And as for enemies, the devil makes his way
in everywhere, even into cloister, and church, and herbarium.”
Beringar
threw his head back and laughed aloud, until the short black hair danced on his
forehead. “Vainly, if he comes looking for mischief where you are! But he’d
hardly expect to blunt his horns against an old crusader here! I take the
hint!”
But
all the time, though he scarcely seemed to turn his head or pay much attention
to anything round him, his black eyes were missing nothing, and his ears were
at stretch while he laughed and jested. By this time he knew that the
well-spoken and well-favoured boy of whom Aline had innocently spoken was not
going to make his appearance, and more, that Brother Cadfael did not care if he
poked his nose into every corner of the garden, sniffed at every drying herb
and peered at every potion in the hut, for they would tell him nothing. The
benchbed was stripped of its blanket, and laden with a large mortar and a
gently bubbling jar of wine. There was no trace of Godith anywhere to be found.
The boy was simply a boy like the rest, and no doubt slept in the dortoir with
the rest.
“Well,
I’ll leave you to your cleansing labours,” said Beringar, “and stop hampering
your meditations with my prattle. Or have you work for me to do?”
“The
king has none?” said Cadfael solicitously.
Another
ungrudging laugh acknowledged the thrust. “Not yet, not yet, but that will
come. Such talent he cannot afford to hold off suspiciously for ever. Though to
be sure, he did lay one testing task upon me, and I seem to be making very
little progress in that.” He plucked another tip of mint, and bruised and bit
it with pleasure. “Brother Cadfael, it seems to me that you are the most
practical man of hand and brain here. Supposing I should have need of your
help, you would not refuse it without due thought—would you?”
Brother
Cadfael straightened up, with some creaking of back muscles, to give him a
long, considering look. “I hope,” he said cautiously, “I never do anything
without due thought—even if the thought sometimes has to shift its feet pretty
briskly to keep up with the deed.”
“So
I supposed,” said Beringar, sweet-voiced and smiling. “I’ll bear that in mind
as a promise.” And he made a small, graceful obeisance, and walked away at
leisure to the courtyard.
The
reapers came back in time for Vespers, sun-reddened, weary and sweat-stained,
but with the corn all cut and stacked for carrying. After supper Godith slipped
out of the refectory in haste, and came to pluck at Cadfael’s sleeve.
“Brother
Cadfael, you must come! Something vital!” He felt the quivering excitement of
her hand, and the quiet intensity of her whispering voice. “There’s time before
Compline—come back to the field with me.”
“What
is it?” he asked as softly, for they were within earshot of a dozen people if
they had spoken aloud, and she was not the woman to fuss over nothing. “What
has happened to you? What have you left down there that’s so urgent?”
“A
man! A wounded man! He’s been in the river, he was hunted into it upstream and
came down with the current. I dared not stay to question, but I knew he’s in
need. And hungry! He’s been there a night and a day…”
“How
did you find him? You alone? No one else knows?”
“No
one else.” She gripped Cadfael’s sleeve more tightly, and her whisper grew
gruff with shyness. “It was a long day… I went aside, and had to go far aside,
into the bushes near the mill. Nobody saw…”
“Surely,
child! I know!” Please God all the boys, her contemporaries, were kept hard at
it, and never noticed such daintiness. Brother Athanasius would not have
noticed a thunderclap right behind him. “He was there in the bushes? And is
still?”
“Yes.
I gave him the bread and meat I had with me, and told him I’d come back when I
could. His clothes have dried on him—there’s blood on his sleeve… But I think
he’ll do well, if you take care of him. We could hide him in the mill—no one
goes there yet.” She had thought of all the essentials, she was towing him
towards his hut in the herb garden, not directly towards the gate house.
Medicines, linen, food, they would need all these.
“Of
what age,” asked Cadfael, more easily now they were well away from listeners,
“is this wounded man of yours?”
“A
boy,” she said on a soft breath. “Hardly older than I am. And hunted! He thinks
I am a boy, of course. I gave him the water from my bottle, and he called me
Ganymede…”
Well,
well, thought Cadfael, bustling before her into the hut, a young man of some
learning, it seems! “Then, Ganymede,” he said, bundling a roll of linen, a
blanket and a pot of salve into her arms, “stow these about you, while I fill
this little vial and put some vittles together. Wait here a few minutes for me,
and we’ll be off. And on the way you can tell me everything about this young
fellow you’ve discovered, for once across the road no one is going to hear us.”
And
on the way she did indeed pour out in her relief and eagerness what she could
not have said so freely by daylight. It was not yet dark, but a fine neutral
twilight in which they saw each other clear but without colours.
“The
bushes there are thick. I heard him stir and groan, and I went to look. He
looks like a young gentleman of family, someone’s squire. Yes, he talked to me,
but—but told me nothing, it was like talking to a wilful child. So weak, and
blood on his shoulder and arm, and making little jests… But he trusted me
enough to know I wouldn’t betray him.” She skipped beside Cadfael through the
tall stubble into which the abbey sheep would soon be turned to graze, and to
fertilise the field with their droppings. “I gave him what I had, and told him
to lie still, and I would bring help as soon as it grew dusk.”
“Now
we’re near, do you lead the way. You he’ll know.” There was already starlight
before the sun was gone, a lovely August light that would still last them,
their eyes being accustomed, an hour or more, while veiling them from other
eyes. Godith withdrew from Cadfael’s clasp the hand that had clung like a
child’s through the stubble, and waded forward into the low, loose thicket of
bushes. On their left hand, within a few yards of them, the river ran, dark and
still, only the thrusting sound of its current like a low throb shaking the
silence, and an occasional gleam of silver showing where its eddies swirled.
“Hush!
It’s me—Ganymede! And a friend to us both!”
In
the sheltered dimness a darker form stirred, and raised into sight a pale oval
of face and a tangled head of hair almost as pale. A hand was braced into the
grass to thrust the half-seen stranger up from the ground. No broken bones
there, thought Cadfael with satisfaction. The hard-drawn breath signalled
stiffness and pain, but nothing mortal. A young, muted voice said: “Good lad!
Friends I surely need…”
Cadfael
kneeled beside him and lent him a shoulder to lean against. “First, before we
move you, where’s the damage? Nothing out of joint—by the look of you, nothing
broken.” His hands were busy about the young man’s body and limbs, he grunted
cautious content.
“Nothing
but gashes,” muttered the boy laboriously, and gasped at a shrewd touch. “I
lost enough blood to betray me, but into the river… And half-drowned… they must
think wholly…” He relaxed with a great sigh, feeling how confidently he was
handled.
“Food
and wine will put the blood back into you, in time. Can you rise and go?”
“Yes,”
said his patient grimly, and all but brought his careful supporters down with
him, proving it.
“No,
let be, we can do better for you than that. Hold fast by me, and turn behind
me. Now, your arms round my neck…”
He
was long, but a light weight. Cadfael stooped forward, hooked his thick arms
round slim, muscular thighs, and shrugged the weight securely into balance on
his solid back. The dank scent of the river water still hung about the young
man’s clothing. “I’m too great a load,” he fretted feebly. “I could have
walked …”
“You’ll
do as you’re bid, and no argument. Godric, go before, and see there’s no one in
sight.”
It
was only a short way to the shadow of the mill. Its bulk loomed dark against
the still lambent sky, the great round of the undershot wheel showing gaps here
and there like breaks in a set of teeth. Godith heaved open the leaning door,
and felt her way before them into gloom. Through narrow cracks in the
floorboards on the left side she caught fleeting, spun gleams of the river
water hurrying beneath. Even in this hot, dry season, lower than it had been
for some years, the Severn flowed fast and still.
“There’ll
be dry sacks in plenty piled somewhere by the landward wall,” puffed Cadfael at
her back. “Feel your way along and find them.” There was also a dusty, rustling
layer of last harvest’s chaff under their feet, sending up fine powder to
tickle their noses. Godith groped her way to the corner, and spread sacks there
in a thick, comfortable mattress, with two folded close for a pillow. “Now take
this long-legged heron of yours under the armpits, and help me ease him down…
There, as good a bed as mine in the dortoir! Now close the door, before I make
a light to see him by.”
He
had brought a good end of candle with him, and a handful of the dry chaff
spread on a millstone made excellent tinder for the spark he struck. When his
candle was burning steadily he ground it into place on the flickering chaff,
quenching the fire that might have blown and spread, and anchoring his light on
a safe candlestick, as the wax first softened and then congealed again. “Now
let’s look at you!”
The
young man lay back gratefully and heaved a huge sigh, meekly abandoning the
responsibility for himself. Out of a soiled and weary face, eyes irrepressibly
lively gazed up at them, of some light, bright colour not then identifiable. He
had a large, generous mouth, drawn with exhaustion but wryly smiling, and the
tangle of hair matted and stained from the river would be as fair as
corn-stalks when it was clean. “One of them ripped your shoulder for you, I
see,” said Cadfael, hands busy unfastening and drawing off the dark cotte
encrusted down one sleeve with dried blood. “Now the shirt—you’ll be needing new
clothes, my friend, before you leave this hostelry.”
“I’ll
have trouble paying my shot,” said the boy, valiantly grinning, and ended the
grin with a sharp indrawn breath as the sleeve was detached painfully from his
wound.
“Our
charges are low. For a straight story you can buy such hospitality as we’re
offering. Godric, lad, I need water, and river water’s better than none. See if
you can find anything in this place to carry it in.”
She
found the sound half of a large pitcher among the debris under the wheel, left
by some customer after its handle and lip had got broken, scrubbed it out
industriously with the skirt of her cotte, and went obediently to bring water,
he hoped safely. The flow of the river here would be fresher than the leat, and
occupy her longer on the journey, while Cadfael undid the boy’s belt, and
stripped off his shoes and hose, shaking out the blanket to spread over his
nakedness. There was a long but not deep gash, he judged from a sword-cut, down
the right thigh, a variety of bruises showing bluish on his fair skin, and most
strangely, a thin, broken graze on the left side of his neck, and another
curiously like it on the outer side of his right wrist. More healed, dark
lines, these, older by a day or two than his wounds. “No question,” mused
Cadfael aloud, “but you’ve been living an interesting life lately.”
“Lucky
to keep it,” murmured the boy, half-asleep in his new ease.
“Who
was hunting you?”
“The
king’s men—who else?”
“And
still will be?”
“Surely.
But in a few days I’ll be fit to relieve you of the burden of me…”
“Never
mind that now. Turn a little to me—so! Let’s get this thigh bound up, it’s
clean enough, it’s knitting already. This will sting.” It did, the youth
stiffened and gasped a little, but made no complaint. Cadfael had the wound
bound and under the blanket by the time Godith came with the pitcher of water.
For want of a handle she had to use two hands to carry it.
“Now
we’ll see to this shoulder. This is where you lost so much blood. An arrow did
this!” It was an oblique cut sliced through the outer part of his left arm just
below the shoulder, bone-deep, leaving an ugly flap of flesh gaping. Cadfael
began to sponge away the encrustations of blood from it, and press it firmly
together beneath a pad of linen soaked in one of his herbal salves. “This will
need help to knit clean,” he said, busy rolling his bandage tightly round the
arm. “There, now you should eat, but not too much, you’re over-weary to make
the best use of it. Here’s meat and cheese and bread, and keep some by you for
morning, you may well be ravenous when you wake.”
“If
there’s water left,” besought the young man meekly, “I should like to wash my
hands and face. I’m foul!”
Godith
kneeled beside him, moistened a piece of linen in the pitcher, and instead of
putting it into his hand, very earnestly and thoroughly did it for, him,
putting back the matted hair from his forehead, which was wide and candid, even
teasing out some of the knots with solicitous fingers. After the first surprise
he lay quietly and submissively under her ministering touch, but his eyes,
cleansed of the soiled shadows, watched her face as she bent over him, and grew
larger and larger in respectful wonder. And all this while she had hardly said
a word.
The
young man was almost too worn out to eat at all, and flagged very soon. He lay
for a few moments with lids drooping, peering at his rescuers in silent
thought. Then he said, his tongue stumbling sleepily: “I owe you a name, after
all you’ve done for me…”
“Tomorrow,”
said Cadfael firmly. “You’re in the best case to sleep sound, and here I
believe you may. Now drink this down—it helps keep wounds from festering, and
eases the heart.” It was a strong cordial of his own brewing, he tucked away
the empty vial in his gown. “And here’s a little flask of wine to bear you
company if you wake. In the morning I’ll be with you early.”
“We!”
said Godith, low but firmly.
“Wait,
one more thing!” Cadfael had remembered it at the last moment. “You’ve no
weapon on you—yet I think you did wear a sword.”
“I
shed it,” mumbled the boy drowsily, “in the river. I had too much weight to
keep afloat—and they were shooting. It was in the water I got this clout… I had
the wit to go down, I hope they believe I stayed down… God knows it was touch
and go!”
“Yes,
well, tomorrow will do. And we must find you a weapon. Now, good night!”
He
was asleep before ever they put out the candle, and drew the door closed. They
walked wordlessly through the rustling stubble for some minutes, the sky over
them an arch of dark and vivid blue paling at the edges into a fringe of
sea-green. Godith asked abruptly: “Brother Cadfael, who was Ganymede?”
“A
beautiful youth who was cup-bearer to Jove, and much loved by him.”
“Oh!”
said Godith, uncertain whether to be delighted or rueful, this success being
wholly due to her boyishness.
“But
some say that it’s also another name for Hebe,” said Cadfael.
“Oh!
And who is Hebe?”
“Cup-bearer
to Jove, and much loved by him—but a beautiful maiden.”
“Ah!”
said Godith profoundly. And as they reached the road and crossed towards the
abbey, she said seriously:
“You
know who he must be, don’t you?”
“Jove?
The most god-like of all the pagan gods…”
“He!”
she said severely, and caught and shook Brother Cadfael’s arm in her solemnity.
“A Saxon name, and Saxon hair, and on the run from the king’s men… He’s Torold
Blund, who set out with Nicholas to save FitzAlan’s treasury for the empress.
And of course he had nothing to do with poor Nicholas’s death. I don’t believe
he ever did a shabby thing in his whole life!”
“That,”
said Cadfael, “I hesitate to say of any man, least of all myself. But I give
you my word, child, this one most shabby thing he certainly did not do. You may
sleep in peace!”
It
was nothing out of the ordinary for Brother Cadfael, that devoted gardener and
apothecary, to rise long before it was necessary for Prime, and have an hour’s
work done before he joined his brothers at the first service; so no one thought
anything of it when he dressed and went out early on that particular morning,
and no one even knew that he also roused his boy, as he had promised. They went
out with more medicaments and food, and a cotte and hose that Brother Cadfael
had filched from the charity offerings that came in to the almoner. Godith had
taken away with her the young man’s bloodstained shirt, which was of fine linen
and not to be wasted, had washed it before she slept, and mended it on rising,
where the arrow-head had sliced the threads asunder. On such a warm August
night, spread out carefully on the bushes in the garden, it had dried well.
Their
patient was sitting up in his bed of sacks, munching bread with appetite, and
seemed to have total trust in them, for he made no move to seek cover when the
door began to open. He had draped his torn and stained cotte round his shoulders,
but for the rest was naked under his blanket, and the bared, smooth chest and
narrow flanks were elegantly formed. Body and eyes still showed blue bruises,
but he was certainly much restored alter one long night of rest.
“Now,”
said Cadfael with satisfaction, “you may talk as much as you like, my friend,
while I dress this wound of yours. The leg will do very well until we have more
time, but this shoulder is a tricky thing. Godric, see to him on the other side
while I uncover it, it may well stick. You steady bandage and arm while I
unbind. Now, sir…” And he added, for fair exchange: “They call me Brother
Cadfael, I’m as Welsh as Dewi Sant, and I’ve been about the world, as you may
have guessed. And this boy of mine is Godric, as you’ve heard, and brought me
to you. Trust us both, or neither.”
“I
trust both,” said the boy. He had more colour this morning, or it was the flush
of dawn reflected, his eyes were bright and hazel, more green than brown. “I
owe you more than trust can pay, but show me more I can do, and I’ll do it. My
name is Torold Blund, I come from a hamlet by Oswestry, and I’m FitzAlan’s man
from head to foot.” The bandage stuck then, and Godith felt him flinch, and
locked the fold until she could ease it free, by delicate touches. “If that
puts you in peril,” said Torold, suppressing the pain, “I do believe I’m fit to
go, and go I will. I would not for the world shrug off my danger upon you.”
“You’ll
go when you’re let,” said Godith, and for revenge snatched off the last fold of
bandage, but very circumspectly, and holding the anointed pad in place. “And it
won’t be today.”
“Hush,
let him talk, time’s short,” said Cadfael. “Go to it, lad. We’re not in the
business of selling Maud’s men to Stephen, or Stephen’s men to Maud. How did
you come here in this pass?”
Torold
took a deep breath, and talked to some purpose. “I came to the castle here with
Nicholas Faintree, who was also FitzAlan’s man, from the next manor to my
father’s, we joined the garrison only a week before it fell. The evening before
the assault there was a council—we were not there, we were small fry—and they
resolved to get the FitzAlan treasury away the very next day for the use of the
empress, not knowing then it would be the last day. Nicholas and I were told
off to be the messengers because we were new to Shrewsbury, and not known, and
might get through well enough where others senior to us might be known and cut
down at sight. The goods—they were not too bulky, thank God, not much plate,
more coin, and most of all in jewellery—were hidden somewhere no one knew but
our lord and his agent who had them in guard. We had to ride to him when the
word was given, take them from where he would show us, and get clear by night
for Wales. FitzAlan had an accord with Owain Gwynedd—not that he’s for either
party here, he’s for Wales, but civil war here suits him well, and he and
FitzAlan are friends. Before it was well dawn they attacked, and it was plain
we could not hold. So we were sent off on our errand—it was to a shop in the
town…” He wavered, uneasy at giving any clue.
“I
know,” said Cadfael, wiping away the exudation of the night from the shoulder
wound, and anointing a new pad. “It was Edric Flesher, who himself has told me
his part in it. You were taken out to his barn in Frankwell, and the treasury
laid up with you to wait for the cover of night. Go on!”
The
young man, watching the dressing of his own hurts without emotion, went on
obediently: “We rode as soon as it was dark. From there clear of the suburb and
into trees is only a short way. There’s a herdsman’s hut there in the piece
where the track is in woodland, though only along the edge, the fields still
close. We were on this stretch when Nick’s horse fell lame. I lit down to see,
for he went very badly, and he had picked up a caltrop, and was cut to the
bone.”
“Caltrops?”
said Brother Cadfael, startled. “On such a forest path, away from any field of
battle?” For those unobtrusive martial cruelties, made in such a shape as to be
scattered under the hooves of cavalry, and leaving always one crippling spike
upturned, surely had no part to play on a narrow forest ride.
“Caltrops,”
said Torold positively. “I don’t speak simply from the wound, the thing was
there embedded, I know, I wrenched it out. But the poor beast was foundered, he
could go, but not far, and not loaded. There’s a farm I know of very close
there, I thought I could get a fresh horse in exchange for Nick’s, a poor
exchange but what could we do? We did not even unload, but Nick lighted down,
to ease the poor creature of his weight, and said he would wait there in the
hut for me. And I went, and I got a mount from the farm—it’s off to the right,
heading west as we were, the man’s name is Ulf, he’s distant kin to me on my
mother’s side—and rode back, with Nick’s half the load on this new nag.
“I
came up towards the hut,” he said, stiffening at the recollection, “and I
thought he would be looking out for me, ready to mount, and he was not. I don’t
know why that made me so uneasy. Not a breath stirring, and for all I was cautious,
I knew I could be heard by any man truly listening. And he never showed face or
called out word. So I never went too near. I drew off, and reined forward a
little way, and made a single tether of the horses, to be off as fast as might
be. One knot to undo, and with a single pluck. And then I went to the hut.”
“It
was full dark then?” asked Cadfael, rolling bandage.
“Full
dark, but I could see, having been out in it. Inside it was black as pitch. The
door stood half open to the wall. I went inside stretching my ears, and not a
murmur. But in the middle of the hut I fell over him. Over Nick! If I hadn’t I
might not be here to tell as much,” said Torold grimly, and cast a sudden
uneasy glance at his Ganymede, so plainly some years his junior, and attending
him with such sedulous devotion. “This is not good hearing.” His eyes appealed
eloquently to Cadfael over Godith’s shoulder.
“You’d
best go on freely,” said Cadfael with sympathy. “He’s deeper in this than you
think, and will have your blood and mine if we dare try to banish him. No part
of this matter of Shrewsbury has been good hearing, but something may be saved.
Tell your part, we’ll tell ours.”
Godith,
all eyes, ears and serviceable hands, wisely said nothing at all.
“He
was dead,” said Torold starkly. “I fell on him, mouth to mouth, there was no
breath in him. I held him, reaching forward to save myself as I fell, I had him
in my arms and he was like an armful of rags. And then I heard the dry fodder
rustle behind me, and started round, because there was no wind to stir it, and
I was frightened…”
“Small
blame!” said Cadfael, smoothing a fresh pad soaked in his herbal salve against
the moist wound. “You had good reason. Trouble no more for your friend, he is
with God surely. We buried him yesterday within the abbey. He has a prince’s
tomb. You, I think, escaped the like very narrowly, when his murderer lunged
from behind the door.”
“So
I think, too,” said the boy, and drew in hissing breath at the bite of
Cadfael’s dressing. “There he must have been. The grass warned me when he made
his assay. I don’t know how it is, every man throws up his right arm to ward
off blows from his head, and so did I. His cord went round my wrist as well as
my throat. I was not clever or a hero, I lashed out in fright and jerked it out
of his hands. It brought him down on top of me in the dark. I know only too
well,” he said, defensively, “that you may not believe me.”
“There
are things that go to confirm you. Spare to be so wary of your friends. So you
were man to man, at least, better odds than before. How did you escape him?”
“More
by luck than valour,” said Torold ruefully. “We were rolling about in the hay,
wrestling and trying for each other’s throat, everything by feel and nothing by
sight, and neither of us could get space or time to draw, for I don’t know how
long, but I suppose it was no more than minutes. What ended it was that there
must have been an old manger there against the wall, half fallen to pieces, and
I banged my head against one of the boards lying loose in the hay. I hit him
with it, two-handed, and he dropped. I doubt I did him any lasting damage, but
it knocked him witless long enough for me to run, and run I did, and loosed
both the horses, and made off westward like a hunted hare. I still had work to
do, and there was no one but me left to do it, or I might have stayed to try
and even the account for Nick. Or I might not,” owned Torold with scowling
honesty. “I doubt I was even thinking about FitzAlan’s errand then, though I’m
thinking of it now, and have been ever since. I ran for my life. I was afraid
he might have had others lying in ambush to come to his aid. All I wanted was
out of there as fast as my legs would go.”
“No
need to make a penance of it,” said Cadfael mildly, securing his bandage. “Sound
sense is something to be glad of, not ashamed. But, my friend, it’s taken you
two full days, by your own account, to get to much the same spot you started
from. I take it, by that, the king has allies pretty thick between here and
Wales, at least by the roads.”
“Thick
as bees in swarm! I got well forward by the more northerly road, and all but
ran my head into a patrol where there was no passing. They were stopping
everything that moved, what chance had I with two horses and a load of
valuables? I had to draw off into the woods, and by that time it was getting
light, there was nothing to be done but lie up until dark again and try the
southerly road. And that was no better, they had loose companies ranging the
countryside by then. I thought I might make my way through by keeping off the
roads and close to the curve of the river, but it was another night lost. I lay
up in a copse on the hill all day Thursday, and tried again by night, and that
was when they winded me, four or five of them, and I had to run for it, with
only one way to run, down towards the river. They had me penned, I couldn’t get
out of the trap. I took the saddle-bags from both horses, and turned the beasts
loose, and started them off at a panic gallop, hoping they’d crash through and lead
the pursuit away from me, but there was one of the fellows too near, he saw the
trick, and made for me instead. He gave me this slash in the thigh, and his
yell brought the others running. There was only one thing to do. I took to the
water, saddle-bags and all. I’m a strong swimmer, but with that weight it was
hard work to stay afloat, and let the current bring me downstream. That’s when
they started shooting. Dark as it was, they’d been out in it long enough to
have fair vision, and there’s always light from the water when there’s
something moving in it. So I got this shoulder wound, and had the sense to go
under and stay under as long as I had breath. Severn’s fast, even in summer
water it carried me down well. They followed along the bank for a while, and
loosed one or two more arrows, but then I think they were sure I was under for
good. I worked my way towards the bank as soon as it seemed safe, to get a foot
to ground and draw breath here and there, but I stayed in the water. I knew the
bridge would be manned, I dared not drag myself ashore until I was well past.
It was high time by then. I remember crawling into the bushes, but not much
else, except rousing just enough to be afraid to stir when your people came
reaping. And then Godric here found me. And that’s the truth of it,” he ended
firmly, and looked Cadfael unblinkingly in the eye.
“But
not the whole truth,” said Cadfael, placidly enough. “Godric found no
saddle-bags along with you.” He eyed the young face that fronted him steadily,
lips firmly closed, and smiled. “No, never fret, we won’t question you. You are
the sole custodian of FitzAlan’s treasury, and what you’ve done with it, and
how, God knows, you ever managed to do anything sensible with it in your
condition, that’s your affair. You haven’t the air of a courier who has failed
in his mission, I’ll say that for you. And for your better peace, all the talk
in the town is that FitzAlan and Adeney were not taken, but broke out of the
ring and are got clean away. Now we have to leave you alone here until
afternoon, we have duties, too. But one of us, or both, will come and see how
you’re faring then. And here’s food and drink, and clothes I hope will fit you
well enough to pass. But lie quiet for today, you’re not your own man yet
however wholeheartedly you may be FitzAlan’s.”
Godith
laid the washed and mended shirt on top of the folded garments, and was
following Cadfael to the door when the look on Torold’s face halted her, half
uneasy, half triumphant. His eyes grew round with amazement as he stared at the
crisp, clean linen, and the fine stitches of the long mend where the
blood-stained gash had been. A soft whistle of admiration saluted the wonder.
“Holy
Mary! Who did this? Do you keep an expert seamstress within the abbey walls? Or
did you pray for a miracle?”
“That?
That’s Godric’s work,” said Cadfael, not altogether innocently, and walked out
into the early sunshine, leaving Godith flushed to the ears. “We learn more
skills in the cloister than merely cutting wheat and brewing cordials,” she
said loftily, and fled alter Cadfael.
But
she was grave enough on the way back, going over in her mind Torold’s story,
and reflecting how easily he might have died before ever she met him; not
merely once, in the murderer’s cord, nor the second time from King Stephen’s
roaming companies, but in the river, or from his wounds in the bushes. It
seemed to her that divine grace was taking care of him, and had provided her as
the instrument. There remained lingering anxieties.
“Brother
Cadfael, you do believe him?”
“I
believe him. What he could not tell truth about, he would not lie about,
either. Why, what’s on your mind still?”
“Only
that the night before I saw him I said—I was afraid the companion who rode with
Nicholas was far the most likely to be tempted to kill him. How simple it would
have been! But you said yesterday, you did say, he did not do it. Are you quite
sure? How do you know?”
“Nothing simpler, girl dear! The mark of the
strangler’s cord is on his neck and on his wrist. Did you not understand those
thin scars? He was meant to go after his friend out of this world. No, you need
have no fear on that score, what he told us is truth. But there may be things
he could not tell us, things we ought to discover, for Nicholas Faintree’s
sake. Godith, this afternoon, when you’ve seen to the lotions and wines, you
may leave the garden and go and keep him company if you please, and I’ll come
there as soon as I can. There are things I must look into, over there on the
Frankwell side of Shrewsbury.”
Chapter
Six
FROM
THE FRANKWELL END OF THE WESTERN BRIDGE, the suburb outside the walls and over
the river, the road set off due west, climbing steadily, leaving behind the
gardens that fringed the settlement. At first it was but a single road mounting
the hill that rose high above Severn, then shortly it branched into two, of
which the more southerly soon branched again, three spread fingers pointing
into Wales. But Cadfael took the road Nicholas and Torold had taken on the
night after the castle fell, the most northerly of the three.
He
had thought of calling on Edric Flesher in the town, and giving him the news
that one, at least, of the two young couriers had survived and preserved his
charge, but then he had decided against it. As yet Torold was by no means safe,
and until he was well away, the fewer people who knew of his whereabouts the
better, the less likely was word of him to slip out in the wrong place, where
his enemies might overhear. There would be time later to share any good news
with Edric and Petronilla.
The
road entered the thick woodland of which Torold had spoken, and narrowed into a
grassy track, within the trees but keeping close to the edge, where cultivated
fields showed between the trunks. And there, withdrawn a little deeper into the
woods, lay the hut, low and roughly timbered. From this place it would be a
simple matter to carry a dead body on horseback as far as the castle ditch. The
river, as everywhere here, meandered in intricate coils, and would have to be
crossed in order to reach the place where the dead had been flung, but there
was a place opposite the castle on this side where a central island made the
stream fordable even on foot in such a dry season, once the castle itself was
taken. The distance was small, the night had been long enough. Then somewhere
off to the right lay Ulf s holding, where Torold had got his exchange of
horses. Cadfael turned off in that direction, and found the croft not a quarter
of a mile from the track.
Ulf
was busy gleaning after carrying his corn, and not at first disposed to be
talkative to an unknown monk, but the mention of Torold’s name, and the clear
intimation that here was someone Torold had trusted, loosened his tongue.
“Yes,
he did come with a lamed horse, and I did let him have the best of mine in
exchange. I was the gainer, though, even so, for the beast he left with me came
from FitzAlan’s stables. He’s still lame, but healing. Would you see him? His
fine gear is well hidden, it would mark him out for stolen or worse if it was
seen.”
Even
without his noble harness the horse, a tall roan, showed suspiciously fine for
a working farmer to possess, and undoubtedly he was still lame of one
fore-foot. Ulf showed him the wound.
“Torold
said a caltrop did this,” mused Cadfael. “Strange place to find such.”
“Yet
a caltrop it was, for I have it, and several more like it that I went and
combed out of the grass there next day. My beasts cross there, I wanted no more
of them lamed. Someone seeded a dozen yards of the path at its narrowest there.
To halt them by the hut, what else?”
“Someone
who knew in advance what they were about and the road they’d take, and gave
himself plenty of time to lay his trap, and wait in ambush for them to spring
it.”
“The
king had got wind of the matter somehow,” Ulf opined darkly, “and sent some of
his men secretly to get hold of whatever they were carrying. He’s desperate for
money—as bad as the other side.”
Nevertheless,
thought Cadfael, as he walked back to the hut in the woods, for all that I can
see, this was no party sent out by the king, but one man’s enterprise for his
own private gain. If he had indeed been the king’s emissary he would have had a
company with him. It was not King Stephen’s coffers that were to have profited,
if all had gone according to plan.
To
sum up, then, it was proven there had indeed been a third here that night. Over
and over Torold was cleared of blame. The caltrops were real, a trail of them
had been laid to ensure laming one or other of the horses, and so far the
stratagem had succeeded, perhaps even better than expected, since it had
severed the two companions, leaving the murderer free to deal with one first,
and then lie in wait for the other.
Cadfael
did not at once go into the hut; the surroundings equally interested him.
Somewhere here, well clear of the hut itself, Torold had regarded the pricking
of his thumbs, and tethered the horses forward on the road, ready for flight.
And somewhere here, too, probably withdrawn deeper into cover, the third man
had also had a horse in waiting. It should still be possible to find their
traces. It had not rained since that night, nor was it likely that many men had
roamed these woods since. All the inhabitants of Shrewsbury were still keeping
close under their own roof-trees unless forced to go abroad, and the king’s
patrols rode in the open, where they could ride fast.
It
took him a little while, but he found both places. The solitary horse had been
hobbled and left to graze, and by the signs he had been a fine creature, for
the hoof-marks he had left in a patch of softer ground, a hollow of dried mud
where water habitually lay after rain, and had left a smooth silt, showed large
and well shod. The spot where two had waited together was well to westward of
the hut, and in thick cover. A low branch showed the peeled scar where the
tether had been pulled clear in haste, and two distinguishable sets of prints
could be discerned where the grass thinned to bare ground.
Cadfael
went into the hut. He had broad daylight to aid him, and with the door set wide
there was ample light even within. The murderer had waited here for his victim,
he must have left his traces.
The
remains of the winter fodder, mown along the sunlit fringes of the woods, had
been left here against the return of autumn, originally in a neat stack against
the rear wall, but now a stormy sea of grass was spread and tossed over the
entire earthen floor, as though a gale had played havoc within there. The
decrepit manger from which Torold had plucked his loose plank was there,
drunkenly leaning. The dry grass was well laced with small herbs now rustling
and dead but still fragrant, and there was a liberal admixture of hooky,
clinging goose-grass in it. That reminded him not only of the shred of stem
dragged deep into Nick Faintree’s throat by the ligature that killed him, but
also of Torold’s ugly shoulder wound. He needed goose-grass to make a dressing
for it, he would look along the fringe of the fields, it must be plentiful
here. God’s even-handed justice, that called attention to one friend’s murder
with a dry stem of last year’s crop, might well, by the same token, design to
soothe and heal the other friend’s injuries by the gift of this year’s.
Meantime,
the hut yielded little, except the evident chaos of a hand-to-hand struggle
waged within it. But in the rough timbers behind the door there were a few
roving threads of deep blue woollen cloth, rather pile than thread. Someone had
certainly lain in hiding there, the door drawn close to his body. There was
also one clot of dried clover that bore a smaller clot of blood. But Cadfael
raked and combed in vain among the rustling fodder in search of the strangler’s
weapon. Either the murderer had found it again and taken it away with him, or
else it lay deeply entangled in some corner, evading search. Cadfael worked his
way backwards on hands and knees from the manger to the doorway, and was about
to give up, and prise himself up from his knees, when the hand on which he
supported his weight bore down on something hard and sharp, and winced from the
contact in surprise. Something was driven half into the earth floor under the
thinning layers of hay, like another caltrop planted here for inquisitive monks
to encounter to their grief and injury. He sat back on his heels, and carefully
brushed aside the rustling grasses, until he could get a hand to the hidden
thing and prise it loose. It came away into his hand readily, filling his palm,
hard, encrusted and chill. He lifted it to the invading sunlight in the doorway
behind him, and it glittered with pinpoints of yellow, a miniature sun.
Brother
Cadfael rose from his knees and took it into the full daylight of afternoon to
see what he had found. It was a large, rough-cut gem stone, as big as a
crab-apple, a deep-yellow topaz still gripped and half-enclosed by an eagle’s
talon of silver-gilt. The claw was complete, finely shaped, but broken off at
the stem, below the stone it clutched. This was the tip of some excellent
setting in silver, perhaps the end of a brooch-pin—no, too large for that. The
apex of a dagger-hilt? If so, a noble dagger, no common working knife. Beneath
that jagged tip would have been the rounded hand-grip, and on the cross-piece,
perhaps, some smaller topaz stones to match this master-stone. Broken off thus,
it lay in his hand a sullen, faceted ball of gold.
One
man had threshed and clawed here in his death-throes, two others had rolled and
flailed in mortal combat; any one of the three, with a thrusting hip and the
weight of a convulsed body, could have bored this hilt into the hardpacked earth
of the floor, and snapped off the crown-stone thus at its most fragile point,
and never realised the loss.
Brother
Cadfael put it away carefully in the scrip at his girdle, and went to look for
his goose-grass. In the thick herbage at the edge of the trees, where the sun
reached in, he found sprawling, angular mats of it, filled his scrip, and set
off for home with dozens of the little hooked seeds clinging in his skirts.
Godith
slipped away as soon as all the brothers had dispersed to their afternoon work,
and made her way by circumspect deviations to the mill at the end of the Gaye.
She had taken with her some ripe plums from the orchard, the half of a small
loaf of new bread, and a fresh flask of Cadfael’s wine. The patient had rapidly
developed a healthy appetite, and it was her pleasure to enjoy his enjoyment of
food and drink, as though she had a proprietorial interest in him by reason of
having found him in need.
He
was sitting on his bed of sacks, fully dressed, his back against the warm
timbers of the wall, his long legs stretched out comfortably before him with
ankles crossed. The cotte and hose fitted reasonably well, perhaps a little
short in the sleeves. He looked surprisingly lively, though still rather
greyish in the face, and careful in his movements because of the lingering
aches and pains from his wounds. She was not best pleased to see that he had
struggled into the cotte, and said so.
“You
should keep that shoulder easy, there was no need to force it into a sleeve
yet. If you don’t rest it, it won’t heal.”
“I’ve
very well,” he said abstractedly. “And I must bear whatever discomfort there
may be, if I’m to get on my way soon. It will knit well enough, I dare say.”
His mind was not on his own ills, he was frowning thoughtfully over other matters.
“Godric, I had no time to question, this morning, but—your Brother Cadfael said
Nick’s buried, and in the abbey. Is that truth?” He was not so much doubting
their word as marvelling how it had come about. “How did they ever find him?”
“That
was Brother Cadfael’s own doing,” said Godith. She sat down beside him and told
him. “There was one more than there should have been, and Brother Cadfael would
not rest until he had found the one who was different, and since then he has
not let anyone else rest. The king knows there was murder done, and has said it
should be avenged. If anyone can get justice for your friend, Brother Cadfael
is the man.”
“So
whoever it was, there in the hut, it seems I did him little harm, only dimmed
his wits for a matter of minutes. I was afraid of it. He was fit enough and
cunning enough to get rid of his dead man before morning.”
“But
not clever enough to deceive Brother Cadfael. Every individual soul must be
accounted for. Now at least Nicholas has had all the rites of the church in his
own clean name, and has a noble tomb.”
“I’m
glad,” said Torold, “to know he was not left there to rot uncoloured, or put
into the ground nameless among all the rest, though they were our comrades,
too, and not deserving of such a death. If we had stayed, we should have
suffered the same fate. If they caught me, I might suffer it yet. And yet King
Stephen approves the hunt for the murderer who did his work for him! What a mad
world!”
Godith
thought so, too; but for all that, there was a difference, a sort of logic in
it, that the king should accept the onus of the ninety-four whose deaths he had
decreed, but utterly reject the guilt for the ninety-fifth, killed
treacherously and without his sanction.
“He
despised the manner of the killing, and he resented being made an accomplice in
it. And no one is going to capture you,” she said firmly, and hoisted the plums
out of the breast of her cotte, and tumbled them between them on the blanket.
“Here’s a taste of something sweeter than bread. Try them!”
They
sat companionably eating, and slipping the stones through a chink in the
floorboards into the river below. “I still have a task laid on me,” said Torold
at length, soberly, “and now I’m alone to see it done. And heaven knows,
Godric, what I should have done without you and Brother Cadfael, and sad I
shall be to set off and leave you behind, with small chance of seeing you
again. Never shall I forget what you’ve done for me. But go I must, as soon as
I’m fit and can get clear. It will be better for you when I’m gone, you’ll be
safer so.”
“Who
is safe? Where?” said Godith, biting into another ripe purple plum. “There is
no safe place.”
“There
are degrees in danger, at any rate. And I have work to do, and I’m fit to get
on with it now.”
She
turned and gave him a long, roused look. Never until that moment had she looked
far enough ahead to confront the idea of his departure. He was something she
had only newly discovered, and here he was, unless she was mistaking his
meaning, threatening to take himself off, out of her hands and out of her life.
Well, she had an ally in Brother Cadfael. With the authority of her master she
said sternly:
“If
you’re thinking you’re going to set off anywhere until you’re fully healed,
then think again, and smartly, too. You’ll stay here until you’re given leave
to go, and that won’t be today, or tomorrow, you can make up your mind to
that!”
Torold
gaped at her in startled and delighted amusement, laid his head back against
the rough timber of the wall, and laughed aloud. “You sound like my mother, the
time I had a bad fall at the quintain. And dearly I love you, but so I did her,
and I still went my own way. I’m fit and strong and able, Godric, and I’m under
order that came before your orders. I must go. In my place, you’d have been out
of here before now, as fierce as you are.”
“I
would not,” she said furiously, “I have more sense. What use would you be, on
the run from here, without even a weapon, without a horse—you turned your
horses loose, remember, to baffle the pursuit, you told us so! How far would
you get? And how grateful would FitzAlan be for your folly? Not that we need go
into it,” she said loftily, “seeing you’re not fit even to walk out of here as
far as the river. You’d be carried back on Brother Cadfael’s shoulders, just as
you came here the first time.”
“Oh,
would I so, Godric, my little cousin?” Torold’s eyes were sparkling mischief.
He had forgotten for the moment all his graver cares, amused and nettled by the
impudence of this urchin, vehemently threatening him with humiliation and
failure. “Do I look to you so feeble?”
“As
a starving cat,” she said, and plunged a plum-stone between the boards with a
vicious snap. “A ten-year-old could lay you on your back!”
“You
think so, do you?” Torold rolled sideways and took her about the middle in his
good arm. “I’ll show you, Master Godric, whether I’m fit or no!” He was
laughing for pure pleasure, feeling his muscles stretch and exult again in a
sudden, sweet bout of horseplay with a trusted familiar, who needed taking down
a little for everyone’s good. He reached his wounded arm to pin the boy down by
the shoulders. The arrogant imp had uttered only one muffled squeak as he was
tipped on his back. “One hand of mine can more than deal with you, my lovely
lad!” crowed Torold, withdrawing half his weight, and flattening his left palm
firmly in the breast of the over-ample cotte, to demonstrate.
He
recoiled, stricken and enlightened, just as Godith got breath enough to swear
at him, and strike out furiously with her right hand, catching him a salutary
box on the ear. They fell apart in a huge, ominous silence, and sat up among
the rumpled sacks with a yard or more between them.
The
silence and stillness lasted long. It was a full minute before they so much as
tilted cautious heads and looked sidewise at each other. Her profile, warily
emerging from anger into guilty sympathy, was delicate and pert and utterly
feminine, he must have been weak and sick indeed, or he would surely have
known. The soft, gruff voice was only an ambiguous charm, a natural deceit.
Torold scrubbed thoughtfully at his stinging ear, and asked at last, very
carefully: “Why didn’t you tell me? I never meant to offend you, but how was I
to know?”
“There
was no need for you to know,” snapped Godith, still ruffled, “if you’d had the
sense to do as you’re bid, or the courtesy to treat your friends gently.”
“But
you goaded me! Good God,” protested Torold, “it was only the rough play I’d
have used on a younger brother of my own, and you asked for it.” He demanded
suddenly:
“Does
Brother Cadfael know?”
“Of
course he does! Brother Cadfael at least can tell a hart from a hind.”
There
fell a second and longer silence, full of resentment, curiosity and caution,
while they continued to study each other through lowered lashes, she furtively
eyeing the sleeve that covered his wound, in case a telltale smear of blood
should break through, he surveying again the delicate curves of her face, the
jut of lip and lowering of brows that warned him she was still offended.
Two
small, wary voices uttered together, grudgingly:
“Did
I hurt you?”
They
began to laugh at the same instant, suddenly aware of their own absurdity. The
illusion of estrangement vanished utterly; they fell into each other’s arms
helpless with laughter, and nothing was left to complicate their relationship
but the slightly exaggerated gentleness with which they touched each other.
“But
you shouldn’t have used that arm so,” she reproached at last, as they
disentangled themselves and sat back, eased and content. “You could have
started it open again, it’s a bad gash.”
“Oh,
no, there’s no damage. But you—I wouldn’t for the world have vexed you.” And he
asked, quite simply, and certain of his right to be told: “Who are you? And how
did you ever come into such a coil as this?”
She
turned her head and looked at him long and earnestly; there would never again
be anything with which she would hesitate to trust him.
“They
left it too late,” she said, “to send me away out of Shrewsbury before the town
fell. This was a desperate throw, turning me into an abbey servant, but I was
sure I could carry it off. And I did, with everyone but Brother Cadfael. You
were taken in, weren’t you? I’m a fugitive of your party, Torold, we’re two of
a kind. I’m Godith Adeney.”
“Truly?”
He beamed at her, round-eyed with wonder and delight. “You’re Fulke Adeney’s
daughter? Praise God! We were anxious for you! Nick especially, for he knew
you… I never saw you till now, but I, too…” He stooped his fair head and
lightly kissed the small, none too clean hand that had just picked up the last
of the plums. “Mistress Godith, I am your servant to command! This is splendid!
If I’d known, I’d have told you better than half a tale.”
“Tell
me now,” said Godith, and generously split the plum in half, and sent the stone
whirling down into the Severn. The riper half she presented to his open mouth,
effectively closing it for a moment. “And then,” she said, “I’ll tell you my
side of it, and we shall have a useful whole.”
Brother
Cadfael did not go straight to the mill on his return, but halted to check that
his workshop was in order, and to pound up his goose-grass in a mortar, and
prepare a smooth green salve from it. Then he went to join his young charges,
careful to circle into the shadow of the mill from the opposite direction, and
to keep an eye open for any observer. Time was marching all too swiftly, within
an hour he and Godith would have to go back for Vespers.
They
had both known his step; when he entered they were sitting side by side with
backs propped against the wall, watching the doorway with rapt, expectant
smiles. They had a certain serene, aloof air about them, as though they
inhabited a world immune from common contacts or, common cares, but generously
accessible to him. He had only to look at them, and he knew they had no more
secrets; they were so rashly and candidly man and woman together that there was
no need even to ask anything. Though they were both waiting expectantly to tell
him!
“Brother
Cadfael…” Godith began, distantly radiant.
“First
things first,” said Cadfael briskly. “Help him out of cotte and shirt, and
start unwinding the bandage until it sticks—as it will, my friend, you’re not
out of the wood yet. Then wait, and I’ll ease it off.”
There
was no disconcerting or chastening them. The girl was up in a moment, easing
the seam of the cotte away from Torold’s wound, loosening the ties of his shirt
to slip it down from his shoulder, gently freeing the end of the linen bandage
and beginning to roll it up. The boy inclined this way and that to help, and
never took his eyes from Godith’s face, as she seldom took hers from his
absorbed countenance, and only to concentrate upon his needs.
“Well,
well!” thought Cadfael philosophically. “It seems Hugh Beringar will seek his
promised bride to little purpose—if, indeed, he really is seeking her?”
“Well,
youngster,” he said aloud, “you’re a credit to me and to yourself, as
clean-healing flesh as ever I saw. This slice of you that somebody tried to
sever will stay with you lifelong, after all, and the arm will even serve you
to hold a bow in a month or so. But you’ll have the scar as long as you live.
Now hold steady, this may burn, but trust me, it’s the best salve you could
have for green wounds. Torn muscles hurt as they knit, but knit they will.”
“It
doesn’t hurt,” said Torold in a dream. “Brother Cadfael…”
“Hold
your tongue until we have you all bound up trim. Then you can talk your hearts
out, the both of you.”
And
talk they did, as soon as Torold was helped back into his shirt, and the cotte
draped over his shoulders. Each of them took up the thread from the other, as
though handed it in a fixed and formal ceremony, like a favour in a dance; Even
their voices had grown somehow alike, as if they matched tones without
understanding that they did it. They had not the least idea, as yet, that they
were in love. The innocents believed they were involved in a partisan
comradeship, which was but the lesser half of what had happened to them in his
absence.
“So
I have told Torold all about myself,” said Godith, “and he has told me the only
thing he did not tell us before. And now he wants to tell you.”
Torold
picked up the tendered thread willingly. “I have FitzAlan’s treasury safely
hidden,” he said simply. “I had it in two pairs of linked saddle-bags, and I
kept it afloat, too, all down the river, though I had to shed sword and
swordbelt and dagger and all to lighten the load. I fetched up under the first
arch of the stone bridge. You’ll know it as well as I. That first pier spreads,
there used to be a boat-mill moored under it, some time ago, and the mooring
chain is still there, bolted to a ring in the stone. A man can hold on there
and get his breath, and so I did. And I hauled up the chain and hooked my
saddle-bags on to it, and let them down under the water, out of sight. Then I
left them there, and drifted on down here just about alive, to where Godith
found me.” He found no difficulty in speaking of her as Godith; the name had a
jubilant sound in his mouth. “And there all that gold is dangling in the Severn
still, I hope and believe, until I can reclaim it and get it away to its
rightful owner. Thank God he’s alive to benefit by it.” A last qualm shook him
suddenly and severely. “There’s been no word of anyone finding it?” he
questioned anxiously. “We should know if they had?”
“We
should know, never doubt it! No, no one’s hooked any such fish. Why should
anyone look for it there? But getting it out again undetected may not be so
easy. We three must put our wits together,” said Cadfael, “and see what we can
do between us. And while you two have been swearing your alliance, let me tell
you what I’ve been doing.”
He
made it brief enough. “I found all as you told it. The traces of your horses
are there, and of your enemy’s, too. One horse only. This was a thief bent on his
own enrichment, no zealot trying to fill the king’s coffers. He had seeded the
path for you liberally with caltrops, your kinsman collected several of them
next day, for the sake of his own cattle. The signs of your struggle within the
hut are plain enough. And pressed into the earth floor I found this.” He
produced it from his scrip, a lump of deep yellow roughly faceted, and clenched
in the broken silver-gilt claw. Torold took it from him and examined it
curiously, but without apparent recognition.
“Broken
off from a hilt, would you think?”
“Not
from yours, then?”
“Mine?”
Torold laughed. “Where would a poor squire with his way to make get hold of so
fine a weapon as this must have been? No, mine was a plain old sword my
grandsire wore before me, and a dagger to match, in a heavy hide sheath. If it
had been light as this, I’d have tried to keep it. No, this is none of mine.”
“Nor
Faintree’s, either?”
Torold
shook his head decidedly. “If he had any such, I should have known. Nick and I
are of the same condition, and friends three years and more.” He looked up
intently into Brother Cadfael’s face. “Now I remember a very small thing that
may have meaning, after all. When I broke free and left the other fellow dazed,
I trod on something under the hay where we’d been struggling, a small, hard
thing that almost threw me. I think it could well have been this. It was his?
Yes, it must have been his! Snapped off against the ground as we rolled.”
“His,
almost certainly, and the only thing we have to lead us to him,” said Cadfael,
taking back the stone and hiding it again from view in his pouch. “No man would
willingly discard so fine a thing because one stone was broken from it. Whoever
owned it still has it, and will get it repaired when he dare. If we can find the
dagger, we shall have found the murderer.”
“I
wish,” said Torold fiercely, “I could both go and stay! I should be glad to be
the one to avenge Nick, he was a good friend to me. But my part is to obey my
orders, and get FitzAlan’s goods safely over to him in France. And,” he said,
regarding Cadfael steadily, “to take with me also Fulke Adeney’s daughter, and
deliver her safe to her father. If you will trust her to me.”
“And
help us,” added Godith with immense confidence.
“Trust
her to you—I might,” said Cadfael mildly. “And help you both I surely will, as
best I can. A very simple matter! All I have to do—and mark you, she has the
assurance to demand it of me!—is to conjure you two good horses out of the
empty air, where even poor hacks are gold, retrieve your hidden treasure for
you, and see you well clear of the town, westward into Wales. Just a trifle!
Harder things are done daily by the saints…”
He
had reached this point when he stiffened suddenly, and spread a warning hand to
enjoin silence. Listening with ears stretched, he caught for a second time the
soft sound of a foot moving warily in the edge of the rustling stubble, close
to the open door.
“What
is it?” asked Godith in a soundless whisper, her eyes immense in alarm.
“Nothing!”
said Cadfael as softly. “My ears playing tricks.” And aloud he said: “Well, you
and I must be getting back for Vespers. Come! It wouldn’t do to be late.”
Torold
accepted his silent orders, and let them go without a word from him. If someone
had indeed been listening… But he had heard nothing, and it seemed to him that
even Cadfael was not sure. Why alarm Godith? Brother Cadfael was her best
protector here, and once within the abbey walls she would again be in
sanctuary. As for Torold, he was his own responsibility, though he would have
been happier if he had had a sword!
Brother
Cadfael reached down into the capacious waist of his habit, and drew out a long
poniard in a rubbed and worn leather scabbard. Silently he put it into Torold’s
hands. The young man took it, marvelling, staring as reverently as at a first
small miracle, so apt was the answer to his thought. He had it by the sheath,
the cross of the hilt before his face, and was still gazing in wonder as they
went out from him into the evening, and drew the door closed after them.
Cadfael took the memory of that look with him into the fresh, saffron air of
sunset. He himself must once have worn the same rapt expression, contemplating
the same uplifted hilt. When he had taken the Cross, long ago, his vow had been
made on that hilt, and the dagger had gone with him to Jerusalem, and roved the
eastern seas with him for ten years. Even when he gave up his’ sword along with
the things of this world, and surrendered all pride of possessions, he had kept
the poniard. Just as well to part with it at last, to someone who had need of
it and would not disgrace it
He
looked about him very cautiously as they rounded the corner of the mill and
crossed the race. His hearing was sharp as a wild creature’s, and he had heard
no whisper or rustle from outside until the last few moments of their talk
together, nor could he now be certain that what he had heard was a human foot,
it might well have been a small animal slipping through the stubble. All the
same, he must take thought for what might happen if they really had been spied
upon. Surely, at the worst, only the last few exchanges could have been
overheard, though those were revealing enough. Had the treasure been mentioned?
Yes, he himself had said that all that was required of him was to obtain two
horses, retrieve the treasure, and see them safely headed for Wales. Had
anything been said then of where the treasure was hidden? No, that had been
much earlier. But the listener, if listener there had been, could well have
learned that a hunted fugitive of FitzAlan’s party was in hiding there, and
worse, that Adeney’s daughter was being sheltered in the abbey.
This
was getting too warm for comfort. Best get them away as soon as the boy was fit
to ride. But if this evening passed, and the night, and no move was made to
betray them, he would suspect he had been fretting over nothing. There was no
one in sight here but a solitary boy fishing, absorbed and distant on the river
bank.
“What
was it?” asked Godith, meek and attentive beside him. “Something made you
uneasy, I know.”
“Nothing
to worry your head about,” said Cadfael. “I was mistaken. Everything is as it
should be.”
From
the corner of his eye, at that moment, he caught the sudden movement down
towards the river, beyond the clump of bushes where she had found Torold. Out
of the meagre cover a slight, agile body unfolded and stood erect, stretching
lazily, and drifted at an oblique angle towards the path on which they walked,
his course converging with theirs. Hugh Beringar, his stride nicely calculated
to look accidental and yet bring him athwart their path at the right moment,
showed them a placid and amiable face, recognising Cadfael with pleasure,
accepting his attendant boy with benevolence.
“A
very fair evening, brother! You’re bound for Vespers? So am I. We may walk
together?”
“Very
gladly,” said Cadfael heartily. He tapped Godith on the shoulder, and handed
her the small sacking bundle that held his herbs and dressings. “Run ahead,
Godric, and put these away for me, and come down to Vespers with the rest of
the boys. You’ll save my legs, and have time to give a stir to that lotion I
have been brewing. Go on, child, run!”
And
Godith clasped the bundle and ran, taking good care to run like an athletic
boy, rattling one hand along the tall stubble, and whistling as she went, glad
enough to put herself out of that young man’s sight. Her own eyes and mind were
full of another young man.
“A
most biddable lad you have,” said Hugh Beringar benignly, watching her race
ahead.
“A
good boy,” said Cadfael placidly, matching him step for step across the field
blanched to the colour of cream. “He has a year’s endowment with us, but I
doubt if he’ll take the cowl. But he’ll have learned his letters, and figuring,
and a good deal about herbs and medicines, it will stand him in good stead.
You’re at leisure today, my lord?”
“Not
so much at leisure,” said Hugh Beringar with equal serenity, “as in need of
your skills and knowledge. I tried your garden first, and not finding you
there, thought you might have business today over here in the main gardens and
orchard. But for want of a sight of you anywhere, I sat down to enjoy the
evening sunshine, here by the river. I knew you’d come to Vespers, but never
realised you had fields beyond here. Is all the corn brought in now?”
“All
that we have here. The sheep will be grazing the stubble very shortly. What was
it you wanted of me, my lord? If I may serve you in accord with my duty, be
sure I will.”
“Yesterday
morning, Brother Cadfael, I asked you if you would give any request of mine
fair consideration, and you told me you give fair consideration to all that you
do. And I believe it. I had in mind what was then no more than a rumoured
threat, now it’s a real one. I have reason to know that King Stephen is already
making plans to move on, and means to make sure of his supplies and his mounts.
The siege of Shrewsbury has cost him plenty, and he now has more mouths to feed
and more men to mount. It’s not generally known, or too many would be taking
thought to evade it, as I am,” owned Beringar blithely, “but he’s about to
issue orders to have every homestead in the town searched, and a tithe of all
fodder and provisions in store commandeered for the army’s use. And all—mark
that, all—the good horses to be found, no matter who owns them, that are not
already in army or garrison service. The abbey stables will not be exempt.”
This
Cadfael did not like at all. It came far too pat, a shrewd thrust at his own
need of horses, and most ominous indication that Hugh Beringar, who had this
information in advance of the general citizens, might also be as well informed
of what went on in other quarters. Nothing this young man said or did would
ever be quite what it seemed, but whatever game he played would always be his
own game. The less said in reply, at this stage, the better. Two could play
their own games, and both, possibly, benefit. Let him first say out what he
wanted, even if what he said would have to be scrutinised from all angles, and
subjected to every known test.
“That
will be bad news to Brother Prior,” said Cadfael mildly.
“It’s
bad news to me,” said Beringar ruefully. “For I have four horses in those same
abbey stables, and while I might have a claim to retain them all for myself and
my men, once the king has given me his commission, I can’t make any such claim
at this moment with security. It might be allowed, it might not. And to be open
with you, I have no intention of letting my two best horses be drafted for the
king’s army. I want them out of here and in some private place, where they can
escape Prestcote’s foraging parties, until this flurry is over.”
“Only
two?” said Cadfael innocently. “Why not all?”
“Oh,
come, I know you have more cunning than that. Would I be here without horses at
all? If they found none of mine, they’d be hunting for all, and small chance
I’d have left for royal favour. But let them take the two nags, and they won’t
question further. Two I can afford. Brother Cadfael, it takes no more than a
few days in this place to know that you are the man to take any enterprise in
hand, however rough and however risky.” His voice was brisk and bland, even
hearty, he seemed to intend no double meanings. “The lord abbot turns to you
when he’s faced with an ordeal beyond his powers. I turn to you for practical
help. You know all this countryside. Is there a place of safety where my horses
can lie up for a few days, until this round-up is over?”
So
improbable a proposal Cadfael had not looked for, but it came as manna from
heaven. Nor did he hesitate long over taking advantage of it for his own ends.
Even if lives had not depended on the provision of those two horses, he was
well aware that Beringar was making use of him without scruple, and he need
have no scruples about doing as much in return. It went a little beyond that,
even, for he had a shrewd suspicion that at this moment Beringar knew far too
much of what was going on in his, Cadfael’s mind, and had no objection whatever
to any guesses Cadfael might be making as to what was going on in his,
Beringar’s. Each of us, he thought, has a hold of sorts upon the other, and
each of us has a reasonable insight into the other’s methods, if not motives.
It will be a fair fight. And yet this debonair being might very well be the
murderer of Nicholas Faintree. That would be a very different duel, with no
quarter asked or offered. In the meantime, make the most of what might or might
not be quite accidental circumstances.
“Yes,”
said Cadfael, “I do know of such a place.”
Beringar
did not even ask him where, or question his judgment as to whether it would be
remote enough and secret enough to be secure. “Show me the way tonight,” he
said outright, and smiled into Cadfael’s face. “It’s tonight or never, the
order will be made public tomorrow. If you and I can make the return journey on
foot before morning, ride with me. Rather you than any!”
Cadfael
considered ways and means; there was no need to consider what his answer would
be.
“Better
get your horses out after Vespers, then, out to St. Giles. I’ll join you there
when Compline is over, it will be getting dark then. It wouldn’t do for me to
be seen riding out with you, but you may exercise your own horses in the
evening as the fit takes you.”
“Good!”
said Beringar with satisfaction. “Where is this place? Have we to cross the
river anywhere?”
“No,
nor even the brook. It’s an old grange the abbey used to maintain in the Long
Forest, out beyond Pulley. Since the times grew so unchancy we’ve withdrawn all
our sheep and cattle from there, but keep two lay brothers still in the house.
No one will look for horses there, they know it’s all but abandoned. And the
lay brothers will credit what I say.”
“And
St. Giles is on our way?” It was a chapel of the abbey, away at the eastern end
of the Foregate.
“It
is. We’ll go south to Sutton, and then bear west and into the forest. You’ll
have three miles or more to walk back by the shorter way. Without horses we may
save a mile or so.”
“I
think my legs will hold me up for that distance,” said Beringar demurely.
“After Compline, then, at St. Giles.” And without any further word or question
he left Cadfael’s side, lengthening his easy stride to gain ground; for Aline
Siward was just emerging from the doorway of her house and turning towards the
abbey gateway on her way to church. Before she had gone many yards Beringar was
at her elbow; she raised her head and smiled confidingly into his face. A
creature quite without guile, but by no means without proper pride or shrewd
sense, and she opened like a flower at sight of this young man devious as a
serpent, whatever else of good or ill might be said of him. That, thought
Cadfael, watching them walk before him in animated conversation, ought to
signify something in his favour? Or was it only proof of her childlike
trustfulness? Blameless young women have before now been taken in by
black-hearted villains, even murderers; and black-hearted villains and
murderers have been deeply devoted to blameless young women, contradicting
their own nature in this one perverse tenderness.
Cadfael
was consoled and cheered by the sight of Godith in church, nobody’s fool,
nudging and whispering among the boys, and flicking him one rapid, questioning
blue glance, which he answered with a reassuring nod and smile. None too
well-founded reassurance, but somehow he would make it good. Admirable as Aline
was, Godith was the girl for him. She reminded him of Arianna, the Greek
boat-girl, long ago, skirts kilted above the knee, short hair a cloud of curls,
leaning on her long oar and calling across the water to him…
Ah, well! The age he had been then, young Torold had
not even reached yet. These things are for the young. Meantime, tonight after
Compline, at St. Giles!
Chapter
Seven
THE
RIDE OUT THROUGH SUTTON INTO THE LONG FOREST, dense and primitive through all
but the heathy summits of its fifteen square miles, was like a sudden return
visit to aspects of his past, night raids and desperate ambushes once so
familiar to him as to be almost tedious, but now, in this shadowy, elderly
form, as near excitement as he wished to come. The horse under him was lofty
and mettlesome and of high pedigree, he had not been astride such a creature
for nearly twenty years, and the flattery and temptation reminded him of days
past, when exalted and venturesome companions made all labours and privations
pleasurable.
Hugh
Beringar, once away from the used roads and into the trees and the night
shadows, seemed to have no cares in the world, certainly no fear of any
treachery on his companion’s part. He chattered, even, to pass the time along
the way, curious about Brother Cadfael’s uncloistral past, and about the
countries he had known as well as he knew this forest.
“So
you lived in the world all those years, and saw so much of it, and never
thought to marry? And half the world women, they say?” The light voice,
seemingly idle and faintly mocking, nevertheless genuinely questioned and
required an answer.
“I
had thought to marry, once,” said Cadfael honestly, “before I took the Cross,
and she was a very fair woman, too, but to say truth, I forgot her in the east,
and in the west she forgot me. I was away too long, she gave up waiting and
married another man, small blame to her.”
“Have
you ever seen her again?” asked Hugh.
“No,
never. She has grandchildren by now, may they be good to her. She was a fine
woman, Richildis.”
“But
the east was also made up of men and women, and you a young crusader. I cannot
but wonder,” said Beringar dreamily.
“So,
wonder! I also wonder about you,” said Cadfael mildly. “Do you know any human
creatures who are not strangers, one to another?”
A
faint gleam of light showed among the trees. The lay brothers sat up late with
a reed dip, Cadfael suspected playing at dice. Why not? The tedium here must be
extreme. They were bringing these decent brothers a little diversion,
undoubtedly welcome.
That
they were alive and alert to the slightest sound of an unexpected approach was
soon proved, as both emerged ware and ready in the doorway. Brother Anselm
loomed huge and muscular, like an oak of his own fifty-five years, and swung a
long staff in one hand. Brother Louis, French by descent but born in England,
was small and wiry and agile, and in this solitude kept a dagger by him, and
knew how to use it. Both of them came forth prepared for anything, placid of
face and watchful of eye; but at sight of Brother Cadfael they fell to an easy
grinning.
“What,
is it you, old comrade? A pleasure to see a known face, but we hardly looked
for you in the middle of the night. Are you biding over until tomorrow? Where’s
your errand?” They looked at Beringar with measuring interest, but he left it
to Cadfael to do the dealing for him here, where the abbey’s writ ran with more
force than the king’s.
“Our
errand’s here, to you,” said Cadfael, lighting down. “My lord here asks that
you’ll give stabling and shelter for a few days to these two beasts, and keep
them out of the public eye.” No need to bide the reason from these two, who
would have sympathised heartily with the owner of such horseflesh in his desire
to keep it. “They’re commandeering baggage horses for the army, and that’s no
fit life for these fellows, they’ll be held back to serve in a better fashion.”
Brother
Anselm ran an appreciative eye over Beringar’s mount, and an affectionate hand
over the arched neck. “A long while since the stable here had such a beauty in
it! Long enough since it had any at all, barring Prior Robert’s mule when he
visited, and he does that very rarely now. We expect to be recalled, to tell
truth, this place is too isolated and unprofitable to be kept much longer. Yes,
we’ll give you house-room, my fine lad, gladly, and your mate, too. All the
more gladly, my lord, if you’ll let me get my leg across him now and again by
way of exercise.”
“I
think he may carry even you without trouble,” acknowledged Beringar amiably.
“And surrender them to no one but myself or Brother Cadfael.”
“That’s
understood. No one will set eyes on them here.” They led the horses into the
deserted stable, very content with the break in their tedious existence, and
with Beringar’s open-handed largesse for their services. “Though we’d have
taken them in for the pleasure of it,” said Brother Louis truthfully. “I was
groom once in Earl Robert of Gloucester’s household, I love a fine horse, one
with a gloss and a gait to do me credit.”
Cadfael
and Hugh Beringar turned homeward together on foot. “An hour’s walking, hardly
more,” said Cadfael, “by the way I’ll take you. The path’s too overgrown in
parts for the horses, but I know it well, it cuts off the Foregate. We have to
cross the brook, well upstream from the mill, and can enter the abbey grounds
from the garden side, unnoticed, if you’re willing to wade.”
“I
believe,” said Beringar reflectively, but with complete placidity, “you are
having a game with me. Do you mean to lose me in the woods, or drown me in the mill-race?”
“I
doubt if I should succeed at either. No, this will be a most amicable walk
together, you’ll see. And well worth it, I trust.”
And
curiously, for all each of them knew the other was making use of him, it was
indeed a pleasant nocturnal journey they made, the elderly monk without
personal ambitions, and the young man whose ambitions were limitless and
daring. Probably Beringar was working hard at the puzzle of why Cadfael had so
readily accommodated him, certainly Cadfael was just as busy trying to fathom
why Beringar had ever invited him to conspire with him thus; it did not matter,
it made the contest more interesting. And which of them was to win, and to get
the most out of the tussle, was very much in the balance.
Keeping
pace thus on the narrow forest path they were much of a height, though Cadfael
was thickset and burly, and Beringar lean and lissome and light of foot. He
followed Cadfael’s steps attentively, and the darkness, only faintly alleviated
by starlight between the branches, seemed to bother him not at all. And lightly
and freely he talked.
“The
king intends to move down into Gloucester’s country again, in more strength,
hence this drive for men and horses. In a few more days he’ll surely be
moving.”
“And
you go with him?” Since he was minded to be talkative, why not encourage him?
Everything he said would be calculated, of course, but sooner or later even he
might make a miscalculation.
“That
depends on the king. Will you credit it, Brother Cadfael, the man distrusts me!
Though in fact I’d liefer be put in charge of my own command here, where my
lands lie. I’ve made myself as assiduous as I dare—to see the same face too
constantly might have the worst effect, not to see it in attendance at all
would be fatal. A nice question of judgment.”
“I
feel,” said Cadfael, “that a man might have considerable confidence in your
judgment. Here we are at the brook, do you hear it?” There were stones there by
which to cross dryshod, though the water was low and the bed narrowed, and
Beringar, having rested his eyes a few moments to assay the distance and the
ground, crossed in a nicely balanced leap that served to justify Cadfael’s
pronouncement.
“Do
you indeed?” resumed the young man, falling in beside him again as they went
on. “Have a high opinion of my judgment? Of risks and vantages only? Or, for
instance, of men?—And women?”
“I
can hardly question your judgment of men,” said Cadfael drily, “since you’ve
confided in me. If I doubted, I’d hardly be likely to own it.”
“And
of women?” They were moving more freely now through open fields.
“I
think they might all be well advised to beware of you. And what else is
gossiped about in the king’s court, besides the next campaign? There’s no fresh
word of FitzAlan and Adeney being sighted?”
“None,
nor will be now,” said Beringar readily. “They had luck, and I’m not sorry.
Where they are by now there’s no knowing, but wherever it is, it’s one stage on
the way to France.”
There
was no reason to doubt him; whatever he was about he was making his
dispositions by way of truth, not lies. So the news for Godith’s peace of mind
was still good, and every day better, as the distance between her father and
Stephen’s vengeance lengthened. And now there were two excellent horses well
positioned on an escape road for Godith and Torold, in the care of two stalwart
brothers who would release them at Cadfael’s word. The first step was
accomplished. Now to recover the saddle-bags from the river, and start them on
their way. Not so simple a matter, but surely not impossible.
“I
see now where we are,” said Beringar, some twenty minutes later. They had cut
straight across the mile of land enclosed by the brook’s wanderings, and stood
again on the bank; on the other side the stripped fields of pease whitened in
the starlight, and beyond their smooth rise lay the gardens, and the great
range of abbey buildings. “You have a nose for country, even in the dark. Lead
the way, I’ll trust you for an unpitted ford, too.”
Cadfael
had only to kilt his habit, having nothing but his sandals to get wet. He
strode into the water at the point opposite the low roof of Godith’s hut, which
just showed above the trees and bushes and the containing wall of the
herbarium. Beringar plunged in after him, boots and hose and all. The water was
barely knee-deep, but clearly he cared not at all. And Cadfael noted how he
moved, gently and steadily, hardly a ripple breaking from his steps. He had all
the intuitive gifts of wild creatures, as alert by night as by day. On the
abbey bank he set off instinctively round the edge of the low stubble of
peasehaulms, to avoid any rustle among the dry roots soon to be dug in.
“A
natural conspirator,” said Cadfael, thinking aloud; and that he could do so was
proof of a strong, if inimical, bond between them.
Beringar
turned on him a face suddenly lit by a wild smile. “One knows another,” he
said. They had grown used to exchanging soundless whispers, and yet making them
clear to be heard. “I’ve remembered one rumour that’s making the rounds, that I
forgot to tell you. A few days ago there was some fellow hunted into the river
by night, said to be one of FitzAlan’s squires. They say an archer got him
behind the left shoulder, maybe through the heart. However it was, he went
down, somewhere by Atcham his body may be cast up. But they caught a riderless
horse, a good saddle-horse, the next day, sure to be his.”
“Do
you tell me?” said Cadfael, mildly marvelling. “You may speak here, there’ll be
no one prowling in my herb-garden by night, and they’re used to me rising at
odd times to tend my brews here.”
“Does
not your boy see to that?” asked Hugh Beringar innocently.
“A
boy slipping out of the dortoir,” said Brother Cadfael, “would soon have cause
to rue it. We take better care of our children here, my lord, than you seem to
think.”
“I’m
glad to hear it. It’s well enough for seasoned old soldiers turned monk to risk
the chills of the night, but the young things ought to be protected.” His voice
was sweet and smooth as honey. “I was telling you of this odd thing about the
horses… A couple of days later, if you’ll believe it, they rounded up another
saddle-horse running loose, grazing up in the heathlands north of the town,
still saddled. They’re thinking there was a single bodyguard sent out from the
castle, when the assault came, to pick up Adeney’s daughter from wherever she
was hidden, and escort her safely out of the ring round Shrewsbury. They think
the attempt failed,” he said softly, “when her attendant took to the river to
save her. So she’s still missing, and still thought to be somewhere here, close
in hiding. And they’ll be looking for her, Brother Cadfael—they’ll be looking
for her now more eagerly than ever.”
They
were up at the edge of the inner gardens by then. Hugh Beringar breathed an
almost silent “Good night!” and was gone like a shadow towards the guest house.
Before
he slept out the rest of the night, Brother Cadfael lay awake long enough to do
some very hard thinking. And the longer he thought, the more convinced he
became that someone had indeed approached the mill closely enough and silently
enough to catch the last few sentences spoken within; and that the someone was
Hugh Beringar, past all doubt. He had proved how softly he could move, how
instinctively he adapted his movements to circumstances, he had provoked a shared
expedition committing each of them to the other’s discretion, and he had
uttered a number of cryptic confidences calculated to arouse suspicion and
alarm, and possibly precipitate unwise action—though Cadfael had no intention
of giving him that last satisfaction. He did not believe the listener had been
within earshot long. But the last thing Cadfael himself had said gave away
plainly enough that he intended somehow to get hold of two horses, retrieve the
hidden treasury, and see Torold on his way with “her.” If Beringar had been at
the door just a moment earlier, he must also have heard the girl named; but
even without that he must surely have had his suspicions. Then just what game
was he playing, with his own best horses, with the fugitives he could betray at
any moment, yet had not so far betrayed, and with Brother Cadfael? A better and
larger prize offered than merely one young man’s capture, and the exploitation
of a girl against whom he had no real grudge. A man like Beringar might prefer
to risk all and play for all, Torold, Godith and treasure in one swoop. For
himself alone, as once before, though without success? Or for the king’s gain
and favour? He was indeed a young man of infinite possibilities.
Cadfael
thought about him for a long time before he slept, and one thing, at least, was
clear. If Beringar knew now that Cadfael had as good as undertaken to recover
the treasury, then from this point on he would hardly let Cadfael out of his
sight, for he needed him to lead him to the spot. A little light began to dawn,
faint but promising, just before sleep came. It seemed no more than a moment
before the bell was rousing him with the rest for Prime.
“Today,”
said Cadfael to Godith, in the garden after breakfast, “do all as usual, go to
the Mass before chapter, and then to your schooling. After dinner you should
work a little in the garden, and see to the medicines, but after that you can
slip away to the old mill, discreetly, mind, until Vespers. Can you dress
Torold’s wound without me? I may not be seen there today.”
“Surely
I can,” she said blithely. “I’ve seen it done, and I know the herbs now. But…
If someone, if he, was spying on us yesterday, how if he comes today?” She had
been told of the night’s expedition, briefly, and the implications at once
heartened and alarmed her.
“He
will not,” said Cadfael positively. “If all goes well, wherever I am today,
there he will be. That’s why I want you away from me, and why you may breathe
more easily away from me. And there’s something I may want you and Torold to do
for me, late tonight, if things go as I expect. When we come to Vespers, then
I’ll tell you, yes or no. If it’s yes, that’s all I need say, and this is what
you must do…”
She
listened in glowing silence throughout, and nodded eager comprehension. “Yes, I
saw the boat, leaning against the wall of the mill. Yes, I know the thicket of
bushes at the beginning of the garden, close under the end of the bridge… Yes,
of course we can do it, Torold and I together!”
“Wait
long enough to be sure,” cautioned Cadfael. “And now run off to the parish
Mass, and your lessons, and look as like the other boys as you can, and don’t
be afraid. If there should be any cause for fear, I intend to hear of it early,
and I’ll be with you at once.”
A
part of Cadfael’s thinking was rapidly proved right. He made it his business to
be very active about the precincts that Sunday, attendant at every service,
trotting on various errands from gate house to guest house, to the abbot’s
lodging, the infirmary, the gardens; and everywhere that he went, somewhere
within view, unobtrusive but present, was Hugh Beringar. Never before had that
young man been so constantly at church, in attendance even when Aline was not
among the worshippers. Now let’s see, thought Cadfael, with mild malice,
whether I can lure him from the lists even when she does attend, and leave the
field open for the other suitor. For Aline would certainly come to the Mass
after chapter, and his last foray to the gate house had shown him Adam
Courcelle, dressed for peace and piety, approaching the door of the small house
where she and her maid were lodged.
It
was unheard of for Cadfael to be absent from Mass, but for once he invented an
errand which gave him fair excuse. His skills with medicines were known in the
town, and people often asked for his help and advice. Abbot Heribert was
indulgent to such requests, and lent his herbalist freely. There was a child
along the Foregate towards St. Giles who had been under his care from time to
time for a skin infection, and though he was growing out of it gradually, and
there was no great need for a visit this day, no one had the authority to
contradict Cadfael when he pronounced it necessary to go.
In
the gateway he met Aline Siward and Adam Courcelle entering, she slightly flushed,
certainly not displeased with her escort, but perhaps a little embarrassed, the
king’s officer devoutly attentive and also warmly flushed, clearly in his case
with pleasure. If Aline was expecting to be accosted by Beringar, as had become
usual by this time, for once she was surprised. Whether relieved or
disappointed there was no telling. Beringar was nowhere to be seen.
Proof
positive, thought Cadfael, satisfied, and went on his physicianly visit
serenely and without haste. Beringar was discretion itself in his surveillance,
he contrived not to be seen at all until Cadfael, on his way home again, met
him ambling out gently for exercise on one of his remaining horses, and
whistling merrily as he rode.
He
saluted Cadfael gaily, as though no encounter could have been more unexpected
or more delightful. “Brother Cadfael, you astray on a Sunday morning?”
Very
staidly Cadfael rehearsed his errand, and reported its satisfactory results.
“The
range of your skills is admirable,” said Beringar, twinkling. “I trust you had
an undisturbed sleep after your long working day yesterday?”
“My
mind was over-active for a while,” said Cadfael, “but I slept well enough. And
thus far you still have a horse to ride, I see.”
“Ah,
that! I was at fault, I should have realised that even if the order was issued
on a Sunday, they would not move until the sabbath was over. Tomorrow you’ll
see for yourself.” Unquestionably he was telling the truth, and certain of his
information. “The hunt is likely to be very thorough,” he said, and Cadfael
knew he was not talking only of the horses and the provisions. “King Stephen is
a little troubled about his relations with the church and its bishops. I ought
to have known he would hold back on Sunday. Just as well, it gives us a day’s
credit and grace. Tonight we can stay blamelessly at home in all men’s sight,
as the innocent should. Eh, Cadfael?” And he laughed, and leaned to clap a hand
on Brother Cadfael’s shoulder, and rode on, kicking his heels into his horse’s
sides and rousing to a trot towards St. Giles.
Nevertheless,
when Cadfael emerged from the refectory after dinner, Beringar was visible just
within the doorway of the guest-hall opposite, seemingly oblivious but well
aware of everything within his field of vision. Cadfael led him harmlessly to
the cloister, and sat down there in the sun, and dozed contentedly until he was
sure that Godith would be well away and free from surveillance. Even when he
awoke he sat for a while, to make quite sure, and to consider the implications.
No
question but all his movements were being watched very narrowly, and by
Beringar in person. He did not delegate such work to his men-at-arms, or to any
other hired eyes, but did the duty himself, and probably took pleasure in it,
too. If he was willing to surrender Aline to Courcelle, even for an hour, then
maximum importance attached to what he was doing instead. I am elected, thought
Cadfael, as the means to the end he desires, and that is FitzAlan’s treasury.
And his surveillance is going to be relentless. Very well! There’s no way of
evading it. The only thing to do is to make use of it.
Do
not, therefore, tire out the witness too much, or alert him too soon of
activities planned. He has you doing a deal of guessing, now keep him guessing.
So
he betook himself to his herbarium, and worked conscientiously on all his
preparations there, brewing and newly begun, all that afternoon until it was
time to repair to church for Vespers. Where Beringar secreted himself he did
not trouble to consider, he hoped the vigil was tedious in the extreme to a man
so volatile and active.
Courcelle
had either stayed—the opportunity being heaven-sent, and not to be wasted—or
returned for the evening worship, he came with Aline demure and thoughtful on
his arm. At sight of Brother Cadfael sallying forth from the gardens he halted,
and greeted him warmly.
“A
pleasure to see you in better circumstances than when last we met, brother. I
hope you may have no more such duties. At least Aline and you, between you,
lent some grace to what would otherwise have been a wholly ugly business. I
wish I had some way of softening his Grace’s mind towards your house, he still
keeps a certain grudge that the lord abbot was in no hurry to come to his
peace.”
“A
mistake a great many others also made,” said Cadfael philosophically. “No doubt
we shall weather it.”
“I
trust so. But as yet his Grace is in no mind to extend any privileges to the
abbey above the other townsfolk. If I should be compelled to enforce, even
within your walls, orders I’d rather see stop at the gates, I hope you’ll
understand that I do it reluctantly, and have no choice about it.”
He
is asking pardon in advance, thought Cadfael, enlightened, for tomorrow’s
invasion. So it’s true enough, as I supposed, and he has been given the ill work
to do, and is making it clear beforehand that he dislikes the business and
would evade it if he could. He may even be making `rather more than he need of
his repugnance, for the lady’s benefit.
“If
that should happen,” he said benignly, “I’m sure every man of my order will
realise that you do only what you must, like any soldier under orders. You need
not fear that any odium will attach to you.”
“So
I have assured Adam many times,” said Aline warmly, and flushed vividly at
hearing herself call him by his Christian name. Perhaps it was for the first
time. “But he’s hard to convince. No, Adam, it is true—you take to yourself
blame which is not your due, as if you had killed Giles with your own hand,
which you know is false. How could I[p even blame the Flemings? They were under
orders, too. In such dreadful times as these no one can do more than choose his
own road according to his conscience, and bear the consequences of his choice,
whatever they may be.”
“In
no times, good or bad,” said Cadfael sententiously, “can man do more or better
than that. Since I have this chance, lady, I should render you account of the
alms you trusted to me, for all are bestowed, and they have benefited three
poor, needy souls. For want of names, which I did not enquire, say some prayer
for three worthy unfortunates who surely pray for you.”
And
so she would, he reflected as he watched her enter the church on Courcelle’s
arm. At this crisis season of her life, bereaved of kin, left mistress of a
patrimony she had freely dedicated to the king’s service, he judged she was
perilously hesitant between the cloister and the world, and for all he had
chosen the cloister in his maturity, he heartily wished her the world, if
possible a more attractive world than surrounded her now, to employ and fulfil
her youth.
Going
in to take his place among his brothers, he met Godith making for her own
corner. Her eyes questioned brightly, and he said softly: “Yes! Do all as I
told you.”
So
now what mattered was to make certain that for the rest of the evening he led
Beringar into pastures far apart from where Godith operated. What Cadfael did
must be noted, what she did must go unseen and unsuspected. And that could not
be secured by adhering faithfully to the evening routine. Supper was always a
brief meal, Beringar would be sure to be somewhere within sight of the
refectory when they emerged. Collations in the chapter house, the formal
reading from the lives of the saints, was a part of the day that Cadfael had
been known to miss on other occasions, and he did so now, leading his
unobtrusive attendant first to the infirmary, where he paid a brief visit to
Brother Reginald, who was old and deformed in the joints, and welcomed company,
and then to the extreme end of the abbot’s own garden, far away from the
herbarium, and farther still from the gate house. By then Godith would be freed
from her evening lesson with the novices, and might appear anywhere between the
hut and the herbarium and the gates, so it was essential that Beringar should
continue to concentrate on Cadfael, even if he was doing nothing more exciting
than trimming the dead flowers from the abbot’s roses and clove-pinks. By that
stage Cadfael was checking only occasionally that the watch on his movements
continued; he was quite certain that it would, and with exemplary patience.
During the day it seemed almost casual, hardly expecting action, except that
Cadfael was a tricky opponent, and might have decided to act precisely when it
was unexpected of him. But it was after dark that things would begin to happen.
When
Compline was over there was always, on fine evenings, a brief interlude of
leisure in the cloister or the gardens, before the brothers went to their beds.
By then it was almost fully dark, and Cadfael was satisfied that Godith was long
since where she should be, and Torold beside her. But he thought it best to
delay yet a while, and go to the dortoir with the rest. Whether he emerged
thence by way of the night stairs into the church, or the outer staircase,
someone keeping watch from across the great court, where the guest hall lay,
would be able to pick up his traces without trouble.
He
chose the night stairs and the open north door of the church, and slipped round
the east end of the Lady Chapel and the chapter house to cross the court into
the gardens. No need to look round or listen for his shadow, he knew it would
be there, moving at leisure, hanging well back from him but keeping him in
sight. The night was reasonably dark, but the eyes grew accustomed to it soon,
and he knew how securely Beringar could move in darkness. He would expect the
night-wanderer to leave by the ford, as they had returned together the previous
night. Someone bound on secret business would not pass the porter on the gate,
whatever his normal authority.
After
he had waded the brook, Cadfael did pause to be sure Beringar was with him. The
breaks in the rhythm of the water were very slight, but he caught them, and was
content. Now to follow the course of the brook downstream on this side until
nearing its junction with the river. There was a little footbridge there, and
then it was only a step to the stone bridge that crossed into Shrewsbury. Over
the road, and down the slope into the main abbey gardens, and he was already
under the shadow of the first archway of the bridge, watching the faint flashes
of light from the eddies where once a boat-mill had been moored. In this corner
under the stone pier the bushes grew thick, such an awkward slope of ground was
not worth clearing for what it would bear. Half-grown willows leaned, trailing
leaves in the water, and the bushy growth under their branches would have
hidden half a dozen well-screened witnesses.
The
boat was there, afloat and tied up to one of the leaning branches, though it
was of the light, withy-and-hide type that could be ported easily overland.
This time there was good reason it should not, as it usually would, be drawn
ashore and turned over in the turf. There was, Cadfael hoped, a solid bundle
within it, securely tied up in one or two of the sacks from the mill. It would
not have done for him to be seen to be carrying anything. Long before this, he
trusted, he had been clearly seen to be empty-handed.
He
stepped into the boat and loosed the mooring-rope. The sacking bundle was
there, and convincingly heavy when he cautiously tested. A little above him on
the slope, drawn into the edge of the bushes, he caught the slight movement of
a deeper shadow as he pushed off with the long paddle into the flow under the
first archway.
In
the event it proved remarkably easy. No matter how keen Hugh Beringar’s sight,
he could not possibly discern everything that went on under the bridge, detail
by detail. However sharp his hearing, it would bring him only a sound
suggesting the rattling of a chain drawn up against stone, with some
considerable weight on the end, the splash and trickle of water running out
from something newly drawn up, and then the iron rattle of the chain
descending; which was exactly what it was, except that Cadfael’s hands slowed
and muted the descent, to disguise the fact that the same weight was still
attached, and only the bundle concealed in the boat had been sluiced in the
Severn briefly, to provide the trickle of water on the stone ledge. The next
part might be more risky, since he was by no means certain he had read
Beringar’s mind correctly. Brother Cadfael was staking his own life and those
of others upon his judgment of men.
So
far, however, It had gone perfectly. He paddled his light craft warily ashore,
and above him a swift-moving shadow withdrew to higher ground, and, he
surmised, went to earth close to the roadway, ready to fall in behind him
whichever way he took. Though he would have wagered that the way was already
guessed at, and rightly. He tied up the boat again, hastily but securely; haste
was a part of his disguise that night, like stealth. When he crept cautiously
up to the highroad again, and loomed against the night sky for a moment in
stillness, ostensibly waiting to be sure he could cross unnoticed, the watcher
could hardly miss seeing that he had now a shape grossly humped by some large
bundle he carried slung over his shoulder.
He
crossed, rapidly and quietly, and returned by the way he had come, following
the brook upstream from the river after passing the ford, and so into the
fields and woods he had threaded with Beringar only one night past. The bundle
he carried, mercifully, had not been loaded with the full weight it was
supposed to represent, though either Torold or Godith had seen fit to give it a
convincing bulk and heft. More than enough, Cadfael reflected ruefully, for an
ageing monk to carry four miles or more. His nights were being relentlessly
curtailed. Once these young folk were wafted away into relative safety he would
sleep through Matins and Lauds, and possibly the next morning’s Prime, as well,
and do fitting penance for it.
Now
everything was matter for guesswork. Would Beringar take it for granted where
he was bound, and turn back too soon, and with some residue of suspicion, and
ruin everything? No! Where Cadfael was concerned he would take nothing for
granted, not until he was sure by his own observation where this load had been
bestowed in safekeeping, and satisfied that Cadfael had positively returned to
his duty without it. But would he, by any chance, intercept it on the way? No,
why should he? To do so would have been to burden himself with it, whereas now
he had an old fool to carry it for him, to where he had his horses hidden to
convey it with ease elsewhere.
Cadfael
had the picture clear in his mind now, the reckoning at its worst. If Beringar
had killed Nicholas Faintree in the attempt to possess himself of the treasury,
then his aim now would be not only to accomplish what he had failed to do then,
but also something beyond, a possibility which had been revealed to him only
since that attempt. By letting Brother Cadfael stow away for him both horses
and treasure at an advantageous place, he had ensured his primary objective;
but in addition, if he waited for Cadfael to convey his fugitives secretly to
the same spot, as he clearly intended to do, then Beringar could remove the
only witness to his former murder, and capture his once affianced bride as
hostage for her father. What an enormous boon to bestow on King Stephen! His
own favoured place would be assured, his crime buried for ever.
So
much, of course, for the worst. But the range of possibilities was wide. For
Beringar might be quite innocent of Faintree’s death, but very hot on the trail
of FitzAlan’s valuables, now he had detected their whereabouts; and an elderly
monk might be no object to his plans for his own enrichment, or, if he
preferred to serve his interests in another way, his means of ingratiating
himself with the king. In which case Cadfael might not long survive his
depositing this infernal nuisance he carried, on shoulders already aching, at
the grange where the horses were stabled. Well, thought Cadfael, rather
exhilarated than oppressed, we shall see!
Once
into the woods beyond the coil of the brook, he halted, and dropped the load
with a huge grunt from his shoulders, and sat down on it, ostensibly to rest,
actually to listen for the soft sounds of another man halting, braced, not
resting. Very soft they were, but he caught them, and was happy. The young man
was there, tireless, serene, a born adventurer. He saw a dark, amused,
saturnine face ready for laughter. He was reasonably sure, then, how the
evening would end. With a little luck—better, with God’s blessing, he
reproved!—he would be back in time for Matins.
There
was no perceptible light in the grange when he reached it, but it needed only
the rustle and stir of footsteps, and Brother Louis was out with a little
pine-flare in one hand and his dagger in the other, as wide awake as at midday,
and more perilous.
“God
bless you, brother,” said Cadfael, easing the load gratefully from his back. He
would have something to say to young Torold when next he talked to him! Someone
or something other than his own shoulders could carry this the next time. “Let
me within, and shut the door to.”
“Gaily!”
said Brother Louis, and haled him within and did as he was bid.
On
the way back, not a quarter of an hour later, Brother Cadfael listened
carefully as he went, but he heard nothing of anyone following or accompanying
him, certainly of no menace. Hugh Beringar had watched him into the grange from
cover, possibly even waited for him to emerge unburdened, and then melted away
into the night to which he belonged, and made his own lightsome, satisfied way
home to the abbey. Cadfael abandoned all precautions and did the same. He was
certain, now, where he stood. By the time the bell rang for Matins he was ready
to emerge with the rest of the dortoir, and proceed devoutly down the
night-stairs to give due praise in the church.
Chapter
Eight
BEFORE
DAWN ON THAT MONDAY MORNING in August the king’s officers had deployed small
parties to close every road out of Shrewsbury, while at every section within
the town wall others stood ready to move methodically through the streets and
search every house. There was more in the wind than the commandeering of horses
and provisions, though that would certainly be done as they went, and done
thoroughly.
“Everything
shows that the girl must be in hiding somewhere near,” Prestcote had insisted,
reporting to the king after full enquiries. “The one horse we found turned
loose is known to be from FitzAlan’s stables, and this young man hunted into
the Severn certainly had a companion who has not yet been run to earth. Left
alone, she cannot have got far. All your advisers agree, your Grace cannot
afford to let the chance of her capture slip. Adeney would certainly come back
to redeem her, he has no other child. It’s possible even FitzAlan could be
forced to return, rather than face the shame of letting her die.”
“Die?”
echoed the king, bristling ominously. “Is it likely I’d take the girl’s life?
Who spoke of her dying?”
“Seen
from here,” said Prestcote drily, “it may be an absurdity to speak of any such
matter, but to an anxious father waiting for better news it may seem all too
possible. Of course you would do the girl no harm. No need even to harm her
father if you get him into your hands, or even FitzAlan. But your Grace must
consider that you should do everything possible to prevent their services from
reaching the empress. It’s no longer a matter of revenge for Shrewsbury, but
simply of a sensible measure to conserve your own forces and cut down on your
enemy’s.”
“That’s
true enough,” admitted Stephen, without overmuch enthusiasm. His anger and
hatred had simmered down into his more natural easiness of temperament, not to
say laziness. “I am not sure that I like even making such use of the girl.” He
remembered that he had as good as ordered young Beringar to track down his
affianced bride if he wanted to establish himself in royal favour, and the
young man, though respectfully attendant since, if somewhat sporadically, had
never yet produced any evidence of zeal in the search. Possibly, thought the
king, he read my mind better than I did myself at the time.
“She
need come by no injury, and your Grace would be saved having to contend with
any forces attached to her father’s standard, if not also his lord’s. If you
can cut off all those levies from the enemy, you will have saved yourself great
labour, and a number of your men their lives. You cannot afford to neglect such
a chance.”
It
was sound advice, and the king knew it. Weapons are where you find them, and
Adeney could sit and kick his heels in an easy imprisonment enough, once he was
safe in captivity.
“Very
well!” he said. “Make your search and make it thoroughly.”
The
preparations were certainly thorough. Adam Courcelle descended upon the Abbey
Foregate with his own command and a company of the Flemings. And while Willem
Ten Heyt went ahead and established a guard-post at St. Giles, to question
every rider and search every cart attempting to leave the town, and his
lieutenant posted sentries along every path and by every possible
crossing-place along the riverside, Courcelle took possession, civilly but
brusquely, of the abbey gate house, and ordered the gates closed to all
attempting to enter or leave. It was then about twenty minutes before Prime,
and already daylight. There had been very little noise made, but Prior Robert
from the dortoir had caught the unusual stir and disquiet from the gate house,
on which the window of his own chamber looked down, and he came out in haste to
see what was afoot.
Courcelle
made him a reverence that deceived nobody, and asked with respect for
privileges everyone knew he was empowered to take; still, the veil of courtesy
did something to placate the prior’s indignation.
“Sir,
I am ordered by his Grace King Stephen to require of your house free and
orderly entry everywhere, a tithe of your stores for his Grace’s necessary
provision, and such serviceable horses as are not already in the use of people
in his Grace’s commission. I am also commanded to search and enquire everywhere
for the girl Godith, daughter of his Grace’s traitor Fulke Adeney, who is
thought to be still in hiding here in Shrewsbury.”
Prior
Robert raised his thin, silver brows and looked down his long, aristocratic
nose. “You would hardly expect to find such a person within our precincts? I
assure you there is none such in the guest house, where alone she might
becomingly be found.”
“It
is a formality here, I grant you,” said Courcelle, “but I have my orders, and
cannot treat one dwelling more favourably than another.”
There
were lay servants listening by then, standing apart silent and wary, and one or
two of the boy pupils, sleepy-eyed and scared. The master of the novices came
to herd his strays back into their quarters, and stayed, instead, to listen
with them.
“This
should be reported at once to the abbot,” said the prior with admirable
composure, and led the way at once to Abbot Heribert’s lodging. Behind them,
the Flemings were closing the gates and mounting a guard, before turning their
practical attention to the barns and the stables.
Brother
Cadfael, having for two nights running missed the first few hours of his rest,
slept profoundly through all the earliest manifestations of invasion, and awoke
only when the bell rang for Prime, far too late to do anything but dress in
haste and go down with the rest of the brothers to the church. Only when he
heard the whispers passed from man to man, and saw the closed gates, the
lounging Flemings, and the subdued and huge-eyed boys, and heard the
businesslike bustle and clatter of hooves from the stable-yard, did he realise
that for once events had overtaken him, and snatched the initiative from his
hands. For nowhere among the scared and anxious youngsters in church could he
see any sign of Godith. As soon as Prime was over, and he was free to go, he
hurried away to the hut in the herbarium. The door was unlatched and open, the
array of drying herbs and mortars and bottles in shining order, the blankets
had been removed from the bench-bed, and a basket of newly gathered lavender
and one or two bottles arranged innocently along it. Of Godith there was no
sign, in the hut, in the gardens, in the peasefields along the brook, where at
one side the great stack of dried haulms loomed pale as flax, waiting to be
carted away to join the hay in the barns. Nor was there any trace of a large
bundle wrapped in sacking and probably damp from seeping river-water, which had
almost certainly spent the night under that bleached pile, or the small boat
which should have been turned down upon it and carefully covered over. The
boat, FitzAlan’s treasury, and Godith had all vanished into thin air. Godith
had awakened somewhat before Prime, uneasily aware of the heavy responsibility
that now lay upon her, and gone out without undue alarm to find out what was
happening at the gate house. Though all had been done briskly and quietly,
there was something about the stirring in the air and the unusual voices,
lacking the decorous monastic calm of the brothers, that disturbed her mind.
She was on the point of emerging from the walled garden when she saw the
Flemings dismounting and closing the gates, and Courcelle advancing to meet the
prior. She froze at the sound of her own name thus coolly spoken. If they were
bent upon a thorough search, even here, they must surely find her. Questioned
like the other boys, with all those enemy eyes upon her, she could not possibly
sustain the performance. And if they found her, they might extend the search
and find what she had in her charge. Besides, there was Brother Cadfael to
protect, and Torold. Torold had returned faithfully to his mill once he had
seen her safely home with the treasure. Last night she had almost wished he
could have stayed with her, now she was glad he had the whole length of the
Gaye between him and this dawn alarm, and woods not far from his back, and
quick senses that would pick up the signs early, and give him due warning to
vanish.
Last
night had been like a gay, adventurous dream, for some reason inexpressibly
sweet, holding their breath together in cover until Cadfael had led his shadow
well away from the bridge, loosing the little boat, hauling up the dripping
saddle-bags, swathing them in dry sacks to make another bundle the image of
Cadfael’s; their hands together on the chain, holding it away from the stone,
muting it so that there should be no further sound, then softly paddling the
short way upstream to the brook, and round to the peasefields. Hide the boat,
too, Cadfael had said, for we’ll need it tomorrow night, if the chance offers.
Last night’s adventure had been the dream, this morning was the awakening, and
she needed the boat now, this moment.
There
was no hope of reaching Brother Cadfael for orders, what she guarded must be
got away from here at once, and it certainly could not go out through the
gates. There was no one to tell her what to do, this fell upon her shoulders
now. Blessedly, the Flemings were not likely to ransack the gardens until they
had looted stables and barns and stores; she had a little time in hand.
She
went back quickly to the hut, folded her blankets and hid them under the bench
behind a row of jars and mortars, stripped the bed and turned it into a mere
shelf for more such deceits, and set the door wide open to the innocent
daylight. Then she slipped away to the stack of haulms, and dragged out the
boat from its hiding-place, and the sacking bundle with it. A godsend that the
gentle slope of the field was so glazed with the cropped stems, and the boat so
light, that it slid down effortlessly into the brook. She left it beached, and
returned to drag the treasury after it, and hoist it aboard. Until last night
she had never been in such a boat, but Torold had shown her how to use the
paddle, and the steady flow of the brook helped her.
She
already knew what she would do. There was no hope at all of escaping notice if
she went downstream to the Severn; with such a search in hand, there would be
watchers on the main road, on the bridge, and probably along the banks. But
only a short way from her launching-place a broad channel was drawn off to the
right, to the pool of the main abbey mill, where the mill-race, drawn off
upstream through the abbey pool and the fish ponds, turned the wheel and
emptied itself again into the pond, to return to the main stream of the brook
and accompany it to the river. Just beyond the mill the three grace houses of
the abbey were ranged, with little gardens down to the water, and three more
like them protected the pond from open view on the other side. The house next
to the mill was the one devoted to the use of Aline Siward. True, Courcelle had
said he was to search for his fugitive everywhere; but if there was one place
in this conventual enclosure that would receive no more than a formal visit
from him, it was certainly the house where Aline was living.
What
if we are on opposite sides, thought Godith, plying her paddle inexpertly but
doggedly at the turn, and sailing into wider, smoother water, she can’t throw
me to the wolves, it isn’t in her, with a face like hers! And are we on
opposite sides? Are we on either side, by this time? She places everything she
has at the king’s disposal, and he hangs her brother! My father stakes life and
lands for the empress, and I don’t believe she cares what happens to him or any
of his like, provided she gets her own way. I daresay Aline’s brother was more
to her than King Stephen will ever be, and I know I care more for my father and
Torold than for the Empress Maud, and I wish the old king’s son hadn’t drowned
when that awful ship went down, so that there’d have been no argument over who
inherited, and Stephen and Maud alike could have stayed in their own manors,
and left us alone!
The
mill loomed on her right, but the wheel was still today, and the water of the
race spilled over freely into the pond that opened beyond, with slow
counter-currents flowing along the opposite bank to return to the brook. The
bank here was sheer for a couple of feet, to level as much ground as possible
for the narrow gardens; but if she could heave the bundle safely ashore, she
thought she could drag up the boat. She caught at a naked root that jutted into
the water from a leaning willow, and fastened her mooring-line to it, before
she dared attempt to hoist her treasure up to the edge of the grass. It was
heavy for her, but she rolled it on to the thwart, and thence manipulated it
into her arms. She could just reach the level rim of turf without tilting the
boat too far. The weight rested and remained stable, and Godith leaned her arms
thankfully either side of it, and for the first time tears welled out of her
eyes and ran down her face.
Why,
she wondered rebelliously, why am I going to such trouble for this rubbish,
when all I care about is Torold, and my father? And Brother Cadfael! I should
be failing him if I tipped it down into the pond and left it there. He went to
all sorts of pains to get it to this point, and now I have to go on with the
work. And Torold cares greatly that he should carry out the task he was given.
That’s more than gold. It isn’t this lump that matters!
She
scrubbed an impatient and grubby hand over her cheeks and eyes, and set about
climbing ashore, which proved tricky, for the boat tended to withdraw from
under her foot to the length of its mooring; when at last she had scrambled to
safety, swearing now instead of crying, she could not draw it up after her, she
was afraid of holing it on the jagged roots. It would have to ride here. She
lay on her stomach and shortened the mooring, and made sure the knot was fast.
Then she towed her detested incubus up into the shadow of the house, and
hammered at the door.
It
was Constance who opened it. It was barely eight o’clock, Godith realized, and
it was Aline’s habit to attend the mass at ten, she might not even be out of
her bed yet. But the general disquiet in the abbey had reached these retired
places also, it seemed, for Aline was up and dressed, and appeared at once
behind her maid’s shoulder.
“What
is it, Constance?” She saw Godith, soiled and tousled and breathless, leaning
over a great sacking bundle on the ground, and came forward in innocent
concern. “Godric! What’s the matter? Did Brother Cadfael send you? Is anything
wrong?”
“You
know the boy, do you, madam?” said Constance, surprised.
“I
know him, he’s Brother Cadfael’s helper, we have talked together.” She cast one
luminous glance over Godith from head to foot, took in the smudged marks of
tears and the heaving bosom, and put her maid quickly aside. She knew
desperation when she saw it, even when it made no abject appeal. “Come within,
come! Here, let me help you with this, whatever it may be. Now, Constance,
close the door!” They were safe within, the wooden walls closed them round, the
morning sun was warm and bright through an eastern window left open.
They
stood looking at each other, Aline all woman in a blue gown, her golden hair
loosed about her in a cloud, Godith brown and rumpled, and arrayed unbecomingly
in an overlarge cotte and ill-fitting hose, short hair wild, and face strained
and grubby from soil, grass and sweat.
“I
came to ask you for shelter,” said Godith simply. “The king’s soldiers are
hunting for me. I’m worth quite a lot to them if they find me. I’m not Godric,
I’m Godith. Godith Adeney, Fulke Adeney’s daughter.”
Aline
let her glance slide, startled and touched, from the fine-featured oval face,
down the drab-clad and slender limbs. She looked again into the challenging,
determined face, and a spark started and glowed in her eyes.
“You’d
better come through here,” she said practically, with a glance at the open
window, “into my own sleeping-chamber, away from the road. Nobody will trouble
you there—we can talk freely. Yes, bring your belongings, I’ll help you with
them.” FitzAlan’s treasury was woman-handled between them into the inner room,
where not even Courcelle, certainly not any other, would dare to go. Aline
closed the door very softly. Godith sat down on a stool by the bed, and felt
every sinew in her grown weak, and every stress relaxing. She leaned her head
against the wall, and looked up at Aline.
“You
do realise, lady, that I’m reckoned the king’s enemy? I don’t want to trick you
into anything. You may think it your duty to give me up.”
“You’re
very honest,” said Aline, “and I’m not being tricked into anything. I’m not
sure even the king would think the better of me if I gave you up to him, but
I’m sure God would not, and I know I should not think the better of myself. You
can rest safe here. Constance and I between us will see to it that no one comes
near you.”
Brother
Cadfael preserved a tranquil face through Prime, and the first conventual Mass,
and a greatly abbreviated chapter meeting, while mentally he was racking his brain
and gnawing his knuckles over his own inexplicable complacence, which had let
him sleep on while the opposing powers stole a march on him. The gates were
fast shut, there was no way out there. He could not pass, and certainly by that
route Godith had not passed. He had seen no soldiers on the other side of the
brook, though they would certainly be watching the river bank. If Godith had
taken the boat, where had she gone with it? Not upstream, for the brook was
open to view for some way, and beyond that flowed through a bed too uneven and
rocky to accommodate such craft. Every moment he was waiting for the outcry
that would signal her capture, but every moment that passed without such an
alarm was ease to him. She was no fool, and she seemed to have got away, though
heaven knew where, with the treasure they were fighting to retain and speed on
its way.
At
chapter Abbot Heribert made a short, weary, disillusioned speech in explanation
of the occupation that had descended upon them, instructed the brothers to obey
whatever commands were given them by the king’s officers with dignity and
fortitude, and to adhere to the order of their day faithfully so far as they
were permitted. To be deprived of the goods of this world should be no more
than a welcome discipline to those who had aspired beyond the world. Brother
Cadfael could at least feel some complacency concerning his own particular
harvest; the king was not likely to demand tithes of his herbs and remedies,
though he might welcome a cask or two of wine. Then the abbot dismissed them
with the injunction to go quietly about their own work until High Mass at ten.
Brother
Cadfael went back to the gardens and occupied himself distractedly with such
small tasks as came to hand, his mind still busy elsewhere. Godith could safely
have forded the brook by broad daylight, and taken to the nearest patch of
woodland, but she could not have carried the unwieldy bundle of treasure with
her, it was too heavy. She had chosen rather to remove all the evidence of
irregular activities here, taking away with her both the treasure and the boat.
He was sure she had not gone as far as the confluence with the river, or she
would have been captured before this. Every moment without the evil news
provided another morsel of reassurance. But wherever she was, she needed his
help.
And
there was Torold, away beyond the reaped fields, in the disused mill. Had he
caught the meaning of these movements in good time, and taken to the woods?
Devoutly Cadfael hoped so. In the meantime there was nothing he could do but
wait, and give nothing away. But oh, if this inquisition passed before the end
of the day, and he could retrieve his two strays after dark, this very night he
must see them away to the west. This might well be the most favourable opportunity,
with the premises already scoured, the searchers tired and glad to forget their
vigilance, the community totally absorbed with their grievances and comparing
notes on the army’s deprivations, the brothers devoted wholly to fervent
prayers of thanks for an ordeal ended.
Cadfael
went out to the great court in good time for Mass. There were army carts being
loaded with sacks from the barns, and a great bustle of Flemings about the
stables. Dismayed guests, caught here in mid-journey with horses worth
commandeering, came out in great agitation to argue and plead for their beasts,
but it did them no good, unless the owners could prove they were in the king’s
service already. Only the poor hacks were spared. One of the abbey carts was
also taken, with its team, and loaded with the abbey’s wheat.
Something
curious was happening at the gates, Cadfael saw. The great carnage doors were
closed, and guarded, but someone had had the calm temerity to knock at the
wicket and ask for entry. Since it could have been one of their own, a courier
from the guard-post at St. Giles, or from the royal camp, the wicket was
opened, and in the narrow doorway appeared the demure figure of Aline Siward,
prayer-book in hand, her gold hair covered decently by the white mourning cap
and wimple.
“I
have permission,” she said sweetly, “to come in to church.” And seeing that the
guards who confronted her were not at home in English, she repeated it just as
amiably in French. They were not disposed to admit her, and were on the point of
closing the door in her face when one of their officers observed the encounter,
and came in haste.
“I
have permission,” repeated Aline patiently, “from Messire Courcelle to come in
to Mass. My name is Aline Siward. If you are in doubt, ask him, he will tell
you.”
It
seemed that she had indeed secured her privilege, for after some hurried words
the wicket was opened fully, and they stood back and let her pass. She walked
through the turmoil of the great court as though nothing out of the ordinary
were happening there, and made for the cloister and the south door of the
church. But she slowed her pace on the way, for she was aware of Brother
Cadfael weaving his way between the scurrying soldiers and the lamenting
travellers to cross her path just at the porch. She gave him a demure public
greeting, but in the moment when they were confidingly close she said privately
and low:
“Be
easy, Godric is safe in my house.”
“Praise
to God and you!” sighed Cadfael as softly.
“After
dark I’ll come for her.” And though Aline had used the boyish name, he knew by
her small, secret smile that the word he had used was no surprise to her. “The
boat?” he questioned soundlessly.
“At
the foot of my garden, ready.”
She
went on into the church, and Cadfael, with a heart suddenly light as
thistledown, went decorously to take his place among the procession of his
brothers.
Torold
sat in the fork of a tree at the edge of the woods east of Shrewsbury castle,
eating the remains of the bread he had brought away with him, and a couple of
early apples stolen from a tree at the limit of the abbey property. Looking
westward across the river he could see not only the great cliff of the castle
walls and towers, but further to the right, just visible between the crests of
trees, the tents of the royal camp. By the numbers busy about the abbey and the
town, the camp itself must be almost empty at this moment.
Torold’s
body was coping well enough with this sudden crisis, to his satisfaction and,
if he would have admitted it, surprise. His mind was suffering more. He had not
yet walked very far, or exerted himself very much, apart from climbing into
this comfortable and densely leafed tree, but he was delighted with the
response of his damaged muscles, and the knit of the gash in his thigh, which
hardly bothered him, and the worse one in his shoulder, which had neither
broken nor greatly crippled his use of his arm. But all his mind fretted and
ached for Godith, the little brother so suddenly transmuted into a creature
half sister, half something more. He had confidence in Brother Cadfael, of
course, but it was impossible to unload all the responsibility for her on to
one pair of cloistered shoulders, however wide and sustaining. Torold fumed and
agonised, and yet went on eating his stolen apples. He was going to need all
the sustenance he could muster.
There
was a patrol moving methodically along the bank of the Severn, between him and
the river, and he dared not move again until they had passed by and withdrawn
from sight towards the abbey and the bridge. And how far round the outskirts of
the town he would have to go, to outflank the royal cordon, was something he
did not yet know.
He
had awakened to the unmistakable sounds from the bridge, carried by the water,
and insistent enough in their rhythm to break his sleep. Many, many men,
mounted and foot, stamping out their presence and their passage upon a stone
bow high above water, the combination sending echoes headlong down the river’s
course. The timber of the mill, the channels of water feeding it, carried the
measure to his ears. He had started up and dressed instinctively, gathering
everything that might betray his having been there, before he ventured out to
look. He had seen the companies fan out at the end of the bridge, and waited to
see no more, for this was a grimly thorough operation. He had wiped out all
traces of his occupation of the mill, throwing into the river all those things
he could not carry away with him, and then had slipped away across the limit of
abbey land, away from the advancing patrol on the river bank, into the edge of
the woodlands opposite the castle.
He
did not know for whom or what this great hunt had been launched, but he knew
all too well who was likely to be taken in it, and his one aim now was to get
to Godith, wherever she might be, and stand between her and danger if he could.
Better still, to take her away from here, into Normandy, where she would be
safe.
Along
the river bank the men of the patrol separated to beat a way through the bushes
where Godith had first come to him. They had already searched the abandoned
mill, but thank God they would find no traces there. Now they were almost out
of sight, he felt safe in swinging down cautiously from his tree and
withdrawing deeper into the belt of woodland. From the bridge to St. Giles the
king’s highway, the road to London, was built up with shops and dwellings, he
must keep well clear. Was it better to go on like this, eastward, and cross the
highroad somewhere beyond St. Giles, or to wait and go back the way he had come,
after all the tumult was over? The trouble was that he did not know when that
was likely to be, and his torment for Godith was something he did not want
prolonged. He would have to go beyond St. Giles, in all probability, before he
dared cross the highroad, and though the brook, after that, need be no obstacle
the approach to the spot opposite the abbey gardens would still be perilous. He
could lie up in the nearest cover and watch, and slip over into the stack of
pease-haulms when the opportunity offered, and thence, if all remained quiet,
into the herbarium, where he had never yet been, and the hut where Godith had
slept the last seven nights in sanctuary. Yes, better go forward and make that
circle. Backward meant braving the end of the bridge, and there would be
soldiers there until darkness fell, and probably through the night.
It
proved a tedious business, when he was longing for swift action. The sudden
assault had brought out all the inhabitants in frightened and indignant unrest,
and Torold had to beware of any notice in such conditions, since he was a young
fellow not known here, where neighbour knew neighbour like his own kin, and any
stranger was liable to be accosted and challenged out of sheer alarm. Several
times he had to draw off deeper into cover, and lie still until danger passed.
Those who lived close to the highway, and had suffered the first shocks, tended
to slip away into any available solitude. Those who were daily tending stock or
cultivating land well away from the road heard the uproar, and gravitated close
enough to satisfy their curiosity about what was going on. Caught between these
two tides, Torold passed a miserable day of fretting and waiting; but it
brought him at last well beyond Willem Ten Heyt’s tight and brutal guard-post,
which by then had amassed a great quantity of goods distrained from agitated
travellers, and a dozen sound horses. Here the last houses of the town ended,
and fields and hamlets stretched beyond. Traffic on the road, half a mile
beyond the post, was thin and easily evaded. Torold crossed, and went to earth
once more in a thicket above the brook, while he viewed the lie of the land.
The
brook was dual here, the mill-race having been drawn off at a weir somewhat
higher upstream. He could see both silver streaks in a sunlight now declining
very slightly towards the west. It must be almost time for Vespers. Surely King
Stephen had finished with the abbey by now, with all Shrewsbury to ransack?
The
valley here was narrow and steep, and no one had built on it, the grass being
given over to sheep. Torold slid down into the cleft, easily leaping the
mill-race, and picking his way over the brook from stone to stone. He began to
make his way downstream from one patch of cover to another, until about the
time of Vespers he had reached the smoother meadows opposite Brother Cadfael’s
gleaned pease-fields. Here the ground was all too open, he had to withdraw
further from the brook to find a copse to hide in while he viewed the way
ahead. From here he could see the roofs of the convent buildings above the
garden walls, and the loftier tower and roof of the church, but nothing of the
activity within. The face that was presented to him looked placid enough, the
pale slope stripped of its harvest, the stack of haulms where Godith and he had
hidden boat and treasure barely nineteen hours ago, the russet wall of the
enclosed garden beyond, the steep roof of a barn. He would have to wait some
time for full daylight to pass, or else take a risk and run for it through the
brook, and into the straw-stack beyond, when he saw his opportunity. And here
there were people moving from time to time about their legitimate business, a
shepherd urging his flock towards the home pasture, a woman coming home from
the woods with mushrooms, two children driving geese. He might very well have
strolled past all these with a greeting, and been taken for granted, but he
could not be seen by any of them making a sudden dash for it through the ford
and into the abbey gardens. That would have been enough to call their attention
and raise an alarm, and there were sounds of unusual activity, shouts and
orders and the creaking of carts and harness, still echoing distantly from
beyond the gardens. Moreover, there was a man on horseback in sight on his side
the brook, some distance away downstream but drawing gradually nearer,
patrolling this stretch of meadows as though he had been posted here to secure
the one unwalled exit from the enclave. As probably he had, though he seemed to
be taking the duty very easily, ambling his mount along the green at leisure.
One man only, but one was enough. He had only to shout, or whistle shrilly on
his fingers, and he could bring a dozen Flemings swarming.
Torold
went to ground among the bushes, and watched him approach. A big, rawboned,
powerful but unhandsome horse, dappled from cream to darkest grey, and the
rider a young fellow black-haired and olive-complexioned, with a thin, assured,
saturnine face and an arrogantly easy carriage in the saddle. It was this
light, elegant seat of his, and the striking colouring of the horse, that
caught Torold’s closer attention. This was the very beast he had seen leading
the patrol along the riverside at dawn, and this same man had surely lighted
down from his mount and gone first into Torold’s abandoned sanctuary at the
mill. Then he had been attended by half a dozen footmen, and had emerged to
loose them in after him, before they all mustered again and moved on. Torold
was sure of this identification; he had had good reason to watch very closely,
dreading that in spite of his precautions they might yet find some detail to
arouse suspicion. This was the same horse, and the same man. Now he rode past
upstream, apparently negligent and unobservant, but Torold knew better. There
was nothing this man missed as be rode, those were lively, witty, formidable
eyes that cast such seemingly languid looks about him.
But
now his back was turned, and no one else moved at the moment in these evening
fields. If he rode on far enough, Torold might attempt the crossing. Even if he
misjudged in his haste and soaked himself, he could not possibly drown in this
stream, and the night would be warm. Go he must, and find his way to Godith’s
bed, and somehow get some reassurance.
The
king’s officer rode on, oblivious, to the limit of the level ground, never
turning his head. And no other creature stirred. Torold picked himself up and
ran for it, across the open mead, into the brook, picking his footing by luck
and instinct well enough, and out upon the pale, shaven fields on the other
side. Like a mole burrowing into earth, he burrowed into the stack of haulms.
In the turmoil of this day it was no surprise to find boat and bundle vanished,
and he had no time to consider whether the omen was bad or good. He drew the
disturbed stems about him, a stiff, creamy lace threaded by sunlight and
warmth, and lay quivering, his face turned to peer through the network to where
the enemy rode serenely.
And
the enemy had also turned, sitting the dappled horse motionless, gazing downstream
as though some pricking of his thumbs had warned him. For some minutes he
remained still, as easy as before, and yet as alert; then he began the return
journey, as softly as he had traced it upstream.
Torold
held his breath and watched him come. He made no haste, but rode his beat in
idle innocence, having nothing to do, and nothing but this repeated to and fro
to pass the time here. But when he drew opposite the pease-fields he reined in,
and sat gazing across the brook long and steadily, and his eyes homed in upon
the loose stack of haulms, and lingered. Torold thought he saw the dark face
melt into a secret smile; he even thought the raised bridle-hand made a small
movement that could have been a salute. Though that was idiocy, he must have imagined
it! For the horseman was moving on downstream on his patrol, gazing towards the
outflow from the mill and the confluence with the river beyond. Never a glance
behind.
Torold
lay down under his weightless covering, burrowed his tired head into his arms,
and his hips into the springy turf of the headland, and fell asleep in sheer,
exhausted reaction. When he awoke it was more than half dark, and very quiet.
He lay for a while listening intently, and then wormed his way out into a
pallid solitude above a deserted valley, and crept furtively up the slope into
the abbey gardens, moving alone among the myriad sun-warmed scents of Cadfael’s
herbs. He found the hut, its door hospitably open to the twilight, and peered
almost fearfully into the warm silence and gloom within.
“Praise
God!” said Brother Cadfael, rising from the bench to haul him briskly within.
“I thought you’d aim for here, I’ve been keeping an eye open for you every
half-hour or so, and at last I have you. Here, sit down and ease your heart,
we’ve come through well enough!”
Urgent
and low, Torold asked the one thing that mattered:
“Where is Godith?”
Chapter
Nine
GODITH,
IF HE HAD BUT KNOWN IT, was at that moment viewing her own reflection in
Aline’s glass, which Constance was holding well away from her to capture more
of the total image. Washed and combed and arrayed in one of Aline’s gowns,
brocaded in brown and gold thread, with a thin gold bandeau of Aline’s round
her curls, she turned this way and that to admire herself with delight at being
female again, and her face was no longer that of an urchin, but of an austere
young gentlewoman aware of her advantages. The soft candlelight only made her
more mysterious and strange in her own eyes.
“I
wish he could see me like this,” she said wistfully, forgetting that so far she
had not mentioned any he except Brother Cadfael, and could not now, even to
Aline, reveal anything concerning Torold’s person and errand beyond his name.
Concerning herself she had told almost everything, but that was the acknowledgement
of a debt.
“There
is a he?” asked Aline, sparking with sympathetic curiosity. “And he will escort
you? Wherever you are going? No, I mustn’t ask you anything, it would be
unfair. But why shouldn’t you wear the dress for him? Once away, you can as
well travel as yourself as you can in boy’s clothes.”
“I
doubt it,” said Godith ruefully. “Not the way we shall be travelling.”
“Then
take it with you. You could put it in that great bundle of yours. I have
plenty, and if you are going with nothing, then you’ll need a gown for when you
reach safety.”
“Oh,
if you knew how you tempt me! You are kind! But I couldn’t take it. And we
shall have weight enough to carry, the first miles. But I do thank you, and I
shall never forget.”
She
had tried on, for pure pleasure, Constance assisting with relish, every dress
Aline had with her, and in every one she had imagined herself confronting
Torold, without warning, and studying his astonished and respectful face. And
somehow, in spite of not knowing where he was or how he was faring, she had
spent a blissful afternoon, unshaken by doubts. Certainly he would see her in
her splendour, if not in this in other fine gowns, in jewels, with her hair,
grown long again, plaited and coiled upon her head in a gold circlet like this
one. Then she recalled how she had sat beside him, the two of them
companionably eating plums and committing the stones to the Severn through the
floorboards of the mill, and she laughed. What use would it ever be, putting on
airs with Torold?
She
was in the act of lifting the circlet from her head when they all heard the
sudden but circumspect knocking on the outer door, and for a moment froze into
wary stillness, looking at one another aghast.
“Do
they mean to search here, after all?” wondered Godith in a shocked whisper.
“Have I brought you into danger?”
“No!
Adam assured me I should not be disturbed, this morning, when they came.” AIine
rose resolutely. “You stay here with Constance, and bolt the door. I’ll go. Can
it be Brother Cadfael come for you already?”
“No,
surely not yet, they’ll still be on the watch.”
It
had sounded the most deferential of knocks, but all the same, Godith sat very
still behind the bolted door, and listened with strained attention to the
snatches of voices that reached her from without. Aline had brought her visitor
into the room. The voice that alternated with hers was a man’s, low-pitched and
ardently courteous.
“Adam
Courcelle!” Constance mouthed silently, and smiled her knowing smile. “So deep
in love, he can’t keep away!”
“And
she—Aline?” whispered Godith curiously.
“Who
knows! Not she—notyet!”
Godith
had heard the same voice that morning, addressing the porter and the lay
servants at the gate in a very different tone. But such duties can surely give
no pleasure, and may well make even a decent man ill-humoured and overbearing.
This devout and considerate soul enquiring tenderly after Aline’s peace of mind
might be his proper self.
“I
hope you have not been too much put out by all this stir,” he was saying.
“There’ll be no more disturbances, you may rest now.”
“I
haven’t been molested at all,” Aline assured him serenely. “I have no
complaint, you have been considerate indeed. But I’m sorry for those who have
had goods distrained. Is the same thing happening in the town?”
“It
is,” he said ruefully, “and will go on tomorrow, but the abbey may be at peace
now. We have finished here.”
“And
you did not find her? The girl you had orders to search for?”
“No,
we have not found her.”
“What
would you say,” asked AIine deliberately, “if I said that I was glad?”
“I
should say that I would expect nothing else from you, and I honour you for it.
I know you could not wish danger or pain or captivity to any creature, much
less a blameless girl. I’ve learned so much of you, Aline.” The brief silence
was charged, and when he resumed: “Aline—“ his voice sank so low that Godith
could not distinguish the words. She did not want to, the tone was too intimate
and urgent. But in a few moments she heard Aline say gently:
“You
must not ask me to be very receptive tonight, this has been a harrowing day for
so many. I can’t help but feel almost as weary as they must be. And as you!
Leave me to sleep long tonight, there will be a better time for talking of
these matters.”
“True!”
he said, resuming the soldier on duty as though he squared his shoulders to a
load again. “Forgive me, this was not the time. Most of my men are out of the
gates by now, I’ll follow them, and let you rest. You may hear marching and the
carts rolling for a quarter of an hour or so, after that it will be quiet.”
The
voices receded, towards the outer door. Godith heard it opened, and after a few
exchanged and inaudible words, closed again. She heard the bolt shot, and in a
few moments more Aline tapped at the bedroom door. “You can safely open, he’s
gone.”
She
stood in the doorway, flushed and frowning, rather in private perplexity than
displeasure. “It seems,” she said, and smiled in a way Adam Courcelle would
have rejoiced to see, “that in sheltering you I’ve done him no wrong. I think he’s
relieved at not finding you. They’re all going. It’s over. Now we have only to
wait for Brother Cadfael and full darkness.”
In
the hut in the herbarium Brother Cadfael fed, reassured and doctored his
patient. Torold, once the first question had been answered so satisfactorily,
lay down submissively on Godith’s bed, and let his shoulder be dressed again,
and the gash in his thigh, already healed, nevertheless be well bandaged and
padded. “For if you’re to ride into Wales this night,” said Cadfael, “we don’t
want any damage or delays, you could all too easily break that open again.”
“Tonight?”
said Torold eagerly. “Is it to be tonight? She and I together?”
“It
is, it must, and high time, too. I don’t think I could stand this sort of thing
much longer,” said Cadfael, though he sounded almost complacent about it. “Not
that I’ve had too much of the pair of you, you understand, but all the same,
I’ll be relieved when you’re well away towards Owain Gwynedd’s country, and
what’s more, I’ll give you a token from myself to the first Welsh you
encounter. Though you already have FitzAlan’s commendation to Owain, and Owain
keeps his word.”
“Once
mounted and started,” vowed Torold heartily, “I’ll take good care of Godith.”
“And
so will she of you. I’ll see she has a pot of this salve I’ve been using on
you, and a few things she may need.”
“And
she took boat and load and all with her!” mused Torold, fond and proud. “How
many girls could have kept their heads and done as well? And this other girl
took her in! And brought you word of it, and so wisely! I tell you, Brother
Cadfael, we breed fine women here in Salop.” He was silent for a moment, and
grew thoughtful. “Now how are we to get her out? They may have left a guard.
And anyhow, I can hardly be seen to walk out at the gate house, seeing the
porter will know I never walked in that way. And the boat is there, not here.”
“Hush
a while,” said Cadfael, finishing off his bandage neatly, “while I think. What
about your own day? You’ve done well, it seems to me, and come out of it none
the worse. And you must have left all open and innocent, for there’s been no
whisper about the old mill. You caught the wind of them soon, it seems.”
Torold
told him about the whole long, dangerous and yet inexpressibly tedious day of
starting and stopping, running and hiding, loitering and hurrying. “I saw the
company that combed the river bank and the mill, six armed men on foot, and an
officer riding. But I’d made sure there was no sign of me left there. The
officer went in first, alone, and then turned his men into it. I saw the same
fellow again,” he recalled, suddenly alert to the coincidence, “this evening,
when I crossed the ford and dived into the stack. He was riding the far bank up
and down, between river and millrace, alone. I knew him by his seat in the
saddle, and the horse he was riding. I’d made the crossing behind his back, and
when he rode back downstream he halted right opposite, and sat and gazed
straight at where I was hiding. I could have sworn he’d seen me. He seemed to
be staring directly at me. And smiling! I was sure I was found out. But then he
rode on. He can’t have seen me, after all.”
Cadfael
put away his medicines very thoughtfully. He asked mildly: “And you knew him by
his horse again? What was so notable about it?”
“The
size and colour. A great, gaunt, striding beast, not beautiful but strong, and
dappled clean through from creamy belly to a back and quarters all but black.”
Cadfael
scrubbed at his blunt brown nose, and scratched his even browner tonsure. “And
the man?”
“A
young fellow hardly older than I. Blackavised, and a light build to him. All I
saw of him this morning was the clothes he wore and the way he rode, very easy
on what I should guess might be a hard-mouthed brute. But I saw his face
tonight. Not much flesh, and bold bones, and black eyes and brows. He whistles
to himself,” said Torold, surprised at remembering this. “Very sweetly!”
So
he did! Cadfael also remembered. The horse, too, he recalled, left behind in
the abbey stables when two better and less noticeable had been withdrawn. Two,
their owner had said, he might be willing to sacrifice, but not all four, and
not the pick of the four. Yet the cull had been made, and still he rode one of
the remaining two, and doubtless the other, also, was still at his disposal. So
he had lied. His position with the king was already assured, he had even been
on duty in today’s raiding. Very selective duty? And if so, who had selected
it?
“And
you thought he had seen you cross?”
“When
I was safe hidden I looked, and he’d turned my way. I thought he’d seen me
moving, from the corner of his eye.”
That
one, thought Cadfael, has eyes all round his head, and what he misses is not
worth marking. But all he said to Torold was: “And he halted and stared across
at you, and then rode on?”
“I
even thought he lifted his bridle-hand a thought to me,” owned Torold, grinning
at his own credulity. “By that time I doubt I was seeing visions at every turn,
I was so wild to get to Godith. But then he just turned and rode on, easy as
ever. So he can’t have seen me, after all.”
Cadfael
pondered the implications of all this in wonder and admiration. Light was
dawning as dusk fell into night. Not complete darkness yet, simply the
departure of the sun, afterglow and all, leaving a faint greenish radiance
along the west; not complete dawn, but a promising confirmation of the first
elusive beams.
“He
can’t have, can he?” demanded Torold, fearful that he might have drawn danger
after him all too near to Godith.
“Never
a fear of it,” said Cadfael confidently. “All’s well, child, don’t fret, I see
my way. And now it’s time for me to go to Compline. You may drop the bolt after
me, and lie down here on Godith’s bed and get an hour or so of sleep, for by
dawn you’ll be needing it. I’ll come back to you as soon as service is over.”
He
did, however, spare the few minutes necessary to amble through the stables, and
was not surprised to note that neither the dapple-grey nor its companion, the
broad-backed brown cob, was in its stall. An innocent visit to the guest hall
after Compline further confirmed that Hugh Beringar was not there in the
apartments for gentlefolk, nor were his three men-at-arms present among the
commonalty. The porter recalled that the three retainers had gone forth soon
after Beringar had ridden in from his day’s duties at the end of the hunt,
about the time that Vespers ended, and Beringar himself had followed, in no
apparent haste, an hour or so later.
So
that’s how things stand, is it? thought Cadfael. He’s staked his hand that’s
it’s to be tonight, and is willing to stand or fall on his wager. Well, since
he’s so bold and so shrewd to read my mind, let’s see how good I am at reading
his, and I’ll stake just as boldly.
Well,
then: Beringar knew from the first that his service with the king was accepted
and his horses safe enough, therefore he wanted them removed for some other
purpose of his own. And made a fellow-conspirator of me! Why? He could have
found a refuge for himself if he’d really needed one. No, he wanted me to know
just where the horses were, available and inviting. He knew I had two people to
deliver out of this town and out of the king’s hold, and would jump at his
offer for my own ends. He offered me the bait of two horses so that I should
transfer the treasury to the same place, ready for flight. And finally, he had
no need to hunt for his fugitives, he had only to sit back and leave it to me
to bring them to the grange as soon as I could, and then he had everything in
one spot, ready to be gathered in.
It
follows, therefore, that tonight he’ll be waiting for us, and this time with
his armed men at his back.
There
were still details that baffled the mind. If Beringar had indeed turned a blind
eye to Torold’s hiding-place this evening, for what purpose? Granted he did not
know at this moment where Godith was, and might choose to let one bird fly in
order to secure its mate also. But now that Cadfael came to consider all that
had passed there was no escaping the possibility, to put it no higher, that
throughout, Beringar had been turning a similarly blind and sparkling eye to
Godith’s boyish disguise, and had had a very shrewd idea of where his missing
bride was to be found. In that case, if he had known Godric was Godith, and
that one of FitzAlan’s men was in hiding in the old mill, then as soon as he
had satisfied himself that Cadfael had recovered the treasure for him he could
simply have gone in force and gathered in all three prizes, and delivered them
to a presumably delighted and grateful king. If he had not done so, but chosen
this furtive way, it must mean something different. As, for instance, that his
intent was to secure Godith and Torold and duly hand them over for his reward,
but despatch FitzAlan’s gold, not back to Shrewsbury, but by his own men, or
indeed in person, to his own home manor, for his own private use. In which case
the horses had been moved not only to fool a simple old monk, but to transfer
the treasure direct to Maesbury in complete secrecy, without having to go near
Shrewsbury.
That,
of course, was all supposing Beringar was not Nicholas Faintree’s murderer. If
he was, the plan differed in one important aspect. He would see to it that
though Godith went back to bait the trap for her father, Torold Blund was
taken, not alive, but dead. Dead, and therefore silent. A second murder to bury
the first.
Altogether
a grim prospect, thought Cadfael, surprisingly undisturbed by it. Except, of
course, that it could all mean something very different. Could, and does! or my
name is not Cadfael, and I’ll never pick a fight with a clever young man again!
He
went back to the herbarium, settled in his mind and ready for another restless
night. Torold was awake and alert, quick to lift the bolt as soon as he was
sure who came.
“Is
it time yet? Can we get round to the house on foot?” He was on thorns until he
could actually see and touch her, and know that she was safe and free, and had
taken no harm.
“There
are always ways. But it’s neither dark enough nor quiet enough yet, so sit down
and rest while you may, for you’ll have a share of the weight on the way, until
we get to the horses. I must go to the dortoir with the rest, and to my bed.
Oh, never fret, I’ll be back. Once we’re in our own cells, leaving is no great
problem. I’m next to the night-stairs, and the prior sleeps at the far end, and
sleeps like the dead. And have you forgotten the church has a parish door, on
to the Foregate? The only door not within the walls. From there to Mistress
Siward’s house is only a short walk, and if it passes the gate house, do you think
the porter takes account of every citizen abroad somewhat late?”
“So
this girl Aline could very well have gone to Mass by that door, like the rest
of the laity,” Torold realised, marvelling.
“So
she could, but then she would have no chance to speak to me, and besides, she
chose to exert her privilege with Courcelle, and show the Flemings she was to
be reckoned with, the clever girl. Oh, you have a fine girl of your own, young
Torold, and I hope you’ll be good to her, but this Aline is only just stretching
her powers to find out what she’s worth, and what she can do, and trust me,
she’ll make such another as our Godith yet.”
Torold
smiled in the warm darkness within the hut, sure even in his anxiety that there
was but one Godric-Godith. “You said the porter was hardly likely to pay much
attention to citizens making for home late,” he reminded, “but he may very well
have a sharp eye for any such in a Benedictine habit.”
“Who
said anything about Benedictine habits drifting abroad so late? You, young man,
shall go and fetch Godith. The parish door is never closed, and with the gate
house so close seldom needs to be. I’ll let you out there when the time comes.
Go to the last little house, beside the mill, and bring Godith and the boat
down from the pond to where the water flows back into the brook, and I shall be
there, waiting.”
“The
third house of the three on our side,” whispered Torold, glowing even in the
dark. “I know it. I’ll go!” The warmth of his gratitude and pleasure filled the
hut, and set the herbal fragrances stirring headily, because it would be he,
and no other, who would come to fetch Godith away, more wildly and wonderfully
than in any mere runaway marriage. “And you’ll be on the abbey bank, when we
come down to the brook?”
“I
will so, and go nowhere without me! And now lie down for an hour, or less, and
leave the latch in case you sleep too soundly, and I’ll come for you when all’s
quiet.”
Brother
Cadfael’s plans worked smoothly. The day having been so rough, all men were
glad to close the shutters, put out the lights, barricade themselves in from
the night, and sleep. Torold was awake and waiting before Cadfael came for him.
Through the gardens, through the small court between guest hall and abbot’s
lodging, into the cloister, and in through the south door of the church, they
went together in such a silence and stillness as belonged neither to night nor
day, only to this withdrawn world between services. They never exchanged a word
until they were in the church, shoulder to shoulder under the great tower and
pressed against the west door. Cadfael eased the huge door ajar, and listened.
Peering carefully, he could see the abbey gates, closed and dark, but the
wicket gallantly open. it made only a very small lancet of twilight in the
night.
“All’s
still. Go now! I’ll be at the brook.”
The
boy slid through the narrow opening, and swung lightly away from the door into
the middle of the roadway, as though coming from the lanes about the
horse-fair. Cadfael closed the door inch by inch in silence. Without haste he
withdrew as he had come, and strolled under the solitary starlight through the
garden and down the field, bearing to the right along the bank of the brook
until he could go no further. Then he sat down in the grass and vetches and
mothpasture of the bank to wait. The August night was warm and still, just
enough breeze to rustle the bushes now and then, and make the trees sigh, and
cover with slight sounds the slighter sounds made by careful and experienced
men. Not that they would be followed tonight. No need! The one who might have
been following was already in position at the end of the journey, and waiting
for them.
Constance
opened the door of the house, and was startled and silenced by the apparition
of this young, secular person, instead of the monk she had expected. But Godith
was there, intent and burning with impatience at her shoulder, and flew past
her with a brief, wordless soundless cry, into his arms and on to his heart.
She was Godric again, though for him she would never now be anyone but Godith,
whom he had never yet seen in her own proper person. She clung to him, and
laughed, and wept, hugged, reviled, threatened him all in a breath, felt
tenderly at his swathed shoulder, demanded explanations and cancelled all her
demands, finally lifted to him an assuaged face in sudden silence, and waited
to be kissed. Stunned and enlightened, Torold kissed her.
“You
must be Torold,” said Aline from the background, so serenely that she must have
known rather more about their relationship, by now, than he knew himself.
“Close the door, Constance, all’s well.” She looked him over, with eyes alert
to a young man’s qualities by reason of certain recent experiences of her own,
and thought well of him. “I knew Brother Cadfael would send. She wanted to go
back as she came this morning, but I said no. He said he would come. I didn’t
know he would be sending you. But Cadfael’s messenger is very welcome.”
“She
has told you about me?” enquired Torold, a little flushed at the thought.
“Nothing
but what I needed to know. She is discretion itself, and so am I,” said AIine
demurely. She, too, was flushed and glittering, but with excitement and
enjoyment of her own plotting, half-regretful that her share must end here. “If
Brother Cadfael is waiting, we mustn’t lose time. The farther you get by
daybreak, the better. Here is the bundle Godith brought. Wait here within,
until I see if everything is quiet below in the garden.”
She
slipped away into the soft darkness, and stood by the edge of the pond,
listening intently. She was sure they had left no guard behind, for why should
they, when they had searched everywhere, and taken all they had been sent to
take? Yet there might still be someone stirring in the houses opposite. But all
were in darkness, she thought even the shutters were closed, in spite of the
warm night, for fear some solitary Fleming should return to help himself to
what he could find, under cover of the day’s official looting. Even the willow
leaves hung motionless here, sheltered from the faint breeze that stirred the
grasses along the river bank.
“Come!”
she whispered, opening the door narrowly. “All’s quiet. Follow where I step,
the slope is rough.” She had even thought to change her pale gown for a dark
one since afternoon, to be shadowy among the shadows. Torold hoisted FitzAlan’s
treasury in its sacking shroud by the rope that secured it, and put off Godith
firmly when she would have reached to share the weight with him. Surprisingly,
she yielded meekly, and went before him very quickly and quietly to where the
boat rode on its short mooring, half-concealed by the stooping willow branches.
Aline lay down at the edge of the bank, and leaned to draw the boat in and hold
it steady, for there was a two-foot hollow of undercut soil between them and
the water. Very quickly and happily this hitherto cloistered and dutiful
daughter was learning to be mistress of her own decisions and exploiter of her
own powers.
Godith
slid down into the boat, and lent both arms to steady the sacking bundle down
between the thwarts. The boat was meant for only two people at most, and
settled low in the water when Torold also was aboard, but it was buoyant and
sturdy, and would get them as far as they needed to go, as it had done once
before.
Godith
leaned and embraced Aline, who was still on her knees at the edge of the grass.
It was too late for spoken thanks then, but Torold kissed the small,
well-tended hand held out to him, and then she loosed the end of the
mooring-rope, and tossed it aboard, and the boat slipped out softly from under
the bank and drifted across in the circling eddies of the outflow, back towards
the brook from which the pool had been drawn. The spill from the head-race of
the mill caught them and brisked their pace like a gentle push, and Torold sat
with paddle idle, and let the silent flow take them out from the pond. When
Godith looked back, all she could see was the shape of the willow, and the
unlighted house beyond.
Brother
Cadfael rose from among the long grasses as Torold paddled the boat across to the
abbey shore. “Well done!” he said in a whisper. “And no trouble? No one
stirring?”
“No
trouble. Now you’re the guide.”
Cadfael
rocked the boat thoughtfully with one hand. “Put Godith and the load ashore
opposite, and then fetch me. I may as well go dry-shod.” And when they were all
safely across to the other side of the brook, he hauled the boat out of the
water into the grass, and Godith hurried to help him carry it into hiding in
the nearest copse. Once in cover, they had leisure to draw breath and confer.
The night was still and calm around them, and five minutes well spent here, as
Cadfael said, might save them much labour thereafter.
“We
may speak, but softly. And since no other eyes, I hope, are to see this burden
of ours until you’re well away to the west, I think we might with advantage
open it and split the load again. The saddle-bags will be far easier to sling
on our shoulders than this single lump.”
“I
can carry one pair,” said Godith, eager at his elbow.
“So
you can, for a short spell, perhaps,” he said indulgently. He was busy
disentangling the two pairs of linked bags from the sacks that had swathed
them. They had straps comfortably broad for the shoulder, and the weights in
them had been balanced in the first place for the horses. “I had thought we
might save ourselves half a mile or so by making use of the river for the first
part of the way,” he said, “but with three of us and only this hazel-shell we
should founder. And it’s not so far we have to go, loaded—something over three
miles, perhaps.”
He
shook one pair of bags into the most comfortable position over his shoulder,
and Torold took the other pair on his sound side. “I never carried goods to
this value before in my life,” said Cadfael as he set off, “and now I’m not
even to see what’s within.”
“Bitter
stuff to me,” said Torold at his back, “it cost Nick his life, and I’m to have
no chance to avenge him.”
“You
give thought to your own life and bear your own burdens,” said Cadfael. “He
will be avenged. Better you should look to the future, and leave Nick to me.”
The
ways by which he led his little convoy differed from those he had used in
Beringar’s company. Instead of crossing the brook and making directly for the
grange beyond Pulley, he bore more strongly to the west, so that by the time
they were as far south as the grange they were also a good mile west of it,
nearer to Wales, and in somewhat thicker forest.
“How
if we should be followed?” wondered Godith.
“We
shall not be followed.” He was so positive about it that she accepted the reassurance
gladly, and asked nothing more. If Brother Cadfael said it, it was so. She had
insisted on carrying Torold’s load for half a mile or so, but he had taken it
back from her at the first sign of quickening breath or faltering step.
A
lace-work of sky showed paler between the branches ahead. They emerged
cautiously into the edge of a broad forest ride that crossed their path on good
turf at an oblique angle. Beyond it, their own track continued, a little more
open to the night than up to this point.
“Now
pay good heed,” said Cadfael, halting them within cover, “for you have to find
your way back without me to this spot. This ride that crosses us here is a
fine, straight road the old Romans made. Eastward, here to our left, it would
bring us to the Severn bridge at Atcham. Westward, to our right, it will take
you two straight as an arrow for Pool and Wales, or if you find any obstacle on
the way, you may bear further south at the end for the ford at Montgomery. Once
you’re on this, you can ride fast enough, though in parts it may be steep. Now
we cross it here, and have another half-mile to go to the ford of the brook. So
pay attention to the way.”
Here
the path was clearly better used, horses could travel it without great
difficulty. The ford, when they reached it, was wide and smooth. “And here,”
said Cadfael, “we leave our loads. One tree among so many trees you might well
lose, but one tree beside the only ford along the path, and you can’t lose it.”
“Leave
them?” wondered Torold. “Why, are we not going straight to where the horses
are? You said yourself we should not be followed tonight.”
“Not
followed, no.” When you know where your quarry must come, and are sure of the
night, you can be there waiting. “No, waste no more time, trust me and do as I
say.” And he let down his own half of the burden, and looked about him, in the
dimness to which by now their eyes were accustomed, for the best and safest
concealment. In the thicket of bushes close to the ford, on their right, there
was a gnarled old tree, one side of it dead, and its lowest branch deep in the
cover of the bushes. Cadfael slung his saddle-bags over it, and without another
word Torold hoisted his own beside them, and drew back to assure himself that
only those who had hidden here were likely ever to find. The full leafage
covered all.
“Good
lad!” said Cadfael contentedly. “Now, from here we bear round to the east
somewhat, and this path we’re on will join the more direct one I used before.
For we must approach the grange from the right direction. It would never do for
any curious person to suppose we’d been a mile nearer Wales.”
Unburdened
now, they drew together and went after him hand in hand, trusting as children.
And now that they were drawing nearer to the actual possibility of flight, they
had nothing at all to say, but clung to each other and believed that things
would go right.
Their
path joined the direct one only some minutes’ walk from the small clearing
where the stockade of the grange rose. The sky paled as the trees fell back.
There was a small rush-light burning somewhere within the house, a tiny, broken
gleam showed through the pales. All round them the night hung silent and
placid.
Brother
Anselm opened to them, so readily that surely some aggrieved traveller from
Shrewsbury must have brought word even here of the day’s upheaval, and alerted
him to the possibility that anyone running from worse penalties might well take
warning, and get out at once. He drew them within thankfully and in haste, and
peered curiously at the two young fellows at Cadfael’s back, as he closed the
gate.
“I
thought it! My thumbs pricked. I felt it must be tonight. Things grow very
rough your way, so we’ve heard.”
“Rough
enough,” admitted Cadfael, sighing. “I’d wish any friend well out of it. And
most of all these two. Children, these good brothers have cared for your trust,
and have it here safe for you. Anselm, this is Adeney’s daughter, and this
FitzAlan’s squire. Where is Louis?”
“Saddling
up,” said Brother Anselm, “the moment he saw who came. We had it in mind the
whole day that you’d have to hurry things. I’ve put food together, in case you
came. Here’s the scrip. It’s ill to ride too far empty. And a flask of wine
here within.”
“Good!
And these few things I brought,” said Cadfael, emptying his own pouch. “They’re
medicines. Godith knows how to use them.”
Godith
and Torold listened and marvelled. The boy said, almost tongue-tied with
wondering gratitude: “I’ll go and help with the saddling.” He drew his hand
from Godith’s and made for the stables, across the small untended court. This
forest assart, unmanageable in such troubled times, would soon be forest again,
these timber buildings, always modest enough, would moulder into the lush
growth of successive summers. The Long Forest would swallow it without trace in
three years, or four.
“Brother
Anselm,” said Godith, running an awed glance from head to foot of the giant, “I
do thank you with all my heart, for both of us, for what you have done for us
two—though I think it was really for Brother Cadfael here. He has been my
master eight days now, and I understand. This and more I would do for him, if
ever I might. I promise you Torold and I will never forget, and never debase
what you’ve done for us.”
“God
love you, child,” said Brother Anselm, charmed and amused, “you talk like a
holy book. What should a decent man do, when a young woman’s threatened, but
see her safe out of her trouble? And her young man with her!”
Brother
Louis came from the stables leading the roan Beringar had ridden when first
these two horses of his were brought here by night. Torold followed with the
black. They shone active and ready in the faint light, excellently groomed and
fed, and well rested.
“And
the baggage,” said Brother Anselm significantly. “That we have safe. For my own
part I would have parted it into two, to balance it better on a beast, but I
thought I had no right to open it, so it stays as you left it, in one. I should
hoist it to the crupper with the lighter weight as rider, but as you think
fit.”
They
were away, the pair of them, to haul out the sackbound bundle Cadfael had
carried here some nights ago. It seemed there were some things they had not
been told, just as there were things Torold and Godith had accepted without
understanding. Anselm brought the burden from the house on his huge shoulders,
and dumped it beside the saddled horses. “I brought thongs to buckle it to the
saddle.” They had indeed given some thought to this, they had fitted loops of
cord to the rope bindings, and were threading their thongs into these when a
blade sliced down through the plaited cords that held the latch of the gate
behind them, and a clear, assured voice ordered sharply:
“Halt
as you stand! Let no man move! Turn hither, all, and slowly, and keep your
hands visible. For the lady’s sake!”
Like
men in a dream they turned as the voice commanded, staring with huge, wary
eyes. The gate in the stockade stood wide open, lifted aside to the pales. In
the open gateway stood Hugh Beringar, sword in hand; and over either shoulder
leaned a bended long-bow, with a braced and competent eye and hand behind it;
and both of them were aimed at Godith. The light was faint but steady. Those
used to it here were well able to use it to shoot home.
“Admirable!”
said Beringar approvingly. “You have understood me very well. Now stay as you
are, and let no man move, while my third man closes the gates behind us.”
Chapter
Ten
THEY HAD ALL REACTED ACCORDING TO THEIR NATURES.
Brother Anselm looked round cautiously for his cudgel, but it was out of reach,
Brother Louis kept both hands in sight, as ordered, but the right one very near
the slit seam of his gown, beneath which he kept his dagger. Godith, first
stunned into incredulous dismay, very quickly revived into furious anger,
though only the set whiteness of her face and the glitter of her eyes betrayed
it. Brother Cadfael, with what appeared to be shocked resignation, sat down
upon the sacking bundle, so that his skirts hid it from sight if it had not
already been noted and judged of importance. Torold, resisting the instinct to
grip the hilt of Cadfael’s poniard at his belt, displayed empty hands, stared
Beringar in the eye defiantly, and took two long, deliberate paces to place
himself squarely between Godith and the two archers. Brother Cadfael admired,
and smiled inwardly. Probably it had not occurred to the boy, in his devoted
state, that there had been ample time for both arrows to find their target
before his body intervened, had that been the intention.
“A
very touching gesture,” admitted Beringar generously, “but hardly effective. I
doubt if the lady is any happier with the situation that way round. And since
we’re all sensible beings here, there’s no need for pointless heroics. For that
matter, Matthew here could put an arrow clean through the pair of you at this
distance, which would benefit nobody, not even me. You may well accept that for
the moment I am giving the orders and calling the tune.”
And
so he was. However his men had held their hands when they might have taken his
order against any movement all too literally, it remained true that none of
them had the slightest chance of making an effective attack upon him and
changing the reckoning. There were yards of ground between, and no dagger is
ever going to outreach an arrow. Torold stretched an arm behind him to draw
Godith close, but she would not endure it. She pulled back sharply to free
herself, and eluding the hand that would have detained her, strode forward
defiantly to confront Hugh Beringar.
“What
manner of tune,” she demanded, “for me? If I’m what you want, very well, here I
am, what’s your will with me? I suppose I still have lands of my own, worth
securing? Do you mean to stand on your rights, and marry me for them? Even if
my father is dispossessed, the king might let my lands and me go to one of his
new captains! Am I worth that much to you? Or is it just a matter of buying
Stephen’s favour, by giving me to him as bait to lure better men back into his
power?”
“Neither,”
said Beringar placidly. He was eyeing her braced shoulders and roused,
contemptuous face with decided appreciation. “I admit, my dear, that I never
felt so tempted to marry you before—you’re greatly improved from the fat little
girl I remember. But to judge by your face, you’d as soon marry the devil
himself, and I have other plans, and so, I fancy, have you. No, provided
everyone here acts like a sensible creature, we need not quarrel. And if it
needs saying for your own comfort, Godith, I have no intention of setting the
hounds on your champion’s trail, either. Why should I bear malice against an
honest opponent? Especially now I’m sure he finds favour in your eyes.”
He
was laughing at her, and she knew it, and took warning. It was not even
malicious laughter, though she found it an offence. It was triumphant, but it
was also light, teasing, almost affectionate. She drew back a step; she even
cast one appealing glance at Brother Cadfael, but he was sitting slumped and
apparently apathetic, his eyes on the ground. She looked up again, and more
attentively, at Hugh Beringar, whose black eyes dwelt upon her with
dispassionate admiration.
“I
do believe,” she said slowly, wondering, “that you mean it.”
“Try
me! You came here to find horses for your journey. There they are! You may
mount and ride as soon as you please, you and the young squire here. No one
will follow you. No one else knows you’re here, only I and my men. But you’ll
ride the faster and safer if you lighten your loads of all but the necessaries
of life,” said Beringar sweetly. “That bundle Brother Cadfael is so negligently
sitting on, as if he thought he’d found a convenient stone—that I’ll keep, by
way of a memento of you, my sweet Godith, when you’re gone.”
Godith
had just enough self-control not to look again at Brother Cadfael when she
heard this. She had enough to do keeping command of her own face, not to betray
the lightning-stroke of understanding, and triumph, and laughter, and so, she
knew, had Torold, a few paces behind her, and equally dazzled and enlightened.
So that was why they had slung the saddlebags on the tree by the ford, a mile
to the west, a mile on their way into Wales. This prize here they could
surrender with joyful hearts, but never a glimmer of joy must show through to
threaten the success. And now it lay with her to perfect the coup, and Brother
Cadfael was leaving it to her. It was the greatest test she had ever faced, and
it was vital to her self-esteem for ever. For this man fronting her was more
than she had thought him, and suddenly it seemed that giving him up was almost
as generous a gesture as this gesture of his, turning her loose to her
happiness with another man and another cause, only distraining the small matter
of gold for his pains. For two fine horses, and a free run into Wales! And a
kind of blessing, too, secular but valued.
“You
mean that,” she said, not questioning, stating. “We may go!”
“And
quickly, if I dare advise. The night is not old yet, but it matures fast. And
you have some way to go.”
“I
have mistaken you,” she said magnanimously. “I never knew you. You had a right
to try for this prize. I hope you understand that we had also a right to fight
for it. In a fair win and a fair defeat there should be no heart-burning.
Agreed?”
“Agreed!”
he said delightedly. “You are an opponent after my own heart, and I think your
young squire had better take you hence, before I change my mind. As long as you
leave the baggage…”
“No
help for it, it’s yours,” said Brother Cadfael, rising reluctantly from his
seat on guard. “You won it fairly, what else can I say?”
Beringar
surveyed without disquiet the mound of sacking presented to view. He knew very
well the shape of the hump Cadfael had carried here from Severn, he had no
misgivings.
“Go,
then, and good speed! You have some hours of darkness yet.” And for the first
time he looked at Torold, and took his time about studying him, for Torold had
held his peace and let her have her head in circumstances he could not be
expected to understand, and with admirable self-restraint. “I ask your pardon,
I don’t know your name.”
“My
name is Torold Blund, a squire of FitzAlan’s.”
“I’m
sorry that we never knew each other. But not sorry that we never had ado in
arms, I fear I should have met my overmatch.” But he was very sunny about it,
having got his way, and he was not really much in awe of Torold’s longer reach,
and greater height. “You take good care of your treasure, Torold, I’ll take
care of mine.”
Sobered
and still, watching him with great eyes that still questioned, Godith said:
“Kiss me and wish me well! As I do you!”
“With
all my heart!” said Beringar, and turned her face up between his hands, and
kissed her soundly. The kiss lasted long, perhaps to provoke Torold, but Torold
watched and was not dismayed. These could have been brother and sister saying a
fond but untroubled farewell. “Now mount, and good speed!”
She
went first to Brother Cadfael, and asked his kiss also, with a frantic quiver
in her voice and her face that no one else saw or heard, and that might have
been of threatened tears, or of almost uncontrollable laughter, or of both together.
The thanks she said to him and to the lay brothers were necessarily brief,
being hampered by the same wild mixture of emotions. She had to escape quickly,
before she betrayed herself. Torold went to hold her stirrup, but Brother
Anselm hoisted her between his hands and set her lightly in the saddle. The
stirrups were a little long for her, he bent to shorten them to her comfort,
and then she saw him look up furtively and flash her a grin, and she knew that
he, too, had fathomed what was going on, and shared her secret laughter. If he
and his comrade had been let into the whole plot from the beginning, they might
not have played their parts so convincingly; but they were very quick to pick
up all the undercurrents.
Torold
mounted Beringar’s roan, and looked down from the saddle at the whole group
within the stockade. The archers had unstrung their bows, and stood by looking
on with idle interest and some amusement, while the third man opened the gate
wide to let the travellers pass.
“Brother
Cadfael, everything I owe to you. I shall not forget.”
“If
there’s anything owing,” said Cadfael comfortably, “you can repay it to Godith.
And see you mind your ways with her until you bring her safe to her father,” he
added sternly. “She’s in your care as a sacred charge, beware of taking any
advantage.”
Torold’s
smile flashed out brilliantly for an instant, and was gone; and the next moment
so was Torold himself, and Godith after him, trotting out briskly through the
open gate into the luminosity of the clearing, and thence into the shadowy
spaces between the trees. They had but a little way to go to the wider path,
and the ford of the brook, where the saddle-bags waited. Cadfael stood
listening to the soft thudding of hooves in the turf, and the occasional rustling
of leafy branches, until all sounds melted into the night’s silence. When he
stirred out of his attentive stillness, it was to find that every other soul
there had been listening just as intently. They looked at one another, and for
a moment had nothing to say.
“If
she comes to her father a virgin,” said Beringar then, “I’ll never stake on man
or woman again.”
“It’s
my belief,” said Cadfael, drily, “she’ll come to her father a wife, and very
proper, too. There are plenty of priests between here and Normandy. She’ll have
more trouble persuading Torold he has the right to take her, unapproved, but
she’ll have her own ways of convincing him.”
“You
know her better than I,” said Beringar. “I hardly knew the girl at all! A
pity!” he added thoughtfully.
“Yet
I think you recognised her the first time you ever saw her with me in the great
court.”
“Oh,
by sight, yes—I was not sure then, but within a couple of days I was. She’s not
so changed in looks, only fined into such a springy young fellow.” He caught
Cadfael’s eye, and smiled. “Yes, I did come looking for her, but not to hand
her over to any man’s use. Nor that I wanted her for myself, but she was, as
you said, a sacred charge upon me. I owed it to the alliance others made for us
to see her into safety.”
“I
trust,” said Cadfael, “that you have done so.”
“I,
too. And no hard feelings upon either side?”
“None.
And no revenges. The game is over.” He sounded, he realised suddenly,
appropriately subdued and resigned, but it was only the pleasant weariness of
relief.
“Then
you’ll ride back with me to the abbey, and keep me company on the way? I have
two horses here. And these lads of mine have earned their sleep, and if your
good brothers will give them house-room overnight, and feed them, they may make
their way back at leisure tomorrow. To sweeten their welcome, there’s two
flasks of wine in my saddle-bags, and a pasty. I feared we might have a longer
wait, though I was sure you’d come.”
“I
had a feeling,” said Brother Louis, rubbing his hands with satisfaction, “for
all the sudden alarm, that there was no real mischief in the wind tonight. And
for two flasks of wine and a pasty we’ll offer you beds with pleasure, and a
game of tables if you’ve a mind for it. We get very little company here.”
One
of the archers led in from the night Beringar’s two remaining horses, the tail,
rangy dapple-grey and the sturdy brown cob, and placidly lay brothers and
men-at-arms together unloaded the food and drink, and at Beringar’s orders made
the unwieldy, sacking-wrapped bundle secure on the dapple’s croup, well
balanced and fastened with Brother Anselm’s leather straps, provided with quite
another end in view. “Not that I wouldn’t trust it with you on the cob,”
Beringar assured Cadfael, “but this great brute will never even notice the weight.
And his rider needs a hard hand, for he has a hard mouth and a contrary will,
and I’m used to him. To tell truth, I love him. I parted with two better worth
keeping, but this hellion is my match, and I wouldn’t change him.”
He
could not better have expressed what Cadfael was thinking about him. This
hellion is my match, and I wouldn’t change him! He did his own spying, he gave
away generously two valuable horses to discharge his debt to a bride he never
really wanted, and he went to all manner of patient, devious shifts to get the
girl safe and well out of his path, and lay hand upon the treasury, which was
fair game, as she was not. Well, well, we live and learn in the book of our
fellowmen!
They
rode together, they two alone, by the same road as once before, and even more
companionably than then. They went without haste, unwinding the longer way
back, the way fitter for horses, the way they had first approached the grange.
The night was warm, still and gentle, defying the stormy and ungentle times with
its calm assertion of permanent stability.
“I
am afraid,” said Hugh Beringar with compunction, “you have missed Matins and
Lauds, and the fault is mine. If I had not delayed everything, you might have
been back for midnight. You and I should share whatever penance is due.”
“You
and I,” said Cadfael cryptically, “share a penance already. Well, I could not
wish for more stimulating company. We many compound my offence by riding at
ease. It is not often a man gets such a night ride, and safely, and at peace.”
Then
they were silent for some way, and thought their own thoughts, but somewhere
the threads tangled, for after a while Beringar said with assurance: “You will
miss her.” It was said with brisk but genuine sympathy. He had, after all, been
observing and learning for some days.
“Like
a fibre gone from my heart,” owned Brother Cadfael without dismay, “but
there’ll be others will fill the place. She was a good girl, and a good lad,
too, if you’ll grant me the fancy. Quick to study, and a hard worker. I hope
she’ll make as good a wife. The young man’s a fair match for her. You saw he
favoured one shoulder? One of the king’s archers did his best to slice the
round of it off him, but with Godith’s care now he’ll do well enough. They’ll
reach France.” And after a moment’s thought he asked, with candid curiosity:
“What would you have done if any one of us had challenged your orders and made
a fight of it?”
Hugh
Beringar laughed aloud. “I fancy I should have looked the world’s fool, for of
course my men knew better than to shoot. But the bow is a mighty powerful
persuader, and after all, an unchancy fellow like me might be in earnest. Why,
you never thought I’d harm the girl?”
Cadfael
debated the wisdom of answering that truthfully as yet, and temporised: “if I
ever thought of it, I soon realised I was wrong. They could have killed before
ever Torold stepped between. No, I soon gave up that error.”
“And
it does not surprise you that I knew what you had brought to the grange, and
what you came to fetch tonight?”
“No
revelation of your cunning can surprise me any longer,” said Cadfael. “I
conclude that you followed me from the river the night I brought it. Also that
you had procured me to help you place the horses there for a dual purpose, to
encourage me to transfer the treasure from wherever it was hidden, and to make
it possible for those youngsters to escape, while the gold stayed here. The
right hand duelling against the left, that fits you well. Why were you so sure
it would be tonight?”
“Faith,
if I’d been in your shoes I would have got them away with all the haste I
could, at this favourable time, when search had been made and failed. You would
have had to be a fool to let the chance slip. And as I have found long ago, you
are no fool, Brother Cadfael.”
“We
have much in common,” agreed Cadfael gravely. “But once you knew that lump
you’re carrying there was safe in the grange, why did you not simply remove it,
and make sure of it? You could still have let the children depart without it,
just as they’ve done now.”
“And
sleep in my bed while they rode away? And never make my peace with Godith, but
let her go into France believing me her enemy, and capable of such meanness?
No, that I could not stomach. I have my vanity. I wanted a clean end, and no
grudges. I have my curiosity, too. I wanted to see this young fellow who had
taken her fancy. The treasure was safe enough until you chose to get them away,
why should I be uneasy about it? And this way was far more satisfying.”
“That,”
agreed Cadfael emphatically, “it certainly was.” They were at the edge of the
forest, and the open road at Sutton, and were turning north towards St. Giles,
all in amicable ease, which seemed to surprise neither of them.
“This
time,” said Beringar, “we’ll ride in at the gate house like orderly members of
the household, even if the time is a little unusual. And if you have no
objection, we may as well take this straight to your hut in the garden, and sit
out the rest of the night, and see what we have here. I should like to see how
Godith has been living in your care, and what skills she’s been acquiring. I
wonder how far they’ll be by now?”
“Halfway
to Pool, or beyond. Most of the way it’s a good road. Yes, come and see for
yourself. You went enquiring for her in the town, did you not? At Edric Flesher’s.
Petronilla had the worst opinion of your motives.”
“She
would,” agreed Beringar, laughing. “No one would ever have been good enough for
her chick, she hated me from the start. Ah, well, you’ll be able to put her
mind at rest now.”
They
had reached the silent Abbey Foregate, and rode between the darkened houses,
the ring of hooves eerie in the stillness. A few uneasy inhabitants opened
their shutters a crack to look out as they passed, but their appearance was so
leisured and peaceful that no one could suspect them of harmful intent. The
wary citizens went back to bed reassured. Over the high, enclosing wail the
great church loomed on their left hand, and the narrow opening of the wicket
showed in the dark bulk of the gate. The porter was a lay brother, a little
surprised at being roused to let in two horsemen at such an hour, but
satisfied, on recognising both of them, that they must have been employed on
some legitimate errand, no great marvel in such troublous times. He was
incurious and sleepy, and did not wait to see them cross to the stables, where
they tended their horses first, as good grooms should, before repairing to the
garden hut with their load.
Beringar
grimaced when he hoisted it. “You carried this on your back all that way?” he
demanded with raised brows.
“I
did,” said Cadfael truthfully, “and you witnessed it.”
“Then
I call that a noble effort. You would not care to shoulder it again these few
paces?”
“I
could not presume,” said Cadfael. “It’s in your charge now.”
“I
was afraid of that!” But he was in high good humour, having fulfilled his idea
of himself, made his justification in Godith’s eyes, and won the prize he
wanted; and he had more sinew in his slenderness than anyone would have
thought, for he lifted and carried the weight lightly enough the short way to
the herbarium.
“I
have flint and tinder here somewhere,” said Cadfael, going first into the hut.
“Wait till I make you a light, there are breakables all round us here.” He
found his box, and struck sparks into the coil of charred cloth, and lit the
floating wick in his little dish of oil. The flame caught and steadied, and
drew tall and still, shedding a gentle light on all the strange shapes of
mortars and flasks and bottles, and the bunches of drying herbs that made the
air aromatic.
“You
are an alchemist,” said Beringar, impressed and charmed. “I am not sure you are
not a wizard.” He set down his load in the middle of the floor, and looked
about him with interest. “This is where she spent her nights?” He had observed
the bed, still rumpled from Torold’s spasmodic and unquiet sleep. “You did this
for her. You must have found her out the very first day.”
“So
I did. It was not so difficult. I was a long time in the world. Will you taste
my wine? It’s made from pears, when the crop’s good.”
“Gladly!
And drink to your better success—against all opponents but Hugh Beringar.”
He
was on his knees by then, unknotting the rope that bound his prize. One sack
disgorged another, the second a third. It could not be said that he was
feverish in his eagerness, or showed any particular greed, only a certain
excited curiosity. Out of the third sack rolled a tight bundle of cloth,
dark-coloured, that fell apart as it was freed from constriction, and shed two
unmistakable sleeves across the earth floor. The white of a shirt showed among
the tangle of dark colours, and uncurled to reveal three large, smooth stones,
a coiled leather belt, a short dagger in a leather sheath. Last of all, out of
the centre something hard and small and bright rolled and lay still, shedding
yellow flashes as it moved, burning sullenly gold and silver when it lay still
at Beringar’s feet.
And
that was all.
On
his knees, he stared and stared, in mute incomprehension, his black brows
almost elevated into his hair, his dark eyes round with astonishment and
consternation. There was nothing more to be read, in a countenance for once
speaking volubly, no recoil, no alarm, no guilt. He leaned forward, and with a
sweep of his hand parted all those mysterious garments, spread them abroad,
gaped at them, and fastened on the stones. His eyebrows danced, and came down
to their normal level, his eyes blazing understanding; he cast one glittering
glance at Cadfael, and then he began to laugh, a huge, genuine laughter that
shook him where he kneeled, and made the bunches of herbs bob and quiver over
his head. A good, open, exuberant sound it was; it made Cadfael, even at this
moment, shake and laugh with him.
“And
I have been commiserating with you,” gasped Beringar, wiping tears from his eyes
with the back of his hand, like a child, “all this time, while you had this in
store for me! What a fool I was, to think I could out-trick you, when I almost
had your measure even then.”
“Here,
drink this down,” urged Cadfael, offering the beaker he had filled. “To your
own better success—with all opponents but Cadfael!”
Beringar
took it, and drank heartily. “Well, you deserve that. You have the last laugh,
but at least you lent it to me a while, and I shall never enjoy a better. What
was it you did? How was it done? I swear I never took my eyes from you. You did
draw up what that young man of yours had drowned there, I heard it rise, I
heard the water run from it on the stone.”
“So
I did, and let it down again, but very softly. This one I had ready in the
boat. The other Godith and her squire drew up as soon as you and I were well on
our way.”
“And
have it with them now?” asked Beringar, momentarily serious.
“They
have. By now, I hope, in Wales, where Owain Gwynedd’s hand will be over them.”
“So
all the while you knew that I was watching and following you?”
“I
knew you must, if you wanted to find your treasure. No one else could lead you
to it. If you cannot shake off surveillance,” said Brother Cadfael sensibly,
“the only thing to do is make use of it.”
“You
certainly did. My treasure!” echoed Beringar, and looked it over and laughed
afresh. “Well, now I understand Godith better. In a fair win and a fair defeat,
she said, there should be no heartburning! And there shall be none!” He looked
again, more soberly, at the things spread before him on the earth floor, and
after some frowning thought looked up just as intently at Cadfael. “The stones
and the sacks, anything to make like for like,” he said slowly, “that I
understand. But why these? What are these things to do with me?”
“You
recognise none of them—I know. They are nothing to do with you, happily for you
and for me. These,” said Cadfael, stooping to pick up and shake out shirt and
hose and cotte, “are the clothes Nicholas Faintree was wearing when he was
strangled by night, in a hut in the woods above Frankwell, and thrown among the
executed under the castle wall, to cover up the deed.”
“Your
one man too many,” said Beringar, low-voiced.
“The
same. Torold Blund rode with him, but they were separated when this befell. The
murderer was waiting also for him, but with the second one he failed. Torold
won away with his charge.”
“That
part I know,” said Beringar. “The last he said to you, and you to him, that
evening in the mill, that I heard, but no more.”
He
looked long at the poor relics, the dark brown hose and russet cotte, a young
squire’s best. He looked up at Cadfael, and eyed him steadily, very far from
laughter now. “I understand. You put these together to spring upon me when I
was unprepared—when I looked for something very different. For me to see, and
recoil from my own guilt. If this happened the night after the town fell, I had
ridden out alone, as I recall. And I had been in the town the same afternoon,
and to say all, yes, I did gather more than she bargained for from Petronilla.
I knew this was in the wind, that there were two in Frankwell waiting for
darkness before they rode. Though what I was listening for was a clue to
Godith, and that I got, too. Yes, I see that I might well be suspect. But do I
seem to you a man who would kill, and in so foul a fashion, just to secure the
trash those children are carrying away with them into Wales?”
“Trash?”
echoed Cadfael, mildly and thoughtfully.
“Oh,
pleasant to have, and useful, I know. But once you have enough of it for your
needs, the rest of it is trash. Can you eat it, wear it, ride it, keep off the
rain and the cold with it, read it, play music on it, make love to it?”
“You
can buy the favour of kings with it,” suggested Cadfael, but very placidly.
“I
have the king’s favour. He blows too many ways as his advisers persuade him,
but left alone he knows a man when he finds one. And he demands unbecoming
services when he’s angry and vengeful, but he despises those who run too
servilely to perform, and never leave him time to think better of his
vindictiveness. I was with him in his camp a part of that evening, he has
accepted me to hold my own castles and border for him, and raise the means and
the men in my own way, which suits me very well. Yes, I would have liked, when
such a chance offered, to secure FitzAlan’s gold for him, but losing it is no
great matter, and it was a good fight. So answer me, Cadfael, do I seem to you
a man who would strangle his fellow-man from behind for money?”
“No!
There were the circumstances that made it a possibility, but long ago I put
that out of mind. You are no such man. You value yourself too high to value a
trifle of gold above your self-esteem. I was as sure as man could well be,
before I put it to the test tonight,” said Cadfael, “that you wished Godith
well out of her peril, and were nudging my elbow with the means to get her
away. To try at the same time for the gold was fair dealing enough. No, you are
not my man. There is not much,” he allowed consideringly, “that I would put out
of your scope, but killing by stealth is one thing I would never look for from
you, now that I know you. Well, so you can’t help me. There’s nothing here to
shake you, and nothing for you to recognise.”
“Not
recognise—no, not that.” Beringar picked up the yellow topaz in its broken
silver claw, and turned it thoughtfully in his hands. He rose, and held it to
the lamp to examine it better. “I never saw it before. But for all that, my
thumbs prick. This, after a fashion, I think I may know. I watched with Aline
while she prepared her brother’s body for burial. All his things she put
together and brought them, I think, to you to be given as alms, all but the
shirt that was stained with his death-sweat. She spoke of something that was
not there, but should have been there—a dagger that was hereditary in her
family, and went always to the eldest son when he came of age. As she described
it to me, I do believe this may be the great stone that tipped the hilt.” He
looked up with furrowed brows. “Where did you find this? Not on your dead man!”
“Not
on him, no. But trampled into the earth floor, where Torold had rolled and
struggled with the murderer. And it does not belong to any dagger of Torold’s.
There is only one other who can have worn it.”
“Are
you saying,” demanded Beringar, aghast, “that it was Aline’s brother who slew
Faintree? Has she to bear that, too?”
“You
are forgetting, for once, your sense of time,” said Brother Cadfael,
reassuringly. “Giles Siward was dead several hours before Nicholas Faintree was
murdered. No, never fear, there’s no guilt there can touch Aline. No, rather,
whoever killed Nicholas Faintree had first robbed the body of Giles, and went
to his ambush wearing the dagger he had contemptibly stolen.”
Beringar
sat down abruptly on Godith’s bed, and held his head hard between his hands.
“For God’s sake, give me more wine, my mind no longer works.” And when his
beaker was refilled he drank thirstily, picked up the topaz again and sat
weighing it in his hand. “Then we have some indication of the man you want. He
was surely present through part, at any rate, of that grisly work done at the
castle, for there, if we’re right, he lifted the pretty piece of weaponry to
which this thing belongs. But he left before the work ended, for it went on
into the night, and by then, it seems, he was lurking in ambush on the other
side Frankwell. How did he learn of their plans? May not one of those poor
wretches have tried to buy his own life by betraying them? Your man was there
when the killing began, but left well before the end. Prestcote was there
surely, Ten Heyt and his Flemings were there and did the work, Courcelle, I
hear, fled the business as soon as he could, and took to the cleaner duties of
scouring the town for FitzAlan, and small blame to him.”
“Not
all the Flemings,” Cadfael pointed out, “speak English.”
“But
some do. And among those ninety-four surely more than half spoke French just as
well. Any one of the Flemings might have taken the dagger. A valuable piece,
and a dead man has no more need of it. Cadfael, I tell you, I feel as you do
about this business, such a death must not go unavenged. Don’t you think, since
it can’t be any further grief or shame to her, I might show this thing to
Aline, and make certain whether it is or is not from the hilt she knew?”
“I
think,” said Cadfael, “that you may. And after chapter we’ll meet again here,
if you will. If, that is, I am not so loaded with penance at chapter that I
vanish from men’s sight for a week.”
In
the event, things turned out very differently. If his absence at Matins and
Lauds had been noticed at all, it was clean forgotten before chapter, and no
one, not even Prior Robert, ever cast it up at him or demanded penance. For
after the former day’s excitement and distress, another and more hopeful
upheaval loomed. King Stephen with his new levies, his remounts and his
confiscated provisions, was about to move south towards Worcester, to attempt
inroads into the western stronghold of Earl Robert of Gloucester, the Empress
Maud’s half-brother and loyal champion. The vanguard of his army was to march
the next day, and the king himself, with his personal guard, was moving today
into Shrewsbury castle for two nights, to inspect and secure his defences
there, before marching after the vanguard. He was well satisfied with the
results of his foraging, and disposed to forget any remaining grudges, for he
had invited to his table at the castle, this Tuesday evening, both Abbot
Heribert and Prior Robert, and in the flurry of preparation minor sins were
overlooked.
Cadfael
repaired thankfully to his workshop, and lay down and slept on Godith’s bed
until Hugh Beringar came to wake him. Hugh had the topaz in his hand, and his
face was grave and tired, but serene.
“It
is hers. She took it in her hands gladly, knowing it for her own. I thought
there could not be two such. Now I am going to the castle, for the king’s party
are already moving in there, and Ten Heyt and his Flemings will be with him. I
mean to find the man, whoever he may be, who filched that dagger after Giles
was dead. Then we shall know we are not far from your murderer. Cadfael, can
you not get Abbot Heribert to bring you with him to the castle this evening? He
must have an attendant, why not you? He turns to you willingly, if you ask, he’ll
jump at you. Then if I have anything to tell, you’ll be close by.”
Brother
Cadfael yawned, groaned and kept his eyes open unwillingly on the young, dark
face that leaned over him, a face of tight, bright lines now, fierce and bleak,
a hunting face. He had won himself a formidable ally.
“A
small, mild curse on you for waking me,” he said, mumbling, “but I’ll come.”
“It
was your own cause,” Beringar reminded him, smiling.
“It
is my cause. Now for the love of God, go away and let me sleep away dinner, and
afternoon and all, you’ve cost me hours enough to shorten my life, you plague.”
Hugh
Beringar laughed, though it was a muted and burdened laugh this time, marked a
cross lightly on Cadfael’s broad brown forehead, and left him to his rest.
Chapter
Eleven
A
SERVER FOR EVERY PLATE WAS REQUIRED at the king’s supper. It was no problem to
suggest to Abbot Heribert that the brother who had coped with the matter of the
mass burial, and even talked with the king concerning the unlicensed death,
should be on hand with him to be questioned at need. Prior Robert took with him
his invariable toady and shadow, Brother Jerome, who would certainly be
indefatigable with finger-bowl, napkin and pitcher throughout, a great deal
more assiduous than Cadfael, whose mind might well be occupied elsewhere. They
were old enemies, in so far as Brother Cadfael entertained enmities. He
abhorred a sickly-pale tonsure.
The
town was willing to put on a festival face, not so much in the king’s honour as
in celebration of the fact that the king was about to depart, but the effect
was much the same. Edric Flesher had come down to the high street from his shop
to watch the guests pass by, and Cadfael flashed him a ghost of a wink, by way
of indication that they would have things to discuss later, things so
satisfactory that they could well be deferred. He got a huge grin and a wave of
a meaty hand in response, and knew his message had been received. Petronilla
would weep for her lamb’s departure, but rejoice for her safe delivery and apt
escort. I must go there soon, he thought, as soon as this last duty is done.
Within
the town gate Cadfael had seen the blind old man sitting almost proudly in
Giles Siward’s good cloth hose, holding out his palm for alms with a dignified
gesture. At the high cross he saw the little old woman clasping by the hand her
feeble-wit grandson with his dangling lip, and the fine brown cotte sat well on
him, and gave him an air of rapt content by its very texture. Oh, Aline, you
ought to give your own charity, and see what it confers, beyond food and
clothing!
Where
the causeway swept up from the street to the gate of the castle, the beggars
who followed the king’s camp had taken up new stations, hopeful and expectant,
for the king’s justiciar, Bishop Robert of Salisbury, had arrived to join his
master, and brought a train of wealthy and important clerics with him. In the
lee of the gate-house wall Lame Osbern’s little trolley was drawn up, where he
could beg comfortably without having to move. The worn wooden pattens he used
for his callused knuckles lay tidily beside him on the trolley, on top of the
folded black cloak he would not need until night fell. It was so folded that
the bronze clasp at the neck showed up proudly against the black, the dragon of
eternity with his tail in his mouth.
Cadfael
let the others go on through the gates, and halted to say a word to the
crippled man. “Well, how have you been since last I saw you by the king’s
guard-post? You have a better place here.”
“I
remember you,” said Osbern, looking up at him with eyes remarkably clear and
innocent, in a face otherwise as misshapen as his body. “You are the brother
who brought me the cloak.”
“And
has it done you good service?”
“It
has, and I have prayed for the lady, as you asked. But, brother, it troubles
me, too. Surely the man who wore it before me is dead. Is it so?”
“He
is,” said Cadfael, “but that should not trouble you. The lady who sent it to
you is his sister, and trust me, her giving blesses the gift. Wear it, and take
comfort.”
He
would have walked on then, but a hasty hand caught at the skirt of his habit,
and Osbern besought him pleadingly: “But, brother, I go in dread that I bear
some guilt. For I saw the man, living, with this cloak about him, hale as I…”
“You
saw him?” echoed Cadfael on a soundless breath, but the anxious voice had
ridden over him and rushed on.
“It
was in the night, and I was cold, and I thought to myself, I wish the good God
would send me such a cloak to keep me warm! Brother, thought is also prayer!
And no more than three days later God did indeed send me this very cloak. You
dropped it into my arms! How can I be at peace? The young man gave me a groat
that night, and asked me to say a prayer for him on the morrow, and so I did.
But how if my first prayer made the second of none effect? How if I have prayed
a man into his grave to get myself a cloak to wear?”
Cadfael
stood gazing at him amazed and mute, feeling the chill of ice flow down his
spine. The man was sane, clear of mind and eye, he knew very well what he was
saying, and his trouble of heart was real and deep, and must be the first
consideration, whatever else followed.
“Put
all such thoughts out of your mind, friend,” said Cadfael firmly, “for only the
devil can have sent them. If God gave you the thing for which you wished, it
was to save one morsel of good out of a great evil for which you are no way to
blame. Surely your prayers for the former wearer are of aid even now to his
soul. This young man was one of FitzAlan’s garrison here, done to death after
the castle fell, at the king’s orders. You need have no fears, his death is not
at your door, and no sacrifice of yours could have saved him.”
Osbern’s
uplifted face eased and brightened, but still he shook his head, bewildered.
“FitzAlan’s man? But how could that be, when I saw him enter and leave the
king’s camp?”
“You
saw him? You are sure? How do you know this is the same cloak?”
“Why,
by this clasp at the throat. I saw it clearly in the firelight when he gave me
the groat.”
He
could not be mistaken, then, there surely were not two such designs exactly
alike, and Cadfael himself had seen its match on the buckle of Giles Siward’s
sword-belt.
“When
was it that you saw him?” he asked gently. “Tell me how it befell.”
“It
was the night before the assault, around midnight. I had my place then close to
the guard-post for the sake of the fire, and I saw him come, not openly, but
like a shadow, among the bushes. He stood when they challenged him, and asked
to be taken to their officer, for he had something to tell, to the king’s
advantage. He kept his face hidden, but he was young. And afraid! But who was
not afraid, then? They took him away within, and afterwards I saw him return,
and they let him out. He said he had orders to go back, for there must be no
suspicion. That was all I heard. He was in better heart then, not so
frightened, so I asked him for alms, and he gave, and asked my prayers in
return. Say some prayer for me tomorrow, he said—and on ‘the morrow, you tell
me, he died! This I’m sure of, when he left me he was not expecting to die.”
“No,”
said Cadfael, sick with pity and grief for all poor, frightened, breakable men,
“surely he was not. None of us knows the day. But pray for him you may, and
your prayers will benefit his soul. Put off all thought that ever you did him
harm, it is not so. You never wished him ill, God hears the heart. Never wished
him any, never did him any.”
He
left Osbern reassured and comforted, but went on into the castle carrying with
him the load of discomfort and depression the lame man had shed. So it always
is, he thought, to relieve another you must burden yourself. And such a burden!
He remembered in time that there was one more question he should have asked,
the most urgent of all, and turned back to ask it.
“Do
you know, friend, who was the officer of the guard, that night?”
Osbern
shook his head. “I never saw him, he never came out himself. No, brother, that
I can’t tell you.”
“Trouble
no more,” said Cadfael. “Now you have told it freely, and you know the cloak
came to you with a blessing, not a bane. Enjoy it freely, as you deserve.”
“Father
Abbot,” said Cadfael, seeking out Heribert in the courtyard, “if you have no
need of me until you come to table, there is work here I have still to do,
concerning Nicholas Faintree.”
With
King Stephen holding audience in the inner ward, and the great court teeming
with clerics, bishops, the small nobility of the county, even an earl or so,
there was no room, in any case, for the mere servitors, whose duties would
begin when the feast began. The abbot had found a friend in the bishop of
Salisbury, and readily dismissed Cadfael to whatever pursuit he chose. He went
in search of Hugh Beringar with Osbern’s story very heavy on his mind, and the
last question still unanswered, though so many sad mysteries were now made
plain. It was not a terrified prisoner with the rope already round his neck who
had broken down and betrayed the secret of FitzAlan’s plans for his treasury.
No, that betrayal had taken place a day previously, when the issue of battle was
still to be decided, and the thing had been done with forethought, to save a
life it yet had failed to save. He came by stealth, and asked to be taken to
the officer of the guard, for he had something to tell to the king’s advantage!
And when he left he told the guard he had orders to go back, so that there
could be no suspicion, but then he was in better heart. Poor wretch, not for
long!
By
what means or on what pretext he had managed to get out of the castle—perhaps
on pretence of reconnoitering the enemy’s position?—certainly he had obeyed his
instructions to return and keep all suspicion lulled. He had returned only to
confront the death he had thought he was escaping.
Hugh
Beringar came out and stood on the steps of the great hall, craning round him
for one person among all that shifting throng. The black Benedictine habits
showed here and there in strong contrast to the finery of lordlings in their
best, but Cadfael was shorter than many of those about him, and saw the man he
was seeking before he was himself seen. He began to weave his way towards him,
and the keen black eyes sweeping the court beneath drawn brows lit upon him,
and glittered. Beringar came down to take him by the arm and draw him away to a
quieter place.
“Come
away, come up on to the guard-walk, there’ll be no one there but the sentry.
How can we talk here?” And when they had mounted to the wall, he found a corner
where no one could approach them without being seen, he said, eyeing Cadfael
very earnestly: “You have news in your face. Tell it quickly, and I’ll tell you
mine.”
Cadfael
told the story as briefly as it had been told to him, and it was understood as
readily. Beringar stood leaning against the merlon of the wall as though
bracing his back for a dour defence. His face was bitter with dismay.
“Her
brother! No escaping it, this can have been no other. He came by night out of
the castle, by stealth, hiding his face, he spoke with the king’s officer, and
returned as he had come. So that there might be no suspicion! Oh, I am sick!”
said Beringar savagely. “And all for nothing! His treason fell victim to one
even worse. You don’t know yet, Cadfael, you don’t know all! But that of all
people it should be her brother!”
“No
help for it,” said Cadfael, “it was he. In terror for his life, regretting an
ill-judged alliance, he went hurrying to the besiegers to buy his life, in
exchange—for what? Something of advantage to the king! That very evening they
had held conference and planned the removal of FitzAlan’s gold. That was how
someone learned in good time of what Faintree and Torold carried, and the way
they were to go. Someone who never passed that word on, as I think, to king or
any, but acted upon it himself, and for his own gain. Why else should it end as
it did? The young man, so says Osbern, went back under orders, relieved and
less afraid.”
“He
had been promised his life,” said Beringar bitterly, “and probably the king’s
favour, too, and a place about him, no wonder he went back the happier in that
belief. But what was really intended was to send him back to be taken and
slaughtered with the rest, to make sure he should not live to tell the tale.
For listen, Cadfael, to what I got out of one of the Flemings who was in that
day’s murderous labour from first to last. He said that after Arnulf of Hesdin
was hanged, Ten Heyt pointed out to the executioners a young man who was to be
the next to go, and said the order came from above. And it was done. They found
it a huge jest that he was dragged to his death incredulous, thinking at first,
no doubt, they were putting up a pretence to remove him from the ranks, and
then he saw it was black reality, and he screamed that they were mistaken, that
he was not to die with the rest, that he had been promised his life, that they
should send and ask—“
“Send
and ask,” said Brother Cadfael, “of Adam Courcelle.”
“No—I
learned no name… my man heard none. What makes you hit on that name in
particular? He was not by but once, according to this man’s account, he came
but once to look at the bodies they had already cut down, and it was early,
they would be but few. Then he went away to his work in the town, and was seen
no more. Weak-stomached, they thought.”
“And
the dagger? Was Giles wearing it when they strung him up?”
“He
was, for my man had an eye to the thing himself, but when he was relieved for a
while, and came back to get it, it was already gone.”
“Even
to one with a great prize in view,” said Cadfael sadly, “a small extra gain by
the way may not come amiss.”
They
looked at each other mutely for a long moment. “But why do you say so
certainly, Courcelle?”
“I
am thinking,” said Cadfael, “of the horror that fell upon him when Aline came
to collect her dead, and he knew what he had done. If I had known, he said, if
I had known, I would have saved him for you! No matter at what cost! God
forgive me! he said, but he meant: Aline, forgive me! With all his heart he
meant it then, though I would not call that repentance. And he gave back,
you’ll remember, the cloak. I think, truly I do think, he would then have given
back also the dagger, if he had dared. But he could not, it was already broken
and incomplete. I wonder,” said Cadfael, pondering, “I wonder what he has done
with it now? A man who would take it from the dead in the first place would not
part with it too easily, even for a girl’s sake, and yet he never dare let her
set eyes on it, and he is in earnest in courting her. Would he keep it, in
hiding? Or get rid of it?”
“If
you are right,” said Beringar, still doubtful, “we need it, it is our proof.
And yet, Cadfael, for God’s sake, how are we to deal now? God knows I can find
no good to say for one who tried to purchase his own safety so, when his
fellows were at their last gasp. But neither you nor I can strip this matter
bare, and do so wicked an injury to so innocent and honourable a lady. It’s
enough that she mourns for him. Let her at least go on thinking that he held by
his mistaken choice faithfully to the end, and gave his life for it—not that he
died craven, bleating that he was promised grace in return for so base a
betrayal. She must not know, now or ever.”
Brother
Cadfael could not but agree. “But if we accuse him, and this comes to trial,
surely everything will come out. That we cannot allow, and there lies our
weakness.”
“And
our strength,” said Beringar fiercely, “for neither can he allow it. He wants
his advancement with the king, he wants offices, but he wants Aline—do you
think I did not know it? Where would he stand with her if ever a breath of this
reached her? No, he will be at least as anxious as we to keep the story for
ever buried. Give him but a fair chance to settle the quarrel out of hand, and
he’ll jump at it.”
“Your
preoccupation,” said Cadfael gently, “I understand, and sympathise with it. But
you must also acknowledge mine. I have here another responsibility. Nicholas
Faintree must not lie uneasy for want of justice.”
“Trust
me, and stand ready to back me in whatever I shall do this night at the king’s
table,” said Hugh Beringar. “Justice he shall have, and vengeance, too, but let
it be as I shall devise.”
Cadfael
went to his duty behind the abbot’s chair in doubt and bewilderment, with no
clear idea in his mind of what Beringar intended, and no conviction that
without the broken dagger any secure case could be made against Courcelle. The
Fleming had not seen him take it, what he had cried out to Aline over her
brother’s body, in manifest pain, was not evidence. And yet there had been
vengeance and death in Hugh Beringar’s face, as much for Aline Siward’s sake as
for Nicholas Faintree’s. What mattered most in the world to him, at this
moment, was that Aline should never know how her brother had disgraced his
blood and his name, and in that cause Beringar would not scruple to spend not
only Adam Courcelle’s life, but also his own. And somehow, reflected Cadfael
ruefully, I have become very much attached to that young man, and I should not
like to see any ill befall him. I would rather this case went to law, even if
we have to step carefully in drawing up our evidence, and leave out every word
concerning Torold Blund and Godith Adeney. But for that we need, we must have,
proof positive that Giles Siward’s dagger passed into the possession of Adam
Courcelle, and preferably the dagger itself, into the bargain, to match with
the piece of it I found on the scene of the murder. Otherwise he will simply
lie and lie, deny everything, say he never saw the topaz or the dagger it came
from, and has nothing to answer; and from the eminence of the position he has
won with the king, he will be unassailable.
There
were no ladies present that night, this was strictly a political and military
occasion, but the great hall had been decked out with borrowed hangings, and
was bright with torches. The king was in good humour, the garrison’s provisions
were assured, and those who had robbed for the royal supplies had done their
work well. From his place behind Heribert at the king’s high table Cadfael
surveyed the full hall, and estimated that some five hundred guests were
present. He looked for Beringar, and found him at a lower table, in his finery,
very debonair and lively in conversation, as though he had no darker
preoccupation. He was master of his face; even when he glanced briefly at
Courcelle there was nothing in the look to attract attention, certainly nothing
to give warning of any grave purpose.
Courcelle
was at the high table, though crowded to its end by the visiting dignitaries.
Big, vividly coloured and handsome, accomplished in arms, in good odour with
the king, how strange that such a man should feel it necessary to grasp
secretly at plunder, and by such degrading means! And yet, in this chaos of
civil war, was it so strange after all? Where a king’s favour could be toppled
with the king, where barons were changing sides according as the fortunes changed,
where even earls were turning to secure their own advantage rather than that of
a cause that might collapse under their feet and leave them prisoner and
ruined! Courcelle was merely a sign of the times; in a few years there would be
duplicates of him in every corner of the realm.
I
do not like the way I see England going, thought Cadfael with anxious
foreboding, and above all I do not like what is about to happen, for as surely
as God sees us, Hugh Beringar is set to sally forth on to a dubious field,
half-armed.
He
fretted through the long meal, hardly troubled by the demands of Abbot
Heribert, who was always abstemious with wine, and ate very frugally. Cadfael
served and poured, proffered the finger-bowl and napkin, and waited with
brooding resignation.
When
the dishes were cleared away, musicians playing, and only the wine on the
tables, the servitors in their turn might take their pick of what was left in
the kitchens, and the cooks and scullions were already helping themselves and
finding quiet corners to sit and eat. Cadfael collected a bread trencher and
loaded it with broken meats, and took it out through the great court to Lame
Osbern at the gate. There was a measure of wine to go with it. Why should not
the poor rejoice for once at the king’s cost, even if that cost was handed on
down the hierarchies until it fell at last upon the poor themselves? Too often
they paid, but never got their share of the rejoicing.
Cadfael
was walking back to the hall when his eye fell upon a lad of about twelve, who
was sitting in the torchlight on the inner side of the gate house, his back
comfortably against the wall, carving his meat into smaller pieces with a
narrow-bladed knife. Cadfael had seen him earlier, in the kitchen, gutting fish
with the same knife, but he had not seen the halt of it, and would not have
seen it now if the boy had not laid it down beside him on the ground while he
ate.
Cadfael
halted and gazed, motionless. It was no kitchen knife, but a well-made dagger,
and its hilt was a slender shaft of silver, rounded to the hand, showing
delicate lines of filigree-work, and glowing round the collar of the blade with
small stones. The hilt ended in a twist of silver broken off short. It was hard
to believe, but impossible not to believe. Perhaps thought really is prayer.
He
spoke to the boy very softly and evenly; the unwitting means of justice must
not be alarmed. “Child, where did you get so fine a knife as that?”
The
boy looked up, untroubled, and smiled. When he had gulped down the mouthful
with which his cheeks were bulging, he said cheerfully: “I found it. I didn’t
steal it.”
“God
forbid, lad, I never thought it. Where did you find it? And have you the
sheath, too?”
It
was lying beside him in the shadow, he patted it proudly. “I fished them out of
the river. I had to dive, but I found them. They really are mine, father, the
owner didn’t want them, he threw them away. I suppose because this was broken.
But it’s the best knife for slitting fish I ever had.”
So
he threw them away! Not, however, simply because the jewelled hilt was broken.
“You
saw him throw it into the river? Where was this, and when?”
“I
was fishing under the castle, and a man came down alone from the water-gate to
the bank of the river, and threw it in, and went back to the castle. When he’d
gone I dived in where I saw it fall, and I found it. It was early in the
evening, the same night all the bodies were carried down to the abbey—a week
ago, come tomorrow. It was the first day it was safe to go fishing there
again.”
Yes,
it fitted well. That same afternoon Aline had taken Giles away to St.
Alkmund’s, and left Courcelle stricken and wild with unavailing regrets, and in
possession of a thing that might turn Aline against him for ever, if once she
set eyes on it. And he had done the only, the obvious thing, consigned it to
the river, never thinking that the avenging angel, in the shape of a fisherboy,
would redeem it to confront him when most he believed himself safe.
“You
did not know who this man was? What like was he? What age?” For there remained
the lingering doubt; all he had to support his conviction was the memory of
Courcelle’s horrified face and broken voice, pleading his devotion over Giles
Siward’s body.
The
child hoisted indifferent shoulders, unable to picture for another what he
himself had seen clearly and memorably. “Just a man. I didn’t know him. Not old
like you, father, but quite old.” But to him anyone of his father’s generation
would be old, though his father might be only a year or two past thirty.
“Would
you know him if you saw him again? Could you point him out among many?”
“Of
course!” said the boy almost scornfully. His eyes were young, bright, and very
observant, if his tongue was none too fluent, of course he would know his man
again.
“Sheathe
your knife, child, and bring it, and come with me,” said Cadfael with decision.
“Oh, don’t fret, no one will take your treasure from you, or if later you must
give it up, you shall be handsomely paid for it. All I need is for you to tell
again what you have told to me, and you shan’t be the loser.”
He
knew, when he entered the hail with the boy beside him, a little apprehensive
now but even more excited, that they came late. The music was stilled, and Hugh
Beringar was on his feet and striding towards the dais on which the high table
stood. They heard his voice raised, high and clear, as he mounted and stood
before the king. “Your Grace, before you depart for Worcester, there is a
matter on which I beg you’ll hear me and do right. I demand justice on one here
in this company, who has abused his position in your confidence. He has stolen
from the dead, to the shame of his nobility, and he has committed murder, to
the shame of his manhood. I stand on my charges, to prove them with my body.
And here is my gage!”
Against
his own doubts, he had accepted Cadfael’s intuition, to the length of staking
his life upon it. He leaned forward, and rolled something small and bright
across the table, to clang softly against the king’s cup. The silence that had
fallen was abrupt and profound. All round the high table heads craned to follow
the flash of yellow brilliance that swayed irregularly over the board, limping
on its broken setting, and then were raised to stare again at the young man who
had launched it. The king picked up the topaz and turned it in his large hands,
his face blank with incomprehension at first, and then wary and brooding. He,
too, looked long at Hugh Beringar. Cadfael, picking his way between the lower
tables, drew the puzzled boy after him and kept his eyes upon Adam Courcelle,
who sat at his end of the table stiff and aware. He had command of his face, he
looked no more astonished or curious than any of those about him; only the taut
hand gripping his drinking-horn betrayed his consternation. Or was even that
imagined, to fit in with an opinion already formed? Cadfael was no longer sure
of his own judgment, a state he found distressing and infuriating.
“You
have bided your time to throw your thunderbolt,” said the king at length, and
looked up darkly at Beringar from the stone he was turning in his hands.
“I
was loth to spoil your Grace’s supper, but neither would I put off what should
not be put off. Your Grace’s justice is every honest man’s right.”
“You
will need to explain much. What is this thing?”
“It
is the tip of a dagger-hilt. The dagger to which it belongs is now by right the
property of the lady Aline Siward, who has loyally brought all the resources of
her house to your Grace’s support. It was formerly in the possession of her
brother Giles, who was among those who garrisoned this castle against your
Grace, and have paid the price for it. I say that it was taken from his dead
body, an act not unknown among the common soldiery, but unworthy of knight or
gentleman. That is the first offence. The second is murder—that murder of which
your Grace was told by Brother Cadfael, of the Benedictine house here in
Shrewsbury, after the count of the dead was made. Your Grace and those who
carried out your orders were used as a shield for one who strangled a man from
behind, as your Grace will well remember.”
“I
do remember,” said the king grimly. He was torn between displeasure at having
to exert himself to listen and judge, when his natural indolence had wanted
only a leisurely and thoughtless feast, and a mounting curiosity as to what lay
behind all this. “What has this stone to do with that death?”
“Your
Grace, Brother Cadfael is also present here, and will testify that he found the
place where this murder was committed, and found there, broken off in the
struggle and trodden into the ground, this stone. He will take oath, as I do,
that the man who stole the dagger is the same who killed Nicholas Faintree, and
that he left behind him, unnoticed, this proof of his guilt.”
Cadfael
was drawing nearer by then, but they were so intent on the closed scene above
that no one noticed his approach. Courcelle was sitting back, relaxed and
brightly interested, in his place, but what did that mean? Doubtless he saw
very well the flaw in this; no need to argue against the claim that whoever
stole the dagger slew the man, since no once could trace possession to him. The
thing was at the bottom of the Severn, lost for ever. The theory could be
allowed to stand, the crime condemned and deplored, provided no one could
furnish a name, and proof to back it. Or, on the other hand, this could far
more simply be the detachment of an innocent man!
“Therefore,”
said Hugh Beringar relentlessly, “I repeat those charges I have made here
before your Grace. I appeal one among us here in this hall of theft and murder,
and I offer proof with my body, to uphold my claim in combat upon the body of
Adam Courcelle.”
He
had turned at the end to face the man he accused, who was on his feet with a
leap, startled and shaken, as well he might be. Shock burned rapidly into
incredulous anger and scorn. Just so would any innocent man look, suddenly
confronted with an accusation so mad as to be laughable.
“Your
Grace, this is either folly or villainy! How comes my name into such a
diatribe? It may well be true that a dagger was stolen from a dead man, it may
even be true that the same thief slew a man, and left this behind as witness.
But as for how my name comes into such a tale, I leave it to Hugh Beringar to
tell—if these are not simply the lies of an envious man. When did I ever see
this supposed dagger? When was it ever in my possession? Where is it now? Has
any ever seen me wear such a thing? Send, my lord, and search those soldier’s
belongings I have here, and if such a thing is found in any ward or lodging of
mine, let me know of it!”
“Wait!”
said the king imperiously, and looked from one face to the other with frowning
brows. “This is indeed a matter that needs to be examined, and if these charges
are made in malice there will be an account to pay. What Adam says is the nub
of it. Is the monk indeed present? And does he confirm the finding of this
broken ornament at the place where this killing befell? And that it came from
that very dagger?”
“I
brought Brother Cadfael here with me tonight,” said the abbot, and looked about
for him helplessly.
“I
am here, Father Abbot,” said Cadfael from below the dais, and advanced to be
seen, his arms about the shoulders of the boy, now totally fascinated, all eyes
and ears.
“Do
you bear out what Beringar says?” demanded King Stephen. “You found this stone
where the man was slain?”
“Yes,
your Grace. Trampled into the earth, where plainly there had been a struggle,
and two bodies rolling upon the ground.”
“And
whose word have we that it comes from a dagger once belonging to Mistress Siward’s
brother? Though I grant you it should be easy enough to recognise, once known.”
“The
word of Lady Aline herself. It has been shown to her, and she has recognised
it.”
“That
is fair witness enough,” said the king, “that whoever is the thief may well be
the murderer, also. But why it should follow that either you or Beringar here
suppose him to be Adam, that for my life I cannot see. There’s never a thread
to join him to the dagger or the deed. You might as well cast round here among
us, and pick on Bishop Robert of Salisbury, or any one of the squires down
below there. Or prick your knife-point into a list of us with eyes closed.
Where is the logic?”
“I
am glad,” said Courcelle, darkly red and forcing a strained laughter, “that
your Grace puts so firm a finger on the crux of the matter. With goodwill I can
go along with this good brother to condemn a mean theft and a furtive killing,
but, Beringar, beware how you connect me with either, or any other honest man.
Follow your thread from this stone, by all means, if thread there is, but until
you can trace this dagger into my hands, be careful how you toss challenges to
mortal combat about you, young man, for they may be taken up, to your great
consternation.”
“My
gage is now lying upon the table,” said Hugh Beringar with implacable calm.
“You have only to take it up. I have not withdrawn it.”
“My
lord king,” said Cadfael, raising his voice to ride over the partisan
whisperings and murmurings that were running like conflicting winds about the
high table, “it is not the case that there is no witness to connect the dagger
with any person. And for proof positive that stone and dagger belong together,
here is the very weapon itself. I ask your Grace to match the two with your own
hands.”
He
held up the dagger, and Beringar at the edge of the dais took it from him,
staring like a man in a dream, and handed it in awed silence to the king. The
boy’s eyes followed it with possessive anxiety, Courcelle’s with stricken and
unbelieving horror, as if a drowned victim had risen to haunt him. Stephen
looked at the thing with an eye appreciative of its workmanship, slid out the
blade with rising curiosity, and fitted the topaz in its silver claw to the
jagged edge of the hilt.
“No
doubt but this belongs. You have all seen?” And he looked down at Cadfael.
“Where, then, did you come by this?”
“Speak
up, child,” said Cadfael encouragingly, “and tell the king what you told to
me.”
The
boy was rosy and shining with an excitement that had quite overridden his fear.
He stood up and told his tale in a voice shrill with self-importance, but still
in the simple words he had used to Cadfael, and there was no man there who
could doubt he was telling the truth.
“…
and I was by the bushes at the edge of the water, and he did not see me. But I
saw him clearly. And as soon as he went away I dived in where it had fallen,
and found it. I live by the river, I was born by it. My mother says I swam
before I walked. I kept the knife, thinking no wrong, since he did not want it.
And that is the very knife, my lord, and may I have it back when you are done?”
The
king was diverted for a moment from the gravity of the cause that now lay in
his hands, to smile at the flushed and eager child with all the good-humour and
charm his nature was meant to dispense, if he had not made an ambitious and
hotly contested bid for a throne, and learned the rough ways that go with such
contests.
“So
our fish tonight was gutted with a jewelled knife, was it, boy? Princely
indeed! And it was good fish, too. Did you catch it, as well as dress it?”
Bashfully
the boy said that he had helped.
“Well,
you have done your part very fitly. And now, did you know this man who threw
away the knife?”
“No,
my lord, I don’t know his name. But I know him well enough when I see him.”
“And
do you see him? Here in this hail with us now?”
“Yes,
my lord,” said the child readily, and pointed a finger straight at Adam
Courcelle. “That was the man.”
All
eyes turned upon Courcelle, the king’s most dourly and thoughtfully of all, and
there was a silence that lasted no more than a long-drawn breath, but seemed to
shake the foundations of the hall, and stop every heart within its walls. Then
Courcelle said, with arduous and angry calm:
“Your
Grace, this is utterly false. I never had the dagger, I could not well toss it
into the river. I deny that ever I had the thing in my possession, or ever saw
it until now.”
“Are
you saying,” asked the king drily, “that the child lies? At whose instigation?
Not Beringar’s—it seems to me that he was as taken aback by this witness as I
myself, or you. Am I to think the Benedictine order has procured the boy to put
up such a story? And for what end?”
“I
am saying, your Grace, that this is a foolish error. The boy may have seen what
he says he saw, and got the dagger as he claims he got it, but he is mistaken
in saying he saw me. I am not the man. I deny all that has been said against
me.”
“And
I maintain it,” said Hugh Beringar. “And I ask that it be put to the proof.”
The
king crashed a fist upon the table so that the boards danced, and cups rocked
and spilled wine. “There is something here to be probed, and I cannot let it
pass now without probing it.” He turned again to the boy, and reined in his
exasperation to ask more gently: “Think and look carefully, now, and say again:
are you certain this is the man you saw? If you have any doubt, say so. It is
no sin to be mistaken. You may have seen some other man of like build or
colour. But if you are sure, say that also, without fear.”
“I
am sure,” said the boy, trembling but adamant. “I know what I saw.”
The
king leaned back in his great chair, and thumped his closed fists on the arms,
and pondered. He looked at Hugh Beringar with grim displeasure: “It seems you
have hung a millstone round my neck, when most I need to be free and to move
fast. I cannot now wipe out what has been said, I must delve deeper. Either
this case goes to the long processes of court law—no, not for you nor any will
I now delay my going one day beyond the morrow’s morrow! I have made my plans,
I cannot afford to change them.”
“There
need be no delay,” said Beringar, “if your Grace countenances trial by combat.
I have appealed Adam Courcelle of murder, I repeat that charge. If he accepts,
I am ready to meet him without any ceremony or preparations. Your Grace may see
the outcome tomorrow, and march on the following day, freed of this burden.”
Cadfael,
during these exchanges, had not taken his eyes from Courcelle’s face, and
marked with foreboding the signs of gradually recovered assurance. The faint
sweat that had broken on his lip and brow dried, the stare of desperation
cooled into calculation; he even began to smile. Since he was now cornered, and
there were two ways out, one by long examination and questioning, one by simple
battle, he was beginning to see in this alternative his own salvation. Cadfael
could follow the measuring, narrowed glance that studied Hugh Beringar from
head to foot, and understood the thoughts behind the eyes. Here was a younger
man, lighter in weight, half a head shorter, much less in reach, inexperienced,
over-confident, an easy victim. It should not be any problem to put him out of
the world; and that done, Courcelle had nothing to fear. The judgment of heaven
would have spoken, no one thereafter would point a finger at him, and Aline
would be still within his reach, innocent of his dealings with her brother, and
effectively separated from a too-engaging rival, without any blame to
Courcelle, the wrongly accused. Oh, no, it was not so grim a situation, after
all. It should work out very well.
He
reached out along the table, picked up the topaz, and rolled it contemptuously
back towards Beringar, to be retrieved and retained.
“Let
it be so, your Grace. I accept battle, tomorrow, without formality, without
need for practice. Your Grace shall march the following day,” And I with you,
his confident countenance completed.
“So
be it!” said the king grimly. “Since you’re bent on robbing me of one good man,
between you, I suppose I may as well find and keep the better of the two.
Tomorrow, then, at nine of the clock, after Mass. Not here within the wards,
but in the open—the meadow outside the town gate, between road and river, will
do well. Prestcote, you and Willem marshal the lists. See to it! And we’ll have
no horses put at risk,” he said practically. “On foot, and with swords!”
Hugh
Beringar bowed acquiescence. Courcelle said: “Agreed!” and smiled, thinking how
much longer a reach and stronger a wrist he had for sword-play.
“A l’outrance!” said the king with a vicious snap,
and rose from the table to put an end to a sullied evening’s entertainment.
Chapter
Twelve
ON
THE WAY BACK THROUGH THE STREETS OF THE TOWN, dark but not quite silent,
somehow uneasily astir as if rats ran in a deserted house, Hugh Beringar on his
rawboned grey drew alongside Brother Cadfael and walked his mount for some few
minutes at their foot-pace, ignoring Brother Jerome’s close proximity and
attentive ears as though they had not existed. In front, Abbot Heribert and
Prior Robert conversed in low and harried tones, concerned for one life at
stake, but unable to intervene. Two young men at bitter enmity had declared for
a death. Once both contestants had accepted the odds, there was no retreating;
he who lost had been judged by heaven. If he survived the sword, the gallows
waited for him.
“You
may call me every kind of fool,” said Beringar accommodatingly, “if it will
give you any ease.” His voice had still its light, teasing intonation, but
Cadfael was not deceived.
“It
is not for me, of all men,” he said, “to blame, or pity—or even regret what you
have done.”
“As
a monk?” asked the mild voice, the smile in it perceptible to an attentive ear.
“As
a man! Devil take you!”
“Brother
Cadfael,” said Hugh heartily, “I do love you. You know very well you would have
done the same in my place.”
“I
would not! Not on the mere guess of an old fool I hardly knew! How if I had
been wrong?”
“Ah,
but you were not wrong! He is the man—doubly a murderer, for he delivered her
poor coward brother to his death just as vilely as he throttled Faintree. Mind,
never a word to Aline about this until all’s over—one way or the other.”
“Never
a word, unless she speak the first. Do you think the news is not blown abroad
all through this town by now?”
“I
know it is, but I pray she is deep asleep long ago, and will not go forth to
hear this or any news until she goes to High Mass at ten. By which time, who
knows, we may have the answer to everything.”
“And
you,” said Brother Cadfael acidly, because of the pain he felt, that must have
some outlet, “will you now spend the night on your knees in vigil, and wear
yourself out before ever you draw in the field?”
“I
am not such a fool as all that,” said Hugh reprovingly, and shook a finger at
his friend. “For shame, Cadfael! You are a monk, and cannot trust God to see
right done? I shall go to bed and sleep well, and rise fresh to the trial. And
now I suppose you will insist on being my deputy and advocate to heaven?”
“No,”
said Cadfael grudgingly, “I shall sleep, and get up only when the bell rings
for me. Am I to have less faith than an impudent heathen like you?”
“That’s
my Cadfael! Still,” conceded Beringar, “you may whisper a word or two to God on
my behalf at Matins and Lauds, if you’ll be so kind. If he turns a deaf ear to
you, small use the rest of us wearing out our knee-bones.” And he leaned from
his tall horse to lay a light hand for an instant on Cadfael’s broad tonsure,
like a playful benediction, and then set spurs to his horse and trotted ahead,
passing the abbot with a respectful reverence, to vanish into the curving
descent of the Wyle.
Brother
Cadfael presented himself before the abbot immediately after Prime. It did not
seem that Heribert was much surprised to see him, or to hear the request he put
forward.
“Father
Abbot, I stand with this young man Hugh Beringar in this cause. The probing
that brought to light the evidence on which his charge rests, that was my
doing. And even if he has chosen to take the cause into his own hands, refusing
me any perilous part in it, I am not absolved. I pray leave to go and stand
trial with him as best I may. Whether I am of help to him or not, I must be
there. I cannot turn my back at this pass on my friend who has spoken for me.”
“I
am much exercised in mind, also,” admitted the abbot, sighing. “In spite of what
the king has said, I can only pray that this trial need not be pressed to the
death.” And I, thought Cadfael ruefully, dare not even pray for that, since the
whole object of this wager is to stop a mouth for ever. “Tell me,” said
Heribert, “is it certain that the man Courcelle killed that poor lad we have
buried in the church?”
“Father,
it is certain. Only he had the dagger, only he can have left the broken part
behind him. There is here a clear contest of right and wrong.”
“Go,
then,” said the abbot. “You are excused all duties until this matter is ended.”
For such duels had been known to last the day long, until neither party could
well see, or stand, or strike, so that in the end one or the other fell and
could not rise, and simply bled to death where he lay. And if weapons were
broken, they must still fight, with hands, teeth and feet, until one or the
other broke and cried for quarter; though few ever did, since that meant
defeat, the judgment of heaven convicting, and the gallows waiting, an even more
shameful death. A bitter business, thought Cadfael, kilting his habit and going
out heavily from the gate house, not worthy of being reverenced as the verdict
of God. In this case there was a certain appropriateness about it, however, and
the divine utterance might yet be heard in it. If, he thought, I have as much
faith as he? I wonder if he did indeed sleep well! And strangely, he could
believe it. His own sleep had been fitful and troubled.
Giles
Siward’s dagger, complete with its lopped topaz, he had brought back with him
and left in his cell, promising the anxious fisher-boy either restoration or
fair reward, but it was not yet time to speak to Aline in the matter. That must
wait the issue of the day. If all went well, Hugh Beringar himself should restore
it to her. If not—no, he would not consider any such possibility.
The
trouble with me, he thought unhappily, is that I have been about the world long
enough to know that God’s plans for us, however infallibly good, may not take
the form that we expect and demand. And I find an immense potential for
rebellion in this old heart, if God, for no matter what perfect end, choose to
take Hugh Beringar out of this world and leave Adam Courcelle in it.
Outside
the northern gate of Shrewsbury the Castle Foregate housed a tight little
suburb of houses and shops, but it ended very soon, and gave place to meadows
on either side the road. The river twined serpentine coils on both sides,
beyond the fields, and in the first level meadow on the left the king’s
marshals had drawn up a large square of clear ground, fenced in on every side
by a line of Flemings with lances held crosswise, to keep back any inquisitive
spectator who might encroach in his excitement, and to prevent flight by either
contestant. Where the ground rose slightly, outside the square, a great chair
had been placed for the king, and the space about it was kept vacant for the
nobility, but on the other three sides there was already a great press of
people. The word had run through Shrewsbury like the wind through leaves. The
strangest thing was the quietness. Every soul about the square of lances was
certainly talking, but in such hushed undertones that the sum of all those
voices was no louder than the absorbed buzzing of a hive of bees in sunshine.
The
slanting light of morning cast long but delicate shadows across the grass, and
the sky above was thinly veiled with haze. Cadfael lingered where guards held a
path clear for the procession approaching from the castle, a brightness of
steel and sheen of gay colours bursting suddenly out of the dim archway of the
gate. King Stephen, big, flaxen-haired, handsome, resigned now to the necessity
that threatened to rob him of one of his officers, but none the better pleased
for that, and not disposed to allow any concessions that would prolong the
contest. To judge by his face, there would be no pauses for rest, and no
limitation imposed upon the possible savagery. He wanted it over. All the
knights and barons and clerics who streamed after him to his presidential chair
were carrying themselves with the utmost discretion, quick to take their lead
from him.
The
two contestants appeared as the royal train drew aside. No shields, Cadfael
noted, and no mail, only the simple protection of leather. Yes, the king wanted
a quick end, none of your day-long hacking and avoiding until neither party
could lift hand. On the morrow the main army would leave to follow the
vanguard, no matter which of these two lay dead, and Stephen had details yet to
be settled before they marched. Beringar first, the accuser, went to kneel to
the king and do him reverence, and did so briskly, springing up vigorously from
his knee and turning to where the ranks of lances parted to let him into the
arena. He caught sight of Cadfael then, standing a little apart. In a face
tight, grave and mature, still the black eyes smiled.
“I
knew,” he said, “that you would not fail me.”
“See
to it,” said Cadfael morosely, “that you do not fail me.”
“No
dread,” said Hugh. “I’m shriven white as a March lamb.” His voice was even and
reflective. “I shall never be readier. And your arm will be seconding mine.”
At
every stroke, thought Cadfael helplessly, and doubted that all these tranquil
years since he took the cowl had really made any transformation in a spirit
once turbulent, insubordinate and incorrigibly rash. He could feel his blood
rising, as though it was he who must enter the lists.
Courcelle
rose from his knee and followed his accuser into the square. They took station
at opposite corners, and Prestcote, with his marshal’s truncheon raised, stood
between them and looked to the king to give the signal. A herald was crying
aloud the charge, the name of the challenger, and the refutation uttered by the
accused. The crowd swayed, with a sound like a great, long-drawn sigh, that
rippled all round the field. Cadfael could see Hugh’s face clearly, and now
there was no smiling, it was bleak, intent and still, eyes fixed steadily upon
his opponent.
The
king surveyed the scene, and lifted his hand. The truncheon fell and Prestcote
drew aside to the edge of the square as the contestants advanced to meet each
other.
At
first sight, the contrast was bitter. Courcelle was half as big again, half as
old again, with height and reach and weight all on his side, and there was no
questioning his skill and experience. His fiery colouring and towering size
made Beringar look no more than a lean, lightweight boy, and though that
lightness might be expected to lend him speed and agility, within seconds it
was clear that Courcelle also was very fast and adroit on his feet. At the
first clash of steel on steel, Cadfael felt his own arm and wrist bracing and
turning the stroke, and swung aside with the very same motion Beringar made to
slide out of danger; the turn brought him about, with the arch of the town gate
full in view.
Out
of the black hollow a girl came darting like a swallow, all swift black and
white and a flying cloud of gold hair. She was running, very fleetly and
purposefully, with her skirts caught up in her hands almost to the knee, and
well behind her, out of breath but making what haste she could, came another
young woman. Constance was wasting much of what breath she still had in calling
after her mistress imploringly to stop, to come away, not to go near; but Aline
made never a sound, only ran towards where two gallants of hers were newly
launched on a determined attempt to kill each other. She looked neither to
right nor left, but only craned to see over the heads of the crowd. Cadfael
hastened to meet her, and she recognised him with a gasp, and flung herself
into his arms.
“Brother
Cadfael, what is this? What has he done? And you knew, you knew, and you never
warned me! If Constance had not gone into town to buy flour, I should never
have known…”
“You
should not be here,” said Cadfael, holding her quivering and panting on his
heart. “What can you do? I promised him not to tell you, he did not wish it.
You should not look on at this.”
“But
I will!” she said with passion. “Do you think I’ll go tamely away and leave him
now? Only tell me,” she begged, “is it true what they’re saying—that he charged
Adam with murdering that young man? And that Giles’s dagger was the proof?”
“It
is true,” said Cadfael. She was staring over his shoulder into the arena, where
the swords clashed, and hissed and clashed again, and her amethyst eyes were
immense and wild.
“And
the charge—that also is true?”
“That
also.”
“Oh,
God!” she said, gazing in fearful fascination. “And he is so slight… how can he
endure it? Half the other’s size… and he dared try to solve it this way! Oh,
Brother Cadfael, how could you let him?”
At
least now, thought Cadfael, curiously eased, I know which of those two is “he”
to her, without need of a name. I never was sure until now, and perhaps neither
was she. “If ever you succeed,” he said, “in preventing Hugh Beringar from
doing whatever he’s set his mind on doing, then come to me and tell me how you
managed it. Though I doubt it would not work for me! He chose this way, girl,
and he had his reasons, good reasons. And you and I must abide it, as he must.”
“But
we are three,” she said vehemently. “If we stand with him, we must give him
strength. I can pray and I can watch, and I will. Bring me nearer—come with me!
I must see!”
She
was thrusting impetuously through towards the lances when Cadfael held her back
by the arm. “I think,” he said, “better if he does not see you. Not now!”
Aline
uttered something that sounded like a very brief and bitter laugh. “He would
not see me now,” she said, “unless I ran between the swords, and so I would, if
they’d let me—No!” She took that back instantly, with a dry sob.
“No,
I would not do so to him. I know better than that. All I can do is watch, and
keep silence.”
The
fate of women in a world of fighting men, he thought wryly, but for all that,
it is not so passive a part as it sounds. So he drew her to a slightly raised
place where she could see, without disturbing, with the glittering gold sheen
of her unloosed hair in the sun, the deadly concentration of Hugh Beringar. Who
had blood on the tip of his sword by then, though from a mere graze on
Courcelle’s cheek, and blood on his own left sleeve below the leather.
“He
is hurt,” she said in a mourning whisper, and crammed half her small fist in
her mouth to stop a cry, biting hard on her knuckles to ensure the silence she
had promised.
“It’s
nothing,” said Cadfael sturdily. “And he is the faster. See there, that parry!
Slight he might seem, but there’s steel in that wrist. What he wills to do,
he’ll do. And he has truth weighting his hand.”
“I
love him,” said Aline in a soft, deliberate whisper, releasing her bitten hand
for a moment. “I did not know until now, but I do love him!”
“So
do I, girl,” said Cadfael, “so do I!”
They
had been two full hours in the arena, with never a break for breath, and the
sun was high and hot, and they suffered, but both went with relentless care,
conserving their strength, and now, when their eyes met at close quarters over
the braced swords, there was no personal grudge between them, only an
inflexible purpose, on the one side to prove truth, on the other to disprove
it, and on either side by the only means left, by killing. They had found out
by then, if they had been in doubt, that for all the obvious advantages on one
side, in this contest they were very evenly matched, equal in skill, almost
equal in speed, the weight of truth holding a balance true between them. Both
bled from minor wounds. There was blood here and there in the grass.
It
was almost noon when Beringar, pressing hard, drove his opponent back with a
sudden lunge, and saw his foot slip in blood-stained turf, thinned by the hot,
dry summer. Courcelle, parrying, felt himself falling, and threw up his arm,
and Hugh’s following stroke took the sword almost out of his hand, shivered
edge to edge, leaving him sprawled on one hip, and clutching only a bladeless
hilt. The steel fell far aside, and lay useless.
Beringar
at once drew back, leaving his foe to rise unthreatened. He rested his point
against the ground, and looked towards Prestcote, who in turn was looking for
guidance to the king’s chair.
“Fight
on!” said the king flatly. His displeasure had not abated.
Beringar
leaned his point into the turf and gazed, wiping sweat from brow and lip.
Courcelle raised himself slowly, looked at the useless hilt in his hand, and
heaved desperate breath before hurling the thing from him in fury. Beringar
looked from him to the king, frowning, and drew off two or three more paces
while he considered. The king made no further move, apart from gesturing dourly
that they should continue. Beringar took three rapid strides to the rim of the
square, tossed his sword beneath the levelled lances, and set hand slowly to
draw the dagger at his belt.
Courcelle
was slow to understand, but blazed into renewed confidence when he realised the
gift that was offered to him.
“Well,
well!” said King Stephen under his breath. “Who knows but I may have been
mistaken in the best man, after all?”
With
nothing but daggers now, they must come to grips. Length of reach is valuable,
even with daggers, and the poniard that Courcelle drew from its sheath at his
hip was longer than the decorative toy Hugh Beringar held. King Stephen revived
into active interest, and shed his natural irritation at being forced into this
encounter.
“He
is mad!” moaned Aline at Cadfael’s shoulder, leaning against him with lips
drawn back and nostrils flaring, like any of her fighting forebears. “He had
licence to kill at leisure. Oh, he is stark mad. And I love him!”
The
fearful dance continued, and the sun at its zenith shortened the shadows of the
two duelists until they advanced, retreated, side-stepped on a black disc cast
by their own bodies, while the full heat beat pitilessly on their heads, and
within their leather harness they ran with sweat. Beringar was on the defensive
now, his weapon being the shorter and lighter, and Courcelle was pressing hard,
aware that he held the advantage. Only Beringar’s quickness of hand and eye
saved him from repeated slashes that might well have killed, and his speed and
agility still enabled him at every assault to spring back out of range. But he
was tiring at last; his judgment was less precise and confident, his movement
less alert and steady. And Courcelle, whether he had got his second wind or
simply gathered all his powers in one desperate effort, to make an end, seemed
to have recovered his earlier force and fire. Blood ran on Hugh’s right hand,
fouled his hilt and made it slippery in his palm. The tatters of Courcelle’s
left sleeve fluttered at the edge of his vision, a distraction that troubled
his concentration. He had tried several darting attacks, and drawn blood in his
turn, but length of blade and length of arm told terribly against him. Doggedly
he set himself to husband his own strength, by constant retreat if necessary,
until Courcelle’s frenzied attacks began to flag, as they must as last.
“Oh,
God!” moaned Aline almost inaudibly. “He was too generous, he has given his
life away… The man is playing with him!”
“No
man,” said Cadfael firmly, “plays with Hugh Beringar with impunity. He is still
the fresher of the two. This is a wild spurt to end it, he cannot maintain it
long.”
Step
by step Hugh gave back, but at each attack only so far as to elude the blade,
and step by step, in a series of vehement rushes, Courcelle pursued and drove
him. It seemed that he was trying to pen him into a corner of the square, where
he would have to make a stand, but at the last moment the attacker’s judgment
flagged or Hugh’s agility swung him clear of the trap, for the renewed pursuit
continued along the line of lancers, Beringar unable to break out again into
the centre of the arena, Courcelle unable to get through the sustained defence,
or prevent this lame progress that seemed likely to end in another corner.
The
Flemings stood like rocks, and let battle, like a slow tide, flow painfully
along their immovable ranks. And halfway along the side of the square Courcelle
suddenly drew back one long, rapid step instead of pursuing, and tossing his
poniard from him in the grass, stooped with a hoarse cry of triumph, and
reached beneath the levelled lances, to rise again brandishing the sword Hugh
Beringar had discarded as a grace to him, more than an hour previously.
Hugh
had not even realised that they had come to that very place, much less that he
had been deliberately driven here for this purpose. Somewhere in the crowd he
heard a woman shriek. Courcelle was in the act of straightening up, the sword
in his hand, his eyes, under the broad, streaming brow half-mad with
exultation. But he was still somewhat off-balance when Hugh launched himself
upon him in a tigerish leap. A second later would have been too late. As the
sword swung upward, he flung his whole weight against Courcelle’s breast,
locked his right arm, dagger and all, about his enemy’s body, and caught the
threatening sword-arm by the wrist in his left hand. For a moment they heaved
and strained, then they went down together heavily in the turf, and rolled and
wrenched in a deadlocked struggle at the feet of the indifferent guards.
Aline
clenched her teeth hard against a second cry, and covered her eyes, but the
next moment as resolutely uncovered them. “No, I will see all, I must… I will
bear it! He shall not be ashamed of me! Oh, Cadfael… oh, Cadfael… What is
happening? I can’t see…
“Courcelle
snatched the sword, but he had no time to strike. Wait, one of them is rising…”
Two
had fallen together, only one arose, and he stood half-stunned and wondering.
For his enemy had fallen limp and still under him, and relaxed straining arms
nervelessly into the grass; and there he lay now, open-eyed to the glare of the
sun, and a slow stream of red was flowing sluggishly from under him, and
forming a dark pool about him on the trampled ground.
Hugh
Beringar looked from the gathering blood to the dagger he still gripped in his
right hand, and shook his head in bewilderment, for he was very tired, and weak
now with this abrupt and inexplicable ending, and there was barely a drop of
fresh blood on his blade, and the sword lay loosely clasped still in Courcelle’s
right hand, innocent of his death. And yet he had his death; his life was
ebbing out fast into the thick grass. So what manner of ominous miracle was
this, that killed and left both weapons unstained?
Hugh
stooped, and raised the inert body by the left shoulder, turning it to see
where the blood issued; and there, driven deep through the leather jerkin, was
the dead man’s own poniard, which he had flung away to grasp at the sword. By
the look of it the hilt had lodged downwards in thick grass against the solidly
braced boot of one of the Flemings. Hugh’s onslaught had flung the owner
headlong upon his discarded blade, and their rolling, heaving struggle had
driven it home.
I
did not kill him, after all, though Beringar. His own cunning killed him. And
whether he was glad or sorry he was too drained to know. Cadfael would be
satisfied, at least; Nicholas Faintree was avenged, he had justice in full. His
murderer had been accused publicly, and publicly the charge had been justified
by heaven. And his murderer was dead; that failing breath was already spent.
Beringar
reached down and picked up his sword, which rose unresisting out of the
convicted hand. He turned slowly, and raised it in salute to the king, and
walked, limping now and dropping a few trickles of blood from stiffening cuts
in hand and forearm, out of the square of lances, which opened silently to let
him go free.
Two
or three paces he took across the sward towards the king’s chair, and Aline
flew into his arms, and clasped him with a possessive fervour that shook him
fully alive again. Her gold hair streamed about his shoulders and breast, she
lifted to him a rapt, exultant and exhausted face, the image of his own, she
called him by his name: “Hugh… Hugh…” and fingered with aching tenderness the
oozing wounds that showed in his cheek and hand and wrist.
“Why
did you not tell me? Why? Why? Oh, you have made me die so many times! Now we
are both alive again… Kiss me!”
He
kissed her, and she remained real, passionate and unquestionably his. She
continued to caress, and fret, and fawn.
“Hush,
love,” he said, eased and restored, “or go on scolding, for if you turn tender
to me now I’m a lost man. I can’t afford to droop yet, the king’s waiting. Now,
if you’re my true lady, lend me your arm to lean on, and come and stand by me
and prop me up, like a good wife, or I may fall flat at his feet.”
“Am
I your true lady?” demanded Aline, like all women wanting guarantees before
witnesses.
“Surely!
Too late to think better of it now, my heart!”
She
was beside him, clasped firmly in his arm, when he came before the king. “Your
Grace,” said Hugh, condescending out of some exalted private place scarcely
flawed by weariness and wounds, “I trust I have proven my case against a
murderer, and have your Grace’s countenance and approval.”
“Your
opponent,” said Stephen, “proved your case for you, all too well.” He eyed them
thoughtfully, disarmed and diverted by this unexpected apparition of entwined
lovers. “But what you have proved may also be your gain. You have robbed me,
young man, of an able deputy sheriff of this shire, whatever else he may have
been, and however foul a fighter. I may well take reprisal by drafting you into
the vacancy you’ve created. Without prejudice to your own castles and your
rights of garrison on our behalf. What do you say?”
“With
your Grace’s leave,” said Beringar, straight-faced, “I must first take counsel
with my bride.”
“Whatever
is pleasing to my lord,” said Aline, equally demurely, “is also pleasing to
me.”
Well,
well, though Brother Cadfael, looking on with interest, I doubt if troth was
ever plighted more publicly. They had better invite the whole of Shrewsbury to
the wedding.
Brother
Cadfael walked across to the guest hall before Compline, and took with him not
only a pot of his goose-grass salve for Hugh Beringar’s numerous minor grazes,
but also Giles Siward’s dagger, with its topaz finial carefully restored.
“Brother
Oswald is a skilled silversmith, this is his gift and mine to your lady. Give
it to her yourself. But ask her—as I know she will—to deal generously by the
boy who fished it out of the river. So much you will have to tell her. For the
rest, for her brother’s part, yes, silence, now and always. For her he was only
one of the many who chose the unlucky side, and died for it.”
Beringar
took the repaired dagger in his hand, and booked at it long and somberly. “Yet
this is not justice,” he said slowly. “You and I between us have forced into
the light the truth of one man’s sins, and covered up the truth of another’s.”
This night, for all his gains, he was very grave and a little sad, and not only
because all his wounds were stiffening, and all his misused muscles groaning at
every movement. The recoil from triumph had him fixing honest eyes on the
countenance of failure, the fate he had escaped. “Is justice due only to the
blameless? If he had not been so visited and tempted, he might never have found
himself mired to the neck in so much infamy.”
“We
deal with what is,” said Cadfael. “Leave what might have been to eyes that can
see it plain. You take what’s lawfully and honourably won, and value and enjoy
it. You have that right. Here are you, deputy sheriff of Salop, in royal
favour, affianced to as fine a girl as heart could wish, and, the one you set
your mind on from the moment you saw her. Be sure I noticed! And if you’re
stiff and sore in every bone tomorrow—and, lad, you will be!—what’s a little
disciplinary pain to a young man in your high feather?”
“I
wonder,” said Hugh, brightening, “where the other two are by now.”
“Within
reach of the Welsh coast, waiting for a ship to carry them coastwise round to
France. They’ll do well enough.” As between Stephen and Maud, Cadfael felt no
allegiance; but these young creatures, though two of them held for Maud and two
for Stephen, surely belonged to a future and an England delivered from the
wounds of civil war, beyond this present anarchy.
“As
for justice,” said Brother Cadfael thoughtfully, “it is but half the tale.” He
would say a prayer at Compline for the repose of Nicholas Faintree, a clean
young man of mind and life, surely now assuaged and at rest. But he would also
say a prayer for the soul of Adam Courcelle, dead in his guilt; for every
untimely death, every man cut down in his vigour and strength without time for
repentance and reparation, is one corpse too many. “No need,” said Cadfael,
“for you ever to look over your shoulder, or feel any compunction. You did the
work that fell to you, and did it well. God disposes all. From the highest to
the lowest extreme of a man’s scope, wherever justice and retribution can reach
him, so can grace.”
About
the Author
ELLIS PETERS is
the nom-de-crime of English novelist Edith Pargeter, author of scores of books
under her own name. She is the recipient of the Silver Dagger Award, conferred
by the Crime Writers Association in Britain, as well as the coveted Edgar,
awarded by the Mystery Writers of America. Miss Pargeter is also well known as
a translator of poetry and prose from the Czech and has been awarded the Gold
Medal and Ribbon of the Czechoslovak Society for Foreign Relations for her
services to Czech literature. She passed away in 1995, at the age of 82, at
home in her beloved Shropshire.
One Corpse Too Many
One Corpse Too Many
In the summer of 1138, war between King Stephen and the
Empress Maud takes Brother Cadfael from the quiet world of his garden to the
battlefield of passions, deceptions, and death. Not far from the safety of the
abbey walls, Shrewsbury castle falls, leaving its ninety-four defenders loyal
to the Empress to hang as traitors. With a heavy heart, Brother Cadfael agrees
to bury the dead, only to make a grisly discovery: ninety-five bodies lie in a
row, and the extra victim has not been hanged, but cruelly strangled. This
ingenious way of disposing of a corpse tells Cadfael that the killer is both
clever and ruthless. But one death among so many seems unimportant to all but
the good Benedictine. He vows to find the truth behind disparate clues: a girl
in boy’s clothing, a missing treasure, and a single broken flower—the tiny bit
of evidence that Cadfael believes can most easily expose a murderer’s black
heart.
One Corpse Too Many
The Second Chronicle of Brother Cadfael,
of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, at Shrewsbury
By
Ellis Peters
Chapter
One
BROTHER
CADFAEL WAS WORKING IN THE SMALL KITCHEN GARDEN by the abbot’s fishponds when
the boy was first brought to him. It was hot August noon, and if he had had his
proper quota of helpers they would all have been snoring in the shade at this
hour, instead of sweating in the sun; but one of his regular assistants, not
yet out of his novitiate, had thought better of the monastic vocation and taken
himself off to join his elder brother in arms on King Stephen’s side, in the
civil war for the crown of England, and the other had taken fright at the
approach of the royal army because his family were of the Empress Maud’s
faction, and their manor in Cheshire seemed a far safer place to be than
Shrewsbury under siege. Cadfael was left to do everything alone, but he had in
his time laboured under far hotter suns than this, and was doggedly determined
not to let his domain run wild, whether the outside world fell into chaos or
no.
In
this early summer of 1138 the fratricidal strife, hitherto somewhat desultory,
was already two years old, but never before had it approached Shrewsbury so
closely. Now its threat hung over castle and town like the shadow of death. But
for all that, Brother Cadfael’s mind was firmly upon life and growth, rather
than destruction and war, and certainly he had no suspicion that another manner
of killing, simple murder, furtive and unlicensed even in these anarchic times,
was soon to disrupt the calm of his chosen life.
August
should not, in normal circumstances, have been one of his busiest times in the
gardens, but there was more than enough for one man to do properly, and the
only relief they had to offer him was Brother Athanasius, who was deaf,
half-senile, and not to be relied upon to know a useful herb from a weed, and
the offer had been firmly declined. Better by far to manage alone. There was a
bed to be prepared for planting out late cabbages for succession, and fresh
seed to be sown for the kind that can weather the winter, as well as pease to
be gathered, and the dead, dried haulms of the early crop to be cleared away
for fodder and litter. And in his wooden work-shed in the herbarium, his own
particular pride, he had half a dozen preparations working in glass vessels and
mortars on the shelves, all of them needing attention at least once a day,
besides the herb wines that bubbled busily on their own at this stage. It was
high harvest time among the herbs, and all the medicines for the winter
demanding his care.
However,
he was not the man to let any part of his kingdom slip out of his control,
however wastefully the royal cousins Stephen and Maud contended for the throne
of England outside the abbey walls. If he lifted his head from digging compost
into the cabbage bed he could see the sluggish plumes of smoke hanging over the
abbey roofs and the town and castle beyond, and smell the acrid residue of
yesterday’s fires. That shadow and stink had hung like a pall over Shrewsbury
for almost a month, while King Stephen stamped and raged in his camp beyond the
Castle Foregate, the one dry-foot way into the town unless he could get
possession of the bridges, and William FitzAlan within the fortress held on
grimly, keeping an anxious eye on his dwindling supplies, and left the
thundering of defiance to his incorrigible uncle, Arnulf of Hesdin, who had
never learned to temper valour with discretion. The townspeople kept their
heads low, locked their doors, shuttered their shops, or, if they could, made
off westwards into Wales, to old, friendly enemies less to be feared than
Stephen. It suited the Welsh very well that Englishmen should fear
Englishmen—if either Maud or Stephen could be regarded as English!—and let
Wales alone, and they would not grudge a helping hand to the fleeing
casualties, provided the war went on merrily.
Cadfael
straightened his back and mopped the sweat from a tonsured scalp burned to the
colour of a ripe hazel-nut; and there was Brother Oswald the almoner bustling
along the path towards him, with skirts flapping, and propelling before him by
the shoulder a boy of about sixteen, in the coarse brown cotte and short summer
hose of the countryside, barelegged but very decently shod in leather, and
altogether looking carefully scrubbed and neat for a special occasion. The boy
went where he was directed, and kept his eyes lowered with nervous meekness.
Another family taking care to put its children out of reach of being pressed
for either side, thought Cadfael, and small blame to them.
“Brother
Cadfael, I think you have need of a helper, and here is a youngster who says
he’s not afraid of hard work. A good woman of the town has brought him in to
the porter, and asked that he be taken and taught as a lay servant. Her nephew
from Hencot, she says, and his parents dead. There’s a year’s endowment with
him. Prior Robert has given leave to take him, and there’s room in the boys’
dortoir. He’ll attend school with the novices, but he’ll not take vows unless
he himself comes to wish it. What do you say, will you have him?”
Cadfael
looked the boy over with interest, but said yes without hesitation, glad enough
to be offered someone young, able-bodied and willing. The lad was slenderly
built, but vigorous and firm on his feet, and moved with a spring. He looked up
warily from under a cropped tangle of brown curls, and his eyes were
long-lashed and darkly blue, very shrewd and bright. He was behaving himself
meekly and decorously, but he did not look intimidated.
“Very
heartily I’ll have you,” said Cadfael, “if you’ll take to this outdoor work
with me. And what’s your name, boy?”
“Godric,
sir,” said the young thing, in a small, gruff voice, appraising Cadfael just as
earnestly as he was being appraised.
“Good,
then, Godric, you and I will get on well enough. And first, if you will, walk
around the gardens here with me and see what we have in hand, and get used to
being within these walls. Strange enough I daresay you’ll find it, but safer
than in the town yonder, which I make no doubt is why your good aunt brought
you here.”
The
blue, bright eyes flashed him one glance and were veiled again.
“See
you come to Vespers with Brother Cadfael,” the almoner instructed, “and Brother
Paul, the master of the novices, will show you your bed, and tell you your
duties after supper. Pay attention to what Brother Cadfael tells you, and be
obedient to him as you should.”
“Yes,
sir,” said the boy virtuously. Under the meek accents a small bubble of
laughter seemed to be trying, though vainly, to burst. When Brother Oswald
hurried away, the blue eyes watched him out of sight, and then turned their
intent gaze upon Cadfael. A demure, oval face, with a wide, firm mouth shaped
properly for laughter, but quick to revert to a very sombre gravity. Even for
those meant to be light-hearted, these were grave times.
“Come,
see what manner of labour you’re taking on yourself,” said Cadfael cheerfully,
and downed his spade to take his new. boy round the enclosed garden, showing
him the vegetables, the herbs that made the noon air heady and drunken with fragrance,
the fish ponds and the beds of pease that ran down almost to the brook. The
early field was already dried and flaxen in the sun, all its harvest gathered,
even the later-sown hung heavy and full in pod.
“These
we should gather today and tomorrow. In this heat they’ll pass their best in a
day. And these spent ones have to be cleared. You can begin that for me. Don’t
pull them up, take the sickle and cut them off low to the ground, and the roots
we plough in, they’re good food for the soil.” He was talking in an easy,
good-humoured flow, to pass off peacefully whatever residue of regret and
strangeness there might be in this abrupt change. “How old are you, Godric?”
“Seventeen,”
said the husky voice beside him. He was on the small side for seventeen; let
him try his hand at digging later on, the ground Cadfael was working was heavy
to till. “I can work hard,” said the boy, almost as though he had guessed at
the thought, and resented it. “I don’t know much, but I can do whatever you
tell me.”
“So
you shall, then, and you can begin with the pease. Stack the dry stuff aside
here, and it goes to provide stable litter. And the roots go back to the
ground.”
“Like
humankind,” said Godric unexpectedly.
“Yes,
like humankind.” Too many were going back to the earth prematurely now in this
fratricidal war. He saw the boy turn his head, almost involuntarily, and look
across the abbey grounds and roofs to where the battered towers of the castle
loomed in their pall of smoke. “Have you kin within there, child?” asked Cadfael
gently.
“No!”
said the boy, too quickly. “But I can’t but think of them. They’re saying in
the town it can’t last long—that it may fall tomorrow. And surely they’ve done
only rightly! Before King Henry died he made his barons acknowledge the Empress
Maud as his heir, and they all swore fealty. She was his only living child, she
should be queen. And yet when her cousin, Count Stephen, seized the throne and
had himself crowned, all too many of them took it meekly and forgot their
oaths. That can’t be right. And it can’t be wrong to stand by the empress
faithfully. How can they excuse changing sides? How can they justify Count
Stephen’s claim?”
“Justify
may not be the apt word, but there are those among the lords, more by far than
take the opposite view, who would say, better a man for overlord than a woman.
And if a man, why, Stephen was as near as any to the throne. He is King
William’s grandchild, just as Maud is.”
“But
not son to the last king. And in any ease, through his mother, who was a woman
like Maud, so where’s the difference?” The young voice had emerged from its
guarded undertone, and rang clear and vehement. “But the real difference was
that Count Stephen rushed here and took what he wanted, while the empress was
far away in Normandy, thinking no evil. And now that half the barons have
recollected their oaths and declared for her, after all, it’s late, and what’s
to come of it but bloodshed and deaths? It begins here, in Shrewsbury, and this
won’t be the end.”
“Child,”
said Cadfael mildly, “are you not trusting me to extremes?”
The
boy, who had picked up the sickle and was swinging it in a capable, testing
hand, turned and looked at him with blue eyes suddenly wide open and unguarded.
“Well, so I do,” he said.
“And
so you may, for that matter. But keep your lips locked among others. We are in
the battlefield here, as sure as in the town, our gates never being closed to
any. All manner of men rub shoulders here, and in rough times some may try to
buy favour with carrying tales. Some may even be collectors of such tales for
their living. Your thoughts are safe in your head, best keep them there.”
The
boy drew back a little, and hung his head. Possibly he felt himself reproved.
Possibly not! “I’ll pay you trust for trust,” said Cadfael. “In my measure
there’s little to choose between two such monarchs, but much to be said for
keeping a man’s fealty and word. And now let me see you hard at work, and when
I’ve finished my cabbage patch I’ll come and help you.”
He
watched the boy set to work, which he did with immense vigour. The coarse tunic
was cut very full, turning a lissome body into a bundle of cloth tied at the
waist; possibly he had got it from some older and larger relative after the
best of the wear was out of it. My friend, thought Cadfael, in this heat you
won’t keep up that pace very long, and then we shall see!
By
the time he joined his assistant in the rustling field of bleached pea-stems,
the boy was red in the face and sweating, and puffing audibly with the strokes
of the sickle, but had not relaxed his efforts. Cadfael swept an armful of cut
haulms to the edge of the field, and said earnestly: “No need to make a penance
of it, lad. Strip off to the waist and be comfortable” And he slid his own
frock, already kilted to the knee, down from powerful brown shoulders, and let
the folds hang at his middle.
The
effect was complex, but by no means decisive. The boy checked momentarily in.
his stroke, said: “I’m well enough as I am!” with admirable composure, but
several tones above the gruff, young-mannish level of his earlier utterances,
and went on resolutely with his labours, at the same time as a distinct wave of
red arose from his collar to engulf his slender neck and the curve of his
cheek. Did that necessarily mean what it seemed to mean? He might have lied
about his age, his voice might be but newly broken and still unstable. And
perhaps he wore no shirt beneath the cotte, and was ashamed to reveal his lacks
to a new acquaintance. Ah, well, there were other tests. Better make sure at
once. If what Cadfael suspected was true, the matter was going to require very
serious thought.
“There’s
that heron that robs our hatcheries, again!” he cried suddenly, pointing across
the Meole brook, where the unsuspecting bird waded, just folding immense wings.
“Toss a stone across at him, boy, you’re nearer than I!” The heron was an
innocent stranger, but if Cadfael was right he was unlikely to come to any
harm.
Godric
stared, clawed up a sizeable stone, and heaved it heartily. His arm swung far
back, swung forward with his slight weight willingly behind it, and hurled the
stone under-arm across the brook and into the shallows, with a splash that sent
the heron soaring, certainly, but several feet from where he had been standing.
“Well,
well!” said Cadfael silently, and settled down to do some hard thinking.
In
his siege camp, deployed across the entire land approach to the Castle
Foregate, between broad coils of the river Severn, King Stephen fretted, fumed
and feasted, celebrating the few loyal Salopians—loyal to him, that is!—who
came to offer him aid, and planning his revenge upon the many disloyal who
absented themselves.
He
was a big, noisy, handsome, simple-minded man, very fair in colouring, very
comely in countenance, and at this stage in his fortunes totally bewildered by
the contention between his natural good nature and his smarting sense of
injury. He was said to be slow-witted, but when his Uncle Henry had died and
left no heir but a daughter, and she handicapped by an Angevin husband and far
away in France, no matter how slavishly her father’s vassals had bowed to his
will and accepted her as queen, Stephen for once in his life had moved with
admirable speed and precision, and surprised his potential subjects into
accepting him at his own valuation before they even had time to consider their
own interests, much less remember reluctant vows. So why had such a successful
coup abruptly turned sour? He would never understand. Why had half of his more
influential subjects, apparently stunned into immobility for a time, revived
into revolt now? Conscience? Dislike of the king imposed upon them?
Superstitious dread of King Henry and his influence with God?
Forced
to take the opposition seriously and resort to arms, Stephen had opened in the
way that came naturally to him, striking hard where he must, but holding the
door cheerfully open for penitents to come in. And what had been the result? He
had spared, and they had taken advantage and despised him for it. He had
invited submission without penalty, as he moved north against the rebel holds,
and the local baronage had held off from him with contempt. Well, tomorrow’s
dawn attack should settle the fate of the Shrewsbury garrison, and make an
example once for all. If these midlanders would not come peacefully and loyally
at his invitation, they should come scurrying like rats to save their own
skins. As for Arnulf of Hesdin… The obscenities and defiances he had hurled
from the towers of Shrewsbury should be regretted bitterly, if briefly.
The
king was conferring in his tent in the meads in the late afternoon, with
Gilbert Prestcote, his chief aide and sheriff-designate of Salop, and Willem
Ten Heyt, the captain of his Flemish mercenaries. It was about the time that
Brother Cadfael and the boy Godric were washing their hands and tidying their
clothing to go to Vespers. The failure of the local gentry to bring in their
own Levies to his support had caused Stephen to lean heavily upon his Flemings,
who in consequence were very well hated, both as aliens and as impervious
professionals, who would as soon burn down a village as get drunk, and were not
at all averse to doing both together. Ten Heyt was a huge, well-favoured man
with reddish-fair hair and long moustaches, barely thirty years old but a
veteran in warfare. Prestcote was a quiet, laconic knight past fifty,
experienced and formidable in battle, cautious in counsel, not a man to go to
extremes, but even he was arguing for severity.
“Your
Grace has tried generosity, and it has been shamelessly exploited to your loss.
It’s time to strike terror.”
“First,”
said Stephen drily, “to take castle and town.”
“That
your Grace may consider as done. What we have mounted for the morning will get
you into Shrewsbury. Then, if they survive the assault, your Grace may do what you
will with FitzAlan, and Adeney, and Hesdin, and the commons of the garrison are
no great matter, but even there you may be well advised to consider an
example.”
The
king would have been content enough then with his revenge on those three who
led the resistance here. William FitzAlan owed his office as sheriff of Salop
to Stephen, and yet had declared and held the castle for his rival. Fulke
Adeney, the greatest of FitzAlan’s vassal lords, had connived at the treason
and supported his overlord wholeheartedly. And Hesdin had condemned himself
over and over out of his own arrogant mouth. The rest were pawns, expendable
but of no importance.
“They
are noising it abroad in the town, as I’ve heard,” said Prestcote, “that
FitzAlan had already sent his wife and children away before we closed the way
north out of the town. But Adeney also has a child, a daughter. She’s said to
be still within the walls. They got the women out of the castle early.”
Prestcote was a man of the shire himself, and knew the local baronage at least
by name and repute. “Adeney’s girl was betrothed from a child to Robert
Beringar’s son, of Maesbury, by Oswestry. They had lands neighbouring in those
parts. I mention it because this is the man who is asking audience of you now,
Hugh Beringar of Maesbury. Use him as you find, your Grace, but until today I
would have said he was FitzAlan’s man, and your enemy. Have him in and judge
for yourself. If he’s changed his coat, well and good, he has men enough at his
command to be useful, but I would not let him in too easily.”
The
officer of the guard had entered the pavilion, and stood waiting to be invited
to speak; Adam Courcelle was one of Prestcote’s chief tenants and his
right-hand man, a tested soldier at thirty years old.
“Your
Grace has another visitor,” he said, when the king turned to acknowledge his
presence. “A lady. Will you see her first? She has no lodging here as yet, and
in view of the hour… She gives her name as Aline Siward, and says that her
father, whom she has only recently buried, was always your man.”
“Time
presses,” said the king. “Let them both come, and the lady shall have first
word.”
Courcelle
led her by the hand into the royal presence, with every mark of deference and
admiration, and she was indeed well worth any man’s attention. She was slender
and shy, and surely no older than eighteen, and the austerity of her mourning,
the white cap and wimple from which a few strands of gold hair crept out to
frame her cheeks, only served to make her look younger still, and more touching.
She had a child’s proud, shy dignity. Great eyes the colour of dark irises
widened wonderingly upon the king’s large comeliness as she made her reverence.
“Madam,”
said Stephen, reaching a hand to her, “I am sorry indeed for your loss, of
which I have this minute heard. If my protection can in any way serve you,
command me.”
“Your
Grace is very kind,” said the girl in a soft, awed voice. “I am now an orphan,
and the only one of my house left to bring you the duty and fealty we owe. I am
doing what my father would have wished, and but for his illness and death he
would have come himself, or I would have come earlier. Until your Grace came to
Shrewsbury we had no opportunity to render you the keys of the two castles we
hold. As I do now!”
Her
maid, a self-possessed young woman a good ten years older than her mistress,
had followed into the tent and stood withdrawn. She came forward now to hand
the keys to Aline, who laid them formally in the king’s hands.
“We
can raise for your Grace five knights, and more than forty men-at-arms, but at
this time I have left all to supply the garrisons at home, since they may be of
more use to your Grace so.” She named her properties and her castellans. It was
like hearing a child recite a lesson learned by heart, but her dignity and
gravity were those of a general in the field. “There is one more thing I should
say plainly, and to my much sorrow. I have a brother, who should have been the
one to perform this duty and service.” Her voice shook slightly, and gallantly
recovered. “When your Grace assumed the crown, my brother Giles took the part
of the Empress Maud, and after an open quarrel with my father, left home to
join her party. I do not know where he is now, though we have heard rumours
that he made his way to her in France. I could not leave your Grace in
ignorance of the dissension that grieves me as it must you. I hope you will not
therefore refuse what I can bring, but use it freely, as my father would have
wished, and as I wish.”
She
heaved a great sigh, as if she had thrown off a weight. The king was enchanted.
He drew her by the hand and kissed her heartily on the cheek. To judge by the
look on his face, Courcelle was envying him the opportunity.
“God
forbid, child,” said the king, “that I should add any morsel to your sorrows,
or fail to lift what I may of them. With all my heart I take your fealty, as
dear to me as that of earl or baron, and thank you for your pains taken to help
me. And now show me what I can do to serve you, for there can be no fit lodging
for you here in a military camp, and I hear you have made no provision as yet
for yourself. It will soon be evening.”
“I
had thought,” she said timidly, “that I might lodge in the abbey guest house,
if we can get a boat to put us across the river.”
“Certainly
you shall have safe escort over the river, and our request to the abbot to give
you one of the grace houses belonging to the abbey, where you may be private
but protected, until we can spare a safe escort to see you to your home.” He
looked about him for a ready messenger, and could not well miss Adam
Courcelle’s glowing eagerness. The young man had bright chestnut hair, and eyes
of the same burning brown, and knew that he stood well with his king. “Adam,
will you conduct Mistress Siward, and see her safely installed?”
“With
all my heart, your Grace,” said Courcelle fervently, and offered an ardent hand
to the lady.
Hugh
Beringar watched the girl pass by, her hand submissive in the broad brown hand
that clasped it, her eyes cast down, her small, gentle face with its
disproportionately large and noble brow tired and sad now that she had done her
errand faithfully. From outside the royal tent he had heard every word. She
looked now as if she might melt into tears at any moment, like a little girl
after a formal ordeal, a child-bride dressed up to advertise her riches or her
lineage, and then as briskly dismissed to the nursery when the transaction was
assured. The king’s officer walked delicately beside her, like a conqueror
conquered, and no wonder.
“Come,
the lord king waits,” said the guttural voice of Willem Ten Heyt in his ear,
and he turned and ducked his head beneath the awning of the tent. The
comparative dimness within veiled the large, fair presence of the king.
“I
am here, my liege,” said Hugh Beringar, and made his obeisance. “Hugh Beringar
of Maesbury, at your Grace’s service with all that I hold. My muster is not
great, six knights and some fifty men-at-arms, but half of them bowmen, and
skilled. And all are yours.”
“Your
name, Master Beringar, is known to us,” said the king drily. “Your
establishment also. That it was devoted to our cause was not so well known. As
I have heard of you, you have been an associate of FitzAlan and Adeney, our
traitors, until very recently. And even this change of heart comes rather
belatedly. I have been some four weeks in these parts, without word from you.”
“Your
Grace,” said Beringar, without haste to excuse himself or apparent discomfort
at his cool reception, “I grew up from a child regarding these men whom you
understandably name your traitors, as my peers and friends, and in friendship
have never found them wanting. Your Grace is too fairminded a man not to admit
that for one like me, who has not so far sworn fealty to any, the choice of a
path at this moment may require a deal of thought, if it is to be made once for
all. That King Henry’s daughter has a reasonable claim is surely beyond
question, I cannot call a man traitor for choosing that cause, though I may
blame him for breaking his oath to you. As for me, I came into my lands only
some months ago, and I have so far sworn fealty to none. I have taken my time
in choosing where I will serve. I am here. Those who flock to you without
thought may fall away from you just as lightly.”
“And
you will not?” said the king sceptically. He was studying this bold and
possibly over-fluent young man with critical attention. A lightweight, not
above the middle height and slenderly built, but of balanced and assured
movement; he might well make up in speed and agility what he lacked in bulk and
reach. Perhaps two or three years past twenty, black-avised, with thin, alert
features and thick, quirky dark brows. An unchancy fellow, because there was no
guessing from his face what went on behind the deep-set eyes. His forthright
speech might be honest, or it might be calculated. He looked quite subtle
enough to have weighed up his sovereign and reasoned that boldness might not be
displeasing.
“And
I will not,” he said firmly. “But that need not pass on my word. It can be put
to the proof hereafter. I am on your Grace’s probation.”
“You
have not brought your force with you?”
“Three
men only are with me. It would have been folly to leave a good castle unmanned
or half-manned, and small service, to you to ask that you feed fifty more
without due provision for the increase. Your Grace has only to tell me where
you would have me serve, and it shall be done.”
“Not
so fast,” said Stephen. “Others may also have need of time and thought before
they embrace you, young man. You were close and in confidence with FitzAlan,
some time ago.”
“I
was. I still have nothing against him but that he has chosen one way, and I the
other.”
“And
as I hear, you are betrothed to Fulke Adeney’s daughter.”
“I
hardly know whether to say to that: I am! or: I was! The times have altered a
great many plans previously made, for others as well as for me. As at this
time, I do not know where the girl is, or whether the bargain still holds.”
“There
are said to be no women now in the castle,” said the king, eyeing him closely.
“FitzAlan’s family may well be clean away, perhaps out of the country by now.
But Adeney’s daughter is thought to be in hiding in the town. It would not be
displeasing to me,” he said with soft emphasis, “to have so valuable a lady in
safe-keeping—in case even my plans should need to be altered. You were of her
father’s party, you must know the places likely to be sheltering her now. When
the way is clear, you, of all people, should be able to find her.”
The
young man gazed back at him with an inscrutable face, in which shrewd black
eyes signalled understanding, but nothing more, neither consent nor resistance,
no admission at all that he knew he was being set a task on which acceptance
and favour might well depend. His face was bland and his voice guileless as he
said: “That is my intent, your Grace. I came from Maesbury with that also in
mind.”
“Well,”
said Stephen, warily content, “you may remain in attendance against the town’s
fall, but we have no immediate work for you here. Should I have occasion to call
you, where will you be found?”
“If
they have room,” said Beringar, “at the abbey guest house.”
The
boy Godric stood through Vespers among the pupils and the novices, far back
among the small fry of the house, and close to the laity, such as lived here outside
the walls on the hither bank of the river, and could still reach this refuge.
He looked, as Brother Cadfael reflected when he turned his head to look for the
child, very small and rather forlorn, and his face, bright and impudent enough
in the herbarium, had grown very solemn indeed here in church. Night was
looming, his first night in this abode. Ah well, his affairs were being taken
in hand more consolingly than he supposed, and the ordeal he was bracing
himself to master need not confront him at all, if things went right, and at
all events not tonight. Brother Paul, the master of the novices, has several
other youngsters to look after, and was glad to have one taken firmly off his
hands.
Cadfael
reclaimed his protйgй after supper, at which meal he was glad to see that
Godric ate heartily. Evidently the boy was of a mettle to fight back against
whatever fears and qualms possessed him, and had the good sense to fortify
himself with the things of the flesh for the struggles of the spirit. Even more
reassuringly, he looked up with relief and recognition when Cadfael laid a hand
on his shoulder as they left the refectory.
“Come,
we’re free until Compline, and it’s cool out in the gardens. No need to stay
inside here, unless you wish.”
The
boy Godric did not wish, he was happy to escape into the summer evening. They
went down at leisure towards the fish ponds and the herbarium, and the boy
skipped at Cadfael’s side, and burst into a gay whistling, abruptly broken off.
“He
said the master of the novices would want me, after supper. Is it really proper
for me to come with you, like this?”
“All
approved and blessed, child, don’t be afraid. I’ve spoken with Brother Paul, we
have his good word. You are my boy, and I am responsible for you.” They had
entered the walled garden, and were suddenly engulfed and drowned in all those
sun-drenched fragrances, rosemary, thyme, fennel, dill, sage, lavender, a whole
world of secret sweetness. The heat of the sun lingered, heady with scent, even
into the cool of the evening. Over their heads swifts wheeled and screamed in
ecstasy.
They
had arrived at the wooden shed, its oiled timbers radiated warmth towards them.
Cadfael opened the door. “This is your sleeping-place, Godric.”
There
was a low bench-bed neatly arrayed at the end of the room. The boy stared, and
quaked under Cadfael’s hand.
“I
have all these medicines brewing here, and some of them need tending regularly,
some very early, they’d spoil if no one minded them. I’ll show you all you have
to do, it’s not so heavy a task. And here you have your bed, and here a grid
you may open for fresh air.” The boy had stopped shaking, the dark blue eyes
were large and measuring, and fixed implacably upon Cadfael. There seemed to be
a smile pending, but there was also a certain aura of offended pride. Cadfael
turned to the door, and showed the heavy bar that guarded it within, and the
impossibility of opening it from without, once that was dropped into its
socket. “You may shut out the world and me until you’re ready to come out to us.”
The
boy Godric, who was not a boy at all, was staring now in direct accusation,
half-offended, half-radiant, wholly relieved.
“How
did you know?” she demanded, jutting a belligerent chin.
“How
were you going to manage in the dortoir?” responded Brother Cadfael mildly.
“I
would have managed. Boys are not so clever, I could have cozened them. Under a
wall like this,” she said, hoisting handfuls of her ample tunic, “all bodies
look the same, and men are blind and stupid.” She laughed then, viewing
Cadfael’s placid competence, and suddenly she was all woman, and startlingly
pretty in her gaiety and relief. “Oh, not you! How did you know? I tried so
hard, I thought I could pass all trials. Where did I go wrong?”
“You
did very well,” said Cadfael soothingly. “But, child, I was forty years about
the world, and from end to end of it, before I took the cowl and came to my
green, sweet ending here. Where did you go wrong? Don’t take it amiss, take it
as sound advice from an ally, if I answer you. When you came to argument, and
meant it with all your heart, you let your voice soar. And never a crack in it,
mind you, to cover the change. That can be learned, I’ll show you when we have
leisure. And then, when I bade you strip and be easy—ah, never blush, child, I
was all but certain then!—of course you put me off. And last, when I got you to
toss a stone across the brook, you did it like a girl, under-arm, with a round
swing. When did you ever see a boy throw like that? Don’t let anyone else trick
you into such another throw, not until you master the art. It betrays you at
once.”
He
stood patiently silent then, for she had dropped on to the bed, and sat with
her head in her hands, and first she began to laugh, and then to cry, and then
both together; and all the while he let her alone, for she was no more out of
control than a man tossed between gain and loss, and manfully balancing his
books. Now he could believe she was seventeen, a budding woman, and a fine one,
too.
When
she was ready, she wiped her eyes on the back of her hand, and looked up
alertly, smiling like sunlight through a rainbow. “And did you mean it?” she
said. “That you’re responsible for me? I said I trusted you to extremes!”
“Daughter
dear,” said Cadfael patiently, “what should I do with you now but serve you as
best I can, and see you safe out of here to wherever you would be?”
“And
you don’t even know who I am,” she said, marvelling. “Who is trusting too far
now?”
“What
difference should it make to me, child, what your name may be? A lass left
forlorn here to weather out this storm and be restored to her own people—is not
that enough? What you want to tell, you’ll tell, and I need no more.”
“I
think I want to tell you everything,” said the girl simply, looking up at him
with eyes wide and candid as the sky. “My father is either in Shrewsbury castle
this minute with his death hanging over him, or out of it and running for his
life with William FitzAlan for the empress’s lands in Normandy, with a hue and
cry ready to be loosed after him any moment. I’m a burden to anyone who
befriends me now, and likely to be a hunted hostage as soon as I’m missed from
where I should be. Even to you, Brother Cadfael, I could be dangerous. I’m
daughter to FitzAlan’s chief ally and friend. My name is Godith Adeney.”
Lame
Osbern, who had been born with both legs withered, and scuttled around at
unbelievable speed on hands provided with wooden pattens, dragging his
shrivelled knees behind him on a little wheeled trolley, was the humblest of
the king’s campfollowers. Normally he had his pitch by the castle gates in the
town, but he had forsaken in time a spot now so dangerous, and transferred his
hopeful allegiance to the edge of the siege camp, as near as he was allowed to
get to the main guard, where the great went in and out. The king was
notoriously open-handed, except towards his enemies-at-arms, and the pickings
were good. The chief military officers, perhaps, were too preoccupied to waste
thought or alms on a beggar, but some of those who came belatedly seeking
favour, having decided which way fortune was tending, were apt to give to the
poor as a kind of sop to God for luck, and the common bowmen and even the
Flemings, when off-duty and merry, tossed Osbern a few coppers, or the scraps
from their mess.
He
had his little wagon backed well into the lee of a clump of half-grown trees,
close to the guard-post, where he might come in for a crust of bread or a
drink, and could enjoy the glow of the field-fire at night. Even summer nights
can strike chill after the heat of the August day, when you have only a few
rags to cover you, and the fire was doubly welcome. They kept it partially
turfed, to subdue the glow, but left themselves light enough to scrutinise any
who came late.
It
was close to midnight when Osbern stirred out of an uneasy sleep, and straining
his ears for the reason, caught the rustling of the bushes behind and to his
left, towards the Castle Foregate but well aside from the open road. Someone
was approaching from the direction of the t9wn, and certainly not from the main
gates, but roundabout in cover from along the riverside. Osbern knew the town
like his own callused palm. Either this was a scout returning from
reconnaissance—but why keep up this stealth right into the camp?—or else
someone had crept out of town or castle by the only other way through the wall
on this side, the water-port that led down to the river.
A
dark figure, visible rather as movement than matter in a moonless night, slid
out from the bushes and made at a crouching, silent scurry for the guard-post.
At the sentry’s challenge he halted immediately, and stood frozen but eager,
and Osbern saw the faint outline of a slight, willowy body, wrapped closely in
a black cloak, so that only a gleam of pale face showed. The voice that
answered the challenge was young, high-pitched, tormentedly afraid and
desperately urgent.
“I
beg audience—I am not armed! Take me to your officer. I have something to
tell—to the king’s advantage…”
They
hauled him in and went over him roughly to ensure he bore no weapons; and whatever
was said between them did not reach Osbern’s ears, but the upshot of it was
that he had his will. They led him within the camp, and there he vanished from
view.
Osbern
did not doze again, the cold of the small hours was gnawing through his rags.
Such a cloak as that, he thought, shivering, I wish the good God would send me!
Yet even the owner of so fine a garment had been shaking, the quavering voice
had betrayed his fear, but also his avid hope. A curious incident, but of no
profit to a poor beggar. Not, that is, until he saw the same figure emerge from
the shadowy alleys of the camp and halt once more at the gate. His step was
lighter and longer now, his bearing less furtive and fearful. He bore some
token from the authorities that was enough to let him out again as he had
entered, unharmed and unmolested. Osbern heard a few words pass:
“I
am to go back, there must be no suspicion… I have my orders!”
Ah,
now, in pure thankfulness for some alleviating merry, he might be disposed to
give. Osbern wheeled himself forward hurriedly into the man’s path, and
extended a pleading hand.
“For
God’s love, master! If he has been gracious to you, be gracious to the poor!”
He
caught a glimpse of a pale face much eased, heard long breaths of relief and
hope. A flicker of firelight caught the elaborate shape of a metal clasp that
fastened the cloak at the throat. Out of the muffling folds a hand emerged, and
dropped a coin into the extended palm. “Say some prayers for me tomorrow,” said
a low, breathless whisper, and the stranger flitted away as he had come, and
vanished into the trees before Osbern had done blessing him for his alms.
Before dawn Osbern was roused again from fitful
sleep, to withdraw himself hastily into the bushes out of all men’s way. For it
was still only the promise of a clear dawn, but the royal camp was astir, so
quietly and in such practical order that he felt rather than heard the
mustering of men, the ordering of ranks, the checking of weapons. The air of
the morning seemed to shake to the tramping of regiments, while barely a sound
could be heard. From curve to curve of Severn, across the neck of land that
afforded the only dry approach to the town, the steady murmur of activity
rippled, awesome and exhilarating, as King Stephen’s army turned out and formed
its divisions for the final assault of Shrewsbury castle.
Chapter Two
LONG
BEFORE NOON IT WAS ALL OVER, the gates fired with brushwood and battered down,
the baileys cleared one by one, the last defiant bowman hunted down from the
walls and towers, smoke heavy and thick like a pall over fortress and town. In
the streets not a human creature or even a dog stirred. At the first assault
every man had gone to earth with wife and family and beasts behind locked and
barred doors, and crouched listening with stretched ears to the thunder and
clash and yelling of battle. It lasted only a short while. The garrison had
reached exhaustion, ill-supplied, thinned by desertions as long as there was
any possibility of escape. Everyone had been certain the next determined attack
must carry the town. The merchants of Shrewsbury waited with held breath for
the inevitable looting, and heaved sighs of relief when it was called to heel
peremptorily by the king himself—not because he grudged his Flemings their booty,
but because he wanted them close about his person. Even a king is vulnerable,
and this had been an enemy town, and was still unpacified. Moreover, his urgent
business was with the garrison of the castle, and in particular with FitzAlan,
and Adeney, and Arnulf of Hesdin.
Stephen
stalked through the smoky, bloody, steel-littered bailey into the hall, and
despatched Courcelle and Ten Heyt and their men with express orders to isolate
the ring leaders and bring them before him. Prestcote he kept at his side; the
keys were in the new lieutenant’s hands, and provisions for the royal garrison
were already in consideration.
“In
the end,” said Prestcote critically, “it has cost your Grace fairly low. In
losses, certainly. In money—the delay was costly, but the castle is intact.
Some repairs to the walls—new gates… This is a stronghold you need never lose
again, I count it worth the time it took to win it.”
“We
shall see,” said Stephen grimly, thinking of Arnulf of Hesdin bellowing his
lordly insults from the towers. As though he courted death!
Courcelle
came in, his helmet off and his chestnut hair blazing. A promising officer,
alert, immensely strong in personal combat, commanding with his men: Stephen
approved him. “Well, Adam. Are they run to earth? Surely FitzAlan is not hiding
somewhere among the barns, like a craven servant?”
“No,
your Grace, by no means!” said Courcelle ruefully. “We have combed this
fortress from roof to dungeons, I promise you we have missed nothing. But
FitzAlan is clean gone! Give us time, and we’ll find for you the day, the hour,
the route they took, their plans.”
“They?”
blazed Stephen, catching at the plural.
“Adeney
is away with him. Not a doubt of it, they’re loose. Sorry I am to bring your
Grace such news, but truth is truth.” And give him his due, he had the guts to
utter such truths. “Hesdin,” he said, “we have. He is here without. Wounded,
but not gravely, nothing but scratched. I put him in irons for safety, but I
think he is hardly in such heart as when he lorded it within here, and your
Grace was well outside.”
“Bring
him in,” ordered the king, enraged afresh to find he had let two of his chief
enemies slip through his fingers.
Arnulf
of Hesdin came in limping heavily, and dragging chains at wrist and ankle; a
big, florid man nearing sixty, soiled with dust, smoke and blood. Two of the
Flemings thrust him to his knees before the king. His face was fixed and
fearful, but defiant still.
“What,
are you tamed?” exulted the king. “Where’s your insolence now? You had plenty
to say for yourself only a day or two ago, are you silenced? Or have you the
wit to talk another language now?”
“Your
Grace,” said Hesdin, grating out words evidently hateful to him, “you are the
victor, and I am at your mercy, and at your feet, and I have fought you fair,
and I look to be treated honourably now. I am a nobleman of England and of
France. You have need of money, and I am worth an earl’s ransom, and I can pay
it.”
“Too
late to speak me fair, you who were loud-mouthed and foul-mouthed when there
were walls between us. I swore to have your life then, and have it I will. An
earl’s ransom cannot buy it back. Shall I quote you my price? Where is
FitzAlan? Where is Adeney? Tell me in short order where I may lay hands on
those two, and better pray that I succeed, and I may—may!—consider letting you
keep your miserable life.”
Hesdin
reared his head and stared the king in the eyes. “I find your price too high,”
he said. “Only one thing I’ll tell you concerning my comrades, they did not run
from you until all was already lost. And live or die, that’s all you’ll get
from me. Go hunt your own noble game!”
“We
shall see!” flared the king, infuriated. “We shall see whether we get no more
from you! Have him away, Adam, give him to Ten Heyt, and see what can be done
with him. Hesdin, you have until two of the clock to tell us everything you
know concerning their flight, or else I hang you from the battlements. Take him
away!”
They
dragged him out still on his knees. Stephen sat fuming and gnawing at his
knuckles. “Is it true, you think, Prestcote, the one thing he did say? That
they fled only when the fight was already lost? Then they may well be still in
the town. How could they break through? Not by the Foregate, clean through our
ranks. And the first companies within were sped straight for the two bridges.
Somewhere in this island of a town they must be hiding. Find them!”
“They
could not have reached the bridges,” said Prestcote positively. “There’s only
one other way out, and that’s by the water-gate to the river. I doubt if they
could have swum Severn there without being seen, I am sure they had no boat.
Most likely they are in hiding somewhere in the town.”
“Scour
it! Find them! No looting until I have them safe in hold. Search everywhere,
but find them.”
While
Ten Heyt and his Flemings rounded up the prisoners taken in arms, and disposed
the new garrison under Prestcote’s orders, Courcelle and others with their
companies pressed on through the town, confirmed the security of the two
bridges, and set about searching every house and shop within the walls. The
king, his conquest assured, returned to his camp with his own bodyguard, and
waited grimly for news of his two fugitives. It was past two o’clock when
Courcelle reported back to him.
“Your
Grace,” he said bluntly, “there is no better word than failure to bring you. We
have searched every street, every officer and merchant of the town has been
questioned, all premises ransacked. It is not such a great town, and unless by
some miracle I do not see how they can well have got outside the walls unseen.
But we have not found them, neither FitzAlan nor Adeney, nor trace nor word of
them. In case they’ve swum the river and got clear beyond the Abbey Foregate,
I’ve sent out a fast patrol that way, but I doubt if we shall hear of them now.
And Hesdin is obdurate still. Not a word to be got from him, and Ten Heyt has
done his best, short of killing too soon. We shall get nothing from him. He
knows the penalty. Threats will do nothing.”
“He
shall have what he was promised,” said Stephen grimly. “And the rest? How many
were taken of the garrison?”
“Apart
from Hesdin, ninety-three in arms.” Courcelle watched the handsome, frowning
face; bitterly angry and frustrated as the king was, he was unlikely to keep
his grudges hot too long. They had been telling him for weeks that it was a
fault in him to forgive too readily. “Your Grace, clemency now would be taken
for weakness,” said Courcelle emphatically.
“Hang
them!” said Stephen, jerking out sentence harshly before he wavered.
“All?”
“All!
And at once. Have them all out of the world before tomorrow.”
They
gave the grisly work to the Flemings to do. It was what mercenaries were for,
and it kept them busy all that day, and out of the houses of the town, which
otherwise would have been pillaged of everything of value. The interlude,
dreadful as it was, gave the guilds and the reeve and the bailiffs time to
muster a hasty delegation of loyalty to the king, and obtain at least a grim
and sceptical motion of grace. He might not believe in their sudden devotion,
but he could appreciate its urgency.
Prestcote
deployed his new garrison and made all orderly in the castle below, while Ten
Heyt and his companies despatched the old garrison wholesale from the
battlements. Arnulf of Hesdin was the first to die. The second was a young
squire who had had a minor command under him; he was in a state of frenzied
dread, and was hauled to his death yelling and protesting that he had been
promised his life. The Flemings who handled him spoke little English, and were
highly diverted by his pleadings, until the noose cut them off short.
Adam
Courcelle confessed himself only too glad to get away from the slaughter, and
pursue his searches to the very edges of the town, and across the bridges into
the suburbs. But he found no trace of William FitzAlan or Fulke Adeney.
From
the morning’s early alarm to the night’s continuing slaughter, a chill hush of
horror hung over the abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul. Rumours flew thick as
bees in swarm, no one knew what was really happening, but everyone knew that it
would be terrible. The brothers doggedly pursued their chosen rйgime, service
after service, chapter and Mass and the hours of work, because life could only
be sustained by refusing to let it be disrupted, by war, catastrophe or death.
To the Mass after chapter came Aline Siward with her maid Constance, pale and
anxious and heroically composed; and perhaps as a result, Hugh Beringar also
attended, for he had observed the lady passing from the house she had been
given in the Foregate, close to the abbey’s main mill.
During
the service he paid rather more attention to the troubled, childish profile
beneath the white mourning wimple than to the words of the celebrant.
Her
small hands were devoutly folded, her resolute, vulnerable lips moved silently,
praying piteously for all those dying and being hurt while she kneeled here.
The girl Constance watched her closely and jealously, a protective presence,
but could not drive the war away from her.
Beringar
followed at a distance until she re-entered her house. He did not seek to
overtake her, nor attempt as yet to speak to her. When she had vanished, he
left his henchmen behind, and went out along the Foregate to the end of the
bridge. The section that drew up was still lifted, sealing in the town, but the
clamour and shrieking of battle was already subsiding to his right, where the
castle loomed in its smoky halo beyond the river. He would still have to wait
before he could carry out his promised search for his affianced bride. Within
the hour, if he had read the signs aright, the bridge should be down, and open.
Meantime, he went at leisure to take his midday meal. There was no hurry.
Rumours
flew in the guest house, as everywhere else. Those who had business of
unimpeachable honesty elsewhere were all seeking to pack their bags and leave.
The consensus of opinion was that the castle had certainly fallen, and the cost
would run very high. King Stephen’s writ had better be respected henceforth,
for he was here, and victorious, and the Empress Maud, however legitimate her
claim, was far away in Normandy, and unlikely to provide any adequate
protection. There were whispers, also, that FitzAlan and Adeney, at the last
moment, had broken out of the trap and were away. For which many breathed
thanks, though silently.
When
Beringar went out again, the bridge was down, the way open, and King Stephen’s
sentries manning the passage. They were strict in scrutinising his credentials,
but passed him within respectfully when they were satisfied. Stephen must have
given orders concerning him. He crossed, and entered at the guarded but open
gate in the wall. The street rose steeply, the island town sat high.
Beringar
knew it well, and knew where he was bound. At the summit of the hill the row of
the butchers’ stalls and houses levelled out, silent and deserted.
Edric
Flesher’s shop was the finest of the row, but it was shuttered and still like
all the rest. Hardly a head looked out, and even then only briefly and
fearfully, and was withdrawn as abruptly behind barred doors. By the look of
the street, they had not so far been ravaged. Beringar thudded at the shut
door, and when he heard furtive stirrings within, lifted his voice: “Open to
me, Hugh Beringar! Edric—Petronilla—Let me in, I’m alone!”
He
had half expected that the door would remain sealed like a tomb, and those
within silent, and he would not have blamed them; but, instead, the door was
flung wide, and there was Petronilla beaming and opening her arms to him as if
to a saviour. She was getting old, but still plump, succulent and kindly, the
most wholesome thing he had seen in this siege town so far. Her grey hair was
tight and neat under its white cap, and her twinkling grey eyes bright and
intelligent as ever, welcoming him in.
“Master
Hugh—to see a known and trusted face here now!” Beringar was instantly sure
that she did not quite trust him! “Come in, and welcome! Edric, here’s
Hugh—Hugh Beringar!” And there was her husband, prompt to her call, large and
rubicund and competent, the master of his craft in this town, and a councillor.
They
drew him within, and closed the door firmly, as he noted and approved. Beringar
said what a lover should say, without preamble: “Where is Godith? I came to
look for her, to provide for her. Where has he hidden her?”
It
seemed they were too intent on making sure the shutters were fast, and
listening for hostile footsteps outside, to pay immediate attention to what he
was saying. And too ready with questions of their own to answer his questions.
“Are
you hunted?” asked Edric anxiously. “Do you need a place to hide?”
And:
“Were you in the garrison?” demanded Petronilla, and patted him concernedly in
search of wounds. As though she had been his nurse once, instead of Godith’s,
and seen him every day of his life instead of twice or thrice since the
childhood betrothal. A little too much solicitude! And a neat, brief
breathing-space while they considered how much or how little to tell him!
“They’ve
been hunting here already,” said Ethic. “I doubt if they’ll come again, they
had the place to pieces after the sheriff and the Lord Fulke. You’re welcome to
a shelter here if you need it. Are they close on your heels?”
He
was sure by that time that they knew he had never been inside the castle, nor
committed in any way to FitzAlan’s stand. This clever, trusted old servant and
her husband had been deep in Adeney’s confidence, they knew very well who had
held with him, and who had held aloof.
“No,
it’s not that. I’m in no danger and no need. I came only to look for Godith.
They’re saying he left it too late to send her away with FitzAlan’s family.
Where can I find her?”
“Did
someone send you here to look for her?” asked Edric.
“No,
no, none… But where else would he place her? Who is there to be trusted like
her nurse? Of course I came first to you! Never tell me she was not here!”
“She
was here,” said Petronilla. “Until a week ago we had her. But she’s gone, Hugh,
you’re too late. He sent two knights to fetch her away, and not even we were
told where she was bound. What we don’t know we can’t be made to tell, he said.
But it’s my belief they got her away out of the town in good time, and she’s
far off by now, and safe, pray God!” No doubt about the fervency of that
prayer, she would fight and die for her nurseling. And lie for her, too, if
need be!
“But
for God’s sake, friends, can you not help me to her at all? I’m her intended
husband. I’m responsible for her if her father is dead, as by now, for all I
know, he may well be…”
That
got him something for his trouble, at any rate, if it was no more than the
flicker of a glance passing between them, before they exclaimed their “God
forbid!” in unison. They knew very well, by the frenzied search, that FitzAlan
and Adeney had been neither killed nor taken. They could not yet be sure that they
were clean away and safe, but they were staking their lives and loyalty on it.
So now he knew he would get nothing more from them, he, the renegade.
Not,
at any rate, by this direct means.
“Sorry
I am, lad,” said Edric Flesher weightily, “to have no better comfort for you,
but so it is. Take heart that at least no enemy has laid hand on her, and we
pray none ever will.” Which could well be taken, reflected Beringar
whimsically, as a thrust at me.
“Then
I must away, and try what I can discover elsewhere,” he said dejectedly. “I’ll
not put you in further peril. Open, Petronilla, and look if the street’s empty
for me.” Which she did, nothing loth, and reported it as empty as a beggar’s
palm. Beringar clasped Edric’s hand, and leaned and kissed Ethic’s wife, and
was rewarded and avenged by a vivid, guilty blush.
“Pray
for her,” he said, asking one thing at least they would not grudge him, and
slipped through the half-open door, and heard it closed firmly behind him. Not
too loudly, since he was supposed to be affecting stealth, but still audibly,
he tramped with hasty steps along the street as far as the corner of the house.
Then, whirling, he skipped back silently on his toes to lay an ear to the
shutter.
“Hunting
for his bride!” Petronilla was saying scornfully. “Yes, and a fair price he’d
pay for her, too, and she a certain decoy for her father’s return, if not for
FitzAlan’s! He has his way to make with Stephen now, and my girl’s his best
weapon.”
“Maybe
we’re too hard on him,” responded Edric mildly. “Who’s to say he doesn’t truly
want to see the girl safe? But I grant you we dared take no chances. Let him do
his own hunting.”
“Thank
God,” she said fiercely, “he can’t well know I’ve hid my lamb away in the one
place where no sane man will look for her!” And she chuckled at the word “man.”
“There’ll
be a time to get her out of there later, when all the hue and cry’s forgotten.
Now I pray her father’s miles from here and riding hard. And that those two
lads in Frankwell will have a lucky run westward with the sheriff’s treasury
tonight. May they all come safe to Normandy, and be serviceable to the empress,
bless her!”
“Hush,
love!” said Edric chidingly. “Even behind locked doors…”
They
had moved away into an inner room; a door closed between. Hugh Beringar abandoned
his listening-post and walked demurely away down the long, curving hill to the
town gate and the bridge, whistling softly and contentedly as he went.
He
had got more even than he had bargained for. So they were hoping to smuggle out
FitzAlan’s treasury, as well as his person, and this very night, westward into
Wales! And had had the forethought to stow it away meantime, against this
desperate contingency, outside the walls of the town, somewhere in the suburb
of Frankwell. No gates to pass, no bridges to cross. As for Godith—he had a
shrewd idea now where to look for her. With the girl and the money, he
reflected, a man could buy the favour of far less corruptible men than King
Stephen!
Godith
was in the herbarium workshop, obstinately stirring, diluting and mixing as she
had been shown, an hour before Vespers, with her heart in anguished suspense,
and her mind in a twilight between hope and despair. Her face was grubby from
smearing away tears with a hand still soiled from the garden, and her eyes were
rimmed with the washed hollows and grimed uplands of her grief and tension. Two
tears escaped from her angry efforts at damming them, while both hands were
occupied, and fell into a brew which should not have been weakened. Godith
swore, an oath she had learned in the mews, long ago, when the falconers were
suffering from a careless and impudent apprentice who had been her close
friend.
“Rather
say a blessing with them,” said Brother Cadfael’s voice behind her shoulder,
gently and easily. “That’s likely to be the finest tisane for the eyes I ever
brewed. Never doubt God was watching.” She had turned her dirty, dogged,
appealing face to him in silence, finding encouragement in the very tone of his
voice. “I’ve been to the gate house, and the mill, and the bridge. Such ill
news as there is, is ill indeed, and presently we’ll go pray for the souls of
those quitting this world. But all of us quit it at last, by whatever way,
that’s not the worst of evils. And there is some news not all evil. From all I
can hear this side Severn, and at the bridge itself—there’s an archer among the
guard there was with me in the Holy Land—your father and FitzAlan are neither
dead, wounded nor captive, and all search of the town has failed to find them.
They’re clear away, Godric, my lad. I doubt if Stephen for all his hunting will
lay hand on them now. And now you may tend to that wine you’re watering, and
practise your young manhood until we can get you safely out of here after your
sire.”
Just
for a moment she rained tears like the spring thaw, and then she glinted
radiance like the spring sun. There was so much to grieve over, and so much to
celebrate, she did not know which to do first, and essayed both together, like
April. But her age was April, and the hopeful sunshine won.
“Brother
Cadfael,” she said when she was calm, “I wish my father could have known you.
And yet you are not of his persuasion, are you?”
“Child,
dear,” said Cadfael comfortably, “my monarch is neither Stephen nor Maud, and
in all my life and all my fighting I’ve fought for only one king. But I value
devotion and fidelity, and doubt if it matters whether the object falls short.
What you do and what you are is what matters. Your loyalty is as sacred as
mine. Now wash your face and bathe your eyes, and you can sleep for half an
hour before Vespers—but no, you’re too young to have the gift!”
She
had not the gift that comes with age, but she had the exhaustion that comes of
youthful stress, and she fell asleep on her bench-bed within seconds, drugged
with the syrup of relief. He awoke her in time to cross the close for Vespers.
She walked beside him discreetly, her shock of clipped curls combed forward on
her brow to hide her still reddened eyes.
Driven
to piety by shock and terror, all the inhabitants of the guest house were also
converging on the church, among them Hugh Beringar; not, perhaps, a victim of
fear, but drawn by the delicate bait of Aline Siward, who came hastening from
her house by the mill with lowered eyes and heavy heart. Beringar had, none the
less, a quick eye for whatever else of interest might be going on round about
him. He saw the two oddly contrasted figures coming in from the gardens, the
squat, solid, powerful middle-aged monk with the outdoor tan and the rolling,
seaman’s gait, with his hand protectively upon the shoulder of a slip of a boy
in a cotte surely inherited from an older and larger kinsman, a bare-legged,
striding youth squinting warily through a bush of brown hair. Beringar looked,
and considered; he smiled, but so inwardly that on his long, mobile mouth the
smile hardly showed.
Godith
controlled both her face and her pace, and gave no sign of recognition. In the
church she strolled away to join her fellow-pupils, and even exchanged a few
nudges and grins with them. If he was still watching, let him wonder, doubt,
change his mind. He had not seen her for more than five years. Whatever his
speculations, he could not be sure. Nor was he watching this part of the
church, she noted; his eyes were on the unknown lady in mourning most of the
time. Godith began to breathe more easily, and even allowed herself to examine
her affianced bridegroom almost as attentively as he was observing Aline
Siward. When last seen, he had been a coltish boy of eighteen, all elbows and
knees, not yet in full command of his body. Now he had a cat’s assured and
contemptuous grace, and a cool, aloof way with him. A presentable enough
fellow, she owned critically, but no longer of interest to her, or possessed of
any rights in her. Circumstances alter fortunes. She was relieved to see that
he did not look in her direction again.
All
the same, she told Brother Cadfael about it, as soon as they were alone
together in the garden after supper, and her evening lesson with the boys was
over. Cadfael took it gravely.
“So
that’s the fellow you were to marry! He came here straight from the king’s
camp, and has certainly joined the king’s party, though according to Brother
Dennis, who collects all the gossip that’s going among his guests, he’s on
sufferance as yet, and has to prove himself before he’ll get a command.” He
scrubbed thoughtfully at his blunt, brown nose, and pondered. “Did it seem to
you that he recognised you? Or even looked over-hard at you, as if you reminded
him of someone known?”
“I
thought at first he did give me a hard glance, as though he might be wondering.
But then he never looked my way again, or showed any interest. No, I think I
was mistaken. He doesn’t know me. I’ve changed in five years, and in this
guise… In another year,” said Godith, astonished and almost alarmed at the
thought, “we should have been married.”
“I
don’t like it!” said Cadfael, brooding. “We shall have to keep you well out of
his sight. If he wins his way in with the king, maybe he’ll leave here with him
in a week or so. Until then, keep far from the guest house or the stables, or
the gate house, or anywhere he may be. Never let him set eyes on you if you can
avoid.”
“I
know!” said Godith, shaken and grave. “If he does find me he may turn me to
account for his own advancement. I do know! Even if my father had reached
shipboard, he would come back and surrender himself, if I were threatened. And
then he would die, as all those poor souls over there have died…” She could not
bear to turn her head to look towards the towers of the castle, hideously
ornamented. They were dying there still, though she did not know it; the work
went on well into the hours of darkness. “I will avoid him, like the plague,”
she said fervently, “and pray that he’ll leave soon.”
Abbot
Heribert was an old, tired and peace-loving man, and disillusionment with the
ugly tendencies of the time, combined with the vigour and ambition of his
prior, Robert, had disposed him to withdraw from the world ever deeper into his
own private consolations of the spirit. Moreover, he knew he was in disfavour
with the king, like all those who had been slow to rally to him with vociferous
support. But confronted with an unmistakable duty, however monstrous, the abbot
could still muster courage enough to rise to the occasion. There were ninety-four
dead or dying men being disposed of like animals, and every one had a soul, and
a right to proper burial, whatever his crimes and errors. The Benedictines of
the abbey were the natural protectors of those rights, and Heribert did not
intend King Stephen’s felons to be shovelled haphazard and nameless into an
unmarked grave. All the same, he shrank from the horror of the task, and looked
about him for someone more accomplished in these hard matters of warfare and
bloodshed than himself, to lend support. And the obvious person was Brother
Cadfael, who had crossed the world in the first Crusade, and afterwards spent
ten years as a sea captain about the coasts of the Holy Land, where fighting
hardly ever ceased.
After
Compline, Abbot Heribert sent for Cadfael to his private parlour.
“Brother,
I am going—now, this night—to ask King Stephen for his leave and authority to
give Christian burial to all those slaughtered prisoners. If he consents,
tomorrow we must take up their poor bodies, and prepare them decently for the
grave. There will be some who can be claimed by their own families, the rest we
shall bury honourably with the rites due to them. Brother, you have yourself
been a soldier. Will you—if I speak with the king—will you take charge of this
work?”
“Not
gladly, but with all my heart, for all that,” said Brother Cadfael, “yes,
Father, I will.”
Chapter
Three
“YES,
I WILL,” SAID GODITH, “if that’s how I can best be useful to you. Yes, I will
go to my morning lesson and my evening lesson, eat my dinner without a word or
a look to anyone, and then make myself scarce and shut myself up here among the
potions. Yes, and drop the bar on the door, if need be, and wait until I hear
your voice before I open again. Of course I’ll do as you bid. But for all that,
I wish I could go with you. These are my father’s people and my people, I wish
I could have some small part in doing them these last services.”
“Even
if it were safe for you to venture there,” said Cadfael firmly, “and it is not,
I would not let you go. The ugliness that man can do to man might cast a shadow
between you and the certainty of the justice and mercy God can do to him
hereafter. It takes half a lifetime to reach the spot where eternity is always
visible, and the crude injustice of the hour shrivels out of sight. You’ll come
to it when the time’s right. No, you stay here and keep well out of Hugh
Beringar’s way.”
He
had even thought of recruiting that young man into his working-party of
able-bodied and devoutly inclined helpers, to make sure that he spent the day
away from anywhere Godith might be. Whether in a bid to acquire merit for their
own souls, out of secret partisan sympathy with the dead men’s cause, or to
search anxiously for friends or kin, three of the travellers in the guest house
had volunteered their aid, and it might have been possible, with such an
example, to inveigle others, even Beringar, into feeling obliged to follow
suit. But it seemed that the young man was already out and away on horseback,
perhaps dancing hopeful attendance on the king; a newcomer seeking office can’t
afford to let his face be forgotten. He had also ridden out the previous
evening as soon as Vespers was over, so said the lay brothers in the stables.
His three men-at-arms were here, idling their day away with nothing to do once
the horses were groomed, fed and exercised, but they saw no reason why they
should involve themselves in an activity certainly unpleasant, and possibly
displeasing to the king. Cadfael could not blame them. He had a muster of twenty,
brothers, lay brothers and the three benevolent travellers, when they set out
across the bridge and through the streets of the town to the castle.
Probably
King Stephen had been glad enough to have a service offered voluntarily which
he might otherwise have had to impose by order. Someone had to bury the dead,
or the new garrison would be the first to suffer, and in an enclosed fortress
in a tightly walled town disease can fester and multiply fearfully. All the
same, the king would perhaps never forgive Abbot Heribert for the implied
reproach, and the reminder of his Christian duty. Howbeit, the old man had
brought back the needful authority; Cadfael’s party was passed through the
gates without question, and Cadfael himself admitted to Prestcote’s presence.
“Your
lordship will have had orders about us,” he said briskly. “We are here to take
charge of the dead, and I require clean and adequate space where they may be
decently laid until we take them away for burial. If we may draw water from the
well, that’s all besides that we need ask. Linen we have brought with us.”
“The
inner ward has been left empty,” said Prestcote indifferently. “There is room
there, and there are boards you may use if you need them.”
“The
king has also granted that such of these unfortunates as were men of this town,
and have families or neighbours here, can be claimed and taken away for private
burial. Will you have that cried through the town, when I am satisfied that all
is ready? And give them free passage in and out?”
“If
there are any bold enough to come,” said Prestcote drily, “they may have their
kin and welcome. The sooner all this carrion is removed, the better shall I be
pleased.”
“Very
well! Then what have you done with them?” For the walls and towers had been
denuded before dawn of their sudden crop of sorry fruit. The Flemings must have
worked half the night to put the evidence out of sight, which was surely not
their idea, but might well be Prestcote’s. He had approved these deaths, he did
not therefore have to take pleasure in them, and he was an old soldier of
strict and orderly habits, who liked a clean garrison.
“We
cut them down, when they were well dead, and dropped them over the parapet into
the green ditch under the wall. Go out by the Foregate, and between the towers
and the road you’ll find them.”
Cadfael
inspected the small ward offered him, and it was at least clean and private,
and had room for all. He led his party out through the gate in the town wall,
and down into the deep, dry ditch beneath the towers. Long, fruiting grasses
and low bushes partially hid what on closer approach looked like a battlefield.
The dead lay piled deep at one spot close under the wall, and were sprawled and
scattered like broken toys for yards on either side. Cadfael and his helpers
tucked up their gowns and went to work in pairs, without word spoken,
disentangling the knotted skein of bodies, carrying away first the most
accessible, lifting apart those shattered into boneless embraces by their fall
from above. The sun climbed high, and the heat was reflected upon them from the
stone of the walls. The three pious travellers shed their cottes. In the deep
hollow the air grew heavy and stifling, and they sweated and laboured for
breath, but never flagged.
“Pay
close attention always,” said Cadfael warningly, “in case some poor soul still
breathes. They were in haste, they may have cut someone down early. And in this
depth of cushioning below, a man could survive even the fall.”
But
the Flemings, for all their hurry, had been thorough. There was no live man
salvaged out of that massacre.
They
had started work early, but it was approaching noon by the time they had all
the dead laid out in the ward, and were beginning the work of washing and
composing the bodies as becomingly as possible, straightening broken limbs,
closing and weighting eyelids, even brushing tangled hair into order, and
binding fallen jaws, so that the dead face might be no horror to some
unfortunate parent or wife who had loved it in life. Before he would go to
Prestcote and ask for the promised proclamation to be made, Cadfael walked the
range of his salvaged children, and checked that they were as presentable as
they could well be made. And as he paced, he counted. At the end he frowned,
and stood to consider, then went back and counted again. And that done, he
began a much closer scrutiny of all those he had not himself handled, drawing
down the linen wrappings that covered the worst ravages. When he rose from the
last of them, his face was grim, and he marched away in search of Prestcote
without a word to any.
“How
many,” demanded Cadfael, “did you say you despatched at the king’s order?”
“Ninety-four,”
said Prestcote, puzzled and impatient.
“Either
you did not count,” said Cadfael, “or you miscounted. There are ninety-five
here.”
“Ninety-four
or ninety-five,” said Prestcote, exasperated, “one more or less, what does it
matter? Traitors all, and condemned, am I to tear my hair because the number
does not tally?”
“Not
you, perhaps,” said Cadfael simply, “but God will require an accounting.
Ninety-four, including Arnulf of Hesdin, you had orders to slay. Justified or
not, that at least was ordered, you had your sanction, the thing is registered
and understood. Any accounting for those comes later and in another court. But
the ninety-fifth is not in the reckoning, no king authorised his removal out of
this world, no castellan had orders to kill him, never was he accused or
convicted of rebellion, treason or any other crime, and the man who destroyed
him is guilty of murder.”
“God’s
wounds!” exploded Prestcote violently. “An officer in the heat of fighting
miscounts by one, and you would make a coram rege case out of it! He was
omitted in the count delivered, but he was taken in arms and hanged like the
rest, and no more than his deserts. He rebelled like the rest, he is hanged
like the rest, and that’s an end of it. In God’s name, man, what do you want me
to do?”
“It
would be well,” said Cadfael flatly, “if you would come and look at him, to
begin with. For he is not like the rest. He was not hanged like the rest, his
hands were not bound like the rest—he is in no way comparable, though someone
took it for granted we would all see and think as you, and omit to count. I am
telling you, my lord Prestcote, there is a murdered man among your executed
men, a leaf hidden in your forest. And if you regret that my eyes found him, do
you think God had not seen him long before? And supposing you could silence me,
do you think God will keep silence?”
Prestcote
had stopped pacing by that time, and stood staring very intently. “You are in
good earnest,” he said, shaken. “How could there be a man there dead in some
other way? Are you sure of what you say?”
“I
am sure. Come and see! He is there because some felon put him there, to pass
for one among the many, and arouse no curiosity, and start no questions.”
“Then
he would need to know that the many would be there.”
“Most
of this town and all this garrison would know that, by nightfall. This was a
deed of night. Come and see!”
And
Prestcote went with him, and showed every sign of consternation and concern.
But so would a guilty man, and who was better placed to know all a guilty man
needed to know, to protect himself? Still, he kneeled with Cadfael beside the
body that was different, there in the confines of the ward, between high walls,
with the odour of death just spreading its first insidious pall over them.
A
young man, this. No armour on him, but naturally the rest had been stripped of
theirs, nail and plate being valuable. But his dress was such as to suggest
that he had worn neither mail nor leather, he was clad in lightweight, dark
cloth, but booted, the manner of dress a man would wear for a journey in summer
weather, to ride light, be warm enough by night, and shed the short cotte to be
cool enough by day. He looked about twenty-five years old, no more, reddish
brown in colouring and round and comely of face, if the eye could make
allowance for the congestion of strangulation, now partially smoothed out by
Cadfael’s experienced fingers. The bulge and stare of the eyes was covered, but
the lids stood large.
“He
died strangled,” said Prestcote, relieved to see the signs.
“He
did, but not by a rope. And not with hands bound, like these others. Look!”
Cadfael drew down the folds of the capuchon from the round young throat, and
showed the sharp, cruel line that seemed to sever head from body. “You see the
thinness of this cord that took his life? No man ever dangled from such a
noose. It runs level round his neck, and is fine as fishing line. It may well
have been fishing line. You see the edges of this furrow in his flesh,
discoloured, and shiny? The cord that killed him was waxed, to bite smooth and
deep. And you see this pit here behind?” He raised the lifeless head gently on
his arm, and showed, close to the knotted cord of the spine, a single, deep,
bruised hollow, with a speck of black blood at its heart. “The mark of one end
of a wooden peg, a hand-hold to twist when the cord was round the victim’s
throat. Stranglers use such waxed cords, with two hand-holds at the
ends—killers by stealth, highway birds of prey. Given strength of hand and
wrist, it is a very easy way of seeing your enemies out of this world. And do
you see, my lord, how his neck, where the thong bites, is lacerated and beaded with
dried blood? Now see here, both hands—Look at his nails, black at the tips with
his own blood. He clawed at the cord that was killing him. His hands were free.
Did you hang any whose hands were not tied?”
“No!”
Prestcote was so fascinated by the details he could not deny that the answer
escaped him involuntarily. It would have been futile to snatch it back. He
looked up at Brother Cadfael across the unknown young man’s body, and his face
sharpened and hardened into hostility. “There is nothing to be gained,” he said
deliberately, “by making public so wild a tale. Bury your dead and be content.
Let the rest be!”
“You
have not considered,” said Cadfael mildly, “that as yet there is no one who can
put a name or a badge to this boy. He may as well be an envoy of the king as an
enemy. Better treat him fairly, and keep your peace with both God and man.
Also,” he said, in a tone even more cloistrally innocent, “you may raise doubts
of your own integrity if you meddle with truth. If I were you, I would report this
faithfully, and send out that proclamation to the townsfolk at once, for we are
ready. Then, if any can claim this young man, you have delivered your soul. And
if not, then clearly you have done all man can do to right a wrong. And your
duty ends there.”
Prestcote
eyed him darkly for some moments, and then rose abruptly from his knees. “I
will send out the word,” he said, and stalked away into the hail.
The
news was cried through the town, and word sent formally to the abbey, so that
the same announcement might be made at the guest house there. Hugh Beringar,
riding in from the east on his return from the king’s camp, having forded the
river at an island downstream, heard the proclamation at the gate house of the
abbey, and saw among those anxiously listening the slight figure of Aline
Siward, who had come out from her house to hear the news. For the first time he
saw her with head uncovered. Her hair was the light, bright gold he had
imagined it would be, and shed a few curling strands on either side her oval
face. The long lashes shadowing her eyes were many shades darker, a rich
bronze. She stood listening intently, gnawed a doubtful lip, and knotted her
small hands together. She looked hesitant, and burdened, and very young.
Beringar
dismounted only a few paces from her, as if he had by mere chance chosen that
spot in order to be still and hear to the end what Prior Robert was saying.
“—and
his Grace the king gives free warranty to any who may wish, to come and claim
their kin, if there be any such among the executed, and give them burial in
their own place and at their own charge. Also, since there is one in particular
whose identity is not known, he desires that all who come may view him, and if
they can, name him. All which may be done without fear of penalty or
disfavour.”
Not
everyone would take that at its face value, but she did. What was troubling her
was not fear of any consequences to herself, but a desperate feeling that she
ought to make this dolorous pilgrimage, while equally earnestly she shrank from
the horrors she might have to see. She had, Beringar remembered, a brother who
had defied his father and run off to join the empress’s adherents; and though
she had heard rumours that he might have reached France, she had no means of
knowing if they were true. Now she was struggling to escape the conviction that
wherever there were garrisons of her brother’s faction fallen victims of this
civil war, she ought to go and assure herself that he was not among them. She
had the most innocent and eloquent of faces, her every thought shone through.
“Madam,”
said Beringar, very softly and respectfully, “if there is any way I can be of
service to you, I beg you command me.”
She
turned to look at him, and smiled, for she had seen him in church, and knew him
to be a guest here like herself, and stress had turned Shrewsbury into a town
where people behaved to one another either as loyal neighbours or potential
informers, and of the latter attitude she was incapable. Nevertheless, he saw
fit to establish his credentials. “You will remember I came to offer the king
my troth when you did. My name is Hugh Beringar of Maesbury. It would give me
pleasure to serve, you. And it seemed to me that you were finding cause for
perplexity and distress in what we have just heard. If there is any errand I
can do for you, I will, gladly.”
“I
do remember you,” said Aline, “and I take your offer very kindly, but this is
something only I can do, if it must be done. No one else here would know my
brother’s face. To tell the truth, I was hesitating… But there will be women
from the town, I know, going there with certain knowledge to find their sons.
If they can do it, so can I.”
“But
you have no good reason,” he said, “to suppose that your brother may be among
these unfortunates.”
“None,
except that I don’t know where he is, and I do know he embraced the empress’s
cause. It would be better, wouldn’t it, to be sure? Not to miss any
possibility? As often as I do not find him dead, I may hope to see him again
alive.”
“Was
he very dear to you?” asked Beringar gently.
She
hesitated to answer that, taking it very gravely. “No, I never knew him as
sister should know brother. Giles was always for his own friends and his own
way, and five years my elder. By the time I was eleven or twelve he was for
ever away from home, and came back only to quarrel with my father. But he is
the only brother I have, and I have not disinherited him. And they’re saying
there’s one there more than they counted, and unknown.”
“It
will not be Giles,” he said firmly.
“But
if it were? Then he needs his name, and his sister to do what’s right.” She had
made up her mind. “I must go.”
“I
think you should not. But I am sure you should not go alone.” He thought
ruefully that her answer to that would be that she had her maid to accompany
her, but instead she said at once: “I will not take Constance into such a
scene! She has no kin there, and why should she have to suffer it as well as
I?”
“Then,
if you will have me, I will go with you.”
He
doubted if she had any artifice in her; certainly at this pass she showed none.
Her anxious face brightened joyfully, she looked at him with the most ingenuous
astonishment, hope and gratitude. But she still hesitated. “That is kind
indeed, but I can’t let you do it. Why should you be subjected to such pain,
just because I have a duty?”
“Oh,
come now!” he said indulgently, sure of himself and of her. “I shall not have a
moment’s peace if you refuse me and go alone. But if you tell me I shall only
be adding to your distress by insisting, then I’ll be silent and obey you. On
no other condition.”
It
was more than she could do. Her lips quivered. “No—it would be a lie. I am not
very brave!” she said sadly. “I shall be grateful indeed.”
He
had what he had wanted; he made the most of it. Why ride, when the walk through
the town could be made to last so much longer, and provide so much more
opportunity to get to know her better? Hugh Beringar sent his horse to the
stables, and set out with Aline along the highway and over the bridge into
Shrewsbury.
Brother
Cadfael was standing guard over his murdered man in a corner of the inner ward,
beside the archway, where every citizen who came in search of child or kinsman
must pass close, and could be questioned. But all he got so far was mute
shaking of heads and glances half-pitying, half-relieved. No one knew the young
man. And how could he expect great concern from these poor souls who came
looking, every one, for some known face, and barely saw the rest?
Prestcote
had made good his word, there was no tally kept of those who came, and no
hindrance placed in their way, or question asked of them. He wanted his castle
rid of its grim reminders as quickly as possible. The guard, under Adam
Courcelle, had orders to remain unobtrusive, even to help if that would get the
unwelcome guests off the premises by nightfall.
Cadfael
had persuaded every man of the guard to view his unknown, but none of them
could identify him. Courcelle had frowned down at the body long and sombrely,
and shaken his head.
“I
never saw him before, to my knowledge. What can there possibly have been about
a mere young squire like this, to make someone hate him enough to kill?”
“There
can be murders without hate,” said Cadfael grimly. “Footpads and forest robbers
take their victims as they come, without any feeling of liking or disliking.”
“Why,
what can such a youth have had to make him worth killing for gain?”
“Friend,”
said Cadfael, “there are those in the world would kill for the few coins a
beggar has begged during the day. When they see kings cut down more than ninety
in one sweep, whose fault was only to be in arms on the other side, is it much
wonder rogues take that for justification? Or at least for licence!” He saw the
colour burn high in Courcelle’s face, and a momentary spark of anger in his
eye, but the young man made no protest. “Oh, I know you had your orders, and no
choice but to obey them. I have been a soldier in my time, and borne the same
discipline and done things I would be glad now to think I had not done. That’s
one reason I’ve accepted, in the end, another discipline.”
“I
doubt,” said Courcelle drily, “if I shall ever come to that.”
“So
would I have doubted it, then. But here I am, and would not change again to
your calling. Well, we do the best we can with our lives!” And the worst, he
thought, viewing the long lines of motionless forms laid out along the ward,
with other men’s lives, if we have power.
There
were some gaps in the silent ranks by then. Some dozen or so had been claimed
by parents and wives. Soon there would be piteous little hand-carts pushed up
the slope to the gate, and brothers and neighbours lifting limp bodies to carry
them away. More of the townspeople were still coming timidly in through the
archway, women with shawls drawn close over their heads and faces half-hidden,
gaunt old men trudging resignedly to look for their sons. No wonder Courcelle,
whose duties could hardly have encompassed this sort of guard before, looked
almost as unhappy as the mourners.
He
was frowning down at the ground in morose thought when Aline came into view in
the archway, her hand drawn protectively through Hugh Beringar’s arm. Her face
was white and taut, her eyes very wide and her lips stiffly set, and her
fingers clutched at her escort’s sleeve as drowning men clutch at floating
twigs, but she kept her head up and her step steady and firm. Beringar matched
his pace attentively to hers, made no effort to divert her eyes from the sorry
spectacle in the ward, and cast only few and brief, but very intent,
side-glances at her pale countenance. It would certainly have been a tactical
error, Cadfael thought critically, to attempt the kind of protective ardour
that claims possession; young and ingenuous and tender as she might be, this
was a proud patrician girl of old blood, not to be trifled with if once that
blood was up. If she had come here on her own family business, like these poor,
prowling citizens, she would not thank any man to try and take it out of her
hands. She might, none the less, be deeply thankful for his considerate and
reticent presence.
Courcelle
looked up, almost as though he had felt a breath of unease moving before them,
and saw the pair emerge into the sunlight in the ward, cruel afternoon sunlight
that spared no detail. His head jerked up and caught the light, his bright hair
burning up like a furze fire. “Christ God!” he said in a hissing undertone, and
went plunging to intercept them on the threshold.
“Aline!—Madam,
should you be here? This is no place for you, so desolate a spectacle. I
marvel,” he said furiously to Beringar, “that you should bring her here, to
face a scene so harrowing.”
“He
did not bring me,” said AIine quickly. “It was I insisted on coming. Since he
could not prevent me, he has been kind enough to come with me.”
“Then,
dear lady, you were foolish to impose such a penance on yourself,” said
Courcelle fiercely. “Why, how can you have business here? Surely there’s none
here belonging to you.”
“I
pray you may be right,” she said. Her eyes, huge in the white face, ranged in
fearful fascination over the shrouded ranks at her feet, and visibly the first
horror and revulsion changed gradually into appalled human pity. “But I must
know! Like all these others! I have only one way of being certain, and it’s no
worse for me than for them. You know I have a brother—you were there when I
told the king
“But
he cannot be here. You said he was fled to Normandy.”
“I
said it was rumoured so—but how can I be sure? He may have won to France, he
may have joined some company of the empress’s men nearer home, how can I tell?
I must see for myself whether he chose Shrewsbury or not.”
“But
surely the garrison here were known. Your name is very unlikely to have been
among them.”
“The
sheriff’s proclamation,” said Beringar mildly, speaking up for the first time
in this encounter, “mentioned that there was one here, at least, Who was not
known. One more, apparently, than the expected tally.”
“You
must let me see for myself,” said AIine, gently and firmly, “or how can I have
any peace?”
Courcelle
had no right to prevent, however it grieved and enraged him. And at least this
particular corpse was close at hand, and could bring her nothing but
reassurance. “He lies here,” he said, and turned her towards the corner where
Brother Cadfael stood. She gazed, and was surprised into the faint brightness
of a smile, a genuine smile though it faded soon.
“I
think I should know you. I’ve seen you about the abbey, you are Brother
Cadfael, the herbalist.”
“That
is my name,” said. Cadfael. “Though why you should have learned it I hardly
know.”
“I
was asking the porter about you,” she owned, flushing. “I saw you at Vespers
and Compline, and—Forgive me, brother, if I have trespassed, but you had such
an air—as though you had lived adventures before you came to the cloister. He
told me you were in the Crusade—with Godfrey of Bouillon at the siege of
Jerusalem! I have only dreamed of such service… Oh!” She had lowered her eyes
from his face, half abashed by her own ardour, and seen the young, dead face
exposed at his feet. She gazed and gazed, in controlled silence. The face was
not offensive, rather its congestion had subsided; the unknown lay youthful and
almost comely,
“This
a most Christian service you are doing now,” said Aline, low-voiced, “for all
these here. This is the unexpected one? The one more than was counted?”
“This
is he.” Cadfael stooped and drew down the linen to show the good but simple
clothing, the absence of anything warlike about the young man. “But for the
dagger, which every man wears when he travels, he was unarmed.”
She
looked up sharply. Over her shoulder Beringar was gazing down with frowning
concentration at the rounded face that must have been cheerful and merry in
life. “Are you saying,” asked AIine, “that he was not in the fight here? Not
captured with the garrison?”
“So
it seems to me. You don’t know him?”
“No.”
She looked down with pure, impersonal compassion. “So young! It’s great pity! I
wish I could tell you his name, but I never saw him before.”
“Master
Beringar?”
“No.
A stranger to me.” Beringar was still staring down very sombrely at the dead.
They were almost of an age, surely no more than a year between them. Every man
burying his twin sees his own burial.
Courcelle,
hovering solicitously, laid a hand on the girl’s arm, and said persuasively:
“Come now, you’ve done your errand, you should quit this sad place at once, it
is not for you. You see your fears were groundless, your brother is not here.”
“No,”
said Aline, “this is not he, but for all that he may—How can I be sure unless I
see them all?” She put off the urging touch, but very gently. “I’ve ventured
this far, and how is it worse for me than for any of these others?” She looked
round appealingly. “Brother Cadfael, this is your charge now. You know I must
ease my mind. Will you come with me?”
“Very
willingly,” said Cadfael, and led the way without more words, for words were
not going to dissuade her, and he thought her right not to be dissuaded. The
two young men followed side by side, neither willing to give the other
precedence. Aline looked down at every exposed face, wrung but resolute.
“He
was twenty-four years old—not very like me, his hair was darker… Oh, here are
all too many no older than he!”
They
had traversed more than half of the dolorous passage when suddenly she caught
at Cadfael’s arm, and froze where she stood. She made no outcry, she had breath
only for a soft moan, audible as a word only to Cadfael, who was nearest.
“Giles!” she said again more strongly, and what colour she had drained from her
face and left her almost translucent, staring down at a face once imperious,
wilful and handsome. She sank to her knees, stooping to study the dead face
close, and then she uttered the only cry she ever made over her brother, and
that very brief and private, and swooped breast to breast with him, gathering
the body into her arms. The mass of her hair slipped out of its coils and
spilled gold over them both.
Brother
Cadfael, who was experienced enough to let her alone until she seemed to need
comfort for her grief instead of decent reticence, would have waited quietly,
but he was hurriedly thrust aside, and Adam Courcelle fell on his knees beside
her, and took her beneath the arms to lift her against his shoulder. The shock
of discovery seemed to have shaken him fully as deeply as it had Aline, his
face was stricken and dismayed, his voice an appalled stammer.
“Madam!—Aline—Dear
God, is this indeed your brother? If I’d known… if I’d known, I’d have saved
him for you… Whatever the cost, I would have delivered him… God forgive me!”
She
lifted a tearless face from the curtain of her yellow hair, and looked at him
with wonder and compunction, seeing him so shattered. “Oh, hush! How can this
be any fault of yours? You could not know. You did only what you were ordered
to do. And how could you have saved one, and let the rest die?”
“Then
truly this is your brother?”
“Yes,”
she said, gazing down at the dead youth with a face now drained even of shock
and grief. “This is Giles.” Now she knew the worst, and now she had only to do
what was needful, what fell to her for want of father and brothers. She
crouched motionless in Courcelle’s arm, earnestly regarding the dead face.
Cadfael, watching, was glad he had managed to mould some form back into
features once handsome, but in death fallen into a total collapse of terror. At
least she was not viewing that hardly human disintegration.
Presently
she heaved a short, sharp sigh, and made to rise, and Hugh Beringar, who had
shown admirably judicious restraint throughout, reached a hand to her on the
other side, and lifted her to her feet. She was mistress of herself as perhaps
she had never been before, never having had to meet such a test until now. What
was required of her she could and would do.
“Brother
Cadfael, I do thank you for all you have done, not only for Giles and me, but
for all these. Now, if you permit, I will take my brother’s burial into my
charge, as is only fitting.”
Close
and anxious at her shoulder, still deeply shaken, Courcelle asked: “Where would
you have him conveyed? My men shall carry him there for you, and be at your
orders as long as you need them. I wish I might attend you myself, but I must
not leave my guard.”
“You
are very kind,” she said, quite composed now. “My mother’s family has a tomb.
at St. Alkmund’s church, here in the town. Father Elias knows me. I shall be
grateful for help in taking my brother there, but I need not keep your men from
their duties longer. All the rest I will do.” Her face had grown intent and
practical, she had work to do, all manner of things to take into account, the need
for speed, the summer heat, the provision of all the materials proper to decent
preparation for the grave. She made her dispositions with authority.
“Messire
Beringar, you have been kind, and I do value it, but now I must stay to see to
my family’s rites. There is no need to sadden all the rest of your day, I shall
be safe enough.”
“I
came with you,” said Hugh Beringar, “and I shall not return without you.” The
very way to talk to her now, without argument, without outward show of
sympathy. She accepted his resolve simply, and turned to her duty. Two of the
guards brought a narrow litter, and lifted Giles Siward’s body into it, and she
herself steadied and straightened the lolling head.
At
the last moment Courcelle, frowning down distressfully at the corpse, said
abruptly: “Wait! I have remembered—I believe there is something here that must
have belonged to him.”
He
went hastily through the archway and across the outer ward to the guard-towers,
and in a few moments came back carrying over his arm a black cloak. “This was
among the gear they left behind in the guardroom at the end. I think it must
have been his—this clasp at the neck has the same design, see, as the buckle of
his belt.”
It
was true enough, there was the same dragon of eternity, tail in mouth, lavishly
worked in bronze. “I noticed it only now. That cannot be by chance. Let me at
least restore him this.” He spread out the cloak and draped it gently over the
litter, covering the dead face. When he looked up, it was into Aline’s eyes,
and for the first time they regarded him through a sheen of tears.
“That
was very kindly done,” she said in a low voice, and gave him her hand. “I shall
not forget it.”
Cadfael
went back to his vigil by the unknown, and continued his questioning, but it
brought no useful response. In the coming night all these dead remaining must
be taken on carts down the Wyle and out to the abbey; this hot summer would not
permit further delay. At dawn Abbot Heribert would consecrate a new piece of
ground at the edge of the abbey enclosure, for a mass grave. But this unknown,
never condemned, never charged with any crime, whose dead body cried aloud for
justice, should not be buried among the executed, nor should there be any rest
until he could go to his grave under his own rightful name, and with all the
individual honours due to him.
In
the house of Father Elias, priest of St. Alkmund’s church, Giles Siward was
reverently stripped, washed, composed and shrouded, all by his sister’s hands,
the good father assisting. Hugh Beringar stood by to fetch and carry for them,
but did not enter the room where they worked. She wanted no one else, she was
quite sufficient to the task laid on her, and if she was robbed of any part of
it now she would feel deprivation and resentment, not gratitude. But when all
was done, and her brother laid ready for rest before the altar of the church,
she was suddenly weary to death, and glad enough of Beringar’s almost silent
company and ready arm back to her house by the mill.
On the following morning Giles Siward was interred
with all due ceremony in the tomb of his maternal grandfather in the church of
St. Alkmund, and the monks of the abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul buried with
due rites all the sixty-six soldiers of the defeated garrison still remaining in
their charge.
Chapter
Four
ALINE
BROUGHT BACK WITH HER THE COTTE and hose her brother had worn, and the cloak
that had covered him, and herself carefully brushed and folded them. The shirt
no one should ever wear again, she would burn it and forget; but these stout
garments of good cloth must not go to waste, in a world where so many went
half-naked and cold. She took the neat bundle, and went in at the abbey gate
house, and finding the whole courtyard deserted, crossed to the ponds and the
gardens in search of Brother Cadfael. She did not find him. The digging out of
a grave large enough to hold sixty-six victims, and the sheer repetitious
labour of laying them in it, takes longer than the opening of a stone tomb to
make room for one more kinsman. The brothers were hard at work until past two
o’clock, even with every man assisting.
But
if Cadfael was not there, his garden-boy was, industriously clipping off
flower-heads dead in the heat, and cutting leaves and stems of blossoming
savory to hang up in bunches for drying. All the end of the hut, under the
eaves, was festooned with drying herbs. The diligent boy worked barefoot and
dusty from the powdery soil, and a smear of green coloured one cheek. At the
sound of approaching footsteps he looked round, and came out in haste from
among his plants, in a great wave of fragrance, which clung about him and
distilled from the folds of his coarse tunic like the miraculous sweetness
conferred upon some otherwise unimpressive-looking saint. The hurried swipe of
a hand over his tangle of hair only served to smear the other cheek and half
his forehead.
“I
was looking,” said Aline, almost apologetically, “for Brother Cadfael. You must
be the boy called Godric, who works for him.”
“Yes,
my lady,” said Godith gruffly. “Brother Cadfael is still busy, they are not
finished yet.” She had wanted to attend, but he would not let her; the less she
was seen in full daylight, the better.
“Oh!”
said Aline, abashed. “Of course, I should have known. Then may I leave my
message with you? It is only—I’ve brought these, my brother’s clothes. He no
longer needs them, and they are still good, someone could be glad of them. Will
you ask Brother Cadfael to dispose of them somewhere they can do good? However
he thinks best.”
Godith
had scrubbed grubby hands down the skirts of her cotte before extending them to
take the bundle. She stood suddenly very still, eyeing the other girl and
clutching the dead man’s clothes, so startled and shaken that she forgot for a
moment to keep her voice low. “No longer needs… You had a brother in there, in
the castle? Oh, I am sorry! Very sorry!”
Aline
looked down at her own hands, empty and rather lost now that even this last
small duty was done. “Yes. One of many,” she said. “He made his choice. I was
taught to think it the wrong one, but at least he stood by it to the end. My
father might have been angry with him, but he would not have had to be
ashamed.”
“I
am sorry!” Godith hugged the folded garments to her breast and could find no
better words. “I’ll deliver your message to Brother Cadfael as soon as he
comes. And he would want me to give you his thanks for your most feeling
charity, until he can do it for himself.”
“And
give him this purse, too. It is for Masses for them all. But especially a Mass
for the one who should not have been there—the one nobody knows.”
Godith
stared in bewilderment and wonder. “Is there one like that? One who did not
belong? I didn’t know!” She had seen Cadfael for only a few hurried moments
when he came home late and weary, and he had had no time to tell her anything.
All she knew was that the remaining dead had been brought to the abbey for
burial; this mysterious mention of one who had no place in the common tragedy
was new to her.
“So
he said. There were ninety-five where there should have been only ninety-four,
and one did not seem to have been in arms. Brother Cadfael was asking all who
came, to look and see if they knew him, but I think no one has yet put a name
to him.”
“And
where, then is he now?” asked Godith, marvelling.
“That
I don’t know. Though they must have brought him here to the abbey. Somehow I
don’t think Brother Cadfael will let him be put into the earth with all the
rest, and he nameless and unaccounted for. You must know his ways better than
I. Have you worked with him long?”
“No,
a very short time,” said Godith, “but I do begin to know him.” She was growing
a little uneasy, thus innocently studied at close quarters by those clear iris
eyes. A woman might be more dangerous to her secret than a man. She cast a
glance back towards the beds of herbs where she had been working.
“Yes,”
said Aline, taking the allusion, “I must not keep you from your proper work.”
Godith
watched her withdraw, almost regretting that she dared not prolong this
encounter with another girl in this sanctuary of men. She laid the bundle of
clothing on her bed in the hut, and went back to work, waiting in some disquiet
for Cadfael to come; and even when he did appear he was tired, and still
burdened with business.
“I’m
sent for to the king’s camp. It seems his sheriff has thought best to let him
know what sort of unexpected hare I’ve started, and he wants an accounting from
me. But I’m forgetting,” he said, passing a hard palm over cheeks stiff with
weariness, “I’ve had no time to talk to you at all, you’ve heard nothing of all
that—“
“Ah,
but I have,” said Godith’ “Aline Siward was here looking for you. She brought
these, see, for you to give as alms, wherever you think best. They were her
brother’s. She told me. And this money is for Masses—she said especially a Mass
for this one man more than was looked for. Now tell me, what is this mystery?”
It
was pleasant to sit quietly for a while and let things slide, and therefore he
relaxed and sat down with her, and told her. She listened intently, and when he
was done she asked at once: “And where is he now, this stranger nobody knows?”
“He
is in the church, on a bier before the altar. I want all who come to services
to pass by him, in the hope that someone must know him, and give him a name. We
can’t keep him beyond tomorrow,” he said fretfully, “the season is too hot. But
if we must bury him unknown, I intend it to be where he can as easily be taken
up again, and to keep his clothes and a drawing of his face, until we discover
the poor lad.”
“And
you truly believe,” she questioned, awed, “that he was murdered? And then cast
in among the king’s victims, to hide the crime away for ever?”
“Child,
I’ve told you! He was taken from behind, with a strangler’s cord ready prepared
for the deed. And it was done in the same night that the others died and were
flung over into the ditch. What better opportunity could a murderer have? Among
so many, who was to count, and separate, and demand answers? He had been dead
much the same time as some of those others. It should have been a certain
cover.”
“But
it was not!” she said, vengefully glowing. “Because you came. Who else would
have cared to be so particular among ninety-five dead men? Who else would have
stood out alone for the rights of a man not condemned—killed without vestige of
law? Oh, Brother Cadfael, you have made me as irreconcilable as you are on
this. Here am I, and have not seen this man. Let the king wait a little while!
Let me go and see! Or go with me, if you must, but let me look at him.”
Cadfael
considered and got to his feet, groaning a little at the effort. He was not so
young as he once had been, and he had had a hard day and night. “Come, then,
have your will, who am Ito shut you out where I invite others in? It should be
quiet enough there now, but keep close to me. Oh, girl, dear, I must also be
about getting you safe out of here as soon as I may.”
“Are
you so eager to get rid of me?” she said, offended. “And just when I’m getting
to know sage from marjoram! What would you do without me?”
“Why,
train some novice I can expect to keep longer than a few weeks. And speaking of
herbs,” said Cadfael, drawing out a little leather bag from the breast of his
habit, and shaking out a six-inch sprig of sun-dried herbage, a thin, square
stem studded at intervals with pairs of spreading leaves, with tiny brown balls
set in the joints of them, “do you know what this one is?”
She
peered at it curiously, having learned much in a few days. “No. We don’t grow
it here. But I might know it if I saw it growing fresh.”
“It’s
goose-grass—-cleavers it’s also called. A queer, creeping thing that grows
little hooks to hold fast, even on these tiny seeds you see here. And you see
it’s broken in the middle of this straight stem?”
She
saw, and was curiously subdued. There was something here beyond her vision; the
thing was a wisp of brown, bleached and dry, but indeed folded sharply in the
midst by a thin fracture. “What is it? Where did you find it?”
“Caught
into the furrow in this poor lad’s throat,” he said, so gently that she could
take it in without shock, “broken here by the ligament that strangled him. And
it’s last year’s crop, not new. The stuff is growing richly at this season,
seeding wild everywhere, this was in fodder, or litter, grass cut last autumn
and dried out. Never turn against the herb, it’s sovereign for healing green
wounds that are stubborn to knit. All the things of the wild have their proper
uses, only misuse makes them evil.” He put the small slip of dryness away
carefully in his bosom, and laid an arm about her shoulders. “Come, then, let’s
go and look at this youngster, you and I together.”
It
was mid-afternoon, the time of work for the brothers, play for the boys and the
novices, once their limited tasks were done. They came down to the church
without meeting any but a few half-grown boys at play, and entered the cool
dimness within.
The
mysterious young man from the castle ditch lay austerely shrouded on his bier
in the choir end of the nave, his head and face uncovered. Dim but pure light
fell upon him; it needed only a few minutes to get accustomed to the soft
interior glow in this summer afternoon, and he shone clear to view. Godith
stood beside him and gazed in silence. They were alone there, but for him, and
they could speak, in low voices. But when Cadfael asked softly: “Do you know
him?” he was already sure of the answer.
A
fine thread of a whisper beside him said: “Yes.”
“Come!”
He led her out as softly as they had come. In the sunlight he heard her draw
breath very deep and long. She made no other comment until they were secure
together in the herbarium, in the drowning summer sweetness, sitting in the
shade of the hut.
“Well,
who is he, this young fellow who troubles both you and me?”
“His
name,” she said, very low and wonderingly, “is Nicholas Faintree. I’ve known
him, by fits and starts, since I was twelve years old. He is a squire of
FitzAlan’s, from one of his northern manors, he’s ridden courier for his lord
several times in the last few years. He would not be much known in Shrewsbury,
no. If he was waylaid and murdered here, he must have been on his lord’s
business. But FitzAlan’s business was almost finished in these parts.” She
hugged her head between her hands, and thought passionately. “There are some in
Shrewsbury could have named him for you, you know, if they had reason to come
looking for men of their own. I know of some who may be able to tell you what
he was doing here that day and that night. If you can be sure no ill will come
to them?”
“Never
by me,” said Cadfael, “that I promise.”
“There’s
my nurse, the one who brought me here and called me her nephew. Petronilla
served my family all her grown life, until she married late, too late for
children of her own, and she married a good friend to FitzAlan’s house and
ours, Edric Flesher, the chief of the butchers’ guild in town. The two of them
were close in all the plans when FitzAlan declared for the empress Maud. If you
go to them from me,” she said confidently, “they’ll tell you anything they
know. You’ll know the shop, it has the sign of the boar’s head, in the
butchers’ row.”
Cadfael
scrubbed thoughtfully at his nose. “If I borrow the abbot’s mule, I can make
better speed, and spare my legs, too. There’ll be no keeping the king waiting,
but on the way back I can halt at the shop. Give me some token, to show you
trust me, and they can do as much without fear.”
“Petronilla
can read, and knows my hand. I’ll write you a line to her, if you’ll lend me a
little leaf of vellum, a mere corner will do.” She was alight with ardour, as
intent as he. “He was a merry person, Nicholas, he never did harm to anyone,
that I know, and he was never out of temper. He laughed a great deal… But if
you tell the king he was of the opposite party, he won’t care to pursue the
murderer, will he? He’ll call it a just fate, and bid you leave well alone.”
“I
shall tell the king,” said Cadfael, “that we have a man plainly murdered, and
the method and time we know, but not the place or the reason. I will also tell
him that we have a name for him—it’s a modest name enough, it can mean nothing
to Stephen. As at this moment there’s no more to tell, for I know no more. And
even if the king should shrug it off and bid me let things lie, I shall not do
it. By my means or God’s means, or the both of us together, Nicholas Faintree shall
have justice before I let this matter rest.”
Having
the loan of the abbot’s own mule, Brother Cadfael took with him in this errand
the good cloth garments Aline had entrusted to him. It was his way to carry out
at once whatever tasks fell him, rather than put them off until the morrow, and
there were beggars enough on his way through the town. The hose he gave to an
elderly man with eyes whitened over with thick cauls, who sat with stick beside
him and palm extended in the shade of the town gate. He looked of a suitable
figure, and was in much-patched and threadbare nethers that would certainly
fall apart very soon. The good brown cotte went to a frail creature no more
than twenty years old who begged at the high cross, a poor feeble-wit with
hanging lip and a palsied shake, who had a tiny old woman holding him by the
hand and caring for him jealously. Her shrill blessings followed Cadfael down
towards the castle gate. The cloak he still had folded before him when he came
to the guard-post of the king’s camp, and saw Lame Osbern’s little wooden
trolley tucked into the bole of a tree close by, and marked the useless,
withered legs, and the hands callused and muscular from dragging all that dead
weight about by force. His wooden pattens lay beside him in the grass. Seeing a
frocked monk approaching on a good riding mule, Osbern seized them and
propelled himself forward into Cadfael’s path. And it was wonderful how fast he
could move, over short distances and with intervals for rest, but all the same
so immobilised a creature, half his body inert, must suffer cold in even the
milder nights, and in the winter terribly.
“Good
brother,” coaxed Osbern, “spare an alms for a poor cripple, and God will reward
you!”
“So
I will, friend,” said Cadfael, “and better than a small coin, too. And you may
say a prayer for a gentle lady who sends it to you by my hand.” And he unfolded
from the saddle before him, and dropped into the startled, malformed hands,
Giles Siward’s cloak.
“You
did right to report truly what you found,” said the king consideringly. “Small
wonder that my castellan did not make the same discovery, he had his hands
full. You say this man was taken from behind by stealth, with a strangler’s
cord? It’s a footpad’s way, and foul. And above all, to cast his victim in
among my executed enemies to cover the crime—that I will not bear! How dared he
make me and my officers his accomplices! That I count an affront to the crown,
and for that alone I would wish the felon taken and judged. And the young man’s
name—Faintree, you said?”
“Nicholas
Faintree. So I was told by one who came and saw him, where we had laid him in
the church. He comes from a family in the north of the county. But that is all
I know of him.”
“It
is possible,” reflected the king hopefully, “that he had ridden to Shrewsbury
to seek service with us. Several such young men from north of the county have
joined us here.”
“It
is possible,” agreed Cadfael gravely; for all things are possible, and men do
turn their coats.
“And
to be cut off by some forest thief for what he carried—it happens! I wish I
could say our roads are safe, out in this new anarchy, God knows, I dare not
claim it. Well, you may pursue such enquiries as can be made into this matter,
if that’s your wish, and call upon my sheriff to do justice if the murderer can
be found. He knows my will. I do not like being made use of to shield so mean a
crime.”
And
that was truth, and the heart of the matter for him, and perhaps it would not
have changed his attitude, thought Cadfael, even if he had known that Faintree
was FitzAlan’s squire and courier, even if it were proved, as so far it
certainly was not, that he was on FitzAlan’s rebellious business when he died.
By all the signs, there would be plenty of killing in Stephen’s realm in the
near future, and he would not lose his sleep over most of it, but to have a
killer-by-stealth creeping for cover into his shadow, that he would take as a
deadly insult to himself, and avenge accordingly. Energy and lethargy,
generosity and spite, shrewd action and incomprehensible inaction, would always
alternate and startle in King Stephen. But somewhere within that tall, comely,
simple-minded person there was a gram of nobility hidden.
“I
accept and value your Grace’s support,” said Brother Cadfael truthfully, “and I
will do my best to see justice done. A man cannot lay down and abandon the duty
God has placed in his hands. Of this young man I know only his name, and the
appearance of his person, which is open and innocent, and that he was accused
of no crime, and no man has complained of wrong by him, and he is dead
unjustly. I think this as unpleasing to your Grace as ever it can be to me. If
I can right it, so I will.”
At
the sign of the boar’s head in the butcher’s row he was received with the
common wary civility any citizen would show to a monk of the abbey. Petronilla,
rounded and comfortable and grey, bade him in and would have offered all the
small attentions that provide a wall between suspicious people, if he had not
at once given her the worn and much-used leaf of vellum on which Godith had,
somewhat cautiously and laboriously, inscribed her trust in the messenger, and
her name. Petronilla peered and flushed with pleasure, and looked up at this
elderly, solid, homely brown monk through blissful tears.
“The
lamb, she’s managing well, then, my girl? And you taking good care of her! Here
she says it, I know that scrawl, I learned to write with her. I had her almost
from birth, the darling, and she the only one, more’s the pity, she should have
had brothers and sisters. It was why I wanted to do everything with her, even
the letters, to be by her whatever she needed. Sit down, brother, sit down and
tell me of her, if she’s well, if she needs anything I can send her by you. Oh,
and, brother, how are we to get her safely away? Can she stay with you, if it
runs to weeks?”
When
Cadfael could wedge a word or two into the flow he told her how her nurseling
was faring, and how he would see to it that she continued to fare. It had not
occurred to him until then what a way the girl had of taking hold of hearts,
without at all designing it. By the time Edric Flesher came in from a cautious
skirmish through the town, to see how the land lay, Cadfael was firmly
established in Petronilla’s favour, and vouched for as a friend to be trusted.
Edric
settled his solid bulk into a broad chair, and said with a gusty breath of
cautious relief: “Tomorrow I’ll open the shop. We’re fortunate! Ask me, he rues
the vengeance he took for those he failed to capture. He’s called off all
pillage here, and for once he’s enforcing it. If only his claims were just, and
he had more spine in his body, I think I’d be for him. And to look like a hero,
and be none, that’s hard on a man.” He gathered his great legs under him, and
looked at his wife, and then, longer, at Cadfael. “She says you have the girl’s
good word, and that’s enough. Name your need, and if we have it, it’s yours.”
“For
the girl,” said Cadfael briskly, “I will keep her safe as long as need be, and
when the right chance offers, I’ll get her away to where she should be. For my
need, yes, there you may help me. We have in the abbey church, and we shall
bury there tomorrow, a young man you may know, murdered on the night after the
castle fell, the night the prisoners were hanged and thrown into the ditch. But
he was killed elsewhere, and thrown among the rest to have him away into the
ground unquestioned. I can tell you how he died, and when. I cannot tell you
where, or why, or who did this thing. But Godith tells me that his name is
Nicholas Faintree, and he was a squire of FitzAlan.”
All
this he let fall between them in so many words, and heard and felt their
silence. Certainly there were things they knew, and equally certainly this
death they had not known, and it struck at them like a mortal blow.
“One
more thing I may tell you,” he said. “I intend to have the truth out into the
open concerning this thing, and see him avenged. And more, I have the king’s
word to pursue the murderer. He likes the deed no more than I like it.”
After
a long moment Edric asked: “There was only one, dead after this fashion? No
second?”
“Should
there have been? Is not one enough?”
“There
were two,” said Edric harshly. “Two who set out together upon the same errand.
How did this death come to light? It seems you are the only man who knows.”
Brother
Cadfael sat back and told them all, without haste. If he had missed Vespers, so
be it. He valued and respected his duties, but if they clashed, he knew which
way he must go. Godith would not stir from her safe solitude without him, not
until her evening schooling.
“Now,”
he said, “you had better tell me. I have Godith to protect, and Faintree to
avenge, and I mean to do both as best I can.”
The
two of them exchanged glances, and understood each other. It was the man who took
up the tale.
“A
week before the castle and the town fell, with FitzAlan’s family already away,
and our plans made to place the girl with your abbey in hiding, FitzAlan also
took thought for the end, if he died. He never ran until they broke in at the
gates, you know that? By the skin of his teeth he got away, swam the river with
Adeney at his shoulder, and got clear. God be thanked! But the day before the
end he made provision for whether he lived or died. His whole treasury had been
left with us here, he wanted it to reach the empress if he were slain. That day
we moved it out into Frankwell, to a garden I hold there, so that there need be
no bridge to pass if we had to convey it away at short notice. And we fixed a
signal. If any of his party came with a certain token—a trifle it was, a
drawing, but private to us who knew—they should be shown where the treasury
was, provided with horses, all they might need, and put over there to pick up
the valuables and make their break by night.”
“And
so it was done?” said Cadfael.
“On
the morning of the fall. It came so early, and in such force, we’d left it all
but too late. Two of them came. We sent them over the bridge to wait for night.
What could they have done by daylight?”
“Tell
me more. What time did these two come to you that morning, what had they to
say, how did they get their orders? How many may have known what was toward?
How many would have known the way they would take? When did you last see them
both alive?”
“They
came just at dawn. We could hear the din by then, the assault had begun. They
had the parchment leaf that was the signal, the head of a saint drawn in ink.
They said there had been a council the night before, and FitzAlan had said then
he would have them go the following day, whatever happened and whether he lived
or no, get the treasury away safe to the empress, for her use in defending her
right.”
“Then
all who were at that council would know those two would be on the road the
following night, as soon as it was dark enough. Would they also know the road?
Did they know where the treasury was hidden?”
“No,
where we had put it, beyond that it was in Frankwell, no one had been told.
Only FitzAlan and I knew that. Those two squires had to come to me.”
“Then
any who had ill designs on the treasury, even if they knew the time of its
removal, could not go and get it for themselves, they could only waylay it on
the road. If all those officers close to FitzAlan knew that it was to be taken
westward into Wales from Frankwell, there’d be no doubt about the road. For the
first mile and more there is but one, by reason of the coils of the river on
either side.”
“You
are thinking that one of those who knew thought to get the gold for himself, by
murder?” said Edric. “One of FitzAlan’s own men? I cannot believe it! And
surely all, or most, stayed to the end, and died. Two men riding by night could
well be waylaid by pure chance, by men living wild in the forest…”
“Within
a mile of the town walls? Don’t forget, whoever killed this lad did so close
enough to Shrewsbury castle to have ample time and means to take his body and
toss it among all those others in the ditch, long before the night was over.
Knowing very well that all those others would be there. Well, so they came,
they showed their credentials, they told you the plan had been made the
previous evening, come what might. But what came, came earlier and more
fiercely than anyone had expected, and all done in haste. Then what? You went
with them over to Frankwell?”
“I
did. I have a garden and a barn there, where they and their horses lay in
hiding until dark. The valuables were packed into two pairs of saddle-bags—one
horse with his rider and that load would have been overdone—in a cavity in a
dry well on my land there. I saw them safe under cover, and left them there
about nine in the morning.”
“And
at what time would they venture to start?”
“Not
until full dark. And do you truly tell me Faintree was murdered, soon after
they set out?”
“Past
doubt he was. Had it been done miles away, he would have been disposed of some
other way. This was planned, and ingenious. But not ingenious enough. You knew
Faintree well—or so Godith gave me to think. Who was the other? Did you also
know him?”
Heavily
and slowly, Edric said, “No! It seemed to me that Nicholas knew him well
enough, they were familiar together like good comrades, but Nicholas was one
open to any new friend. I had never seen this lad before. He was from another
of FitzAlan’s northern manors. He gave his name as Torold Blund.”
They
had told him all they knew, and something more than had been said in words.
Edric’s brooding frown spoke for him. The young man they knew and trusted was
dead, the one they did not know vanished, and with him FitzAlan’s valuables,
plate and coin and jewellery, intended for the empress’s coffers. Enough to
tempt any man. The murderer clearly knew all he needed to know in order to get
possession of that hoard; and who could have known half so well as the second
courier himself? Another might certainly waylay the prize on the road. Torold
Blund need not even have waited for that. Those two had been in hiding together
all that day in Edric’s barn. It was possible that Nicholas Faintree had never
left it until he was dead, draped over a horse for the short ride back to the
castle ditch, before two horses with one rider set out westward into Wales.
“There
was one more thing happened that day,” said Petronilla, as Cadfael rose to take
his leave. “About two of the clock, after the king’s men had manned both
bridges and dropped the draw-bridge, he came—Hugh Beringar, he that was
betrothed to my girl from years back—making pretence to be all concern for her,
and asking where he could find her. Tell him? No, what do you take me for? I
told him she’d been taken away a good week before the town fell, and we were
not told where, but I thought she was far away by now, and safe out of
Stephen’s country. Right well we knew he must have come to us with Stephen’s
authority, or he would never have been let through so soon. He’d been to the
king’s camp before ever he came hunting for my Godith, and it’s not for love
he’s searching for her. She’s worth a fat commission, as bait for her father,
if not for FitzAlan himself. Don’t let my lamb get within his sight, for I hear
he’s living in the abbey now.”
“And
he was here that very afternoon?” pressed Cadfael, concerned. “Yes, yes, I’ll
take good care to keep her away from him, I’ve seen that danger. But there
could not have been any mention when he came here, could there, of Faintree’s
mission? Nothing to make him prick his ears? He’s very quick, and very private!
No—no, I ask your pardon, I know you’d never let out word. Ah, well, my thanks
for your help, and you shall know if I make progress.”
He
was at the door when Petronilla said grievingly at his shoulder: “And he seemed
such a fine young lad, this Torold Blund! How can a body tell what lies behind
the decent, ordinary face?”
“Torold
Blund!” said Godith, testing the name slow syllable by syllable. “That’s a
Saxon name. There are plenty of them up there in the northern manors, good
blood and old. But I don’t know him. I think I can never have seen him. And
Nicholas was on good, close terms with him? Nicholas was easy, but not stupid,
and they sound much of an age, he must have known him well. And yet…”
“Yes,”
said Cadfael, “I know! And yet! Girl dear, I am too tired to think any more.
I’m going to Compline, and then to my bed, and so should you. And tomorrow…”
“Tomorrow,”
she said, rising to the touch of his hand, “we shall bury Nicholas. We! He was
in some measure my friend, and I shall be there.”
“So
you shall, my heart,” said Cadfael, yawning, and led her away in his arm to
celebrate, with gratitude and grief and hope, the ending of the day.
Chapter
Five
NICHOLAS
FAINTREE WAS LAID, WITH DUE HONOURS, under a stone in the transept of the abbey
church, an exceptional privilege. He was but one, after so many, and his
singleness was matter for celebration, besides the fact that there was room
within rather than without, and the labour involved was less. Abbot Heribert
was increasingly disillusioned and depressed with all the affairs of this
world, and welcomed a solitary guest who was not a symbol of civil war, but the
victim of personal malice and ferocity. Against all the probabilities, in due
course Nicholas might find himself a saint. He was mysterious, feloniously
slain, young, to all appearances clean of heart and life, innocent of evil, the
stuff of which martyrs are made.
Aline
Seward was present at the funeral service, and had brought with her,
intentionally or otherwise, Hugh Beringar. That young man made Cadfael
increasingly uneasy. True, he was making no inimical move, nor showing any
great diligence in his search for his affianced bride, if, indeed, he was in
search of her at all. But there was something daunting in the very ease and
impudence of his carriage, the small, sardonic turn of his lip, and the
guileless clarity of the black eyes when they happened to encounter Cadfael’s.
No doubt about it, thought Cadfael, I shall be happier when I’ve got the girl
safely away from here, but in the meantime at least I can move her away from
anywhere he’s likely to be.
The
main orchards and vegetable gardens of the abbey were not within the precinct,
but across the main road, stretched along the rich level beside the river,
called the Gaye; and at the far end of this fertile reach there was a slightly
higher field of corn. It lay almost opposite the castle, and no great distance
from the king’s siege camp, and had suffered some damage during the siege; and
though what remained had been ripe for cutting for almost a week, it had been
too dangerous to attempt to get it in. Now that all was quiet, they were in
haste to salvage a crop that could not be spared, and all hands possible were
mustered to do the work in one day. The second of the abbey’s mills was at the
end of the field, and because of the same dangers had been abandoned for the
season, just when it was beginning to be needed, and had suffered damage which
would keep it out of use until repairs could be undertaken.
“You
go with the reapers,” said Cadfael to Godith. “My thumbs prick, and rightly or
wrongly, I’d rather have you out of the enclave, if only for a day.”
“Without
you?” said Godith, surprised.
“I
must stay here and keep an eye on things. If anything threatens, I’ll be with
you as fast as legs can go. But you’ll be well enough, no one is going to have
leisure to look hard at you until that corn is in the barns. But stay by
Brother Athanasius, he’s as blind as a mole, he wouldn’t know a stag from a hind.
And take care how you swing a sickle, and don’t come back short of a foot!”
She
went off quite happily among the crowd of reapers in the end, glad of an outing
and a change of scene. She was not afraid. Not afraid enough, Cadfael
considered censoriously, but then, she had an old fool here to do the fearing
for her, just as she’d once had an old nurse, protective as a hen with one
chick. He watched them out of the gate house and over the road towards the
Gaye, and went back with a relieved sigh to his own labours in the inner
gardens. He had not been long on his knees, weeding, when a cool, light voice
behind him, almost as quiet as the steps he had not heard in the grass, said:
“So this is where you spend your more peaceful hours. A far cry and a pleasant
change from harvesting dead men.”
Brother
Cadfael finished the last corner of the bed of mint before he turned to
acknowledge the presence of Hugh Beringar. “A pleasant change, right enough.
Let’s hope we’ve finished with that kind of crop, here in Shrewsbury.”
“And
you found a name for your stranger in the end. How was that? No one in the town
seemed to know him.”
“All
questions get their answers,” said Brother Cadfael sententiously, “if you wait
long enough.”
“And
all searchers are bound to find? But of course,” said Beringar, smiling, “you
did not say how long is long enough. If a man found at eighty what he was
searching for at twenty, he might prove a shade ungrateful.”
“He
might well have stopped wanting it long before that,” said Brother Cadfael
drily, “which is in itself an answer to any want. Is there anything you are
looking for here in the herbarium, that I can help you to, or are you curious
to learn about these simples of mine?”
“No,”
owned Beringar, his smile deepening, “I would hardly say it was any simplicity
I came to study.” He pinched off a sprig of mint, crushed it between his
fingers, and set it first to his nose and then closed fine white teeth upon its
savour. “And what should such as I be looking for here? I may have caused a few
ills in my time, I’m no hand at healing them. They tell me, Brother Cadfael,
you have had a wide-ranging career before you came into the cloister. Don’t you
find it unbearably dull here, after such battles, with no enemy left to fight?”
“I
am not finding it at all dull, these days,” said Cadfael, plucking out
willowherb from among the thyme. “And as for enemies, the devil makes his way
in everywhere, even into cloister, and church, and herbarium.”
Beringar
threw his head back and laughed aloud, until the short black hair danced on his
forehead. “Vainly, if he comes looking for mischief where you are! But he’d
hardly expect to blunt his horns against an old crusader here! I take the
hint!”
But
all the time, though he scarcely seemed to turn his head or pay much attention
to anything round him, his black eyes were missing nothing, and his ears were
at stretch while he laughed and jested. By this time he knew that the
well-spoken and well-favoured boy of whom Aline had innocently spoken was not
going to make his appearance, and more, that Brother Cadfael did not care if he
poked his nose into every corner of the garden, sniffed at every drying herb
and peered at every potion in the hut, for they would tell him nothing. The
benchbed was stripped of its blanket, and laden with a large mortar and a
gently bubbling jar of wine. There was no trace of Godith anywhere to be found.
The boy was simply a boy like the rest, and no doubt slept in the dortoir with
the rest.
“Well,
I’ll leave you to your cleansing labours,” said Beringar, “and stop hampering
your meditations with my prattle. Or have you work for me to do?”
“The
king has none?” said Cadfael solicitously.
Another
ungrudging laugh acknowledged the thrust. “Not yet, not yet, but that will
come. Such talent he cannot afford to hold off suspiciously for ever. Though to
be sure, he did lay one testing task upon me, and I seem to be making very
little progress in that.” He plucked another tip of mint, and bruised and bit
it with pleasure. “Brother Cadfael, it seems to me that you are the most
practical man of hand and brain here. Supposing I should have need of your
help, you would not refuse it without due thought—would you?”
Brother
Cadfael straightened up, with some creaking of back muscles, to give him a
long, considering look. “I hope,” he said cautiously, “I never do anything
without due thought—even if the thought sometimes has to shift its feet pretty
briskly to keep up with the deed.”
“So
I supposed,” said Beringar, sweet-voiced and smiling. “I’ll bear that in mind
as a promise.” And he made a small, graceful obeisance, and walked away at
leisure to the courtyard.
The
reapers came back in time for Vespers, sun-reddened, weary and sweat-stained,
but with the corn all cut and stacked for carrying. After supper Godith slipped
out of the refectory in haste, and came to pluck at Cadfael’s sleeve.
“Brother
Cadfael, you must come! Something vital!” He felt the quivering excitement of
her hand, and the quiet intensity of her whispering voice. “There’s time before
Compline—come back to the field with me.”
“What
is it?” he asked as softly, for they were within earshot of a dozen people if
they had spoken aloud, and she was not the woman to fuss over nothing. “What
has happened to you? What have you left down there that’s so urgent?”
“A
man! A wounded man! He’s been in the river, he was hunted into it upstream and
came down with the current. I dared not stay to question, but I knew he’s in
need. And hungry! He’s been there a night and a day…”
“How
did you find him? You alone? No one else knows?”
“No
one else.” She gripped Cadfael’s sleeve more tightly, and her whisper grew
gruff with shyness. “It was a long day… I went aside, and had to go far aside,
into the bushes near the mill. Nobody saw…”
“Surely,
child! I know!” Please God all the boys, her contemporaries, were kept hard at
it, and never noticed such daintiness. Brother Athanasius would not have
noticed a thunderclap right behind him. “He was there in the bushes? And is
still?”
“Yes.
I gave him the bread and meat I had with me, and told him I’d come back when I
could. His clothes have dried on him—there’s blood on his sleeve… But I think
he’ll do well, if you take care of him. We could hide him in the mill—no one
goes there yet.” She had thought of all the essentials, she was towing him
towards his hut in the herb garden, not directly towards the gate house.
Medicines, linen, food, they would need all these.
“Of
what age,” asked Cadfael, more easily now they were well away from listeners,
“is this wounded man of yours?”
“A
boy,” she said on a soft breath. “Hardly older than I am. And hunted! He thinks
I am a boy, of course. I gave him the water from my bottle, and he called me
Ganymede…”
Well,
well, thought Cadfael, bustling before her into the hut, a young man of some
learning, it seems! “Then, Ganymede,” he said, bundling a roll of linen, a
blanket and a pot of salve into her arms, “stow these about you, while I fill
this little vial and put some vittles together. Wait here a few minutes for me,
and we’ll be off. And on the way you can tell me everything about this young
fellow you’ve discovered, for once across the road no one is going to hear us.”
And
on the way she did indeed pour out in her relief and eagerness what she could
not have said so freely by daylight. It was not yet dark, but a fine neutral
twilight in which they saw each other clear but without colours.
“The
bushes there are thick. I heard him stir and groan, and I went to look. He
looks like a young gentleman of family, someone’s squire. Yes, he talked to me,
but—but told me nothing, it was like talking to a wilful child. So weak, and
blood on his shoulder and arm, and making little jests… But he trusted me
enough to know I wouldn’t betray him.” She skipped beside Cadfael through the
tall stubble into which the abbey sheep would soon be turned to graze, and to
fertilise the field with their droppings. “I gave him what I had, and told him
to lie still, and I would bring help as soon as it grew dusk.”
“Now
we’re near, do you lead the way. You he’ll know.” There was already starlight
before the sun was gone, a lovely August light that would still last them,
their eyes being accustomed, an hour or more, while veiling them from other
eyes. Godith withdrew from Cadfael’s clasp the hand that had clung like a
child’s through the stubble, and waded forward into the low, loose thicket of
bushes. On their left hand, within a few yards of them, the river ran, dark and
still, only the thrusting sound of its current like a low throb shaking the
silence, and an occasional gleam of silver showing where its eddies swirled.
“Hush!
It’s me—Ganymede! And a friend to us both!”
In
the sheltered dimness a darker form stirred, and raised into sight a pale oval
of face and a tangled head of hair almost as pale. A hand was braced into the
grass to thrust the half-seen stranger up from the ground. No broken bones
there, thought Cadfael with satisfaction. The hard-drawn breath signalled
stiffness and pain, but nothing mortal. A young, muted voice said: “Good lad!
Friends I surely need…”
Cadfael
kneeled beside him and lent him a shoulder to lean against. “First, before we
move you, where’s the damage? Nothing out of joint—by the look of you, nothing
broken.” His hands were busy about the young man’s body and limbs, he grunted
cautious content.
“Nothing
but gashes,” muttered the boy laboriously, and gasped at a shrewd touch. “I
lost enough blood to betray me, but into the river… And half-drowned… they must
think wholly…” He relaxed with a great sigh, feeling how confidently he was
handled.
“Food
and wine will put the blood back into you, in time. Can you rise and go?”
“Yes,”
said his patient grimly, and all but brought his careful supporters down with
him, proving it.
“No,
let be, we can do better for you than that. Hold fast by me, and turn behind
me. Now, your arms round my neck…”
He
was long, but a light weight. Cadfael stooped forward, hooked his thick arms
round slim, muscular thighs, and shrugged the weight securely into balance on
his solid back. The dank scent of the river water still hung about the young
man’s clothing. “I’m too great a load,” he fretted feebly. “I could have
walked …”
“You’ll
do as you’re bid, and no argument. Godric, go before, and see there’s no one in
sight.”
It
was only a short way to the shadow of the mill. Its bulk loomed dark against
the still lambent sky, the great round of the undershot wheel showing gaps here
and there like breaks in a set of teeth. Godith heaved open the leaning door,
and felt her way before them into gloom. Through narrow cracks in the
floorboards on the left side she caught fleeting, spun gleams of the river
water hurrying beneath. Even in this hot, dry season, lower than it had been
for some years, the Severn flowed fast and still.
“There’ll
be dry sacks in plenty piled somewhere by the landward wall,” puffed Cadfael at
her back. “Feel your way along and find them.” There was also a dusty, rustling
layer of last harvest’s chaff under their feet, sending up fine powder to
tickle their noses. Godith groped her way to the corner, and spread sacks there
in a thick, comfortable mattress, with two folded close for a pillow. “Now take
this long-legged heron of yours under the armpits, and help me ease him down…
There, as good a bed as mine in the dortoir! Now close the door, before I make
a light to see him by.”
He
had brought a good end of candle with him, and a handful of the dry chaff
spread on a millstone made excellent tinder for the spark he struck. When his
candle was burning steadily he ground it into place on the flickering chaff,
quenching the fire that might have blown and spread, and anchoring his light on
a safe candlestick, as the wax first softened and then congealed again. “Now
let’s look at you!”
The
young man lay back gratefully and heaved a huge sigh, meekly abandoning the
responsibility for himself. Out of a soiled and weary face, eyes irrepressibly
lively gazed up at them, of some light, bright colour not then identifiable. He
had a large, generous mouth, drawn with exhaustion but wryly smiling, and the
tangle of hair matted and stained from the river would be as fair as
corn-stalks when it was clean. “One of them ripped your shoulder for you, I
see,” said Cadfael, hands busy unfastening and drawing off the dark cotte
encrusted down one sleeve with dried blood. “Now the shirt—you’ll be needing new
clothes, my friend, before you leave this hostelry.”
“I’ll
have trouble paying my shot,” said the boy, valiantly grinning, and ended the
grin with a sharp indrawn breath as the sleeve was detached painfully from his
wound.
“Our
charges are low. For a straight story you can buy such hospitality as we’re
offering. Godric, lad, I need water, and river water’s better than none. See if
you can find anything in this place to carry it in.”
She
found the sound half of a large pitcher among the debris under the wheel, left
by some customer after its handle and lip had got broken, scrubbed it out
industriously with the skirt of her cotte, and went obediently to bring water,
he hoped safely. The flow of the river here would be fresher than the leat, and
occupy her longer on the journey, while Cadfael undid the boy’s belt, and
stripped off his shoes and hose, shaking out the blanket to spread over his
nakedness. There was a long but not deep gash, he judged from a sword-cut, down
the right thigh, a variety of bruises showing bluish on his fair skin, and most
strangely, a thin, broken graze on the left side of his neck, and another
curiously like it on the outer side of his right wrist. More healed, dark
lines, these, older by a day or two than his wounds. “No question,” mused
Cadfael aloud, “but you’ve been living an interesting life lately.”
“Lucky
to keep it,” murmured the boy, half-asleep in his new ease.
“Who
was hunting you?”
“The
king’s men—who else?”
“And
still will be?”
“Surely.
But in a few days I’ll be fit to relieve you of the burden of me…”
“Never
mind that now. Turn a little to me—so! Let’s get this thigh bound up, it’s
clean enough, it’s knitting already. This will sting.” It did, the youth
stiffened and gasped a little, but made no complaint. Cadfael had the wound
bound and under the blanket by the time Godith came with the pitcher of water.
For want of a handle she had to use two hands to carry it.
“Now
we’ll see to this shoulder. This is where you lost so much blood. An arrow did
this!” It was an oblique cut sliced through the outer part of his left arm just
below the shoulder, bone-deep, leaving an ugly flap of flesh gaping. Cadfael
began to sponge away the encrustations of blood from it, and press it firmly
together beneath a pad of linen soaked in one of his herbal salves. “This will
need help to knit clean,” he said, busy rolling his bandage tightly round the
arm. “There, now you should eat, but not too much, you’re over-weary to make
the best use of it. Here’s meat and cheese and bread, and keep some by you for
morning, you may well be ravenous when you wake.”
“If
there’s water left,” besought the young man meekly, “I should like to wash my
hands and face. I’m foul!”
Godith
kneeled beside him, moistened a piece of linen in the pitcher, and instead of
putting it into his hand, very earnestly and thoroughly did it for, him,
putting back the matted hair from his forehead, which was wide and candid, even
teasing out some of the knots with solicitous fingers. After the first surprise
he lay quietly and submissively under her ministering touch, but his eyes,
cleansed of the soiled shadows, watched her face as she bent over him, and grew
larger and larger in respectful wonder. And all this while she had hardly said
a word.
The
young man was almost too worn out to eat at all, and flagged very soon. He lay
for a few moments with lids drooping, peering at his rescuers in silent
thought. Then he said, his tongue stumbling sleepily: “I owe you a name, after
all you’ve done for me…”
“Tomorrow,”
said Cadfael firmly. “You’re in the best case to sleep sound, and here I
believe you may. Now drink this down—it helps keep wounds from festering, and
eases the heart.” It was a strong cordial of his own brewing, he tucked away
the empty vial in his gown. “And here’s a little flask of wine to bear you
company if you wake. In the morning I’ll be with you early.”
“We!”
said Godith, low but firmly.
“Wait,
one more thing!” Cadfael had remembered it at the last moment. “You’ve no
weapon on you—yet I think you did wear a sword.”
“I
shed it,” mumbled the boy drowsily, “in the river. I had too much weight to
keep afloat—and they were shooting. It was in the water I got this clout… I had
the wit to go down, I hope they believe I stayed down… God knows it was touch
and go!”
“Yes,
well, tomorrow will do. And we must find you a weapon. Now, good night!”
He
was asleep before ever they put out the candle, and drew the door closed. They
walked wordlessly through the rustling stubble for some minutes, the sky over
them an arch of dark and vivid blue paling at the edges into a fringe of
sea-green. Godith asked abruptly: “Brother Cadfael, who was Ganymede?”
“A
beautiful youth who was cup-bearer to Jove, and much loved by him.”
“Oh!”
said Godith, uncertain whether to be delighted or rueful, this success being
wholly due to her boyishness.
“But
some say that it’s also another name for Hebe,” said Cadfael.
“Oh!
And who is Hebe?”
“Cup-bearer
to Jove, and much loved by him—but a beautiful maiden.”
“Ah!”
said Godith profoundly. And as they reached the road and crossed towards the
abbey, she said seriously:
“You
know who he must be, don’t you?”
“Jove?
The most god-like of all the pagan gods…”
“He!”
she said severely, and caught and shook Brother Cadfael’s arm in her solemnity.
“A Saxon name, and Saxon hair, and on the run from the king’s men… He’s Torold
Blund, who set out with Nicholas to save FitzAlan’s treasury for the empress.
And of course he had nothing to do with poor Nicholas’s death. I don’t believe
he ever did a shabby thing in his whole life!”
“That,”
said Cadfael, “I hesitate to say of any man, least of all myself. But I give
you my word, child, this one most shabby thing he certainly did not do. You may
sleep in peace!”
It
was nothing out of the ordinary for Brother Cadfael, that devoted gardener and
apothecary, to rise long before it was necessary for Prime, and have an hour’s
work done before he joined his brothers at the first service; so no one thought
anything of it when he dressed and went out early on that particular morning,
and no one even knew that he also roused his boy, as he had promised. They went
out with more medicaments and food, and a cotte and hose that Brother Cadfael
had filched from the charity offerings that came in to the almoner. Godith had
taken away with her the young man’s bloodstained shirt, which was of fine linen
and not to be wasted, had washed it before she slept, and mended it on rising,
where the arrow-head had sliced the threads asunder. On such a warm August
night, spread out carefully on the bushes in the garden, it had dried well.
Their
patient was sitting up in his bed of sacks, munching bread with appetite, and
seemed to have total trust in them, for he made no move to seek cover when the
door began to open. He had draped his torn and stained cotte round his shoulders,
but for the rest was naked under his blanket, and the bared, smooth chest and
narrow flanks were elegantly formed. Body and eyes still showed blue bruises,
but he was certainly much restored alter one long night of rest.
“Now,”
said Cadfael with satisfaction, “you may talk as much as you like, my friend,
while I dress this wound of yours. The leg will do very well until we have more
time, but this shoulder is a tricky thing. Godric, see to him on the other side
while I uncover it, it may well stick. You steady bandage and arm while I
unbind. Now, sir…” And he added, for fair exchange: “They call me Brother
Cadfael, I’m as Welsh as Dewi Sant, and I’ve been about the world, as you may
have guessed. And this boy of mine is Godric, as you’ve heard, and brought me
to you. Trust us both, or neither.”
“I
trust both,” said the boy. He had more colour this morning, or it was the flush
of dawn reflected, his eyes were bright and hazel, more green than brown. “I
owe you more than trust can pay, but show me more I can do, and I’ll do it. My
name is Torold Blund, I come from a hamlet by Oswestry, and I’m FitzAlan’s man
from head to foot.” The bandage stuck then, and Godith felt him flinch, and
locked the fold until she could ease it free, by delicate touches. “If that
puts you in peril,” said Torold, suppressing the pain, “I do believe I’m fit to
go, and go I will. I would not for the world shrug off my danger upon you.”
“You’ll
go when you’re let,” said Godith, and for revenge snatched off the last fold of
bandage, but very circumspectly, and holding the anointed pad in place. “And it
won’t be today.”
“Hush,
let him talk, time’s short,” said Cadfael. “Go to it, lad. We’re not in the
business of selling Maud’s men to Stephen, or Stephen’s men to Maud. How did
you come here in this pass?”
Torold
took a deep breath, and talked to some purpose. “I came to the castle here with
Nicholas Faintree, who was also FitzAlan’s man, from the next manor to my
father’s, we joined the garrison only a week before it fell. The evening before
the assault there was a council—we were not there, we were small fry—and they
resolved to get the FitzAlan treasury away the very next day for the use of the
empress, not knowing then it would be the last day. Nicholas and I were told
off to be the messengers because we were new to Shrewsbury, and not known, and
might get through well enough where others senior to us might be known and cut
down at sight. The goods—they were not too bulky, thank God, not much plate,
more coin, and most of all in jewellery—were hidden somewhere no one knew but
our lord and his agent who had them in guard. We had to ride to him when the
word was given, take them from where he would show us, and get clear by night
for Wales. FitzAlan had an accord with Owain Gwynedd—not that he’s for either
party here, he’s for Wales, but civil war here suits him well, and he and
FitzAlan are friends. Before it was well dawn they attacked, and it was plain
we could not hold. So we were sent off on our errand—it was to a shop in the
town…” He wavered, uneasy at giving any clue.
“I
know,” said Cadfael, wiping away the exudation of the night from the shoulder
wound, and anointing a new pad. “It was Edric Flesher, who himself has told me
his part in it. You were taken out to his barn in Frankwell, and the treasury
laid up with you to wait for the cover of night. Go on!”
The
young man, watching the dressing of his own hurts without emotion, went on
obediently: “We rode as soon as it was dark. From there clear of the suburb and
into trees is only a short way. There’s a herdsman’s hut there in the piece
where the track is in woodland, though only along the edge, the fields still
close. We were on this stretch when Nick’s horse fell lame. I lit down to see,
for he went very badly, and he had picked up a caltrop, and was cut to the
bone.”
“Caltrops?”
said Brother Cadfael, startled. “On such a forest path, away from any field of
battle?” For those unobtrusive martial cruelties, made in such a shape as to be
scattered under the hooves of cavalry, and leaving always one crippling spike
upturned, surely had no part to play on a narrow forest ride.
“Caltrops,”
said Torold positively. “I don’t speak simply from the wound, the thing was
there embedded, I know, I wrenched it out. But the poor beast was foundered, he
could go, but not far, and not loaded. There’s a farm I know of very close
there, I thought I could get a fresh horse in exchange for Nick’s, a poor
exchange but what could we do? We did not even unload, but Nick lighted down,
to ease the poor creature of his weight, and said he would wait there in the
hut for me. And I went, and I got a mount from the farm—it’s off to the right,
heading west as we were, the man’s name is Ulf, he’s distant kin to me on my
mother’s side—and rode back, with Nick’s half the load on this new nag.
“I
came up towards the hut,” he said, stiffening at the recollection, “and I
thought he would be looking out for me, ready to mount, and he was not. I don’t
know why that made me so uneasy. Not a breath stirring, and for all I was cautious,
I knew I could be heard by any man truly listening. And he never showed face or
called out word. So I never went too near. I drew off, and reined forward a
little way, and made a single tether of the horses, to be off as fast as might
be. One knot to undo, and with a single pluck. And then I went to the hut.”
“It
was full dark then?” asked Cadfael, rolling bandage.
“Full
dark, but I could see, having been out in it. Inside it was black as pitch. The
door stood half open to the wall. I went inside stretching my ears, and not a
murmur. But in the middle of the hut I fell over him. Over Nick! If I hadn’t I
might not be here to tell as much,” said Torold grimly, and cast a sudden
uneasy glance at his Ganymede, so plainly some years his junior, and attending
him with such sedulous devotion. “This is not good hearing.” His eyes appealed
eloquently to Cadfael over Godith’s shoulder.
“You’d
best go on freely,” said Cadfael with sympathy. “He’s deeper in this than you
think, and will have your blood and mine if we dare try to banish him. No part
of this matter of Shrewsbury has been good hearing, but something may be saved.
Tell your part, we’ll tell ours.”
Godith,
all eyes, ears and serviceable hands, wisely said nothing at all.
“He
was dead,” said Torold starkly. “I fell on him, mouth to mouth, there was no
breath in him. I held him, reaching forward to save myself as I fell, I had him
in my arms and he was like an armful of rags. And then I heard the dry fodder
rustle behind me, and started round, because there was no wind to stir it, and
I was frightened…”
“Small
blame!” said Cadfael, smoothing a fresh pad soaked in his herbal salve against
the moist wound. “You had good reason. Trouble no more for your friend, he is
with God surely. We buried him yesterday within the abbey. He has a prince’s
tomb. You, I think, escaped the like very narrowly, when his murderer lunged
from behind the door.”
“So
I think, too,” said the boy, and drew in hissing breath at the bite of
Cadfael’s dressing. “There he must have been. The grass warned me when he made
his assay. I don’t know how it is, every man throws up his right arm to ward
off blows from his head, and so did I. His cord went round my wrist as well as
my throat. I was not clever or a hero, I lashed out in fright and jerked it out
of his hands. It brought him down on top of me in the dark. I know only too
well,” he said, defensively, “that you may not believe me.”
“There
are things that go to confirm you. Spare to be so wary of your friends. So you
were man to man, at least, better odds than before. How did you escape him?”
“More
by luck than valour,” said Torold ruefully. “We were rolling about in the hay,
wrestling and trying for each other’s throat, everything by feel and nothing by
sight, and neither of us could get space or time to draw, for I don’t know how
long, but I suppose it was no more than minutes. What ended it was that there
must have been an old manger there against the wall, half fallen to pieces, and
I banged my head against one of the boards lying loose in the hay. I hit him
with it, two-handed, and he dropped. I doubt I did him any lasting damage, but
it knocked him witless long enough for me to run, and run I did, and loosed
both the horses, and made off westward like a hunted hare. I still had work to
do, and there was no one but me left to do it, or I might have stayed to try
and even the account for Nick. Or I might not,” owned Torold with scowling
honesty. “I doubt I was even thinking about FitzAlan’s errand then, though I’m
thinking of it now, and have been ever since. I ran for my life. I was afraid
he might have had others lying in ambush to come to his aid. All I wanted was
out of there as fast as my legs would go.”
“No
need to make a penance of it,” said Cadfael mildly, securing his bandage. “Sound
sense is something to be glad of, not ashamed. But, my friend, it’s taken you
two full days, by your own account, to get to much the same spot you started
from. I take it, by that, the king has allies pretty thick between here and
Wales, at least by the roads.”
“Thick
as bees in swarm! I got well forward by the more northerly road, and all but
ran my head into a patrol where there was no passing. They were stopping
everything that moved, what chance had I with two horses and a load of
valuables? I had to draw off into the woods, and by that time it was getting
light, there was nothing to be done but lie up until dark again and try the
southerly road. And that was no better, they had loose companies ranging the
countryside by then. I thought I might make my way through by keeping off the
roads and close to the curve of the river, but it was another night lost. I lay
up in a copse on the hill all day Thursday, and tried again by night, and that
was when they winded me, four or five of them, and I had to run for it, with
only one way to run, down towards the river. They had me penned, I couldn’t get
out of the trap. I took the saddle-bags from both horses, and turned the beasts
loose, and started them off at a panic gallop, hoping they’d crash through and lead
the pursuit away from me, but there was one of the fellows too near, he saw the
trick, and made for me instead. He gave me this slash in the thigh, and his
yell brought the others running. There was only one thing to do. I took to the
water, saddle-bags and all. I’m a strong swimmer, but with that weight it was
hard work to stay afloat, and let the current bring me downstream. That’s when
they started shooting. Dark as it was, they’d been out in it long enough to
have fair vision, and there’s always light from the water when there’s
something moving in it. So I got this shoulder wound, and had the sense to go
under and stay under as long as I had breath. Severn’s fast, even in summer
water it carried me down well. They followed along the bank for a while, and
loosed one or two more arrows, but then I think they were sure I was under for
good. I worked my way towards the bank as soon as it seemed safe, to get a foot
to ground and draw breath here and there, but I stayed in the water. I knew the
bridge would be manned, I dared not drag myself ashore until I was well past.
It was high time by then. I remember crawling into the bushes, but not much
else, except rousing just enough to be afraid to stir when your people came
reaping. And then Godric here found me. And that’s the truth of it,” he ended
firmly, and looked Cadfael unblinkingly in the eye.
“But
not the whole truth,” said Cadfael, placidly enough. “Godric found no
saddle-bags along with you.” He eyed the young face that fronted him steadily,
lips firmly closed, and smiled. “No, never fret, we won’t question you. You are
the sole custodian of FitzAlan’s treasury, and what you’ve done with it, and
how, God knows, you ever managed to do anything sensible with it in your
condition, that’s your affair. You haven’t the air of a courier who has failed
in his mission, I’ll say that for you. And for your better peace, all the talk
in the town is that FitzAlan and Adeney were not taken, but broke out of the
ring and are got clean away. Now we have to leave you alone here until
afternoon, we have duties, too. But one of us, or both, will come and see how
you’re faring then. And here’s food and drink, and clothes I hope will fit you
well enough to pass. But lie quiet for today, you’re not your own man yet
however wholeheartedly you may be FitzAlan’s.”
Godith
laid the washed and mended shirt on top of the folded garments, and was
following Cadfael to the door when the look on Torold’s face halted her, half
uneasy, half triumphant. His eyes grew round with amazement as he stared at the
crisp, clean linen, and the fine stitches of the long mend where the
blood-stained gash had been. A soft whistle of admiration saluted the wonder.
“Holy
Mary! Who did this? Do you keep an expert seamstress within the abbey walls? Or
did you pray for a miracle?”
“That?
That’s Godric’s work,” said Cadfael, not altogether innocently, and walked out
into the early sunshine, leaving Godith flushed to the ears. “We learn more
skills in the cloister than merely cutting wheat and brewing cordials,” she
said loftily, and fled alter Cadfael.
But
she was grave enough on the way back, going over in her mind Torold’s story,
and reflecting how easily he might have died before ever she met him; not
merely once, in the murderer’s cord, nor the second time from King Stephen’s
roaming companies, but in the river, or from his wounds in the bushes. It
seemed to her that divine grace was taking care of him, and had provided her as
the instrument. There remained lingering anxieties.
“Brother
Cadfael, you do believe him?”
“I
believe him. What he could not tell truth about, he would not lie about,
either. Why, what’s on your mind still?”
“Only
that the night before I saw him I said—I was afraid the companion who rode with
Nicholas was far the most likely to be tempted to kill him. How simple it would
have been! But you said yesterday, you did say, he did not do it. Are you quite
sure? How do you know?”
“Nothing simpler, girl dear! The mark of the
strangler’s cord is on his neck and on his wrist. Did you not understand those
thin scars? He was meant to go after his friend out of this world. No, you need
have no fear on that score, what he told us is truth. But there may be things
he could not tell us, things we ought to discover, for Nicholas Faintree’s
sake. Godith, this afternoon, when you’ve seen to the lotions and wines, you
may leave the garden and go and keep him company if you please, and I’ll come
there as soon as I can. There are things I must look into, over there on the
Frankwell side of Shrewsbury.”
Chapter
Six
FROM
THE FRANKWELL END OF THE WESTERN BRIDGE, the suburb outside the walls and over
the river, the road set off due west, climbing steadily, leaving behind the
gardens that fringed the settlement. At first it was but a single road mounting
the hill that rose high above Severn, then shortly it branched into two, of
which the more southerly soon branched again, three spread fingers pointing
into Wales. But Cadfael took the road Nicholas and Torold had taken on the
night after the castle fell, the most northerly of the three.
He
had thought of calling on Edric Flesher in the town, and giving him the news
that one, at least, of the two young couriers had survived and preserved his
charge, but then he had decided against it. As yet Torold was by no means safe,
and until he was well away, the fewer people who knew of his whereabouts the
better, the less likely was word of him to slip out in the wrong place, where
his enemies might overhear. There would be time later to share any good news
with Edric and Petronilla.
The
road entered the thick woodland of which Torold had spoken, and narrowed into a
grassy track, within the trees but keeping close to the edge, where cultivated
fields showed between the trunks. And there, withdrawn a little deeper into the
woods, lay the hut, low and roughly timbered. From this place it would be a
simple matter to carry a dead body on horseback as far as the castle ditch. The
river, as everywhere here, meandered in intricate coils, and would have to be
crossed in order to reach the place where the dead had been flung, but there
was a place opposite the castle on this side where a central island made the
stream fordable even on foot in such a dry season, once the castle itself was
taken. The distance was small, the night had been long enough. Then somewhere
off to the right lay Ulf s holding, where Torold had got his exchange of
horses. Cadfael turned off in that direction, and found the croft not a quarter
of a mile from the track.
Ulf
was busy gleaning after carrying his corn, and not at first disposed to be
talkative to an unknown monk, but the mention of Torold’s name, and the clear
intimation that here was someone Torold had trusted, loosened his tongue.
“Yes,
he did come with a lamed horse, and I did let him have the best of mine in
exchange. I was the gainer, though, even so, for the beast he left with me came
from FitzAlan’s stables. He’s still lame, but healing. Would you see him? His
fine gear is well hidden, it would mark him out for stolen or worse if it was
seen.”
Even
without his noble harness the horse, a tall roan, showed suspiciously fine for
a working farmer to possess, and undoubtedly he was still lame of one
fore-foot. Ulf showed him the wound.
“Torold
said a caltrop did this,” mused Cadfael. “Strange place to find such.”
“Yet
a caltrop it was, for I have it, and several more like it that I went and
combed out of the grass there next day. My beasts cross there, I wanted no more
of them lamed. Someone seeded a dozen yards of the path at its narrowest there.
To halt them by the hut, what else?”
“Someone
who knew in advance what they were about and the road they’d take, and gave
himself plenty of time to lay his trap, and wait in ambush for them to spring
it.”
“The
king had got wind of the matter somehow,” Ulf opined darkly, “and sent some of
his men secretly to get hold of whatever they were carrying. He’s desperate for
money—as bad as the other side.”
Nevertheless,
thought Cadfael, as he walked back to the hut in the woods, for all that I can
see, this was no party sent out by the king, but one man’s enterprise for his
own private gain. If he had indeed been the king’s emissary he would have had a
company with him. It was not King Stephen’s coffers that were to have profited,
if all had gone according to plan.
To
sum up, then, it was proven there had indeed been a third here that night. Over
and over Torold was cleared of blame. The caltrops were real, a trail of them
had been laid to ensure laming one or other of the horses, and so far the
stratagem had succeeded, perhaps even better than expected, since it had
severed the two companions, leaving the murderer free to deal with one first,
and then lie in wait for the other.
Cadfael
did not at once go into the hut; the surroundings equally interested him.
Somewhere here, well clear of the hut itself, Torold had regarded the pricking
of his thumbs, and tethered the horses forward on the road, ready for flight.
And somewhere here, too, probably withdrawn deeper into cover, the third man
had also had a horse in waiting. It should still be possible to find their
traces. It had not rained since that night, nor was it likely that many men had
roamed these woods since. All the inhabitants of Shrewsbury were still keeping
close under their own roof-trees unless forced to go abroad, and the king’s
patrols rode in the open, where they could ride fast.
It
took him a little while, but he found both places. The solitary horse had been
hobbled and left to graze, and by the signs he had been a fine creature, for
the hoof-marks he had left in a patch of softer ground, a hollow of dried mud
where water habitually lay after rain, and had left a smooth silt, showed large
and well shod. The spot where two had waited together was well to westward of
the hut, and in thick cover. A low branch showed the peeled scar where the
tether had been pulled clear in haste, and two distinguishable sets of prints
could be discerned where the grass thinned to bare ground.
Cadfael
went into the hut. He had broad daylight to aid him, and with the door set wide
there was ample light even within. The murderer had waited here for his victim,
he must have left his traces.
The
remains of the winter fodder, mown along the sunlit fringes of the woods, had
been left here against the return of autumn, originally in a neat stack against
the rear wall, but now a stormy sea of grass was spread and tossed over the
entire earthen floor, as though a gale had played havoc within there. The
decrepit manger from which Torold had plucked his loose plank was there,
drunkenly leaning. The dry grass was well laced with small herbs now rustling
and dead but still fragrant, and there was a liberal admixture of hooky,
clinging goose-grass in it. That reminded him not only of the shred of stem
dragged deep into Nick Faintree’s throat by the ligature that killed him, but
also of Torold’s ugly shoulder wound. He needed goose-grass to make a dressing
for it, he would look along the fringe of the fields, it must be plentiful
here. God’s even-handed justice, that called attention to one friend’s murder
with a dry stem of last year’s crop, might well, by the same token, design to
soothe and heal the other friend’s injuries by the gift of this year’s.
Meantime,
the hut yielded little, except the evident chaos of a hand-to-hand struggle
waged within it. But in the rough timbers behind the door there were a few
roving threads of deep blue woollen cloth, rather pile than thread. Someone had
certainly lain in hiding there, the door drawn close to his body. There was
also one clot of dried clover that bore a smaller clot of blood. But Cadfael
raked and combed in vain among the rustling fodder in search of the strangler’s
weapon. Either the murderer had found it again and taken it away with him, or
else it lay deeply entangled in some corner, evading search. Cadfael worked his
way backwards on hands and knees from the manger to the doorway, and was about
to give up, and prise himself up from his knees, when the hand on which he
supported his weight bore down on something hard and sharp, and winced from the
contact in surprise. Something was driven half into the earth floor under the
thinning layers of hay, like another caltrop planted here for inquisitive monks
to encounter to their grief and injury. He sat back on his heels, and carefully
brushed aside the rustling grasses, until he could get a hand to the hidden
thing and prise it loose. It came away into his hand readily, filling his palm,
hard, encrusted and chill. He lifted it to the invading sunlight in the doorway
behind him, and it glittered with pinpoints of yellow, a miniature sun.
Brother
Cadfael rose from his knees and took it into the full daylight of afternoon to
see what he had found. It was a large, rough-cut gem stone, as big as a
crab-apple, a deep-yellow topaz still gripped and half-enclosed by an eagle’s
talon of silver-gilt. The claw was complete, finely shaped, but broken off at
the stem, below the stone it clutched. This was the tip of some excellent
setting in silver, perhaps the end of a brooch-pin—no, too large for that. The
apex of a dagger-hilt? If so, a noble dagger, no common working knife. Beneath
that jagged tip would have been the rounded hand-grip, and on the cross-piece,
perhaps, some smaller topaz stones to match this master-stone. Broken off thus,
it lay in his hand a sullen, faceted ball of gold.
One
man had threshed and clawed here in his death-throes, two others had rolled and
flailed in mortal combat; any one of the three, with a thrusting hip and the
weight of a convulsed body, could have bored this hilt into the hardpacked earth
of the floor, and snapped off the crown-stone thus at its most fragile point,
and never realised the loss.
Brother
Cadfael put it away carefully in the scrip at his girdle, and went to look for
his goose-grass. In the thick herbage at the edge of the trees, where the sun
reached in, he found sprawling, angular mats of it, filled his scrip, and set
off for home with dozens of the little hooked seeds clinging in his skirts.
Godith
slipped away as soon as all the brothers had dispersed to their afternoon work,
and made her way by circumspect deviations to the mill at the end of the Gaye.
She had taken with her some ripe plums from the orchard, the half of a small
loaf of new bread, and a fresh flask of Cadfael’s wine. The patient had rapidly
developed a healthy appetite, and it was her pleasure to enjoy his enjoyment of
food and drink, as though she had a proprietorial interest in him by reason of
having found him in need.
He
was sitting on his bed of sacks, fully dressed, his back against the warm
timbers of the wall, his long legs stretched out comfortably before him with
ankles crossed. The cotte and hose fitted reasonably well, perhaps a little
short in the sleeves. He looked surprisingly lively, though still rather
greyish in the face, and careful in his movements because of the lingering
aches and pains from his wounds. She was not best pleased to see that he had
struggled into the cotte, and said so.
“You
should keep that shoulder easy, there was no need to force it into a sleeve
yet. If you don’t rest it, it won’t heal.”
“I’ve
very well,” he said abstractedly. “And I must bear whatever discomfort there
may be, if I’m to get on my way soon. It will knit well enough, I dare say.”
His mind was not on his own ills, he was frowning thoughtfully over other matters.
“Godric, I had no time to question, this morning, but—your Brother Cadfael said
Nick’s buried, and in the abbey. Is that truth?” He was not so much doubting
their word as marvelling how it had come about. “How did they ever find him?”
“That
was Brother Cadfael’s own doing,” said Godith. She sat down beside him and told
him. “There was one more than there should have been, and Brother Cadfael would
not rest until he had found the one who was different, and since then he has
not let anyone else rest. The king knows there was murder done, and has said it
should be avenged. If anyone can get justice for your friend, Brother Cadfael
is the man.”
“So
whoever it was, there in the hut, it seems I did him little harm, only dimmed
his wits for a matter of minutes. I was afraid of it. He was fit enough and
cunning enough to get rid of his dead man before morning.”
“But
not clever enough to deceive Brother Cadfael. Every individual soul must be
accounted for. Now at least Nicholas has had all the rites of the church in his
own clean name, and has a noble tomb.”
“I’m
glad,” said Torold, “to know he was not left there to rot uncoloured, or put
into the ground nameless among all the rest, though they were our comrades,
too, and not deserving of such a death. If we had stayed, we should have
suffered the same fate. If they caught me, I might suffer it yet. And yet King
Stephen approves the hunt for the murderer who did his work for him! What a mad
world!”
Godith
thought so, too; but for all that, there was a difference, a sort of logic in
it, that the king should accept the onus of the ninety-four whose deaths he had
decreed, but utterly reject the guilt for the ninety-fifth, killed
treacherously and without his sanction.
“He
despised the manner of the killing, and he resented being made an accomplice in
it. And no one is going to capture you,” she said firmly, and hoisted the plums
out of the breast of her cotte, and tumbled them between them on the blanket.
“Here’s a taste of something sweeter than bread. Try them!”
They
sat companionably eating, and slipping the stones through a chink in the
floorboards into the river below. “I still have a task laid on me,” said Torold
at length, soberly, “and now I’m alone to see it done. And heaven knows,
Godric, what I should have done without you and Brother Cadfael, and sad I
shall be to set off and leave you behind, with small chance of seeing you
again. Never shall I forget what you’ve done for me. But go I must, as soon as
I’m fit and can get clear. It will be better for you when I’m gone, you’ll be
safer so.”
“Who
is safe? Where?” said Godith, biting into another ripe purple plum. “There is
no safe place.”
“There
are degrees in danger, at any rate. And I have work to do, and I’m fit to get
on with it now.”
She
turned and gave him a long, roused look. Never until that moment had she looked
far enough ahead to confront the idea of his departure. He was something she
had only newly discovered, and here he was, unless she was mistaking his
meaning, threatening to take himself off, out of her hands and out of her life.
Well, she had an ally in Brother Cadfael. With the authority of her master she
said sternly:
“If
you’re thinking you’re going to set off anywhere until you’re fully healed,
then think again, and smartly, too. You’ll stay here until you’re given leave
to go, and that won’t be today, or tomorrow, you can make up your mind to
that!”
Torold
gaped at her in startled and delighted amusement, laid his head back against
the rough timber of the wall, and laughed aloud. “You sound like my mother, the
time I had a bad fall at the quintain. And dearly I love you, but so I did her,
and I still went my own way. I’m fit and strong and able, Godric, and I’m under
order that came before your orders. I must go. In my place, you’d have been out
of here before now, as fierce as you are.”
“I
would not,” she said furiously, “I have more sense. What use would you be, on
the run from here, without even a weapon, without a horse—you turned your
horses loose, remember, to baffle the pursuit, you told us so! How far would
you get? And how grateful would FitzAlan be for your folly? Not that we need go
into it,” she said loftily, “seeing you’re not fit even to walk out of here as
far as the river. You’d be carried back on Brother Cadfael’s shoulders, just as
you came here the first time.”
“Oh,
would I so, Godric, my little cousin?” Torold’s eyes were sparkling mischief.
He had forgotten for the moment all his graver cares, amused and nettled by the
impudence of this urchin, vehemently threatening him with humiliation and
failure. “Do I look to you so feeble?”
“As
a starving cat,” she said, and plunged a plum-stone between the boards with a
vicious snap. “A ten-year-old could lay you on your back!”
“You
think so, do you?” Torold rolled sideways and took her about the middle in his
good arm. “I’ll show you, Master Godric, whether I’m fit or no!” He was
laughing for pure pleasure, feeling his muscles stretch and exult again in a
sudden, sweet bout of horseplay with a trusted familiar, who needed taking down
a little for everyone’s good. He reached his wounded arm to pin the boy down by
the shoulders. The arrogant imp had uttered only one muffled squeak as he was
tipped on his back. “One hand of mine can more than deal with you, my lovely
lad!” crowed Torold, withdrawing half his weight, and flattening his left palm
firmly in the breast of the over-ample cotte, to demonstrate.
He
recoiled, stricken and enlightened, just as Godith got breath enough to swear
at him, and strike out furiously with her right hand, catching him a salutary
box on the ear. They fell apart in a huge, ominous silence, and sat up among
the rumpled sacks with a yard or more between them.
The
silence and stillness lasted long. It was a full minute before they so much as
tilted cautious heads and looked sidewise at each other. Her profile, warily
emerging from anger into guilty sympathy, was delicate and pert and utterly
feminine, he must have been weak and sick indeed, or he would surely have
known. The soft, gruff voice was only an ambiguous charm, a natural deceit.
Torold scrubbed thoughtfully at his stinging ear, and asked at last, very
carefully: “Why didn’t you tell me? I never meant to offend you, but how was I
to know?”
“There
was no need for you to know,” snapped Godith, still ruffled, “if you’d had the
sense to do as you’re bid, or the courtesy to treat your friends gently.”
“But
you goaded me! Good God,” protested Torold, “it was only the rough play I’d
have used on a younger brother of my own, and you asked for it.” He demanded
suddenly:
“Does
Brother Cadfael know?”
“Of
course he does! Brother Cadfael at least can tell a hart from a hind.”
There
fell a second and longer silence, full of resentment, curiosity and caution,
while they continued to study each other through lowered lashes, she furtively
eyeing the sleeve that covered his wound, in case a telltale smear of blood
should break through, he surveying again the delicate curves of her face, the
jut of lip and lowering of brows that warned him she was still offended.
Two
small, wary voices uttered together, grudgingly:
“Did
I hurt you?”
They
began to laugh at the same instant, suddenly aware of their own absurdity. The
illusion of estrangement vanished utterly; they fell into each other’s arms
helpless with laughter, and nothing was left to complicate their relationship
but the slightly exaggerated gentleness with which they touched each other.
“But
you shouldn’t have used that arm so,” she reproached at last, as they
disentangled themselves and sat back, eased and content. “You could have
started it open again, it’s a bad gash.”
“Oh,
no, there’s no damage. But you—I wouldn’t for the world have vexed you.” And he
asked, quite simply, and certain of his right to be told: “Who are you? And how
did you ever come into such a coil as this?”
She
turned her head and looked at him long and earnestly; there would never again
be anything with which she would hesitate to trust him.
“They
left it too late,” she said, “to send me away out of Shrewsbury before the town
fell. This was a desperate throw, turning me into an abbey servant, but I was
sure I could carry it off. And I did, with everyone but Brother Cadfael. You
were taken in, weren’t you? I’m a fugitive of your party, Torold, we’re two of
a kind. I’m Godith Adeney.”
“Truly?”
He beamed at her, round-eyed with wonder and delight. “You’re Fulke Adeney’s
daughter? Praise God! We were anxious for you! Nick especially, for he knew
you… I never saw you till now, but I, too…” He stooped his fair head and
lightly kissed the small, none too clean hand that had just picked up the last
of the plums. “Mistress Godith, I am your servant to command! This is splendid!
If I’d known, I’d have told you better than half a tale.”
“Tell
me now,” said Godith, and generously split the plum in half, and sent the stone
whirling down into the Severn. The riper half she presented to his open mouth,
effectively closing it for a moment. “And then,” she said, “I’ll tell you my
side of it, and we shall have a useful whole.”
Brother
Cadfael did not go straight to the mill on his return, but halted to check that
his workshop was in order, and to pound up his goose-grass in a mortar, and
prepare a smooth green salve from it. Then he went to join his young charges,
careful to circle into the shadow of the mill from the opposite direction, and
to keep an eye open for any observer. Time was marching all too swiftly, within
an hour he and Godith would have to go back for Vespers.
They
had both known his step; when he entered they were sitting side by side with
backs propped against the wall, watching the doorway with rapt, expectant
smiles. They had a certain serene, aloof air about them, as though they
inhabited a world immune from common contacts or, common cares, but generously
accessible to him. He had only to look at them, and he knew they had no more
secrets; they were so rashly and candidly man and woman together that there was
no need even to ask anything. Though they were both waiting expectantly to tell
him!
“Brother
Cadfael…” Godith began, distantly radiant.
“First
things first,” said Cadfael briskly. “Help him out of cotte and shirt, and
start unwinding the bandage until it sticks—as it will, my friend, you’re not
out of the wood yet. Then wait, and I’ll ease it off.”
There
was no disconcerting or chastening them. The girl was up in a moment, easing
the seam of the cotte away from Torold’s wound, loosening the ties of his shirt
to slip it down from his shoulder, gently freeing the end of the linen bandage
and beginning to roll it up. The boy inclined this way and that to help, and
never took his eyes from Godith’s face, as she seldom took hers from his
absorbed countenance, and only to concentrate upon his needs.
“Well,
well!” thought Cadfael philosophically. “It seems Hugh Beringar will seek his
promised bride to little purpose—if, indeed, he really is seeking her?”
“Well,
youngster,” he said aloud, “you’re a credit to me and to yourself, as
clean-healing flesh as ever I saw. This slice of you that somebody tried to
sever will stay with you lifelong, after all, and the arm will even serve you
to hold a bow in a month or so. But you’ll have the scar as long as you live.
Now hold steady, this may burn, but trust me, it’s the best salve you could
have for green wounds. Torn muscles hurt as they knit, but knit they will.”
“It
doesn’t hurt,” said Torold in a dream. “Brother Cadfael…”
“Hold
your tongue until we have you all bound up trim. Then you can talk your hearts
out, the both of you.”
And
talk they did, as soon as Torold was helped back into his shirt, and the cotte
draped over his shoulders. Each of them took up the thread from the other, as
though handed it in a fixed and formal ceremony, like a favour in a dance; Even
their voices had grown somehow alike, as if they matched tones without
understanding that they did it. They had not the least idea, as yet, that they
were in love. The innocents believed they were involved in a partisan
comradeship, which was but the lesser half of what had happened to them in his
absence.
“So
I have told Torold all about myself,” said Godith, “and he has told me the only
thing he did not tell us before. And now he wants to tell you.”
Torold
picked up the tendered thread willingly. “I have FitzAlan’s treasury safely
hidden,” he said simply. “I had it in two pairs of linked saddle-bags, and I
kept it afloat, too, all down the river, though I had to shed sword and
swordbelt and dagger and all to lighten the load. I fetched up under the first
arch of the stone bridge. You’ll know it as well as I. That first pier spreads,
there used to be a boat-mill moored under it, some time ago, and the mooring
chain is still there, bolted to a ring in the stone. A man can hold on there
and get his breath, and so I did. And I hauled up the chain and hooked my
saddle-bags on to it, and let them down under the water, out of sight. Then I
left them there, and drifted on down here just about alive, to where Godith
found me.” He found no difficulty in speaking of her as Godith; the name had a
jubilant sound in his mouth. “And there all that gold is dangling in the Severn
still, I hope and believe, until I can reclaim it and get it away to its
rightful owner. Thank God he’s alive to benefit by it.” A last qualm shook him
suddenly and severely. “There’s been no word of anyone finding it?” he
questioned anxiously. “We should know if they had?”
“We
should know, never doubt it! No, no one’s hooked any such fish. Why should
anyone look for it there? But getting it out again undetected may not be so
easy. We three must put our wits together,” said Cadfael, “and see what we can
do between us. And while you two have been swearing your alliance, let me tell
you what I’ve been doing.”
He
made it brief enough. “I found all as you told it. The traces of your horses
are there, and of your enemy’s, too. One horse only. This was a thief bent on his
own enrichment, no zealot trying to fill the king’s coffers. He had seeded the
path for you liberally with caltrops, your kinsman collected several of them
next day, for the sake of his own cattle. The signs of your struggle within the
hut are plain enough. And pressed into the earth floor I found this.” He
produced it from his scrip, a lump of deep yellow roughly faceted, and clenched
in the broken silver-gilt claw. Torold took it from him and examined it
curiously, but without apparent recognition.
“Broken
off from a hilt, would you think?”
“Not
from yours, then?”
“Mine?”
Torold laughed. “Where would a poor squire with his way to make get hold of so
fine a weapon as this must have been? No, mine was a plain old sword my
grandsire wore before me, and a dagger to match, in a heavy hide sheath. If it
had been light as this, I’d have tried to keep it. No, this is none of mine.”
“Nor
Faintree’s, either?”
Torold
shook his head decidedly. “If he had any such, I should have known. Nick and I
are of the same condition, and friends three years and more.” He looked up
intently into Brother Cadfael’s face. “Now I remember a very small thing that
may have meaning, after all. When I broke free and left the other fellow dazed,
I trod on something under the hay where we’d been struggling, a small, hard
thing that almost threw me. I think it could well have been this. It was his?
Yes, it must have been his! Snapped off against the ground as we rolled.”
“His,
almost certainly, and the only thing we have to lead us to him,” said Cadfael,
taking back the stone and hiding it again from view in his pouch. “No man would
willingly discard so fine a thing because one stone was broken from it. Whoever
owned it still has it, and will get it repaired when he dare. If we can find the
dagger, we shall have found the murderer.”
“I
wish,” said Torold fiercely, “I could both go and stay! I should be glad to be
the one to avenge Nick, he was a good friend to me. But my part is to obey my
orders, and get FitzAlan’s goods safely over to him in France. And,” he said,
regarding Cadfael steadily, “to take with me also Fulke Adeney’s daughter, and
deliver her safe to her father. If you will trust her to me.”
“And
help us,” added Godith with immense confidence.
“Trust
her to you—I might,” said Cadfael mildly. “And help you both I surely will, as
best I can. A very simple matter! All I have to do—and mark you, she has the
assurance to demand it of me!—is to conjure you two good horses out of the
empty air, where even poor hacks are gold, retrieve your hidden treasure for
you, and see you well clear of the town, westward into Wales. Just a trifle!
Harder things are done daily by the saints…”
He
had reached this point when he stiffened suddenly, and spread a warning hand to
enjoin silence. Listening with ears stretched, he caught for a second time the
soft sound of a foot moving warily in the edge of the rustling stubble, close
to the open door.
“What
is it?” asked Godith in a soundless whisper, her eyes immense in alarm.
“Nothing!”
said Cadfael as softly. “My ears playing tricks.” And aloud he said: “Well, you
and I must be getting back for Vespers. Come! It wouldn’t do to be late.”
Torold
accepted his silent orders, and let them go without a word from him. If someone
had indeed been listening… But he had heard nothing, and it seemed to him that
even Cadfael was not sure. Why alarm Godith? Brother Cadfael was her best
protector here, and once within the abbey walls she would again be in
sanctuary. As for Torold, he was his own responsibility, though he would have
been happier if he had had a sword!
Brother
Cadfael reached down into the capacious waist of his habit, and drew out a long
poniard in a rubbed and worn leather scabbard. Silently he put it into Torold’s
hands. The young man took it, marvelling, staring as reverently as at a first
small miracle, so apt was the answer to his thought. He had it by the sheath,
the cross of the hilt before his face, and was still gazing in wonder as they
went out from him into the evening, and drew the door closed after them.
Cadfael took the memory of that look with him into the fresh, saffron air of
sunset. He himself must once have worn the same rapt expression, contemplating
the same uplifted hilt. When he had taken the Cross, long ago, his vow had been
made on that hilt, and the dagger had gone with him to Jerusalem, and roved the
eastern seas with him for ten years. Even when he gave up his’ sword along with
the things of this world, and surrendered all pride of possessions, he had kept
the poniard. Just as well to part with it at last, to someone who had need of
it and would not disgrace it
He
looked about him very cautiously as they rounded the corner of the mill and
crossed the race. His hearing was sharp as a wild creature’s, and he had heard
no whisper or rustle from outside until the last few moments of their talk
together, nor could he now be certain that what he had heard was a human foot,
it might well have been a small animal slipping through the stubble. All the
same, he must take thought for what might happen if they really had been spied
upon. Surely, at the worst, only the last few exchanges could have been
overheard, though those were revealing enough. Had the treasure been mentioned?
Yes, he himself had said that all that was required of him was to obtain two
horses, retrieve the treasure, and see them safely headed for Wales. Had
anything been said then of where the treasure was hidden? No, that had been
much earlier. But the listener, if listener there had been, could well have
learned that a hunted fugitive of FitzAlan’s party was in hiding there, and
worse, that Adeney’s daughter was being sheltered in the abbey.
This
was getting too warm for comfort. Best get them away as soon as the boy was fit
to ride. But if this evening passed, and the night, and no move was made to
betray them, he would suspect he had been fretting over nothing. There was no
one in sight here but a solitary boy fishing, absorbed and distant on the river
bank.
“What
was it?” asked Godith, meek and attentive beside him. “Something made you
uneasy, I know.”
“Nothing
to worry your head about,” said Cadfael. “I was mistaken. Everything is as it
should be.”
From
the corner of his eye, at that moment, he caught the sudden movement down
towards the river, beyond the clump of bushes where she had found Torold. Out
of the meagre cover a slight, agile body unfolded and stood erect, stretching
lazily, and drifted at an oblique angle towards the path on which they walked,
his course converging with theirs. Hugh Beringar, his stride nicely calculated
to look accidental and yet bring him athwart their path at the right moment,
showed them a placid and amiable face, recognising Cadfael with pleasure,
accepting his attendant boy with benevolence.
“A
very fair evening, brother! You’re bound for Vespers? So am I. We may walk
together?”
“Very
gladly,” said Cadfael heartily. He tapped Godith on the shoulder, and handed
her the small sacking bundle that held his herbs and dressings. “Run ahead,
Godric, and put these away for me, and come down to Vespers with the rest of
the boys. You’ll save my legs, and have time to give a stir to that lotion I
have been brewing. Go on, child, run!”
And
Godith clasped the bundle and ran, taking good care to run like an athletic
boy, rattling one hand along the tall stubble, and whistling as she went, glad
enough to put herself out of that young man’s sight. Her own eyes and mind were
full of another young man.
“A
most biddable lad you have,” said Hugh Beringar benignly, watching her race
ahead.
“A
good boy,” said Cadfael placidly, matching him step for step across the field
blanched to the colour of cream. “He has a year’s endowment with us, but I
doubt if he’ll take the cowl. But he’ll have learned his letters, and figuring,
and a good deal about herbs and medicines, it will stand him in good stead.
You’re at leisure today, my lord?”
“Not
so much at leisure,” said Hugh Beringar with equal serenity, “as in need of
your skills and knowledge. I tried your garden first, and not finding you
there, thought you might have business today over here in the main gardens and
orchard. But for want of a sight of you anywhere, I sat down to enjoy the
evening sunshine, here by the river. I knew you’d come to Vespers, but never
realised you had fields beyond here. Is all the corn brought in now?”
“All
that we have here. The sheep will be grazing the stubble very shortly. What was
it you wanted of me, my lord? If I may serve you in accord with my duty, be
sure I will.”
“Yesterday
morning, Brother Cadfael, I asked you if you would give any request of mine
fair consideration, and you told me you give fair consideration to all that you
do. And I believe it. I had in mind what was then no more than a rumoured
threat, now it’s a real one. I have reason to know that King Stephen is already
making plans to move on, and means to make sure of his supplies and his mounts.
The siege of Shrewsbury has cost him plenty, and he now has more mouths to feed
and more men to mount. It’s not generally known, or too many would be taking
thought to evade it, as I am,” owned Beringar blithely, “but he’s about to
issue orders to have every homestead in the town searched, and a tithe of all
fodder and provisions in store commandeered for the army’s use. And all—mark
that, all—the good horses to be found, no matter who owns them, that are not
already in army or garrison service. The abbey stables will not be exempt.”
This
Cadfael did not like at all. It came far too pat, a shrewd thrust at his own
need of horses, and most ominous indication that Hugh Beringar, who had this
information in advance of the general citizens, might also be as well informed
of what went on in other quarters. Nothing this young man said or did would
ever be quite what it seemed, but whatever game he played would always be his
own game. The less said in reply, at this stage, the better. Two could play
their own games, and both, possibly, benefit. Let him first say out what he
wanted, even if what he said would have to be scrutinised from all angles, and
subjected to every known test.
“That
will be bad news to Brother Prior,” said Cadfael mildly.
“It’s
bad news to me,” said Beringar ruefully. “For I have four horses in those same
abbey stables, and while I might have a claim to retain them all for myself and
my men, once the king has given me his commission, I can’t make any such claim
at this moment with security. It might be allowed, it might not. And to be open
with you, I have no intention of letting my two best horses be drafted for the
king’s army. I want them out of here and in some private place, where they can
escape Prestcote’s foraging parties, until this flurry is over.”
“Only
two?” said Cadfael innocently. “Why not all?”
“Oh,
come, I know you have more cunning than that. Would I be here without horses at
all? If they found none of mine, they’d be hunting for all, and small chance
I’d have left for royal favour. But let them take the two nags, and they won’t
question further. Two I can afford. Brother Cadfael, it takes no more than a
few days in this place to know that you are the man to take any enterprise in
hand, however rough and however risky.” His voice was brisk and bland, even
hearty, he seemed to intend no double meanings. “The lord abbot turns to you
when he’s faced with an ordeal beyond his powers. I turn to you for practical
help. You know all this countryside. Is there a place of safety where my horses
can lie up for a few days, until this round-up is over?”
So
improbable a proposal Cadfael had not looked for, but it came as manna from
heaven. Nor did he hesitate long over taking advantage of it for his own ends.
Even if lives had not depended on the provision of those two horses, he was
well aware that Beringar was making use of him without scruple, and he need
have no scruples about doing as much in return. It went a little beyond that,
even, for he had a shrewd suspicion that at this moment Beringar knew far too
much of what was going on in his, Cadfael’s mind, and had no objection whatever
to any guesses Cadfael might be making as to what was going on in his,
Beringar’s. Each of us, he thought, has a hold of sorts upon the other, and
each of us has a reasonable insight into the other’s methods, if not motives.
It will be a fair fight. And yet this debonair being might very well be the
murderer of Nicholas Faintree. That would be a very different duel, with no
quarter asked or offered. In the meantime, make the most of what might or might
not be quite accidental circumstances.
“Yes,”
said Cadfael, “I do know of such a place.”
Beringar
did not even ask him where, or question his judgment as to whether it would be
remote enough and secret enough to be secure. “Show me the way tonight,” he
said outright, and smiled into Cadfael’s face. “It’s tonight or never, the
order will be made public tomorrow. If you and I can make the return journey on
foot before morning, ride with me. Rather you than any!”
Cadfael
considered ways and means; there was no need to consider what his answer would
be.
“Better
get your horses out after Vespers, then, out to St. Giles. I’ll join you there
when Compline is over, it will be getting dark then. It wouldn’t do for me to
be seen riding out with you, but you may exercise your own horses in the
evening as the fit takes you.”
“Good!”
said Beringar with satisfaction. “Where is this place? Have we to cross the
river anywhere?”
“No,
nor even the brook. It’s an old grange the abbey used to maintain in the Long
Forest, out beyond Pulley. Since the times grew so unchancy we’ve withdrawn all
our sheep and cattle from there, but keep two lay brothers still in the house.
No one will look for horses there, they know it’s all but abandoned. And the
lay brothers will credit what I say.”
“And
St. Giles is on our way?” It was a chapel of the abbey, away at the eastern end
of the Foregate.
“It
is. We’ll go south to Sutton, and then bear west and into the forest. You’ll
have three miles or more to walk back by the shorter way. Without horses we may
save a mile or so.”
“I
think my legs will hold me up for that distance,” said Beringar demurely.
“After Compline, then, at St. Giles.” And without any further word or question
he left Cadfael’s side, lengthening his easy stride to gain ground; for Aline
Siward was just emerging from the doorway of her house and turning towards the
abbey gateway on her way to church. Before she had gone many yards Beringar was
at her elbow; she raised her head and smiled confidingly into his face. A
creature quite without guile, but by no means without proper pride or shrewd
sense, and she opened like a flower at sight of this young man devious as a
serpent, whatever else of good or ill might be said of him. That, thought
Cadfael, watching them walk before him in animated conversation, ought to
signify something in his favour? Or was it only proof of her childlike
trustfulness? Blameless young women have before now been taken in by
black-hearted villains, even murderers; and black-hearted villains and
murderers have been deeply devoted to blameless young women, contradicting
their own nature in this one perverse tenderness.
Cadfael
was consoled and cheered by the sight of Godith in church, nobody’s fool,
nudging and whispering among the boys, and flicking him one rapid, questioning
blue glance, which he answered with a reassuring nod and smile. None too
well-founded reassurance, but somehow he would make it good. Admirable as Aline
was, Godith was the girl for him. She reminded him of Arianna, the Greek
boat-girl, long ago, skirts kilted above the knee, short hair a cloud of curls,
leaning on her long oar and calling across the water to him…
Ah, well! The age he had been then, young Torold had
not even reached yet. These things are for the young. Meantime, tonight after
Compline, at St. Giles!
Chapter
Seven
THE
RIDE OUT THROUGH SUTTON INTO THE LONG FOREST, dense and primitive through all
but the heathy summits of its fifteen square miles, was like a sudden return
visit to aspects of his past, night raids and desperate ambushes once so
familiar to him as to be almost tedious, but now, in this shadowy, elderly
form, as near excitement as he wished to come. The horse under him was lofty
and mettlesome and of high pedigree, he had not been astride such a creature
for nearly twenty years, and the flattery and temptation reminded him of days
past, when exalted and venturesome companions made all labours and privations
pleasurable.
Hugh
Beringar, once away from the used roads and into the trees and the night
shadows, seemed to have no cares in the world, certainly no fear of any
treachery on his companion’s part. He chattered, even, to pass the time along
the way, curious about Brother Cadfael’s uncloistral past, and about the
countries he had known as well as he knew this forest.
“So
you lived in the world all those years, and saw so much of it, and never
thought to marry? And half the world women, they say?” The light voice,
seemingly idle and faintly mocking, nevertheless genuinely questioned and
required an answer.
“I
had thought to marry, once,” said Cadfael honestly, “before I took the Cross,
and she was a very fair woman, too, but to say truth, I forgot her in the east,
and in the west she forgot me. I was away too long, she gave up waiting and
married another man, small blame to her.”
“Have
you ever seen her again?” asked Hugh.
“No,
never. She has grandchildren by now, may they be good to her. She was a fine
woman, Richildis.”
“But
the east was also made up of men and women, and you a young crusader. I cannot
but wonder,” said Beringar dreamily.
“So,
wonder! I also wonder about you,” said Cadfael mildly. “Do you know any human
creatures who are not strangers, one to another?”
A
faint gleam of light showed among the trees. The lay brothers sat up late with
a reed dip, Cadfael suspected playing at dice. Why not? The tedium here must be
extreme. They were bringing these decent brothers a little diversion,
undoubtedly welcome.
That
they were alive and alert to the slightest sound of an unexpected approach was
soon proved, as both emerged ware and ready in the doorway. Brother Anselm
loomed huge and muscular, like an oak of his own fifty-five years, and swung a
long staff in one hand. Brother Louis, French by descent but born in England,
was small and wiry and agile, and in this solitude kept a dagger by him, and
knew how to use it. Both of them came forth prepared for anything, placid of
face and watchful of eye; but at sight of Brother Cadfael they fell to an easy
grinning.
“What,
is it you, old comrade? A pleasure to see a known face, but we hardly looked
for you in the middle of the night. Are you biding over until tomorrow? Where’s
your errand?” They looked at Beringar with measuring interest, but he left it
to Cadfael to do the dealing for him here, where the abbey’s writ ran with more
force than the king’s.
“Our
errand’s here, to you,” said Cadfael, lighting down. “My lord here asks that
you’ll give stabling and shelter for a few days to these two beasts, and keep
them out of the public eye.” No need to bide the reason from these two, who
would have sympathised heartily with the owner of such horseflesh in his desire
to keep it. “They’re commandeering baggage horses for the army, and that’s no
fit life for these fellows, they’ll be held back to serve in a better fashion.”
Brother
Anselm ran an appreciative eye over Beringar’s mount, and an affectionate hand
over the arched neck. “A long while since the stable here had such a beauty in
it! Long enough since it had any at all, barring Prior Robert’s mule when he
visited, and he does that very rarely now. We expect to be recalled, to tell
truth, this place is too isolated and unprofitable to be kept much longer. Yes,
we’ll give you house-room, my fine lad, gladly, and your mate, too. All the
more gladly, my lord, if you’ll let me get my leg across him now and again by
way of exercise.”
“I
think he may carry even you without trouble,” acknowledged Beringar amiably.
“And surrender them to no one but myself or Brother Cadfael.”
“That’s
understood. No one will set eyes on them here.” They led the horses into the
deserted stable, very content with the break in their tedious existence, and
with Beringar’s open-handed largesse for their services. “Though we’d have
taken them in for the pleasure of it,” said Brother Louis truthfully. “I was
groom once in Earl Robert of Gloucester’s household, I love a fine horse, one
with a gloss and a gait to do me credit.”
Cadfael
and Hugh Beringar turned homeward together on foot. “An hour’s walking, hardly
more,” said Cadfael, “by the way I’ll take you. The path’s too overgrown in
parts for the horses, but I know it well, it cuts off the Foregate. We have to
cross the brook, well upstream from the mill, and can enter the abbey grounds
from the garden side, unnoticed, if you’re willing to wade.”
“I
believe,” said Beringar reflectively, but with complete placidity, “you are
having a game with me. Do you mean to lose me in the woods, or drown me in the mill-race?”
“I
doubt if I should succeed at either. No, this will be a most amicable walk
together, you’ll see. And well worth it, I trust.”
And
curiously, for all each of them knew the other was making use of him, it was
indeed a pleasant nocturnal journey they made, the elderly monk without
personal ambitions, and the young man whose ambitions were limitless and
daring. Probably Beringar was working hard at the puzzle of why Cadfael had so
readily accommodated him, certainly Cadfael was just as busy trying to fathom
why Beringar had ever invited him to conspire with him thus; it did not matter,
it made the contest more interesting. And which of them was to win, and to get
the most out of the tussle, was very much in the balance.
Keeping
pace thus on the narrow forest path they were much of a height, though Cadfael
was thickset and burly, and Beringar lean and lissome and light of foot. He
followed Cadfael’s steps attentively, and the darkness, only faintly alleviated
by starlight between the branches, seemed to bother him not at all. And lightly
and freely he talked.
“The
king intends to move down into Gloucester’s country again, in more strength,
hence this drive for men and horses. In a few more days he’ll surely be
moving.”
“And
you go with him?” Since he was minded to be talkative, why not encourage him?
Everything he said would be calculated, of course, but sooner or later even he
might make a miscalculation.
“That
depends on the king. Will you credit it, Brother Cadfael, the man distrusts me!
Though in fact I’d liefer be put in charge of my own command here, where my
lands lie. I’ve made myself as assiduous as I dare—to see the same face too
constantly might have the worst effect, not to see it in attendance at all
would be fatal. A nice question of judgment.”
“I
feel,” said Cadfael, “that a man might have considerable confidence in your
judgment. Here we are at the brook, do you hear it?” There were stones there by
which to cross dryshod, though the water was low and the bed narrowed, and
Beringar, having rested his eyes a few moments to assay the distance and the
ground, crossed in a nicely balanced leap that served to justify Cadfael’s
pronouncement.
“Do
you indeed?” resumed the young man, falling in beside him again as they went
on. “Have a high opinion of my judgment? Of risks and vantages only? Or, for
instance, of men?—And women?”
“I
can hardly question your judgment of men,” said Cadfael drily, “since you’ve
confided in me. If I doubted, I’d hardly be likely to own it.”
“And
of women?” They were moving more freely now through open fields.
“I
think they might all be well advised to beware of you. And what else is
gossiped about in the king’s court, besides the next campaign? There’s no fresh
word of FitzAlan and Adeney being sighted?”
“None,
nor will be now,” said Beringar readily. “They had luck, and I’m not sorry.
Where they are by now there’s no knowing, but wherever it is, it’s one stage on
the way to France.”
There
was no reason to doubt him; whatever he was about he was making his
dispositions by way of truth, not lies. So the news for Godith’s peace of mind
was still good, and every day better, as the distance between her father and
Stephen’s vengeance lengthened. And now there were two excellent horses well
positioned on an escape road for Godith and Torold, in the care of two stalwart
brothers who would release them at Cadfael’s word. The first step was
accomplished. Now to recover the saddle-bags from the river, and start them on
their way. Not so simple a matter, but surely not impossible.
“I
see now where we are,” said Beringar, some twenty minutes later. They had cut
straight across the mile of land enclosed by the brook’s wanderings, and stood
again on the bank; on the other side the stripped fields of pease whitened in
the starlight, and beyond their smooth rise lay the gardens, and the great
range of abbey buildings. “You have a nose for country, even in the dark. Lead
the way, I’ll trust you for an unpitted ford, too.”
Cadfael
had only to kilt his habit, having nothing but his sandals to get wet. He
strode into the water at the point opposite the low roof of Godith’s hut, which
just showed above the trees and bushes and the containing wall of the
herbarium. Beringar plunged in after him, boots and hose and all. The water was
barely knee-deep, but clearly he cared not at all. And Cadfael noted how he
moved, gently and steadily, hardly a ripple breaking from his steps. He had all
the intuitive gifts of wild creatures, as alert by night as by day. On the
abbey bank he set off instinctively round the edge of the low stubble of
peasehaulms, to avoid any rustle among the dry roots soon to be dug in.
“A
natural conspirator,” said Cadfael, thinking aloud; and that he could do so was
proof of a strong, if inimical, bond between them.
Beringar
turned on him a face suddenly lit by a wild smile. “One knows another,” he
said. They had grown used to exchanging soundless whispers, and yet making them
clear to be heard. “I’ve remembered one rumour that’s making the rounds, that I
forgot to tell you. A few days ago there was some fellow hunted into the river
by night, said to be one of FitzAlan’s squires. They say an archer got him
behind the left shoulder, maybe through the heart. However it was, he went
down, somewhere by Atcham his body may be cast up. But they caught a riderless
horse, a good saddle-horse, the next day, sure to be his.”
“Do
you tell me?” said Cadfael, mildly marvelling. “You may speak here, there’ll be
no one prowling in my herb-garden by night, and they’re used to me rising at
odd times to tend my brews here.”
“Does
not your boy see to that?” asked Hugh Beringar innocently.
“A
boy slipping out of the dortoir,” said Brother Cadfael, “would soon have cause
to rue it. We take better care of our children here, my lord, than you seem to
think.”
“I’m
glad to hear it. It’s well enough for seasoned old soldiers turned monk to risk
the chills of the night, but the young things ought to be protected.” His voice
was sweet and smooth as honey. “I was telling you of this odd thing about the
horses… A couple of days later, if you’ll believe it, they rounded up another
saddle-horse running loose, grazing up in the heathlands north of the town,
still saddled. They’re thinking there was a single bodyguard sent out from the
castle, when the assault came, to pick up Adeney’s daughter from wherever she
was hidden, and escort her safely out of the ring round Shrewsbury. They think
the attempt failed,” he said softly, “when her attendant took to the river to
save her. So she’s still missing, and still thought to be somewhere here, close
in hiding. And they’ll be looking for her, Brother Cadfael—they’ll be looking
for her now more eagerly than ever.”
They
were up at the edge of the inner gardens by then. Hugh Beringar breathed an
almost silent “Good night!” and was gone like a shadow towards the guest house.
Before
he slept out the rest of the night, Brother Cadfael lay awake long enough to do
some very hard thinking. And the longer he thought, the more convinced he
became that someone had indeed approached the mill closely enough and silently
enough to catch the last few sentences spoken within; and that the someone was
Hugh Beringar, past all doubt. He had proved how softly he could move, how
instinctively he adapted his movements to circumstances, he had provoked a shared
expedition committing each of them to the other’s discretion, and he had
uttered a number of cryptic confidences calculated to arouse suspicion and
alarm, and possibly precipitate unwise action—though Cadfael had no intention
of giving him that last satisfaction. He did not believe the listener had been
within earshot long. But the last thing Cadfael himself had said gave away
plainly enough that he intended somehow to get hold of two horses, retrieve the
hidden treasury, and see Torold on his way with “her.” If Beringar had been at
the door just a moment earlier, he must also have heard the girl named; but
even without that he must surely have had his suspicions. Then just what game
was he playing, with his own best horses, with the fugitives he could betray at
any moment, yet had not so far betrayed, and with Brother Cadfael? A better and
larger prize offered than merely one young man’s capture, and the exploitation
of a girl against whom he had no real grudge. A man like Beringar might prefer
to risk all and play for all, Torold, Godith and treasure in one swoop. For
himself alone, as once before, though without success? Or for the king’s gain
and favour? He was indeed a young man of infinite possibilities.
Cadfael
thought about him for a long time before he slept, and one thing, at least, was
clear. If Beringar knew now that Cadfael had as good as undertaken to recover
the treasury, then from this point on he would hardly let Cadfael out of his
sight, for he needed him to lead him to the spot. A little light began to dawn,
faint but promising, just before sleep came. It seemed no more than a moment
before the bell was rousing him with the rest for Prime.
“Today,”
said Cadfael to Godith, in the garden after breakfast, “do all as usual, go to
the Mass before chapter, and then to your schooling. After dinner you should
work a little in the garden, and see to the medicines, but after that you can
slip away to the old mill, discreetly, mind, until Vespers. Can you dress
Torold’s wound without me? I may not be seen there today.”
“Surely
I can,” she said blithely. “I’ve seen it done, and I know the herbs now. But…
If someone, if he, was spying on us yesterday, how if he comes today?” She had
been told of the night’s expedition, briefly, and the implications at once
heartened and alarmed her.
“He
will not,” said Cadfael positively. “If all goes well, wherever I am today,
there he will be. That’s why I want you away from me, and why you may breathe
more easily away from me. And there’s something I may want you and Torold to do
for me, late tonight, if things go as I expect. When we come to Vespers, then
I’ll tell you, yes or no. If it’s yes, that’s all I need say, and this is what
you must do…”
She
listened in glowing silence throughout, and nodded eager comprehension. “Yes, I
saw the boat, leaning against the wall of the mill. Yes, I know the thicket of
bushes at the beginning of the garden, close under the end of the bridge… Yes,
of course we can do it, Torold and I together!”
“Wait
long enough to be sure,” cautioned Cadfael. “And now run off to the parish
Mass, and your lessons, and look as like the other boys as you can, and don’t
be afraid. If there should be any cause for fear, I intend to hear of it early,
and I’ll be with you at once.”
A
part of Cadfael’s thinking was rapidly proved right. He made it his business to
be very active about the precincts that Sunday, attendant at every service,
trotting on various errands from gate house to guest house, to the abbot’s
lodging, the infirmary, the gardens; and everywhere that he went, somewhere
within view, unobtrusive but present, was Hugh Beringar. Never before had that
young man been so constantly at church, in attendance even when Aline was not
among the worshippers. Now let’s see, thought Cadfael, with mild malice,
whether I can lure him from the lists even when she does attend, and leave the
field open for the other suitor. For Aline would certainly come to the Mass
after chapter, and his last foray to the gate house had shown him Adam
Courcelle, dressed for peace and piety, approaching the door of the small house
where she and her maid were lodged.
It
was unheard of for Cadfael to be absent from Mass, but for once he invented an
errand which gave him fair excuse. His skills with medicines were known in the
town, and people often asked for his help and advice. Abbot Heribert was
indulgent to such requests, and lent his herbalist freely. There was a child
along the Foregate towards St. Giles who had been under his care from time to
time for a skin infection, and though he was growing out of it gradually, and
there was no great need for a visit this day, no one had the authority to
contradict Cadfael when he pronounced it necessary to go.
In
the gateway he met Aline Siward and Adam Courcelle entering, she slightly flushed,
certainly not displeased with her escort, but perhaps a little embarrassed, the
king’s officer devoutly attentive and also warmly flushed, clearly in his case
with pleasure. If Aline was expecting to be accosted by Beringar, as had become
usual by this time, for once she was surprised. Whether relieved or
disappointed there was no telling. Beringar was nowhere to be seen.
Proof
positive, thought Cadfael, satisfied, and went on his physicianly visit
serenely and without haste. Beringar was discretion itself in his surveillance,
he contrived not to be seen at all until Cadfael, on his way home again, met
him ambling out gently for exercise on one of his remaining horses, and
whistling merrily as he rode.
He
saluted Cadfael gaily, as though no encounter could have been more unexpected
or more delightful. “Brother Cadfael, you astray on a Sunday morning?”
Very
staidly Cadfael rehearsed his errand, and reported its satisfactory results.
“The
range of your skills is admirable,” said Beringar, twinkling. “I trust you had
an undisturbed sleep after your long working day yesterday?”
“My
mind was over-active for a while,” said Cadfael, “but I slept well enough. And
thus far you still have a horse to ride, I see.”
“Ah,
that! I was at fault, I should have realised that even if the order was issued
on a Sunday, they would not move until the sabbath was over. Tomorrow you’ll
see for yourself.” Unquestionably he was telling the truth, and certain of his
information. “The hunt is likely to be very thorough,” he said, and Cadfael
knew he was not talking only of the horses and the provisions. “King Stephen is
a little troubled about his relations with the church and its bishops. I ought
to have known he would hold back on Sunday. Just as well, it gives us a day’s
credit and grace. Tonight we can stay blamelessly at home in all men’s sight,
as the innocent should. Eh, Cadfael?” And he laughed, and leaned to clap a hand
on Brother Cadfael’s shoulder, and rode on, kicking his heels into his horse’s
sides and rousing to a trot towards St. Giles.
Nevertheless,
when Cadfael emerged from the refectory after dinner, Beringar was visible just
within the doorway of the guest-hall opposite, seemingly oblivious but well
aware of everything within his field of vision. Cadfael led him harmlessly to
the cloister, and sat down there in the sun, and dozed contentedly until he was
sure that Godith would be well away and free from surveillance. Even when he
awoke he sat for a while, to make quite sure, and to consider the implications.
No
question but all his movements were being watched very narrowly, and by
Beringar in person. He did not delegate such work to his men-at-arms, or to any
other hired eyes, but did the duty himself, and probably took pleasure in it,
too. If he was willing to surrender Aline to Courcelle, even for an hour, then
maximum importance attached to what he was doing instead. I am elected, thought
Cadfael, as the means to the end he desires, and that is FitzAlan’s treasury.
And his surveillance is going to be relentless. Very well! There’s no way of
evading it. The only thing to do is to make use of it.
Do
not, therefore, tire out the witness too much, or alert him too soon of
activities planned. He has you doing a deal of guessing, now keep him guessing.
So
he betook himself to his herbarium, and worked conscientiously on all his
preparations there, brewing and newly begun, all that afternoon until it was
time to repair to church for Vespers. Where Beringar secreted himself he did
not trouble to consider, he hoped the vigil was tedious in the extreme to a man
so volatile and active.
Courcelle
had either stayed—the opportunity being heaven-sent, and not to be wasted—or
returned for the evening worship, he came with Aline demure and thoughtful on
his arm. At sight of Brother Cadfael sallying forth from the gardens he halted,
and greeted him warmly.
“A
pleasure to see you in better circumstances than when last we met, brother. I
hope you may have no more such duties. At least Aline and you, between you,
lent some grace to what would otherwise have been a wholly ugly business. I
wish I had some way of softening his Grace’s mind towards your house, he still
keeps a certain grudge that the lord abbot was in no hurry to come to his
peace.”
“A
mistake a great many others also made,” said Cadfael philosophically. “No doubt
we shall weather it.”
“I
trust so. But as yet his Grace is in no mind to extend any privileges to the
abbey above the other townsfolk. If I should be compelled to enforce, even
within your walls, orders I’d rather see stop at the gates, I hope you’ll
understand that I do it reluctantly, and have no choice about it.”
He
is asking pardon in advance, thought Cadfael, enlightened, for tomorrow’s
invasion. So it’s true enough, as I supposed, and he has been given the ill work
to do, and is making it clear beforehand that he dislikes the business and
would evade it if he could. He may even be making `rather more than he need of
his repugnance, for the lady’s benefit.
“If
that should happen,” he said benignly, “I’m sure every man of my order will
realise that you do only what you must, like any soldier under orders. You need
not fear that any odium will attach to you.”
“So
I have assured Adam many times,” said Aline warmly, and flushed vividly at
hearing herself call him by his Christian name. Perhaps it was for the first
time. “But he’s hard to convince. No, Adam, it is true—you take to yourself
blame which is not your due, as if you had killed Giles with your own hand,
which you know is false. How could I[p even blame the Flemings? They were under
orders, too. In such dreadful times as these no one can do more than choose his
own road according to his conscience, and bear the consequences of his choice,
whatever they may be.”
“In
no times, good or bad,” said Cadfael sententiously, “can man do more or better
than that. Since I have this chance, lady, I should render you account of the
alms you trusted to me, for all are bestowed, and they have benefited three
poor, needy souls. For want of names, which I did not enquire, say some prayer
for three worthy unfortunates who surely pray for you.”
And
so she would, he reflected as he watched her enter the church on Courcelle’s
arm. At this crisis season of her life, bereaved of kin, left mistress of a
patrimony she had freely dedicated to the king’s service, he judged she was
perilously hesitant between the cloister and the world, and for all he had
chosen the cloister in his maturity, he heartily wished her the world, if
possible a more attractive world than surrounded her now, to employ and fulfil
her youth.
Going
in to take his place among his brothers, he met Godith making for her own
corner. Her eyes questioned brightly, and he said softly: “Yes! Do all as I
told you.”
So
now what mattered was to make certain that for the rest of the evening he led
Beringar into pastures far apart from where Godith operated. What Cadfael did
must be noted, what she did must go unseen and unsuspected. And that could not
be secured by adhering faithfully to the evening routine. Supper was always a
brief meal, Beringar would be sure to be somewhere within sight of the
refectory when they emerged. Collations in the chapter house, the formal
reading from the lives of the saints, was a part of the day that Cadfael had
been known to miss on other occasions, and he did so now, leading his
unobtrusive attendant first to the infirmary, where he paid a brief visit to
Brother Reginald, who was old and deformed in the joints, and welcomed company,
and then to the extreme end of the abbot’s own garden, far away from the
herbarium, and farther still from the gate house. By then Godith would be freed
from her evening lesson with the novices, and might appear anywhere between the
hut and the herbarium and the gates, so it was essential that Beringar should
continue to concentrate on Cadfael, even if he was doing nothing more exciting
than trimming the dead flowers from the abbot’s roses and clove-pinks. By that
stage Cadfael was checking only occasionally that the watch on his movements
continued; he was quite certain that it would, and with exemplary patience.
During the day it seemed almost casual, hardly expecting action, except that
Cadfael was a tricky opponent, and might have decided to act precisely when it
was unexpected of him. But it was after dark that things would begin to happen.
When
Compline was over there was always, on fine evenings, a brief interlude of
leisure in the cloister or the gardens, before the brothers went to their beds.
By then it was almost fully dark, and Cadfael was satisfied that Godith was long
since where she should be, and Torold beside her. But he thought it best to
delay yet a while, and go to the dortoir with the rest. Whether he emerged
thence by way of the night stairs into the church, or the outer staircase,
someone keeping watch from across the great court, where the guest hall lay,
would be able to pick up his traces without trouble.
He
chose the night stairs and the open north door of the church, and slipped round
the east end of the Lady Chapel and the chapter house to cross the court into
the gardens. No need to look round or listen for his shadow, he knew it would
be there, moving at leisure, hanging well back from him but keeping him in
sight. The night was reasonably dark, but the eyes grew accustomed to it soon,
and he knew how securely Beringar could move in darkness. He would expect the
night-wanderer to leave by the ford, as they had returned together the previous
night. Someone bound on secret business would not pass the porter on the gate,
whatever his normal authority.
After
he had waded the brook, Cadfael did pause to be sure Beringar was with him. The
breaks in the rhythm of the water were very slight, but he caught them, and was
content. Now to follow the course of the brook downstream on this side until
nearing its junction with the river. There was a little footbridge there, and
then it was only a step to the stone bridge that crossed into Shrewsbury. Over
the road, and down the slope into the main abbey gardens, and he was already
under the shadow of the first archway of the bridge, watching the faint flashes
of light from the eddies where once a boat-mill had been moored. In this corner
under the stone pier the bushes grew thick, such an awkward slope of ground was
not worth clearing for what it would bear. Half-grown willows leaned, trailing
leaves in the water, and the bushy growth under their branches would have
hidden half a dozen well-screened witnesses.
The
boat was there, afloat and tied up to one of the leaning branches, though it
was of the light, withy-and-hide type that could be ported easily overland.
This time there was good reason it should not, as it usually would, be drawn
ashore and turned over in the turf. There was, Cadfael hoped, a solid bundle
within it, securely tied up in one or two of the sacks from the mill. It would
not have done for him to be seen to be carrying anything. Long before this, he
trusted, he had been clearly seen to be empty-handed.
He
stepped into the boat and loosed the mooring-rope. The sacking bundle was
there, and convincingly heavy when he cautiously tested. A little above him on
the slope, drawn into the edge of the bushes, he caught the slight movement of
a deeper shadow as he pushed off with the long paddle into the flow under the
first archway.
In
the event it proved remarkably easy. No matter how keen Hugh Beringar’s sight,
he could not possibly discern everything that went on under the bridge, detail
by detail. However sharp his hearing, it would bring him only a sound
suggesting the rattling of a chain drawn up against stone, with some
considerable weight on the end, the splash and trickle of water running out
from something newly drawn up, and then the iron rattle of the chain
descending; which was exactly what it was, except that Cadfael’s hands slowed
and muted the descent, to disguise the fact that the same weight was still
attached, and only the bundle concealed in the boat had been sluiced in the
Severn briefly, to provide the trickle of water on the stone ledge. The next
part might be more risky, since he was by no means certain he had read
Beringar’s mind correctly. Brother Cadfael was staking his own life and those
of others upon his judgment of men.
So
far, however, It had gone perfectly. He paddled his light craft warily ashore,
and above him a swift-moving shadow withdrew to higher ground, and, he
surmised, went to earth close to the roadway, ready to fall in behind him
whichever way he took. Though he would have wagered that the way was already
guessed at, and rightly. He tied up the boat again, hastily but securely; haste
was a part of his disguise that night, like stealth. When he crept cautiously
up to the highroad again, and loomed against the night sky for a moment in
stillness, ostensibly waiting to be sure he could cross unnoticed, the watcher
could hardly miss seeing that he had now a shape grossly humped by some large
bundle he carried slung over his shoulder.
He
crossed, rapidly and quietly, and returned by the way he had come, following
the brook upstream from the river after passing the ford, and so into the
fields and woods he had threaded with Beringar only one night past. The bundle
he carried, mercifully, had not been loaded with the full weight it was
supposed to represent, though either Torold or Godith had seen fit to give it a
convincing bulk and heft. More than enough, Cadfael reflected ruefully, for an
ageing monk to carry four miles or more. His nights were being relentlessly
curtailed. Once these young folk were wafted away into relative safety he would
sleep through Matins and Lauds, and possibly the next morning’s Prime, as well,
and do fitting penance for it.
Now
everything was matter for guesswork. Would Beringar take it for granted where
he was bound, and turn back too soon, and with some residue of suspicion, and
ruin everything? No! Where Cadfael was concerned he would take nothing for
granted, not until he was sure by his own observation where this load had been
bestowed in safekeeping, and satisfied that Cadfael had positively returned to
his duty without it. But would he, by any chance, intercept it on the way? No,
why should he? To do so would have been to burden himself with it, whereas now
he had an old fool to carry it for him, to where he had his horses hidden to
convey it with ease elsewhere.
Cadfael
had the picture clear in his mind now, the reckoning at its worst. If Beringar
had killed Nicholas Faintree in the attempt to possess himself of the treasury,
then his aim now would be not only to accomplish what he had failed to do then,
but also something beyond, a possibility which had been revealed to him only
since that attempt. By letting Brother Cadfael stow away for him both horses
and treasure at an advantageous place, he had ensured his primary objective;
but in addition, if he waited for Cadfael to convey his fugitives secretly to
the same spot, as he clearly intended to do, then Beringar could remove the
only witness to his former murder, and capture his once affianced bride as
hostage for her father. What an enormous boon to bestow on King Stephen! His
own favoured place would be assured, his crime buried for ever.
So
much, of course, for the worst. But the range of possibilities was wide. For
Beringar might be quite innocent of Faintree’s death, but very hot on the trail
of FitzAlan’s valuables, now he had detected their whereabouts; and an elderly
monk might be no object to his plans for his own enrichment, or, if he
preferred to serve his interests in another way, his means of ingratiating
himself with the king. In which case Cadfael might not long survive his
depositing this infernal nuisance he carried, on shoulders already aching, at
the grange where the horses were stabled. Well, thought Cadfael, rather
exhilarated than oppressed, we shall see!
Once
into the woods beyond the coil of the brook, he halted, and dropped the load
with a huge grunt from his shoulders, and sat down on it, ostensibly to rest,
actually to listen for the soft sounds of another man halting, braced, not
resting. Very soft they were, but he caught them, and was happy. The young man
was there, tireless, serene, a born adventurer. He saw a dark, amused,
saturnine face ready for laughter. He was reasonably sure, then, how the
evening would end. With a little luck—better, with God’s blessing, he
reproved!—he would be back in time for Matins.
There
was no perceptible light in the grange when he reached it, but it needed only
the rustle and stir of footsteps, and Brother Louis was out with a little
pine-flare in one hand and his dagger in the other, as wide awake as at midday,
and more perilous.
“God
bless you, brother,” said Cadfael, easing the load gratefully from his back. He
would have something to say to young Torold when next he talked to him! Someone
or something other than his own shoulders could carry this the next time. “Let
me within, and shut the door to.”
“Gaily!”
said Brother Louis, and haled him within and did as he was bid.
On
the way back, not a quarter of an hour later, Brother Cadfael listened
carefully as he went, but he heard nothing of anyone following or accompanying
him, certainly of no menace. Hugh Beringar had watched him into the grange from
cover, possibly even waited for him to emerge unburdened, and then melted away
into the night to which he belonged, and made his own lightsome, satisfied way
home to the abbey. Cadfael abandoned all precautions and did the same. He was
certain, now, where he stood. By the time the bell rang for Matins he was ready
to emerge with the rest of the dortoir, and proceed devoutly down the
night-stairs to give due praise in the church.
Chapter
Eight
BEFORE
DAWN ON THAT MONDAY MORNING in August the king’s officers had deployed small
parties to close every road out of Shrewsbury, while at every section within
the town wall others stood ready to move methodically through the streets and
search every house. There was more in the wind than the commandeering of horses
and provisions, though that would certainly be done as they went, and done
thoroughly.
“Everything
shows that the girl must be in hiding somewhere near,” Prestcote had insisted,
reporting to the king after full enquiries. “The one horse we found turned
loose is known to be from FitzAlan’s stables, and this young man hunted into
the Severn certainly had a companion who has not yet been run to earth. Left
alone, she cannot have got far. All your advisers agree, your Grace cannot
afford to let the chance of her capture slip. Adeney would certainly come back
to redeem her, he has no other child. It’s possible even FitzAlan could be
forced to return, rather than face the shame of letting her die.”
“Die?”
echoed the king, bristling ominously. “Is it likely I’d take the girl’s life?
Who spoke of her dying?”
“Seen
from here,” said Prestcote drily, “it may be an absurdity to speak of any such
matter, but to an anxious father waiting for better news it may seem all too
possible. Of course you would do the girl no harm. No need even to harm her
father if you get him into your hands, or even FitzAlan. But your Grace must
consider that you should do everything possible to prevent their services from
reaching the empress. It’s no longer a matter of revenge for Shrewsbury, but
simply of a sensible measure to conserve your own forces and cut down on your
enemy’s.”
“That’s
true enough,” admitted Stephen, without overmuch enthusiasm. His anger and
hatred had simmered down into his more natural easiness of temperament, not to
say laziness. “I am not sure that I like even making such use of the girl.” He
remembered that he had as good as ordered young Beringar to track down his
affianced bride if he wanted to establish himself in royal favour, and the
young man, though respectfully attendant since, if somewhat sporadically, had
never yet produced any evidence of zeal in the search. Possibly, thought the
king, he read my mind better than I did myself at the time.
“She
need come by no injury, and your Grace would be saved having to contend with
any forces attached to her father’s standard, if not also his lord’s. If you
can cut off all those levies from the enemy, you will have saved yourself great
labour, and a number of your men their lives. You cannot afford to neglect such
a chance.”
It
was sound advice, and the king knew it. Weapons are where you find them, and
Adeney could sit and kick his heels in an easy imprisonment enough, once he was
safe in captivity.
“Very
well!” he said. “Make your search and make it thoroughly.”
The
preparations were certainly thorough. Adam Courcelle descended upon the Abbey
Foregate with his own command and a company of the Flemings. And while Willem
Ten Heyt went ahead and established a guard-post at St. Giles, to question
every rider and search every cart attempting to leave the town, and his
lieutenant posted sentries along every path and by every possible
crossing-place along the riverside, Courcelle took possession, civilly but
brusquely, of the abbey gate house, and ordered the gates closed to all
attempting to enter or leave. It was then about twenty minutes before Prime,
and already daylight. There had been very little noise made, but Prior Robert
from the dortoir had caught the unusual stir and disquiet from the gate house,
on which the window of his own chamber looked down, and he came out in haste to
see what was afoot.
Courcelle
made him a reverence that deceived nobody, and asked with respect for
privileges everyone knew he was empowered to take; still, the veil of courtesy
did something to placate the prior’s indignation.
“Sir,
I am ordered by his Grace King Stephen to require of your house free and
orderly entry everywhere, a tithe of your stores for his Grace’s necessary
provision, and such serviceable horses as are not already in the use of people
in his Grace’s commission. I am also commanded to search and enquire everywhere
for the girl Godith, daughter of his Grace’s traitor Fulke Adeney, who is
thought to be still in hiding here in Shrewsbury.”
Prior
Robert raised his thin, silver brows and looked down his long, aristocratic
nose. “You would hardly expect to find such a person within our precincts? I
assure you there is none such in the guest house, where alone she might
becomingly be found.”
“It
is a formality here, I grant you,” said Courcelle, “but I have my orders, and
cannot treat one dwelling more favourably than another.”
There
were lay servants listening by then, standing apart silent and wary, and one or
two of the boy pupils, sleepy-eyed and scared. The master of the novices came
to herd his strays back into their quarters, and stayed, instead, to listen
with them.
“This
should be reported at once to the abbot,” said the prior with admirable
composure, and led the way at once to Abbot Heribert’s lodging. Behind them,
the Flemings were closing the gates and mounting a guard, before turning their
practical attention to the barns and the stables.
Brother
Cadfael, having for two nights running missed the first few hours of his rest,
slept profoundly through all the earliest manifestations of invasion, and awoke
only when the bell rang for Prime, far too late to do anything but dress in
haste and go down with the rest of the brothers to the church. Only when he
heard the whispers passed from man to man, and saw the closed gates, the
lounging Flemings, and the subdued and huge-eyed boys, and heard the
businesslike bustle and clatter of hooves from the stable-yard, did he realise
that for once events had overtaken him, and snatched the initiative from his
hands. For nowhere among the scared and anxious youngsters in church could he
see any sign of Godith. As soon as Prime was over, and he was free to go, he
hurried away to the hut in the herbarium. The door was unlatched and open, the
array of drying herbs and mortars and bottles in shining order, the blankets
had been removed from the bench-bed, and a basket of newly gathered lavender
and one or two bottles arranged innocently along it. Of Godith there was no
sign, in the hut, in the gardens, in the peasefields along the brook, where at
one side the great stack of dried haulms loomed pale as flax, waiting to be
carted away to join the hay in the barns. Nor was there any trace of a large
bundle wrapped in sacking and probably damp from seeping river-water, which had
almost certainly spent the night under that bleached pile, or the small boat
which should have been turned down upon it and carefully covered over. The
boat, FitzAlan’s treasury, and Godith had all vanished into thin air. Godith
had awakened somewhat before Prime, uneasily aware of the heavy responsibility
that now lay upon her, and gone out without undue alarm to find out what was
happening at the gate house. Though all had been done briskly and quietly,
there was something about the stirring in the air and the unusual voices,
lacking the decorous monastic calm of the brothers, that disturbed her mind.
She was on the point of emerging from the walled garden when she saw the
Flemings dismounting and closing the gates, and Courcelle advancing to meet the
prior. She froze at the sound of her own name thus coolly spoken. If they were
bent upon a thorough search, even here, they must surely find her. Questioned
like the other boys, with all those enemy eyes upon her, she could not possibly
sustain the performance. And if they found her, they might extend the search
and find what she had in her charge. Besides, there was Brother Cadfael to
protect, and Torold. Torold had returned faithfully to his mill once he had
seen her safely home with the treasure. Last night she had almost wished he
could have stayed with her, now she was glad he had the whole length of the
Gaye between him and this dawn alarm, and woods not far from his back, and
quick senses that would pick up the signs early, and give him due warning to
vanish.
Last
night had been like a gay, adventurous dream, for some reason inexpressibly
sweet, holding their breath together in cover until Cadfael had led his shadow
well away from the bridge, loosing the little boat, hauling up the dripping
saddle-bags, swathing them in dry sacks to make another bundle the image of
Cadfael’s; their hands together on the chain, holding it away from the stone,
muting it so that there should be no further sound, then softly paddling the
short way upstream to the brook, and round to the peasefields. Hide the boat,
too, Cadfael had said, for we’ll need it tomorrow night, if the chance offers.
Last night’s adventure had been the dream, this morning was the awakening, and
she needed the boat now, this moment.
There
was no hope of reaching Brother Cadfael for orders, what she guarded must be
got away from here at once, and it certainly could not go out through the
gates. There was no one to tell her what to do, this fell upon her shoulders
now. Blessedly, the Flemings were not likely to ransack the gardens until they
had looted stables and barns and stores; she had a little time in hand.
She
went back quickly to the hut, folded her blankets and hid them under the bench
behind a row of jars and mortars, stripped the bed and turned it into a mere
shelf for more such deceits, and set the door wide open to the innocent
daylight. Then she slipped away to the stack of haulms, and dragged out the
boat from its hiding-place, and the sacking bundle with it. A godsend that the
gentle slope of the field was so glazed with the cropped stems, and the boat so
light, that it slid down effortlessly into the brook. She left it beached, and
returned to drag the treasury after it, and hoist it aboard. Until last night
she had never been in such a boat, but Torold had shown her how to use the
paddle, and the steady flow of the brook helped her.
She
already knew what she would do. There was no hope at all of escaping notice if
she went downstream to the Severn; with such a search in hand, there would be
watchers on the main road, on the bridge, and probably along the banks. But
only a short way from her launching-place a broad channel was drawn off to the
right, to the pool of the main abbey mill, where the mill-race, drawn off
upstream through the abbey pool and the fish ponds, turned the wheel and
emptied itself again into the pond, to return to the main stream of the brook
and accompany it to the river. Just beyond the mill the three grace houses of
the abbey were ranged, with little gardens down to the water, and three more
like them protected the pond from open view on the other side. The house next
to the mill was the one devoted to the use of Aline Siward. True, Courcelle had
said he was to search for his fugitive everywhere; but if there was one place
in this conventual enclosure that would receive no more than a formal visit
from him, it was certainly the house where Aline was living.
What
if we are on opposite sides, thought Godith, plying her paddle inexpertly but
doggedly at the turn, and sailing into wider, smoother water, she can’t throw
me to the wolves, it isn’t in her, with a face like hers! And are we on
opposite sides? Are we on either side, by this time? She places everything she
has at the king’s disposal, and he hangs her brother! My father stakes life and
lands for the empress, and I don’t believe she cares what happens to him or any
of his like, provided she gets her own way. I daresay Aline’s brother was more
to her than King Stephen will ever be, and I know I care more for my father and
Torold than for the Empress Maud, and I wish the old king’s son hadn’t drowned
when that awful ship went down, so that there’d have been no argument over who
inherited, and Stephen and Maud alike could have stayed in their own manors,
and left us alone!
The
mill loomed on her right, but the wheel was still today, and the water of the
race spilled over freely into the pond that opened beyond, with slow
counter-currents flowing along the opposite bank to return to the brook. The
bank here was sheer for a couple of feet, to level as much ground as possible
for the narrow gardens; but if she could heave the bundle safely ashore, she
thought she could drag up the boat. She caught at a naked root that jutted into
the water from a leaning willow, and fastened her mooring-line to it, before
she dared attempt to hoist her treasure up to the edge of the grass. It was
heavy for her, but she rolled it on to the thwart, and thence manipulated it
into her arms. She could just reach the level rim of turf without tilting the
boat too far. The weight rested and remained stable, and Godith leaned her arms
thankfully either side of it, and for the first time tears welled out of her
eyes and ran down her face.
Why,
she wondered rebelliously, why am I going to such trouble for this rubbish,
when all I care about is Torold, and my father? And Brother Cadfael! I should
be failing him if I tipped it down into the pond and left it there. He went to
all sorts of pains to get it to this point, and now I have to go on with the
work. And Torold cares greatly that he should carry out the task he was given.
That’s more than gold. It isn’t this lump that matters!
She
scrubbed an impatient and grubby hand over her cheeks and eyes, and set about
climbing ashore, which proved tricky, for the boat tended to withdraw from
under her foot to the length of its mooring; when at last she had scrambled to
safety, swearing now instead of crying, she could not draw it up after her, she
was afraid of holing it on the jagged roots. It would have to ride here. She
lay on her stomach and shortened the mooring, and made sure the knot was fast.
Then she towed her detested incubus up into the shadow of the house, and
hammered at the door.
It
was Constance who opened it. It was barely eight o’clock, Godith realized, and
it was Aline’s habit to attend the mass at ten, she might not even be out of
her bed yet. But the general disquiet in the abbey had reached these retired
places also, it seemed, for Aline was up and dressed, and appeared at once
behind her maid’s shoulder.
“What
is it, Constance?” She saw Godith, soiled and tousled and breathless, leaning
over a great sacking bundle on the ground, and came forward in innocent
concern. “Godric! What’s the matter? Did Brother Cadfael send you? Is anything
wrong?”
“You
know the boy, do you, madam?” said Constance, surprised.
“I
know him, he’s Brother Cadfael’s helper, we have talked together.” She cast one
luminous glance over Godith from head to foot, took in the smudged marks of
tears and the heaving bosom, and put her maid quickly aside. She knew
desperation when she saw it, even when it made no abject appeal. “Come within,
come! Here, let me help you with this, whatever it may be. Now, Constance,
close the door!” They were safe within, the wooden walls closed them round, the
morning sun was warm and bright through an eastern window left open.
They
stood looking at each other, Aline all woman in a blue gown, her golden hair
loosed about her in a cloud, Godith brown and rumpled, and arrayed unbecomingly
in an overlarge cotte and ill-fitting hose, short hair wild, and face strained
and grubby from soil, grass and sweat.
“I
came to ask you for shelter,” said Godith simply. “The king’s soldiers are
hunting for me. I’m worth quite a lot to them if they find me. I’m not Godric,
I’m Godith. Godith Adeney, Fulke Adeney’s daughter.”
Aline
let her glance slide, startled and touched, from the fine-featured oval face,
down the drab-clad and slender limbs. She looked again into the challenging,
determined face, and a spark started and glowed in her eyes.
“You’d
better come through here,” she said practically, with a glance at the open
window, “into my own sleeping-chamber, away from the road. Nobody will trouble
you there—we can talk freely. Yes, bring your belongings, I’ll help you with
them.” FitzAlan’s treasury was woman-handled between them into the inner room,
where not even Courcelle, certainly not any other, would dare to go. Aline
closed the door very softly. Godith sat down on a stool by the bed, and felt
every sinew in her grown weak, and every stress relaxing. She leaned her head
against the wall, and looked up at Aline.
“You
do realise, lady, that I’m reckoned the king’s enemy? I don’t want to trick you
into anything. You may think it your duty to give me up.”
“You’re
very honest,” said Aline, “and I’m not being tricked into anything. I’m not
sure even the king would think the better of me if I gave you up to him, but
I’m sure God would not, and I know I should not think the better of myself. You
can rest safe here. Constance and I between us will see to it that no one comes
near you.”
Brother
Cadfael preserved a tranquil face through Prime, and the first conventual Mass,
and a greatly abbreviated chapter meeting, while mentally he was racking his brain
and gnawing his knuckles over his own inexplicable complacence, which had let
him sleep on while the opposing powers stole a march on him. The gates were
fast shut, there was no way out there. He could not pass, and certainly by that
route Godith had not passed. He had seen no soldiers on the other side of the
brook, though they would certainly be watching the river bank. If Godith had
taken the boat, where had she gone with it? Not upstream, for the brook was
open to view for some way, and beyond that flowed through a bed too uneven and
rocky to accommodate such craft. Every moment he was waiting for the outcry
that would signal her capture, but every moment that passed without such an
alarm was ease to him. She was no fool, and she seemed to have got away, though
heaven knew where, with the treasure they were fighting to retain and speed on
its way.
At
chapter Abbot Heribert made a short, weary, disillusioned speech in explanation
of the occupation that had descended upon them, instructed the brothers to obey
whatever commands were given them by the king’s officers with dignity and
fortitude, and to adhere to the order of their day faithfully so far as they
were permitted. To be deprived of the goods of this world should be no more
than a welcome discipline to those who had aspired beyond the world. Brother
Cadfael could at least feel some complacency concerning his own particular
harvest; the king was not likely to demand tithes of his herbs and remedies,
though he might welcome a cask or two of wine. Then the abbot dismissed them
with the injunction to go quietly about their own work until High Mass at ten.
Brother
Cadfael went back to the gardens and occupied himself distractedly with such
small tasks as came to hand, his mind still busy elsewhere. Godith could safely
have forded the brook by broad daylight, and taken to the nearest patch of
woodland, but she could not have carried the unwieldy bundle of treasure with
her, it was too heavy. She had chosen rather to remove all the evidence of
irregular activities here, taking away with her both the treasure and the boat.
He was sure she had not gone as far as the confluence with the river, or she
would have been captured before this. Every moment without the evil news
provided another morsel of reassurance. But wherever she was, she needed his
help.
And
there was Torold, away beyond the reaped fields, in the disused mill. Had he
caught the meaning of these movements in good time, and taken to the woods?
Devoutly Cadfael hoped so. In the meantime there was nothing he could do but
wait, and give nothing away. But oh, if this inquisition passed before the end
of the day, and he could retrieve his two strays after dark, this very night he
must see them away to the west. This might well be the most favourable opportunity,
with the premises already scoured, the searchers tired and glad to forget their
vigilance, the community totally absorbed with their grievances and comparing
notes on the army’s deprivations, the brothers devoted wholly to fervent
prayers of thanks for an ordeal ended.
Cadfael
went out to the great court in good time for Mass. There were army carts being
loaded with sacks from the barns, and a great bustle of Flemings about the
stables. Dismayed guests, caught here in mid-journey with horses worth
commandeering, came out in great agitation to argue and plead for their beasts,
but it did them no good, unless the owners could prove they were in the king’s
service already. Only the poor hacks were spared. One of the abbey carts was
also taken, with its team, and loaded with the abbey’s wheat.
Something
curious was happening at the gates, Cadfael saw. The great carnage doors were
closed, and guarded, but someone had had the calm temerity to knock at the
wicket and ask for entry. Since it could have been one of their own, a courier
from the guard-post at St. Giles, or from the royal camp, the wicket was
opened, and in the narrow doorway appeared the demure figure of Aline Siward,
prayer-book in hand, her gold hair covered decently by the white mourning cap
and wimple.
“I
have permission,” she said sweetly, “to come in to church.” And seeing that the
guards who confronted her were not at home in English, she repeated it just as
amiably in French. They were not disposed to admit her, and were on the point of
closing the door in her face when one of their officers observed the encounter,
and came in haste.
“I
have permission,” repeated Aline patiently, “from Messire Courcelle to come in
to Mass. My name is Aline Siward. If you are in doubt, ask him, he will tell
you.”
It
seemed that she had indeed secured her privilege, for after some hurried words
the wicket was opened fully, and they stood back and let her pass. She walked
through the turmoil of the great court as though nothing out of the ordinary
were happening there, and made for the cloister and the south door of the
church. But she slowed her pace on the way, for she was aware of Brother
Cadfael weaving his way between the scurrying soldiers and the lamenting
travellers to cross her path just at the porch. She gave him a demure public
greeting, but in the moment when they were confidingly close she said privately
and low:
“Be
easy, Godric is safe in my house.”
“Praise
to God and you!” sighed Cadfael as softly.
“After
dark I’ll come for her.” And though Aline had used the boyish name, he knew by
her small, secret smile that the word he had used was no surprise to her. “The
boat?” he questioned soundlessly.
“At
the foot of my garden, ready.”
She
went on into the church, and Cadfael, with a heart suddenly light as
thistledown, went decorously to take his place among the procession of his
brothers.
Torold
sat in the fork of a tree at the edge of the woods east of Shrewsbury castle,
eating the remains of the bread he had brought away with him, and a couple of
early apples stolen from a tree at the limit of the abbey property. Looking
westward across the river he could see not only the great cliff of the castle
walls and towers, but further to the right, just visible between the crests of
trees, the tents of the royal camp. By the numbers busy about the abbey and the
town, the camp itself must be almost empty at this moment.
Torold’s
body was coping well enough with this sudden crisis, to his satisfaction and,
if he would have admitted it, surprise. His mind was suffering more. He had not
yet walked very far, or exerted himself very much, apart from climbing into
this comfortable and densely leafed tree, but he was delighted with the
response of his damaged muscles, and the knit of the gash in his thigh, which
hardly bothered him, and the worse one in his shoulder, which had neither
broken nor greatly crippled his use of his arm. But all his mind fretted and
ached for Godith, the little brother so suddenly transmuted into a creature
half sister, half something more. He had confidence in Brother Cadfael, of
course, but it was impossible to unload all the responsibility for her on to
one pair of cloistered shoulders, however wide and sustaining. Torold fumed and
agonised, and yet went on eating his stolen apples. He was going to need all
the sustenance he could muster.
There
was a patrol moving methodically along the bank of the Severn, between him and
the river, and he dared not move again until they had passed by and withdrawn
from sight towards the abbey and the bridge. And how far round the outskirts of
the town he would have to go, to outflank the royal cordon, was something he
did not yet know.
He
had awakened to the unmistakable sounds from the bridge, carried by the water,
and insistent enough in their rhythm to break his sleep. Many, many men,
mounted and foot, stamping out their presence and their passage upon a stone
bow high above water, the combination sending echoes headlong down the river’s
course. The timber of the mill, the channels of water feeding it, carried the
measure to his ears. He had started up and dressed instinctively, gathering
everything that might betray his having been there, before he ventured out to
look. He had seen the companies fan out at the end of the bridge, and waited to
see no more, for this was a grimly thorough operation. He had wiped out all
traces of his occupation of the mill, throwing into the river all those things
he could not carry away with him, and then had slipped away across the limit of
abbey land, away from the advancing patrol on the river bank, into the edge of
the woodlands opposite the castle.
He
did not know for whom or what this great hunt had been launched, but he knew
all too well who was likely to be taken in it, and his one aim now was to get
to Godith, wherever she might be, and stand between her and danger if he could.
Better still, to take her away from here, into Normandy, where she would be
safe.
Along
the river bank the men of the patrol separated to beat a way through the bushes
where Godith had first come to him. They had already searched the abandoned
mill, but thank God they would find no traces there. Now they were almost out
of sight, he felt safe in swinging down cautiously from his tree and
withdrawing deeper into the belt of woodland. From the bridge to St. Giles the
king’s highway, the road to London, was built up with shops and dwellings, he
must keep well clear. Was it better to go on like this, eastward, and cross the
highroad somewhere beyond St. Giles, or to wait and go back the way he had come,
after all the tumult was over? The trouble was that he did not know when that
was likely to be, and his torment for Godith was something he did not want
prolonged. He would have to go beyond St. Giles, in all probability, before he
dared cross the highroad, and though the brook, after that, need be no obstacle
the approach to the spot opposite the abbey gardens would still be perilous. He
could lie up in the nearest cover and watch, and slip over into the stack of
pease-haulms when the opportunity offered, and thence, if all remained quiet,
into the herbarium, where he had never yet been, and the hut where Godith had
slept the last seven nights in sanctuary. Yes, better go forward and make that
circle. Backward meant braving the end of the bridge, and there would be
soldiers there until darkness fell, and probably through the night.
It
proved a tedious business, when he was longing for swift action. The sudden
assault had brought out all the inhabitants in frightened and indignant unrest,
and Torold had to beware of any notice in such conditions, since he was a young
fellow not known here, where neighbour knew neighbour like his own kin, and any
stranger was liable to be accosted and challenged out of sheer alarm. Several
times he had to draw off deeper into cover, and lie still until danger passed.
Those who lived close to the highway, and had suffered the first shocks, tended
to slip away into any available solitude. Those who were daily tending stock or
cultivating land well away from the road heard the uproar, and gravitated close
enough to satisfy their curiosity about what was going on. Caught between these
two tides, Torold passed a miserable day of fretting and waiting; but it
brought him at last well beyond Willem Ten Heyt’s tight and brutal guard-post,
which by then had amassed a great quantity of goods distrained from agitated
travellers, and a dozen sound horses. Here the last houses of the town ended,
and fields and hamlets stretched beyond. Traffic on the road, half a mile
beyond the post, was thin and easily evaded. Torold crossed, and went to earth
once more in a thicket above the brook, while he viewed the lie of the land.
The
brook was dual here, the mill-race having been drawn off at a weir somewhat
higher upstream. He could see both silver streaks in a sunlight now declining
very slightly towards the west. It must be almost time for Vespers. Surely King
Stephen had finished with the abbey by now, with all Shrewsbury to ransack?
The
valley here was narrow and steep, and no one had built on it, the grass being
given over to sheep. Torold slid down into the cleft, easily leaping the
mill-race, and picking his way over the brook from stone to stone. He began to
make his way downstream from one patch of cover to another, until about the
time of Vespers he had reached the smoother meadows opposite Brother Cadfael’s
gleaned pease-fields. Here the ground was all too open, he had to withdraw
further from the brook to find a copse to hide in while he viewed the way
ahead. From here he could see the roofs of the convent buildings above the
garden walls, and the loftier tower and roof of the church, but nothing of the
activity within. The face that was presented to him looked placid enough, the
pale slope stripped of its harvest, the stack of haulms where Godith and he had
hidden boat and treasure barely nineteen hours ago, the russet wall of the
enclosed garden beyond, the steep roof of a barn. He would have to wait some
time for full daylight to pass, or else take a risk and run for it through the
brook, and into the straw-stack beyond, when he saw his opportunity. And here
there were people moving from time to time about their legitimate business, a
shepherd urging his flock towards the home pasture, a woman coming home from
the woods with mushrooms, two children driving geese. He might very well have
strolled past all these with a greeting, and been taken for granted, but he
could not be seen by any of them making a sudden dash for it through the ford
and into the abbey gardens. That would have been enough to call their attention
and raise an alarm, and there were sounds of unusual activity, shouts and
orders and the creaking of carts and harness, still echoing distantly from
beyond the gardens. Moreover, there was a man on horseback in sight on his side
the brook, some distance away downstream but drawing gradually nearer,
patrolling this stretch of meadows as though he had been posted here to secure
the one unwalled exit from the enclave. As probably he had, though he seemed to
be taking the duty very easily, ambling his mount along the green at leisure.
One man only, but one was enough. He had only to shout, or whistle shrilly on
his fingers, and he could bring a dozen Flemings swarming.
Torold
went to ground among the bushes, and watched him approach. A big, rawboned,
powerful but unhandsome horse, dappled from cream to darkest grey, and the
rider a young fellow black-haired and olive-complexioned, with a thin, assured,
saturnine face and an arrogantly easy carriage in the saddle. It was this
light, elegant seat of his, and the striking colouring of the horse, that
caught Torold’s closer attention. This was the very beast he had seen leading
the patrol along the riverside at dawn, and this same man had surely lighted
down from his mount and gone first into Torold’s abandoned sanctuary at the
mill. Then he had been attended by half a dozen footmen, and had emerged to
loose them in after him, before they all mustered again and moved on. Torold
was sure of this identification; he had had good reason to watch very closely,
dreading that in spite of his precautions they might yet find some detail to
arouse suspicion. This was the same horse, and the same man. Now he rode past
upstream, apparently negligent and unobservant, but Torold knew better. There
was nothing this man missed as be rode, those were lively, witty, formidable
eyes that cast such seemingly languid looks about him.
But
now his back was turned, and no one else moved at the moment in these evening
fields. If he rode on far enough, Torold might attempt the crossing. Even if he
misjudged in his haste and soaked himself, he could not possibly drown in this
stream, and the night would be warm. Go he must, and find his way to Godith’s
bed, and somehow get some reassurance.
The
king’s officer rode on, oblivious, to the limit of the level ground, never
turning his head. And no other creature stirred. Torold picked himself up and
ran for it, across the open mead, into the brook, picking his footing by luck
and instinct well enough, and out upon the pale, shaven fields on the other
side. Like a mole burrowing into earth, he burrowed into the stack of haulms.
In the turmoil of this day it was no surprise to find boat and bundle vanished,
and he had no time to consider whether the omen was bad or good. He drew the
disturbed stems about him, a stiff, creamy lace threaded by sunlight and
warmth, and lay quivering, his face turned to peer through the network to where
the enemy rode serenely.
And
the enemy had also turned, sitting the dappled horse motionless, gazing downstream
as though some pricking of his thumbs had warned him. For some minutes he
remained still, as easy as before, and yet as alert; then he began the return
journey, as softly as he had traced it upstream.
Torold
held his breath and watched him come. He made no haste, but rode his beat in
idle innocence, having nothing to do, and nothing but this repeated to and fro
to pass the time here. But when he drew opposite the pease-fields he reined in,
and sat gazing across the brook long and steadily, and his eyes homed in upon
the loose stack of haulms, and lingered. Torold thought he saw the dark face
melt into a secret smile; he even thought the raised bridle-hand made a small
movement that could have been a salute. Though that was idiocy, he must have imagined
it! For the horseman was moving on downstream on his patrol, gazing towards the
outflow from the mill and the confluence with the river beyond. Never a glance
behind.
Torold
lay down under his weightless covering, burrowed his tired head into his arms,
and his hips into the springy turf of the headland, and fell asleep in sheer,
exhausted reaction. When he awoke it was more than half dark, and very quiet.
He lay for a while listening intently, and then wormed his way out into a
pallid solitude above a deserted valley, and crept furtively up the slope into
the abbey gardens, moving alone among the myriad sun-warmed scents of Cadfael’s
herbs. He found the hut, its door hospitably open to the twilight, and peered
almost fearfully into the warm silence and gloom within.
“Praise
God!” said Brother Cadfael, rising from the bench to haul him briskly within.
“I thought you’d aim for here, I’ve been keeping an eye open for you every
half-hour or so, and at last I have you. Here, sit down and ease your heart,
we’ve come through well enough!”
Urgent
and low, Torold asked the one thing that mattered:
“Where is Godith?”
Chapter
Nine
GODITH,
IF HE HAD BUT KNOWN IT, was at that moment viewing her own reflection in
Aline’s glass, which Constance was holding well away from her to capture more
of the total image. Washed and combed and arrayed in one of Aline’s gowns,
brocaded in brown and gold thread, with a thin gold bandeau of Aline’s round
her curls, she turned this way and that to admire herself with delight at being
female again, and her face was no longer that of an urchin, but of an austere
young gentlewoman aware of her advantages. The soft candlelight only made her
more mysterious and strange in her own eyes.
“I
wish he could see me like this,” she said wistfully, forgetting that so far she
had not mentioned any he except Brother Cadfael, and could not now, even to
Aline, reveal anything concerning Torold’s person and errand beyond his name.
Concerning herself she had told almost everything, but that was the acknowledgement
of a debt.
“There
is a he?” asked Aline, sparking with sympathetic curiosity. “And he will escort
you? Wherever you are going? No, I mustn’t ask you anything, it would be
unfair. But why shouldn’t you wear the dress for him? Once away, you can as
well travel as yourself as you can in boy’s clothes.”
“I
doubt it,” said Godith ruefully. “Not the way we shall be travelling.”
“Then
take it with you. You could put it in that great bundle of yours. I have
plenty, and if you are going with nothing, then you’ll need a gown for when you
reach safety.”
“Oh,
if you knew how you tempt me! You are kind! But I couldn’t take it. And we
shall have weight enough to carry, the first miles. But I do thank you, and I
shall never forget.”
She
had tried on, for pure pleasure, Constance assisting with relish, every dress
Aline had with her, and in every one she had imagined herself confronting
Torold, without warning, and studying his astonished and respectful face. And
somehow, in spite of not knowing where he was or how he was faring, she had
spent a blissful afternoon, unshaken by doubts. Certainly he would see her in
her splendour, if not in this in other fine gowns, in jewels, with her hair,
grown long again, plaited and coiled upon her head in a gold circlet like this
one. Then she recalled how she had sat beside him, the two of them
companionably eating plums and committing the stones to the Severn through the
floorboards of the mill, and she laughed. What use would it ever be, putting on
airs with Torold?
She
was in the act of lifting the circlet from her head when they all heard the
sudden but circumspect knocking on the outer door, and for a moment froze into
wary stillness, looking at one another aghast.
“Do
they mean to search here, after all?” wondered Godith in a shocked whisper.
“Have I brought you into danger?”
“No!
Adam assured me I should not be disturbed, this morning, when they came.” AIine
rose resolutely. “You stay here with Constance, and bolt the door. I’ll go. Can
it be Brother Cadfael come for you already?”
“No,
surely not yet, they’ll still be on the watch.”
It
had sounded the most deferential of knocks, but all the same, Godith sat very
still behind the bolted door, and listened with strained attention to the
snatches of voices that reached her from without. Aline had brought her visitor
into the room. The voice that alternated with hers was a man’s, low-pitched and
ardently courteous.
“Adam
Courcelle!” Constance mouthed silently, and smiled her knowing smile. “So deep
in love, he can’t keep away!”
“And
she—Aline?” whispered Godith curiously.
“Who
knows! Not she—notyet!”
Godith
had heard the same voice that morning, addressing the porter and the lay
servants at the gate in a very different tone. But such duties can surely give
no pleasure, and may well make even a decent man ill-humoured and overbearing.
This devout and considerate soul enquiring tenderly after Aline’s peace of mind
might be his proper self.
“I
hope you have not been too much put out by all this stir,” he was saying.
“There’ll be no more disturbances, you may rest now.”
“I
haven’t been molested at all,” Aline assured him serenely. “I have no
complaint, you have been considerate indeed. But I’m sorry for those who have
had goods distrained. Is the same thing happening in the town?”
“It
is,” he said ruefully, “and will go on tomorrow, but the abbey may be at peace
now. We have finished here.”
“And
you did not find her? The girl you had orders to search for?”
“No,
we have not found her.”
“What
would you say,” asked AIine deliberately, “if I said that I was glad?”
“I
should say that I would expect nothing else from you, and I honour you for it.
I know you could not wish danger or pain or captivity to any creature, much
less a blameless girl. I’ve learned so much of you, Aline.” The brief silence
was charged, and when he resumed: “Aline—“ his voice sank so low that Godith
could not distinguish the words. She did not want to, the tone was too intimate
and urgent. But in a few moments she heard Aline say gently:
“You
must not ask me to be very receptive tonight, this has been a harrowing day for
so many. I can’t help but feel almost as weary as they must be. And as you!
Leave me to sleep long tonight, there will be a better time for talking of
these matters.”
“True!”
he said, resuming the soldier on duty as though he squared his shoulders to a
load again. “Forgive me, this was not the time. Most of my men are out of the
gates by now, I’ll follow them, and let you rest. You may hear marching and the
carts rolling for a quarter of an hour or so, after that it will be quiet.”
The
voices receded, towards the outer door. Godith heard it opened, and after a few
exchanged and inaudible words, closed again. She heard the bolt shot, and in a
few moments more Aline tapped at the bedroom door. “You can safely open, he’s
gone.”
She
stood in the doorway, flushed and frowning, rather in private perplexity than
displeasure. “It seems,” she said, and smiled in a way Adam Courcelle would
have rejoiced to see, “that in sheltering you I’ve done him no wrong. I think he’s
relieved at not finding you. They’re all going. It’s over. Now we have only to
wait for Brother Cadfael and full darkness.”
In
the hut in the herbarium Brother Cadfael fed, reassured and doctored his
patient. Torold, once the first question had been answered so satisfactorily,
lay down submissively on Godith’s bed, and let his shoulder be dressed again,
and the gash in his thigh, already healed, nevertheless be well bandaged and
padded. “For if you’re to ride into Wales this night,” said Cadfael, “we don’t
want any damage or delays, you could all too easily break that open again.”
“Tonight?”
said Torold eagerly. “Is it to be tonight? She and I together?”
“It
is, it must, and high time, too. I don’t think I could stand this sort of thing
much longer,” said Cadfael, though he sounded almost complacent about it. “Not
that I’ve had too much of the pair of you, you understand, but all the same,
I’ll be relieved when you’re well away towards Owain Gwynedd’s country, and
what’s more, I’ll give you a token from myself to the first Welsh you
encounter. Though you already have FitzAlan’s commendation to Owain, and Owain
keeps his word.”
“Once
mounted and started,” vowed Torold heartily, “I’ll take good care of Godith.”
“And
so will she of you. I’ll see she has a pot of this salve I’ve been using on
you, and a few things she may need.”
“And
she took boat and load and all with her!” mused Torold, fond and proud. “How
many girls could have kept their heads and done as well? And this other girl
took her in! And brought you word of it, and so wisely! I tell you, Brother
Cadfael, we breed fine women here in Salop.” He was silent for a moment, and
grew thoughtful. “Now how are we to get her out? They may have left a guard.
And anyhow, I can hardly be seen to walk out at the gate house, seeing the
porter will know I never walked in that way. And the boat is there, not here.”
“Hush
a while,” said Cadfael, finishing off his bandage neatly, “while I think. What
about your own day? You’ve done well, it seems to me, and come out of it none
the worse. And you must have left all open and innocent, for there’s been no
whisper about the old mill. You caught the wind of them soon, it seems.”
Torold
told him about the whole long, dangerous and yet inexpressibly tedious day of
starting and stopping, running and hiding, loitering and hurrying. “I saw the
company that combed the river bank and the mill, six armed men on foot, and an
officer riding. But I’d made sure there was no sign of me left there. The
officer went in first, alone, and then turned his men into it. I saw the same
fellow again,” he recalled, suddenly alert to the coincidence, “this evening,
when I crossed the ford and dived into the stack. He was riding the far bank up
and down, between river and millrace, alone. I knew him by his seat in the
saddle, and the horse he was riding. I’d made the crossing behind his back, and
when he rode back downstream he halted right opposite, and sat and gazed
straight at where I was hiding. I could have sworn he’d seen me. He seemed to
be staring directly at me. And smiling! I was sure I was found out. But then he
rode on. He can’t have seen me, after all.”
Cadfael
put away his medicines very thoughtfully. He asked mildly: “And you knew him by
his horse again? What was so notable about it?”
“The
size and colour. A great, gaunt, striding beast, not beautiful but strong, and
dappled clean through from creamy belly to a back and quarters all but black.”
Cadfael
scrubbed at his blunt brown nose, and scratched his even browner tonsure. “And
the man?”
“A
young fellow hardly older than I. Blackavised, and a light build to him. All I
saw of him this morning was the clothes he wore and the way he rode, very easy
on what I should guess might be a hard-mouthed brute. But I saw his face
tonight. Not much flesh, and bold bones, and black eyes and brows. He whistles
to himself,” said Torold, surprised at remembering this. “Very sweetly!”
So
he did! Cadfael also remembered. The horse, too, he recalled, left behind in
the abbey stables when two better and less noticeable had been withdrawn. Two,
their owner had said, he might be willing to sacrifice, but not all four, and
not the pick of the four. Yet the cull had been made, and still he rode one of
the remaining two, and doubtless the other, also, was still at his disposal. So
he had lied. His position with the king was already assured, he had even been
on duty in today’s raiding. Very selective duty? And if so, who had selected
it?
“And
you thought he had seen you cross?”
“When
I was safe hidden I looked, and he’d turned my way. I thought he’d seen me
moving, from the corner of his eye.”
That
one, thought Cadfael, has eyes all round his head, and what he misses is not
worth marking. But all he said to Torold was: “And he halted and stared across
at you, and then rode on?”
“I
even thought he lifted his bridle-hand a thought to me,” owned Torold, grinning
at his own credulity. “By that time I doubt I was seeing visions at every turn,
I was so wild to get to Godith. But then he just turned and rode on, easy as
ever. So he can’t have seen me, after all.”
Cadfael
pondered the implications of all this in wonder and admiration. Light was
dawning as dusk fell into night. Not complete darkness yet, simply the
departure of the sun, afterglow and all, leaving a faint greenish radiance
along the west; not complete dawn, but a promising confirmation of the first
elusive beams.
“He
can’t have, can he?” demanded Torold, fearful that he might have drawn danger
after him all too near to Godith.
“Never
a fear of it,” said Cadfael confidently. “All’s well, child, don’t fret, I see
my way. And now it’s time for me to go to Compline. You may drop the bolt after
me, and lie down here on Godith’s bed and get an hour or so of sleep, for by
dawn you’ll be needing it. I’ll come back to you as soon as service is over.”
He
did, however, spare the few minutes necessary to amble through the stables, and
was not surprised to note that neither the dapple-grey nor its companion, the
broad-backed brown cob, was in its stall. An innocent visit to the guest hall
after Compline further confirmed that Hugh Beringar was not there in the
apartments for gentlefolk, nor were his three men-at-arms present among the
commonalty. The porter recalled that the three retainers had gone forth soon
after Beringar had ridden in from his day’s duties at the end of the hunt,
about the time that Vespers ended, and Beringar himself had followed, in no
apparent haste, an hour or so later.
So
that’s how things stand, is it? thought Cadfael. He’s staked his hand that’s
it’s to be tonight, and is willing to stand or fall on his wager. Well, since
he’s so bold and so shrewd to read my mind, let’s see how good I am at reading
his, and I’ll stake just as boldly.
Well,
then: Beringar knew from the first that his service with the king was accepted
and his horses safe enough, therefore he wanted them removed for some other
purpose of his own. And made a fellow-conspirator of me! Why? He could have
found a refuge for himself if he’d really needed one. No, he wanted me to know
just where the horses were, available and inviting. He knew I had two people to
deliver out of this town and out of the king’s hold, and would jump at his
offer for my own ends. He offered me the bait of two horses so that I should
transfer the treasury to the same place, ready for flight. And finally, he had
no need to hunt for his fugitives, he had only to sit back and leave it to me
to bring them to the grange as soon as I could, and then he had everything in
one spot, ready to be gathered in.
It
follows, therefore, that tonight he’ll be waiting for us, and this time with
his armed men at his back.
There
were still details that baffled the mind. If Beringar had indeed turned a blind
eye to Torold’s hiding-place this evening, for what purpose? Granted he did not
know at this moment where Godith was, and might choose to let one bird fly in
order to secure its mate also. But now that Cadfael came to consider all that
had passed there was no escaping the possibility, to put it no higher, that
throughout, Beringar had been turning a similarly blind and sparkling eye to
Godith’s boyish disguise, and had had a very shrewd idea of where his missing
bride was to be found. In that case, if he had known Godric was Godith, and
that one of FitzAlan’s men was in hiding in the old mill, then as soon as he
had satisfied himself that Cadfael had recovered the treasure for him he could
simply have gone in force and gathered in all three prizes, and delivered them
to a presumably delighted and grateful king. If he had not done so, but chosen
this furtive way, it must mean something different. As, for instance, that his
intent was to secure Godith and Torold and duly hand them over for his reward,
but despatch FitzAlan’s gold, not back to Shrewsbury, but by his own men, or
indeed in person, to his own home manor, for his own private use. In which case
the horses had been moved not only to fool a simple old monk, but to transfer
the treasure direct to Maesbury in complete secrecy, without having to go near
Shrewsbury.
That,
of course, was all supposing Beringar was not Nicholas Faintree’s murderer. If
he was, the plan differed in one important aspect. He would see to it that
though Godith went back to bait the trap for her father, Torold Blund was
taken, not alive, but dead. Dead, and therefore silent. A second murder to bury
the first.
Altogether
a grim prospect, thought Cadfael, surprisingly undisturbed by it. Except, of
course, that it could all mean something very different. Could, and does! or my
name is not Cadfael, and I’ll never pick a fight with a clever young man again!
He
went back to the herbarium, settled in his mind and ready for another restless
night. Torold was awake and alert, quick to lift the bolt as soon as he was
sure who came.
“Is
it time yet? Can we get round to the house on foot?” He was on thorns until he
could actually see and touch her, and know that she was safe and free, and had
taken no harm.
“There
are always ways. But it’s neither dark enough nor quiet enough yet, so sit down
and rest while you may, for you’ll have a share of the weight on the way, until
we get to the horses. I must go to the dortoir with the rest, and to my bed.
Oh, never fret, I’ll be back. Once we’re in our own cells, leaving is no great
problem. I’m next to the night-stairs, and the prior sleeps at the far end, and
sleeps like the dead. And have you forgotten the church has a parish door, on
to the Foregate? The only door not within the walls. From there to Mistress
Siward’s house is only a short walk, and if it passes the gate house, do you think
the porter takes account of every citizen abroad somewhat late?”
“So
this girl Aline could very well have gone to Mass by that door, like the rest
of the laity,” Torold realised, marvelling.
“So
she could, but then she would have no chance to speak to me, and besides, she
chose to exert her privilege with Courcelle, and show the Flemings she was to
be reckoned with, the clever girl. Oh, you have a fine girl of your own, young
Torold, and I hope you’ll be good to her, but this Aline is only just stretching
her powers to find out what she’s worth, and what she can do, and trust me,
she’ll make such another as our Godith yet.”
Torold
smiled in the warm darkness within the hut, sure even in his anxiety that there
was but one Godric-Godith. “You said the porter was hardly likely to pay much
attention to citizens making for home late,” he reminded, “but he may very well
have a sharp eye for any such in a Benedictine habit.”
“Who
said anything about Benedictine habits drifting abroad so late? You, young man,
shall go and fetch Godith. The parish door is never closed, and with the gate
house so close seldom needs to be. I’ll let you out there when the time comes.
Go to the last little house, beside the mill, and bring Godith and the boat
down from the pond to where the water flows back into the brook, and I shall be
there, waiting.”
“The
third house of the three on our side,” whispered Torold, glowing even in the
dark. “I know it. I’ll go!” The warmth of his gratitude and pleasure filled the
hut, and set the herbal fragrances stirring headily, because it would be he,
and no other, who would come to fetch Godith away, more wildly and wonderfully
than in any mere runaway marriage. “And you’ll be on the abbey bank, when we
come down to the brook?”
“I
will so, and go nowhere without me! And now lie down for an hour, or less, and
leave the latch in case you sleep too soundly, and I’ll come for you when all’s
quiet.”
Brother
Cadfael’s plans worked smoothly. The day having been so rough, all men were
glad to close the shutters, put out the lights, barricade themselves in from
the night, and sleep. Torold was awake and waiting before Cadfael came for him.
Through the gardens, through the small court between guest hall and abbot’s
lodging, into the cloister, and in through the south door of the church, they
went together in such a silence and stillness as belonged neither to night nor
day, only to this withdrawn world between services. They never exchanged a word
until they were in the church, shoulder to shoulder under the great tower and
pressed against the west door. Cadfael eased the huge door ajar, and listened.
Peering carefully, he could see the abbey gates, closed and dark, but the
wicket gallantly open. it made only a very small lancet of twilight in the
night.
“All’s
still. Go now! I’ll be at the brook.”
The
boy slid through the narrow opening, and swung lightly away from the door into
the middle of the roadway, as though coming from the lanes about the
horse-fair. Cadfael closed the door inch by inch in silence. Without haste he
withdrew as he had come, and strolled under the solitary starlight through the
garden and down the field, bearing to the right along the bank of the brook
until he could go no further. Then he sat down in the grass and vetches and
mothpasture of the bank to wait. The August night was warm and still, just
enough breeze to rustle the bushes now and then, and make the trees sigh, and
cover with slight sounds the slighter sounds made by careful and experienced
men. Not that they would be followed tonight. No need! The one who might have
been following was already in position at the end of the journey, and waiting
for them.
Constance
opened the door of the house, and was startled and silenced by the apparition
of this young, secular person, instead of the monk she had expected. But Godith
was there, intent and burning with impatience at her shoulder, and flew past
her with a brief, wordless soundless cry, into his arms and on to his heart.
She was Godric again, though for him she would never now be anyone but Godith,
whom he had never yet seen in her own proper person. She clung to him, and
laughed, and wept, hugged, reviled, threatened him all in a breath, felt
tenderly at his swathed shoulder, demanded explanations and cancelled all her
demands, finally lifted to him an assuaged face in sudden silence, and waited
to be kissed. Stunned and enlightened, Torold kissed her.
“You
must be Torold,” said Aline from the background, so serenely that she must have
known rather more about their relationship, by now, than he knew himself.
“Close the door, Constance, all’s well.” She looked him over, with eyes alert
to a young man’s qualities by reason of certain recent experiences of her own,
and thought well of him. “I knew Brother Cadfael would send. She wanted to go
back as she came this morning, but I said no. He said he would come. I didn’t
know he would be sending you. But Cadfael’s messenger is very welcome.”
“She
has told you about me?” enquired Torold, a little flushed at the thought.
“Nothing
but what I needed to know. She is discretion itself, and so am I,” said AIine
demurely. She, too, was flushed and glittering, but with excitement and
enjoyment of her own plotting, half-regretful that her share must end here. “If
Brother Cadfael is waiting, we mustn’t lose time. The farther you get by
daybreak, the better. Here is the bundle Godith brought. Wait here within,
until I see if everything is quiet below in the garden.”
She
slipped away into the soft darkness, and stood by the edge of the pond,
listening intently. She was sure they had left no guard behind, for why should
they, when they had searched everywhere, and taken all they had been sent to
take? Yet there might still be someone stirring in the houses opposite. But all
were in darkness, she thought even the shutters were closed, in spite of the
warm night, for fear some solitary Fleming should return to help himself to
what he could find, under cover of the day’s official looting. Even the willow
leaves hung motionless here, sheltered from the faint breeze that stirred the
grasses along the river bank.
“Come!”
she whispered, opening the door narrowly. “All’s quiet. Follow where I step,
the slope is rough.” She had even thought to change her pale gown for a dark
one since afternoon, to be shadowy among the shadows. Torold hoisted FitzAlan’s
treasury in its sacking shroud by the rope that secured it, and put off Godith
firmly when she would have reached to share the weight with him. Surprisingly,
she yielded meekly, and went before him very quickly and quietly to where the
boat rode on its short mooring, half-concealed by the stooping willow branches.
Aline lay down at the edge of the bank, and leaned to draw the boat in and hold
it steady, for there was a two-foot hollow of undercut soil between them and
the water. Very quickly and happily this hitherto cloistered and dutiful
daughter was learning to be mistress of her own decisions and exploiter of her
own powers.
Godith
slid down into the boat, and lent both arms to steady the sacking bundle down
between the thwarts. The boat was meant for only two people at most, and
settled low in the water when Torold also was aboard, but it was buoyant and
sturdy, and would get them as far as they needed to go, as it had done once
before.
Godith
leaned and embraced Aline, who was still on her knees at the edge of the grass.
It was too late for spoken thanks then, but Torold kissed the small,
well-tended hand held out to him, and then she loosed the end of the
mooring-rope, and tossed it aboard, and the boat slipped out softly from under
the bank and drifted across in the circling eddies of the outflow, back towards
the brook from which the pool had been drawn. The spill from the head-race of
the mill caught them and brisked their pace like a gentle push, and Torold sat
with paddle idle, and let the silent flow take them out from the pond. When
Godith looked back, all she could see was the shape of the willow, and the
unlighted house beyond.
Brother
Cadfael rose from among the long grasses as Torold paddled the boat across to the
abbey shore. “Well done!” he said in a whisper. “And no trouble? No one
stirring?”
“No
trouble. Now you’re the guide.”
Cadfael
rocked the boat thoughtfully with one hand. “Put Godith and the load ashore
opposite, and then fetch me. I may as well go dry-shod.” And when they were all
safely across to the other side of the brook, he hauled the boat out of the
water into the grass, and Godith hurried to help him carry it into hiding in
the nearest copse. Once in cover, they had leisure to draw breath and confer.
The night was still and calm around them, and five minutes well spent here, as
Cadfael said, might save them much labour thereafter.
“We
may speak, but softly. And since no other eyes, I hope, are to see this burden
of ours until you’re well away to the west, I think we might with advantage
open it and split the load again. The saddle-bags will be far easier to sling
on our shoulders than this single lump.”
“I
can carry one pair,” said Godith, eager at his elbow.
“So
you can, for a short spell, perhaps,” he said indulgently. He was busy
disentangling the two pairs of linked bags from the sacks that had swathed
them. They had straps comfortably broad for the shoulder, and the weights in
them had been balanced in the first place for the horses. “I had thought we
might save ourselves half a mile or so by making use of the river for the first
part of the way,” he said, “but with three of us and only this hazel-shell we
should founder. And it’s not so far we have to go, loaded—something over three
miles, perhaps.”
He
shook one pair of bags into the most comfortable position over his shoulder,
and Torold took the other pair on his sound side. “I never carried goods to
this value before in my life,” said Cadfael as he set off, “and now I’m not
even to see what’s within.”
“Bitter
stuff to me,” said Torold at his back, “it cost Nick his life, and I’m to have
no chance to avenge him.”
“You
give thought to your own life and bear your own burdens,” said Cadfael. “He
will be avenged. Better you should look to the future, and leave Nick to me.”
The
ways by which he led his little convoy differed from those he had used in
Beringar’s company. Instead of crossing the brook and making directly for the
grange beyond Pulley, he bore more strongly to the west, so that by the time
they were as far south as the grange they were also a good mile west of it,
nearer to Wales, and in somewhat thicker forest.
“How
if we should be followed?” wondered Godith.
“We
shall not be followed.” He was so positive about it that she accepted the reassurance
gladly, and asked nothing more. If Brother Cadfael said it, it was so. She had
insisted on carrying Torold’s load for half a mile or so, but he had taken it
back from her at the first sign of quickening breath or faltering step.
A
lace-work of sky showed paler between the branches ahead. They emerged
cautiously into the edge of a broad forest ride that crossed their path on good
turf at an oblique angle. Beyond it, their own track continued, a little more
open to the night than up to this point.
“Now
pay good heed,” said Cadfael, halting them within cover, “for you have to find
your way back without me to this spot. This ride that crosses us here is a
fine, straight road the old Romans made. Eastward, here to our left, it would
bring us to the Severn bridge at Atcham. Westward, to our right, it will take
you two straight as an arrow for Pool and Wales, or if you find any obstacle on
the way, you may bear further south at the end for the ford at Montgomery. Once
you’re on this, you can ride fast enough, though in parts it may be steep. Now
we cross it here, and have another half-mile to go to the ford of the brook. So
pay attention to the way.”
Here
the path was clearly better used, horses could travel it without great
difficulty. The ford, when they reached it, was wide and smooth. “And here,”
said Cadfael, “we leave our loads. One tree among so many trees you might well
lose, but one tree beside the only ford along the path, and you can’t lose it.”
“Leave
them?” wondered Torold. “Why, are we not going straight to where the horses
are? You said yourself we should not be followed tonight.”
“Not
followed, no.” When you know where your quarry must come, and are sure of the
night, you can be there waiting. “No, waste no more time, trust me and do as I
say.” And he let down his own half of the burden, and looked about him, in the
dimness to which by now their eyes were accustomed, for the best and safest
concealment. In the thicket of bushes close to the ford, on their right, there
was a gnarled old tree, one side of it dead, and its lowest branch deep in the
cover of the bushes. Cadfael slung his saddle-bags over it, and without another
word Torold hoisted his own beside them, and drew back to assure himself that
only those who had hidden here were likely ever to find. The full leafage
covered all.
“Good
lad!” said Cadfael contentedly. “Now, from here we bear round to the east
somewhat, and this path we’re on will join the more direct one I used before.
For we must approach the grange from the right direction. It would never do for
any curious person to suppose we’d been a mile nearer Wales.”
Unburdened
now, they drew together and went after him hand in hand, trusting as children.
And now that they were drawing nearer to the actual possibility of flight, they
had nothing at all to say, but clung to each other and believed that things
would go right.
Their
path joined the direct one only some minutes’ walk from the small clearing
where the stockade of the grange rose. The sky paled as the trees fell back.
There was a small rush-light burning somewhere within the house, a tiny, broken
gleam showed through the pales. All round them the night hung silent and
placid.
Brother
Anselm opened to them, so readily that surely some aggrieved traveller from
Shrewsbury must have brought word even here of the day’s upheaval, and alerted
him to the possibility that anyone running from worse penalties might well take
warning, and get out at once. He drew them within thankfully and in haste, and
peered curiously at the two young fellows at Cadfael’s back, as he closed the
gate.
“I
thought it! My thumbs pricked. I felt it must be tonight. Things grow very
rough your way, so we’ve heard.”
“Rough
enough,” admitted Cadfael, sighing. “I’d wish any friend well out of it. And
most of all these two. Children, these good brothers have cared for your trust,
and have it here safe for you. Anselm, this is Adeney’s daughter, and this
FitzAlan’s squire. Where is Louis?”
“Saddling
up,” said Brother Anselm, “the moment he saw who came. We had it in mind the
whole day that you’d have to hurry things. I’ve put food together, in case you
came. Here’s the scrip. It’s ill to ride too far empty. And a flask of wine
here within.”
“Good!
And these few things I brought,” said Cadfael, emptying his own pouch. “They’re
medicines. Godith knows how to use them.”
Godith
and Torold listened and marvelled. The boy said, almost tongue-tied with
wondering gratitude: “I’ll go and help with the saddling.” He drew his hand
from Godith’s and made for the stables, across the small untended court. This
forest assart, unmanageable in such troubled times, would soon be forest again,
these timber buildings, always modest enough, would moulder into the lush
growth of successive summers. The Long Forest would swallow it without trace in
three years, or four.
“Brother
Anselm,” said Godith, running an awed glance from head to foot of the giant, “I
do thank you with all my heart, for both of us, for what you have done for us
two—though I think it was really for Brother Cadfael here. He has been my
master eight days now, and I understand. This and more I would do for him, if
ever I might. I promise you Torold and I will never forget, and never debase
what you’ve done for us.”
“God
love you, child,” said Brother Anselm, charmed and amused, “you talk like a
holy book. What should a decent man do, when a young woman’s threatened, but
see her safe out of her trouble? And her young man with her!”
Brother
Louis came from the stables leading the roan Beringar had ridden when first
these two horses of his were brought here by night. Torold followed with the
black. They shone active and ready in the faint light, excellently groomed and
fed, and well rested.
“And
the baggage,” said Brother Anselm significantly. “That we have safe. For my own
part I would have parted it into two, to balance it better on a beast, but I
thought I had no right to open it, so it stays as you left it, in one. I should
hoist it to the crupper with the lighter weight as rider, but as you think
fit.”
They
were away, the pair of them, to haul out the sackbound bundle Cadfael had
carried here some nights ago. It seemed there were some things they had not
been told, just as there were things Torold and Godith had accepted without
understanding. Anselm brought the burden from the house on his huge shoulders,
and dumped it beside the saddled horses. “I brought thongs to buckle it to the
saddle.” They had indeed given some thought to this, they had fitted loops of
cord to the rope bindings, and were threading their thongs into these when a
blade sliced down through the plaited cords that held the latch of the gate
behind them, and a clear, assured voice ordered sharply:
“Halt
as you stand! Let no man move! Turn hither, all, and slowly, and keep your
hands visible. For the lady’s sake!”
Like
men in a dream they turned as the voice commanded, staring with huge, wary
eyes. The gate in the stockade stood wide open, lifted aside to the pales. In
the open gateway stood Hugh Beringar, sword in hand; and over either shoulder
leaned a bended long-bow, with a braced and competent eye and hand behind it;
and both of them were aimed at Godith. The light was faint but steady. Those
used to it here were well able to use it to shoot home.
“Admirable!”
said Beringar approvingly. “You have understood me very well. Now stay as you
are, and let no man move, while my third man closes the gates behind us.”
Chapter
Ten
THEY HAD ALL REACTED ACCORDING TO THEIR NATURES.
Brother Anselm looked round cautiously for his cudgel, but it was out of reach,
Brother Louis kept both hands in sight, as ordered, but the right one very near
the slit seam of his gown, beneath which he kept his dagger. Godith, first
stunned into incredulous dismay, very quickly revived into furious anger,
though only the set whiteness of her face and the glitter of her eyes betrayed
it. Brother Cadfael, with what appeared to be shocked resignation, sat down
upon the sacking bundle, so that his skirts hid it from sight if it had not
already been noted and judged of importance. Torold, resisting the instinct to
grip the hilt of Cadfael’s poniard at his belt, displayed empty hands, stared
Beringar in the eye defiantly, and took two long, deliberate paces to place
himself squarely between Godith and the two archers. Brother Cadfael admired,
and smiled inwardly. Probably it had not occurred to the boy, in his devoted
state, that there had been ample time for both arrows to find their target
before his body intervened, had that been the intention.
“A
very touching gesture,” admitted Beringar generously, “but hardly effective. I
doubt if the lady is any happier with the situation that way round. And since
we’re all sensible beings here, there’s no need for pointless heroics. For that
matter, Matthew here could put an arrow clean through the pair of you at this
distance, which would benefit nobody, not even me. You may well accept that for
the moment I am giving the orders and calling the tune.”
And
so he was. However his men had held their hands when they might have taken his
order against any movement all too literally, it remained true that none of
them had the slightest chance of making an effective attack upon him and
changing the reckoning. There were yards of ground between, and no dagger is
ever going to outreach an arrow. Torold stretched an arm behind him to draw
Godith close, but she would not endure it. She pulled back sharply to free
herself, and eluding the hand that would have detained her, strode forward
defiantly to confront Hugh Beringar.
“What
manner of tune,” she demanded, “for me? If I’m what you want, very well, here I
am, what’s your will with me? I suppose I still have lands of my own, worth
securing? Do you mean to stand on your rights, and marry me for them? Even if
my father is dispossessed, the king might let my lands and me go to one of his
new captains! Am I worth that much to you? Or is it just a matter of buying
Stephen’s favour, by giving me to him as bait to lure better men back into his
power?”
“Neither,”
said Beringar placidly. He was eyeing her braced shoulders and roused,
contemptuous face with decided appreciation. “I admit, my dear, that I never
felt so tempted to marry you before—you’re greatly improved from the fat little
girl I remember. But to judge by your face, you’d as soon marry the devil
himself, and I have other plans, and so, I fancy, have you. No, provided
everyone here acts like a sensible creature, we need not quarrel. And if it
needs saying for your own comfort, Godith, I have no intention of setting the
hounds on your champion’s trail, either. Why should I bear malice against an
honest opponent? Especially now I’m sure he finds favour in your eyes.”
He
was laughing at her, and she knew it, and took warning. It was not even
malicious laughter, though she found it an offence. It was triumphant, but it
was also light, teasing, almost affectionate. She drew back a step; she even
cast one appealing glance at Brother Cadfael, but he was sitting slumped and
apparently apathetic, his eyes on the ground. She looked up again, and more
attentively, at Hugh Beringar, whose black eyes dwelt upon her with
dispassionate admiration.
“I
do believe,” she said slowly, wondering, “that you mean it.”
“Try
me! You came here to find horses for your journey. There they are! You may
mount and ride as soon as you please, you and the young squire here. No one
will follow you. No one else knows you’re here, only I and my men. But you’ll
ride the faster and safer if you lighten your loads of all but the necessaries
of life,” said Beringar sweetly. “That bundle Brother Cadfael is so negligently
sitting on, as if he thought he’d found a convenient stone—that I’ll keep, by
way of a memento of you, my sweet Godith, when you’re gone.”
Godith
had just enough self-control not to look again at Brother Cadfael when she
heard this. She had enough to do keeping command of her own face, not to betray
the lightning-stroke of understanding, and triumph, and laughter, and so, she
knew, had Torold, a few paces behind her, and equally dazzled and enlightened.
So that was why they had slung the saddlebags on the tree by the ford, a mile
to the west, a mile on their way into Wales. This prize here they could
surrender with joyful hearts, but never a glimmer of joy must show through to
threaten the success. And now it lay with her to perfect the coup, and Brother
Cadfael was leaving it to her. It was the greatest test she had ever faced, and
it was vital to her self-esteem for ever. For this man fronting her was more
than she had thought him, and suddenly it seemed that giving him up was almost
as generous a gesture as this gesture of his, turning her loose to her
happiness with another man and another cause, only distraining the small matter
of gold for his pains. For two fine horses, and a free run into Wales! And a
kind of blessing, too, secular but valued.
“You
mean that,” she said, not questioning, stating. “We may go!”
“And
quickly, if I dare advise. The night is not old yet, but it matures fast. And
you have some way to go.”
“I
have mistaken you,” she said magnanimously. “I never knew you. You had a right
to try for this prize. I hope you understand that we had also a right to fight
for it. In a fair win and a fair defeat there should be no heart-burning.
Agreed?”
“Agreed!”
he said delightedly. “You are an opponent after my own heart, and I think your
young squire had better take you hence, before I change my mind. As long as you
leave the baggage…”
“No
help for it, it’s yours,” said Brother Cadfael, rising reluctantly from his
seat on guard. “You won it fairly, what else can I say?”
Beringar
surveyed without disquiet the mound of sacking presented to view. He knew very
well the shape of the hump Cadfael had carried here from Severn, he had no
misgivings.
“Go,
then, and good speed! You have some hours of darkness yet.” And for the first
time he looked at Torold, and took his time about studying him, for Torold had
held his peace and let her have her head in circumstances he could not be
expected to understand, and with admirable self-restraint. “I ask your pardon,
I don’t know your name.”
“My
name is Torold Blund, a squire of FitzAlan’s.”
“I’m
sorry that we never knew each other. But not sorry that we never had ado in
arms, I fear I should have met my overmatch.” But he was very sunny about it,
having got his way, and he was not really much in awe of Torold’s longer reach,
and greater height. “You take good care of your treasure, Torold, I’ll take
care of mine.”
Sobered
and still, watching him with great eyes that still questioned, Godith said:
“Kiss me and wish me well! As I do you!”
“With
all my heart!” said Beringar, and turned her face up between his hands, and
kissed her soundly. The kiss lasted long, perhaps to provoke Torold, but Torold
watched and was not dismayed. These could have been brother and sister saying a
fond but untroubled farewell. “Now mount, and good speed!”
She
went first to Brother Cadfael, and asked his kiss also, with a frantic quiver
in her voice and her face that no one else saw or heard, and that might have
been of threatened tears, or of almost uncontrollable laughter, or of both together.
The thanks she said to him and to the lay brothers were necessarily brief,
being hampered by the same wild mixture of emotions. She had to escape quickly,
before she betrayed herself. Torold went to hold her stirrup, but Brother
Anselm hoisted her between his hands and set her lightly in the saddle. The
stirrups were a little long for her, he bent to shorten them to her comfort,
and then she saw him look up furtively and flash her a grin, and she knew that
he, too, had fathomed what was going on, and shared her secret laughter. If he
and his comrade had been let into the whole plot from the beginning, they might
not have played their parts so convincingly; but they were very quick to pick
up all the undercurrents.
Torold
mounted Beringar’s roan, and looked down from the saddle at the whole group
within the stockade. The archers had unstrung their bows, and stood by looking
on with idle interest and some amusement, while the third man opened the gate
wide to let the travellers pass.
“Brother
Cadfael, everything I owe to you. I shall not forget.”
“If
there’s anything owing,” said Cadfael comfortably, “you can repay it to Godith.
And see you mind your ways with her until you bring her safe to her father,” he
added sternly. “She’s in your care as a sacred charge, beware of taking any
advantage.”
Torold’s
smile flashed out brilliantly for an instant, and was gone; and the next moment
so was Torold himself, and Godith after him, trotting out briskly through the
open gate into the luminosity of the clearing, and thence into the shadowy
spaces between the trees. They had but a little way to go to the wider path,
and the ford of the brook, where the saddle-bags waited. Cadfael stood
listening to the soft thudding of hooves in the turf, and the occasional rustling
of leafy branches, until all sounds melted into the night’s silence. When he
stirred out of his attentive stillness, it was to find that every other soul
there had been listening just as intently. They looked at one another, and for
a moment had nothing to say.
“If
she comes to her father a virgin,” said Beringar then, “I’ll never stake on man
or woman again.”
“It’s
my belief,” said Cadfael, drily, “she’ll come to her father a wife, and very
proper, too. There are plenty of priests between here and Normandy. She’ll have
more trouble persuading Torold he has the right to take her, unapproved, but
she’ll have her own ways of convincing him.”
“You
know her better than I,” said Beringar. “I hardly knew the girl at all! A
pity!” he added thoughtfully.
“Yet
I think you recognised her the first time you ever saw her with me in the great
court.”
“Oh,
by sight, yes—I was not sure then, but within a couple of days I was. She’s not
so changed in looks, only fined into such a springy young fellow.” He caught
Cadfael’s eye, and smiled. “Yes, I did come looking for her, but not to hand
her over to any man’s use. Nor that I wanted her for myself, but she was, as
you said, a sacred charge upon me. I owed it to the alliance others made for us
to see her into safety.”
“I
trust,” said Cadfael, “that you have done so.”
“I,
too. And no hard feelings upon either side?”
“None.
And no revenges. The game is over.” He sounded, he realised suddenly,
appropriately subdued and resigned, but it was only the pleasant weariness of
relief.
“Then
you’ll ride back with me to the abbey, and keep me company on the way? I have
two horses here. And these lads of mine have earned their sleep, and if your
good brothers will give them house-room overnight, and feed them, they may make
their way back at leisure tomorrow. To sweeten their welcome, there’s two
flasks of wine in my saddle-bags, and a pasty. I feared we might have a longer
wait, though I was sure you’d come.”
“I
had a feeling,” said Brother Louis, rubbing his hands with satisfaction, “for
all the sudden alarm, that there was no real mischief in the wind tonight. And
for two flasks of wine and a pasty we’ll offer you beds with pleasure, and a
game of tables if you’ve a mind for it. We get very little company here.”
One
of the archers led in from the night Beringar’s two remaining horses, the tail,
rangy dapple-grey and the sturdy brown cob, and placidly lay brothers and
men-at-arms together unloaded the food and drink, and at Beringar’s orders made
the unwieldy, sacking-wrapped bundle secure on the dapple’s croup, well
balanced and fastened with Brother Anselm’s leather straps, provided with quite
another end in view. “Not that I wouldn’t trust it with you on the cob,”
Beringar assured Cadfael, “but this great brute will never even notice the weight.
And his rider needs a hard hand, for he has a hard mouth and a contrary will,
and I’m used to him. To tell truth, I love him. I parted with two better worth
keeping, but this hellion is my match, and I wouldn’t change him.”
He
could not better have expressed what Cadfael was thinking about him. This
hellion is my match, and I wouldn’t change him! He did his own spying, he gave
away generously two valuable horses to discharge his debt to a bride he never
really wanted, and he went to all manner of patient, devious shifts to get the
girl safe and well out of his path, and lay hand upon the treasury, which was
fair game, as she was not. Well, well, we live and learn in the book of our
fellowmen!
They
rode together, they two alone, by the same road as once before, and even more
companionably than then. They went without haste, unwinding the longer way
back, the way fitter for horses, the way they had first approached the grange.
The night was warm, still and gentle, defying the stormy and ungentle times with
its calm assertion of permanent stability.
“I
am afraid,” said Hugh Beringar with compunction, “you have missed Matins and
Lauds, and the fault is mine. If I had not delayed everything, you might have
been back for midnight. You and I should share whatever penance is due.”
“You
and I,” said Cadfael cryptically, “share a penance already. Well, I could not
wish for more stimulating company. We many compound my offence by riding at
ease. It is not often a man gets such a night ride, and safely, and at peace.”
Then
they were silent for some way, and thought their own thoughts, but somewhere
the threads tangled, for after a while Beringar said with assurance: “You will
miss her.” It was said with brisk but genuine sympathy. He had, after all, been
observing and learning for some days.
“Like
a fibre gone from my heart,” owned Brother Cadfael without dismay, “but
there’ll be others will fill the place. She was a good girl, and a good lad,
too, if you’ll grant me the fancy. Quick to study, and a hard worker. I hope
she’ll make as good a wife. The young man’s a fair match for her. You saw he
favoured one shoulder? One of the king’s archers did his best to slice the
round of it off him, but with Godith’s care now he’ll do well enough. They’ll
reach France.” And after a moment’s thought he asked, with candid curiosity:
“What would you have done if any one of us had challenged your orders and made
a fight of it?”
Hugh
Beringar laughed aloud. “I fancy I should have looked the world’s fool, for of
course my men knew better than to shoot. But the bow is a mighty powerful
persuader, and after all, an unchancy fellow like me might be in earnest. Why,
you never thought I’d harm the girl?”
Cadfael
debated the wisdom of answering that truthfully as yet, and temporised: “if I
ever thought of it, I soon realised I was wrong. They could have killed before
ever Torold stepped between. No, I soon gave up that error.”
“And
it does not surprise you that I knew what you had brought to the grange, and
what you came to fetch tonight?”
“No
revelation of your cunning can surprise me any longer,” said Cadfael. “I
conclude that you followed me from the river the night I brought it. Also that
you had procured me to help you place the horses there for a dual purpose, to
encourage me to transfer the treasure from wherever it was hidden, and to make
it possible for those youngsters to escape, while the gold stayed here. The
right hand duelling against the left, that fits you well. Why were you so sure
it would be tonight?”
“Faith,
if I’d been in your shoes I would have got them away with all the haste I
could, at this favourable time, when search had been made and failed. You would
have had to be a fool to let the chance slip. And as I have found long ago, you
are no fool, Brother Cadfael.”
“We
have much in common,” agreed Cadfael gravely. “But once you knew that lump
you’re carrying there was safe in the grange, why did you not simply remove it,
and make sure of it? You could still have let the children depart without it,
just as they’ve done now.”
“And
sleep in my bed while they rode away? And never make my peace with Godith, but
let her go into France believing me her enemy, and capable of such meanness?
No, that I could not stomach. I have my vanity. I wanted a clean end, and no
grudges. I have my curiosity, too. I wanted to see this young fellow who had
taken her fancy. The treasure was safe enough until you chose to get them away,
why should I be uneasy about it? And this way was far more satisfying.”
“That,”
agreed Cadfael emphatically, “it certainly was.” They were at the edge of the
forest, and the open road at Sutton, and were turning north towards St. Giles,
all in amicable ease, which seemed to surprise neither of them.
“This
time,” said Beringar, “we’ll ride in at the gate house like orderly members of
the household, even if the time is a little unusual. And if you have no
objection, we may as well take this straight to your hut in the garden, and sit
out the rest of the night, and see what we have here. I should like to see how
Godith has been living in your care, and what skills she’s been acquiring. I
wonder how far they’ll be by now?”
“Halfway
to Pool, or beyond. Most of the way it’s a good road. Yes, come and see for
yourself. You went enquiring for her in the town, did you not? At Edric Flesher’s.
Petronilla had the worst opinion of your motives.”
“She
would,” agreed Beringar, laughing. “No one would ever have been good enough for
her chick, she hated me from the start. Ah, well, you’ll be able to put her
mind at rest now.”
They
had reached the silent Abbey Foregate, and rode between the darkened houses,
the ring of hooves eerie in the stillness. A few uneasy inhabitants opened
their shutters a crack to look out as they passed, but their appearance was so
leisured and peaceful that no one could suspect them of harmful intent. The
wary citizens went back to bed reassured. Over the high, enclosing wail the
great church loomed on their left hand, and the narrow opening of the wicket
showed in the dark bulk of the gate. The porter was a lay brother, a little
surprised at being roused to let in two horsemen at such an hour, but
satisfied, on recognising both of them, that they must have been employed on
some legitimate errand, no great marvel in such troublous times. He was
incurious and sleepy, and did not wait to see them cross to the stables, where
they tended their horses first, as good grooms should, before repairing to the
garden hut with their load.
Beringar
grimaced when he hoisted it. “You carried this on your back all that way?” he
demanded with raised brows.
“I
did,” said Cadfael truthfully, “and you witnessed it.”
“Then
I call that a noble effort. You would not care to shoulder it again these few
paces?”
“I
could not presume,” said Cadfael. “It’s in your charge now.”
“I
was afraid of that!” But he was in high good humour, having fulfilled his idea
of himself, made his justification in Godith’s eyes, and won the prize he
wanted; and he had more sinew in his slenderness than anyone would have
thought, for he lifted and carried the weight lightly enough the short way to
the herbarium.
“I
have flint and tinder here somewhere,” said Cadfael, going first into the hut.
“Wait till I make you a light, there are breakables all round us here.” He
found his box, and struck sparks into the coil of charred cloth, and lit the
floating wick in his little dish of oil. The flame caught and steadied, and
drew tall and still, shedding a gentle light on all the strange shapes of
mortars and flasks and bottles, and the bunches of drying herbs that made the
air aromatic.
“You
are an alchemist,” said Beringar, impressed and charmed. “I am not sure you are
not a wizard.” He set down his load in the middle of the floor, and looked
about him with interest. “This is where she spent her nights?” He had observed
the bed, still rumpled from Torold’s spasmodic and unquiet sleep. “You did this
for her. You must have found her out the very first day.”
“So
I did. It was not so difficult. I was a long time in the world. Will you taste
my wine? It’s made from pears, when the crop’s good.”
“Gladly!
And drink to your better success—against all opponents but Hugh Beringar.”
He
was on his knees by then, unknotting the rope that bound his prize. One sack
disgorged another, the second a third. It could not be said that he was
feverish in his eagerness, or showed any particular greed, only a certain
excited curiosity. Out of the third sack rolled a tight bundle of cloth,
dark-coloured, that fell apart as it was freed from constriction, and shed two
unmistakable sleeves across the earth floor. The white of a shirt showed among
the tangle of dark colours, and uncurled to reveal three large, smooth stones,
a coiled leather belt, a short dagger in a leather sheath. Last of all, out of
the centre something hard and small and bright rolled and lay still, shedding
yellow flashes as it moved, burning sullenly gold and silver when it lay still
at Beringar’s feet.
And
that was all.
On
his knees, he stared and stared, in mute incomprehension, his black brows
almost elevated into his hair, his dark eyes round with astonishment and
consternation. There was nothing more to be read, in a countenance for once
speaking volubly, no recoil, no alarm, no guilt. He leaned forward, and with a
sweep of his hand parted all those mysterious garments, spread them abroad,
gaped at them, and fastened on the stones. His eyebrows danced, and came down
to their normal level, his eyes blazing understanding; he cast one glittering
glance at Cadfael, and then he began to laugh, a huge, genuine laughter that
shook him where he kneeled, and made the bunches of herbs bob and quiver over
his head. A good, open, exuberant sound it was; it made Cadfael, even at this
moment, shake and laugh with him.
“And
I have been commiserating with you,” gasped Beringar, wiping tears from his eyes
with the back of his hand, like a child, “all this time, while you had this in
store for me! What a fool I was, to think I could out-trick you, when I almost
had your measure even then.”
“Here,
drink this down,” urged Cadfael, offering the beaker he had filled. “To your
own better success—with all opponents but Cadfael!”
Beringar
took it, and drank heartily. “Well, you deserve that. You have the last laugh,
but at least you lent it to me a while, and I shall never enjoy a better. What
was it you did? How was it done? I swear I never took my eyes from you. You did
draw up what that young man of yours had drowned there, I heard it rise, I
heard the water run from it on the stone.”
“So
I did, and let it down again, but very softly. This one I had ready in the
boat. The other Godith and her squire drew up as soon as you and I were well on
our way.”
“And
have it with them now?” asked Beringar, momentarily serious.
“They
have. By now, I hope, in Wales, where Owain Gwynedd’s hand will be over them.”
“So
all the while you knew that I was watching and following you?”
“I
knew you must, if you wanted to find your treasure. No one else could lead you
to it. If you cannot shake off surveillance,” said Brother Cadfael sensibly,
“the only thing to do is make use of it.”
“You
certainly did. My treasure!” echoed Beringar, and looked it over and laughed
afresh. “Well, now I understand Godith better. In a fair win and a fair defeat,
she said, there should be no heartburning! And there shall be none!” He looked
again, more soberly, at the things spread before him on the earth floor, and
after some frowning thought looked up just as intently at Cadfael. “The stones
and the sacks, anything to make like for like,” he said slowly, “that I
understand. But why these? What are these things to do with me?”
“You
recognise none of them—I know. They are nothing to do with you, happily for you
and for me. These,” said Cadfael, stooping to pick up and shake out shirt and
hose and cotte, “are the clothes Nicholas Faintree was wearing when he was
strangled by night, in a hut in the woods above Frankwell, and thrown among the
executed under the castle wall, to cover up the deed.”
“Your
one man too many,” said Beringar, low-voiced.
“The
same. Torold Blund rode with him, but they were separated when this befell. The
murderer was waiting also for him, but with the second one he failed. Torold
won away with his charge.”
“That
part I know,” said Beringar. “The last he said to you, and you to him, that
evening in the mill, that I heard, but no more.”
He
looked long at the poor relics, the dark brown hose and russet cotte, a young
squire’s best. He looked up at Cadfael, and eyed him steadily, very far from
laughter now. “I understand. You put these together to spring upon me when I
was unprepared—when I looked for something very different. For me to see, and
recoil from my own guilt. If this happened the night after the town fell, I had
ridden out alone, as I recall. And I had been in the town the same afternoon,
and to say all, yes, I did gather more than she bargained for from Petronilla.
I knew this was in the wind, that there were two in Frankwell waiting for
darkness before they rode. Though what I was listening for was a clue to
Godith, and that I got, too. Yes, I see that I might well be suspect. But do I
seem to you a man who would kill, and in so foul a fashion, just to secure the
trash those children are carrying away with them into Wales?”
“Trash?”
echoed Cadfael, mildly and thoughtfully.
“Oh,
pleasant to have, and useful, I know. But once you have enough of it for your
needs, the rest of it is trash. Can you eat it, wear it, ride it, keep off the
rain and the cold with it, read it, play music on it, make love to it?”
“You
can buy the favour of kings with it,” suggested Cadfael, but very placidly.
“I
have the king’s favour. He blows too many ways as his advisers persuade him,
but left alone he knows a man when he finds one. And he demands unbecoming
services when he’s angry and vengeful, but he despises those who run too
servilely to perform, and never leave him time to think better of his
vindictiveness. I was with him in his camp a part of that evening, he has
accepted me to hold my own castles and border for him, and raise the means and
the men in my own way, which suits me very well. Yes, I would have liked, when
such a chance offered, to secure FitzAlan’s gold for him, but losing it is no
great matter, and it was a good fight. So answer me, Cadfael, do I seem to you
a man who would strangle his fellow-man from behind for money?”
“No!
There were the circumstances that made it a possibility, but long ago I put
that out of mind. You are no such man. You value yourself too high to value a
trifle of gold above your self-esteem. I was as sure as man could well be,
before I put it to the test tonight,” said Cadfael, “that you wished Godith
well out of her peril, and were nudging my elbow with the means to get her
away. To try at the same time for the gold was fair dealing enough. No, you are
not my man. There is not much,” he allowed consideringly, “that I would put out
of your scope, but killing by stealth is one thing I would never look for from
you, now that I know you. Well, so you can’t help me. There’s nothing here to
shake you, and nothing for you to recognise.”
“Not
recognise—no, not that.” Beringar picked up the yellow topaz in its broken
silver claw, and turned it thoughtfully in his hands. He rose, and held it to
the lamp to examine it better. “I never saw it before. But for all that, my
thumbs prick. This, after a fashion, I think I may know. I watched with Aline
while she prepared her brother’s body for burial. All his things she put
together and brought them, I think, to you to be given as alms, all but the
shirt that was stained with his death-sweat. She spoke of something that was
not there, but should have been there—a dagger that was hereditary in her
family, and went always to the eldest son when he came of age. As she described
it to me, I do believe this may be the great stone that tipped the hilt.” He
looked up with furrowed brows. “Where did you find this? Not on your dead man!”
“Not
on him, no. But trampled into the earth floor, where Torold had rolled and
struggled with the murderer. And it does not belong to any dagger of Torold’s.
There is only one other who can have worn it.”
“Are
you saying,” demanded Beringar, aghast, “that it was Aline’s brother who slew
Faintree? Has she to bear that, too?”
“You
are forgetting, for once, your sense of time,” said Brother Cadfael,
reassuringly. “Giles Siward was dead several hours before Nicholas Faintree was
murdered. No, never fear, there’s no guilt there can touch Aline. No, rather,
whoever killed Nicholas Faintree had first robbed the body of Giles, and went
to his ambush wearing the dagger he had contemptibly stolen.”
Beringar
sat down abruptly on Godith’s bed, and held his head hard between his hands.
“For God’s sake, give me more wine, my mind no longer works.” And when his
beaker was refilled he drank thirstily, picked up the topaz again and sat
weighing it in his hand. “Then we have some indication of the man you want. He
was surely present through part, at any rate, of that grisly work done at the
castle, for there, if we’re right, he lifted the pretty piece of weaponry to
which this thing belongs. But he left before the work ended, for it went on
into the night, and by then, it seems, he was lurking in ambush on the other
side Frankwell. How did he learn of their plans? May not one of those poor
wretches have tried to buy his own life by betraying them? Your man was there
when the killing began, but left well before the end. Prestcote was there
surely, Ten Heyt and his Flemings were there and did the work, Courcelle, I
hear, fled the business as soon as he could, and took to the cleaner duties of
scouring the town for FitzAlan, and small blame to him.”
“Not
all the Flemings,” Cadfael pointed out, “speak English.”
“But
some do. And among those ninety-four surely more than half spoke French just as
well. Any one of the Flemings might have taken the dagger. A valuable piece,
and a dead man has no more need of it. Cadfael, I tell you, I feel as you do
about this business, such a death must not go unavenged. Don’t you think, since
it can’t be any further grief or shame to her, I might show this thing to
Aline, and make certain whether it is or is not from the hilt she knew?”
“I
think,” said Cadfael, “that you may. And after chapter we’ll meet again here,
if you will. If, that is, I am not so loaded with penance at chapter that I
vanish from men’s sight for a week.”
In
the event, things turned out very differently. If his absence at Matins and
Lauds had been noticed at all, it was clean forgotten before chapter, and no
one, not even Prior Robert, ever cast it up at him or demanded penance. For
after the former day’s excitement and distress, another and more hopeful
upheaval loomed. King Stephen with his new levies, his remounts and his
confiscated provisions, was about to move south towards Worcester, to attempt
inroads into the western stronghold of Earl Robert of Gloucester, the Empress
Maud’s half-brother and loyal champion. The vanguard of his army was to march
the next day, and the king himself, with his personal guard, was moving today
into Shrewsbury castle for two nights, to inspect and secure his defences
there, before marching after the vanguard. He was well satisfied with the
results of his foraging, and disposed to forget any remaining grudges, for he
had invited to his table at the castle, this Tuesday evening, both Abbot
Heribert and Prior Robert, and in the flurry of preparation minor sins were
overlooked.
Cadfael
repaired thankfully to his workshop, and lay down and slept on Godith’s bed
until Hugh Beringar came to wake him. Hugh had the topaz in his hand, and his
face was grave and tired, but serene.
“It
is hers. She took it in her hands gladly, knowing it for her own. I thought
there could not be two such. Now I am going to the castle, for the king’s party
are already moving in there, and Ten Heyt and his Flemings will be with him. I
mean to find the man, whoever he may be, who filched that dagger after Giles
was dead. Then we shall know we are not far from your murderer. Cadfael, can
you not get Abbot Heribert to bring you with him to the castle this evening? He
must have an attendant, why not you? He turns to you willingly, if you ask, he’ll
jump at you. Then if I have anything to tell, you’ll be close by.”
Brother
Cadfael yawned, groaned and kept his eyes open unwillingly on the young, dark
face that leaned over him, a face of tight, bright lines now, fierce and bleak,
a hunting face. He had won himself a formidable ally.
“A
small, mild curse on you for waking me,” he said, mumbling, “but I’ll come.”
“It
was your own cause,” Beringar reminded him, smiling.
“It
is my cause. Now for the love of God, go away and let me sleep away dinner, and
afternoon and all, you’ve cost me hours enough to shorten my life, you plague.”
Hugh
Beringar laughed, though it was a muted and burdened laugh this time, marked a
cross lightly on Cadfael’s broad brown forehead, and left him to his rest.
Chapter
Eleven
A
SERVER FOR EVERY PLATE WAS REQUIRED at the king’s supper. It was no problem to
suggest to Abbot Heribert that the brother who had coped with the matter of the
mass burial, and even talked with the king concerning the unlicensed death,
should be on hand with him to be questioned at need. Prior Robert took with him
his invariable toady and shadow, Brother Jerome, who would certainly be
indefatigable with finger-bowl, napkin and pitcher throughout, a great deal
more assiduous than Cadfael, whose mind might well be occupied elsewhere. They
were old enemies, in so far as Brother Cadfael entertained enmities. He
abhorred a sickly-pale tonsure.
The
town was willing to put on a festival face, not so much in the king’s honour as
in celebration of the fact that the king was about to depart, but the effect
was much the same. Edric Flesher had come down to the high street from his shop
to watch the guests pass by, and Cadfael flashed him a ghost of a wink, by way
of indication that they would have things to discuss later, things so
satisfactory that they could well be deferred. He got a huge grin and a wave of
a meaty hand in response, and knew his message had been received. Petronilla
would weep for her lamb’s departure, but rejoice for her safe delivery and apt
escort. I must go there soon, he thought, as soon as this last duty is done.
Within
the town gate Cadfael had seen the blind old man sitting almost proudly in
Giles Siward’s good cloth hose, holding out his palm for alms with a dignified
gesture. At the high cross he saw the little old woman clasping by the hand her
feeble-wit grandson with his dangling lip, and the fine brown cotte sat well on
him, and gave him an air of rapt content by its very texture. Oh, Aline, you
ought to give your own charity, and see what it confers, beyond food and
clothing!
Where
the causeway swept up from the street to the gate of the castle, the beggars
who followed the king’s camp had taken up new stations, hopeful and expectant,
for the king’s justiciar, Bishop Robert of Salisbury, had arrived to join his
master, and brought a train of wealthy and important clerics with him. In the
lee of the gate-house wall Lame Osbern’s little trolley was drawn up, where he
could beg comfortably without having to move. The worn wooden pattens he used
for his callused knuckles lay tidily beside him on the trolley, on top of the
folded black cloak he would not need until night fell. It was so folded that
the bronze clasp at the neck showed up proudly against the black, the dragon of
eternity with his tail in his mouth.
Cadfael
let the others go on through the gates, and halted to say a word to the
crippled man. “Well, how have you been since last I saw you by the king’s
guard-post? You have a better place here.”
“I
remember you,” said Osbern, looking up at him with eyes remarkably clear and
innocent, in a face otherwise as misshapen as his body. “You are the brother
who brought me the cloak.”
“And
has it done you good service?”
“It
has, and I have prayed for the lady, as you asked. But, brother, it troubles
me, too. Surely the man who wore it before me is dead. Is it so?”
“He
is,” said Cadfael, “but that should not trouble you. The lady who sent it to
you is his sister, and trust me, her giving blesses the gift. Wear it, and take
comfort.”
He
would have walked on then, but a hasty hand caught at the skirt of his habit,
and Osbern besought him pleadingly: “But, brother, I go in dread that I bear
some guilt. For I saw the man, living, with this cloak about him, hale as I…”
“You
saw him?” echoed Cadfael on a soundless breath, but the anxious voice had
ridden over him and rushed on.
“It
was in the night, and I was cold, and I thought to myself, I wish the good God
would send me such a cloak to keep me warm! Brother, thought is also prayer!
And no more than three days later God did indeed send me this very cloak. You
dropped it into my arms! How can I be at peace? The young man gave me a groat
that night, and asked me to say a prayer for him on the morrow, and so I did.
But how if my first prayer made the second of none effect? How if I have prayed
a man into his grave to get myself a cloak to wear?”
Cadfael
stood gazing at him amazed and mute, feeling the chill of ice flow down his
spine. The man was sane, clear of mind and eye, he knew very well what he was
saying, and his trouble of heart was real and deep, and must be the first
consideration, whatever else followed.
“Put
all such thoughts out of your mind, friend,” said Cadfael firmly, “for only the
devil can have sent them. If God gave you the thing for which you wished, it
was to save one morsel of good out of a great evil for which you are no way to
blame. Surely your prayers for the former wearer are of aid even now to his
soul. This young man was one of FitzAlan’s garrison here, done to death after
the castle fell, at the king’s orders. You need have no fears, his death is not
at your door, and no sacrifice of yours could have saved him.”
Osbern’s
uplifted face eased and brightened, but still he shook his head, bewildered.
“FitzAlan’s man? But how could that be, when I saw him enter and leave the
king’s camp?”
“You
saw him? You are sure? How do you know this is the same cloak?”
“Why,
by this clasp at the throat. I saw it clearly in the firelight when he gave me
the groat.”
He
could not be mistaken, then, there surely were not two such designs exactly
alike, and Cadfael himself had seen its match on the buckle of Giles Siward’s
sword-belt.
“When
was it that you saw him?” he asked gently. “Tell me how it befell.”
“It
was the night before the assault, around midnight. I had my place then close to
the guard-post for the sake of the fire, and I saw him come, not openly, but
like a shadow, among the bushes. He stood when they challenged him, and asked
to be taken to their officer, for he had something to tell, to the king’s
advantage. He kept his face hidden, but he was young. And afraid! But who was
not afraid, then? They took him away within, and afterwards I saw him return,
and they let him out. He said he had orders to go back, for there must be no
suspicion. That was all I heard. He was in better heart then, not so
frightened, so I asked him for alms, and he gave, and asked my prayers in
return. Say some prayer for me tomorrow, he said—and on ‘the morrow, you tell
me, he died! This I’m sure of, when he left me he was not expecting to die.”
“No,”
said Cadfael, sick with pity and grief for all poor, frightened, breakable men,
“surely he was not. None of us knows the day. But pray for him you may, and
your prayers will benefit his soul. Put off all thought that ever you did him
harm, it is not so. You never wished him ill, God hears the heart. Never wished
him any, never did him any.”
He
left Osbern reassured and comforted, but went on into the castle carrying with
him the load of discomfort and depression the lame man had shed. So it always
is, he thought, to relieve another you must burden yourself. And such a burden!
He remembered in time that there was one more question he should have asked,
the most urgent of all, and turned back to ask it.
“Do
you know, friend, who was the officer of the guard, that night?”
Osbern
shook his head. “I never saw him, he never came out himself. No, brother, that
I can’t tell you.”
“Trouble
no more,” said Cadfael. “Now you have told it freely, and you know the cloak
came to you with a blessing, not a bane. Enjoy it freely, as you deserve.”
“Father
Abbot,” said Cadfael, seeking out Heribert in the courtyard, “if you have no
need of me until you come to table, there is work here I have still to do,
concerning Nicholas Faintree.”
With
King Stephen holding audience in the inner ward, and the great court teeming
with clerics, bishops, the small nobility of the county, even an earl or so,
there was no room, in any case, for the mere servitors, whose duties would
begin when the feast began. The abbot had found a friend in the bishop of
Salisbury, and readily dismissed Cadfael to whatever pursuit he chose. He went
in search of Hugh Beringar with Osbern’s story very heavy on his mind, and the
last question still unanswered, though so many sad mysteries were now made
plain. It was not a terrified prisoner with the rope already round his neck who
had broken down and betrayed the secret of FitzAlan’s plans for his treasury.
No, that betrayal had taken place a day previously, when the issue of battle was
still to be decided, and the thing had been done with forethought, to save a
life it yet had failed to save. He came by stealth, and asked to be taken to
the officer of the guard, for he had something to tell to the king’s advantage!
And when he left he told the guard he had orders to go back, so that there
could be no suspicion, but then he was in better heart. Poor wretch, not for
long!
By
what means or on what pretext he had managed to get out of the castle—perhaps
on pretence of reconnoitering the enemy’s position?—certainly he had obeyed his
instructions to return and keep all suspicion lulled. He had returned only to
confront the death he had thought he was escaping.
Hugh
Beringar came out and stood on the steps of the great hall, craning round him
for one person among all that shifting throng. The black Benedictine habits
showed here and there in strong contrast to the finery of lordlings in their
best, but Cadfael was shorter than many of those about him, and saw the man he
was seeking before he was himself seen. He began to weave his way towards him,
and the keen black eyes sweeping the court beneath drawn brows lit upon him,
and glittered. Beringar came down to take him by the arm and draw him away to a
quieter place.
“Come
away, come up on to the guard-walk, there’ll be no one there but the sentry.
How can we talk here?” And when they had mounted to the wall, he found a corner
where no one could approach them without being seen, he said, eyeing Cadfael
very earnestly: “You have news in your face. Tell it quickly, and I’ll tell you
mine.”
Cadfael
told the story as briefly as it had been told to him, and it was understood as
readily. Beringar stood leaning against the merlon of the wall as though
bracing his back for a dour defence. His face was bitter with dismay.
“Her
brother! No escaping it, this can have been no other. He came by night out of
the castle, by stealth, hiding his face, he spoke with the king’s officer, and
returned as he had come. So that there might be no suspicion! Oh, I am sick!”
said Beringar savagely. “And all for nothing! His treason fell victim to one
even worse. You don’t know yet, Cadfael, you don’t know all! But that of all
people it should be her brother!”
“No
help for it,” said Cadfael, “it was he. In terror for his life, regretting an
ill-judged alliance, he went hurrying to the besiegers to buy his life, in
exchange—for what? Something of advantage to the king! That very evening they
had held conference and planned the removal of FitzAlan’s gold. That was how
someone learned in good time of what Faintree and Torold carried, and the way
they were to go. Someone who never passed that word on, as I think, to king or
any, but acted upon it himself, and for his own gain. Why else should it end as
it did? The young man, so says Osbern, went back under orders, relieved and
less afraid.”
“He
had been promised his life,” said Beringar bitterly, “and probably the king’s
favour, too, and a place about him, no wonder he went back the happier in that
belief. But what was really intended was to send him back to be taken and
slaughtered with the rest, to make sure he should not live to tell the tale.
For listen, Cadfael, to what I got out of one of the Flemings who was in that
day’s murderous labour from first to last. He said that after Arnulf of Hesdin
was hanged, Ten Heyt pointed out to the executioners a young man who was to be
the next to go, and said the order came from above. And it was done. They found
it a huge jest that he was dragged to his death incredulous, thinking at first,
no doubt, they were putting up a pretence to remove him from the ranks, and
then he saw it was black reality, and he screamed that they were mistaken, that
he was not to die with the rest, that he had been promised his life, that they
should send and ask—“
“Send
and ask,” said Brother Cadfael, “of Adam Courcelle.”
“No—I
learned no name… my man heard none. What makes you hit on that name in
particular? He was not by but once, according to this man’s account, he came
but once to look at the bodies they had already cut down, and it was early,
they would be but few. Then he went away to his work in the town, and was seen
no more. Weak-stomached, they thought.”
“And
the dagger? Was Giles wearing it when they strung him up?”
“He
was, for my man had an eye to the thing himself, but when he was relieved for a
while, and came back to get it, it was already gone.”
“Even
to one with a great prize in view,” said Cadfael sadly, “a small extra gain by
the way may not come amiss.”
They
looked at each other mutely for a long moment. “But why do you say so
certainly, Courcelle?”
“I
am thinking,” said Cadfael, “of the horror that fell upon him when Aline came
to collect her dead, and he knew what he had done. If I had known, he said, if
I had known, I would have saved him for you! No matter at what cost! God
forgive me! he said, but he meant: Aline, forgive me! With all his heart he
meant it then, though I would not call that repentance. And he gave back,
you’ll remember, the cloak. I think, truly I do think, he would then have given
back also the dagger, if he had dared. But he could not, it was already broken
and incomplete. I wonder,” said Cadfael, pondering, “I wonder what he has done
with it now? A man who would take it from the dead in the first place would not
part with it too easily, even for a girl’s sake, and yet he never dare let her
set eyes on it, and he is in earnest in courting her. Would he keep it, in
hiding? Or get rid of it?”
“If
you are right,” said Beringar, still doubtful, “we need it, it is our proof.
And yet, Cadfael, for God’s sake, how are we to deal now? God knows I can find
no good to say for one who tried to purchase his own safety so, when his
fellows were at their last gasp. But neither you nor I can strip this matter
bare, and do so wicked an injury to so innocent and honourable a lady. It’s
enough that she mourns for him. Let her at least go on thinking that he held by
his mistaken choice faithfully to the end, and gave his life for it—not that he
died craven, bleating that he was promised grace in return for so base a
betrayal. She must not know, now or ever.”
Brother
Cadfael could not but agree. “But if we accuse him, and this comes to trial,
surely everything will come out. That we cannot allow, and there lies our
weakness.”
“And
our strength,” said Beringar fiercely, “for neither can he allow it. He wants
his advancement with the king, he wants offices, but he wants Aline—do you
think I did not know it? Where would he stand with her if ever a breath of this
reached her? No, he will be at least as anxious as we to keep the story for
ever buried. Give him but a fair chance to settle the quarrel out of hand, and
he’ll jump at it.”
“Your
preoccupation,” said Cadfael gently, “I understand, and sympathise with it. But
you must also acknowledge mine. I have here another responsibility. Nicholas
Faintree must not lie uneasy for want of justice.”
“Trust
me, and stand ready to back me in whatever I shall do this night at the king’s
table,” said Hugh Beringar. “Justice he shall have, and vengeance, too, but let
it be as I shall devise.”
Cadfael
went to his duty behind the abbot’s chair in doubt and bewilderment, with no
clear idea in his mind of what Beringar intended, and no conviction that
without the broken dagger any secure case could be made against Courcelle. The
Fleming had not seen him take it, what he had cried out to Aline over her
brother’s body, in manifest pain, was not evidence. And yet there had been
vengeance and death in Hugh Beringar’s face, as much for Aline Siward’s sake as
for Nicholas Faintree’s. What mattered most in the world to him, at this
moment, was that Aline should never know how her brother had disgraced his
blood and his name, and in that cause Beringar would not scruple to spend not
only Adam Courcelle’s life, but also his own. And somehow, reflected Cadfael
ruefully, I have become very much attached to that young man, and I should not
like to see any ill befall him. I would rather this case went to law, even if
we have to step carefully in drawing up our evidence, and leave out every word
concerning Torold Blund and Godith Adeney. But for that we need, we must have,
proof positive that Giles Siward’s dagger passed into the possession of Adam
Courcelle, and preferably the dagger itself, into the bargain, to match with
the piece of it I found on the scene of the murder. Otherwise he will simply
lie and lie, deny everything, say he never saw the topaz or the dagger it came
from, and has nothing to answer; and from the eminence of the position he has
won with the king, he will be unassailable.
There
were no ladies present that night, this was strictly a political and military
occasion, but the great hall had been decked out with borrowed hangings, and
was bright with torches. The king was in good humour, the garrison’s provisions
were assured, and those who had robbed for the royal supplies had done their
work well. From his place behind Heribert at the king’s high table Cadfael
surveyed the full hall, and estimated that some five hundred guests were
present. He looked for Beringar, and found him at a lower table, in his finery,
very debonair and lively in conversation, as though he had no darker
preoccupation. He was master of his face; even when he glanced briefly at
Courcelle there was nothing in the look to attract attention, certainly nothing
to give warning of any grave purpose.
Courcelle
was at the high table, though crowded to its end by the visiting dignitaries.
Big, vividly coloured and handsome, accomplished in arms, in good odour with
the king, how strange that such a man should feel it necessary to grasp
secretly at plunder, and by such degrading means! And yet, in this chaos of
civil war, was it so strange after all? Where a king’s favour could be toppled
with the king, where barons were changing sides according as the fortunes changed,
where even earls were turning to secure their own advantage rather than that of
a cause that might collapse under their feet and leave them prisoner and
ruined! Courcelle was merely a sign of the times; in a few years there would be
duplicates of him in every corner of the realm.
I
do not like the way I see England going, thought Cadfael with anxious
foreboding, and above all I do not like what is about to happen, for as surely
as God sees us, Hugh Beringar is set to sally forth on to a dubious field,
half-armed.
He
fretted through the long meal, hardly troubled by the demands of Abbot
Heribert, who was always abstemious with wine, and ate very frugally. Cadfael
served and poured, proffered the finger-bowl and napkin, and waited with
brooding resignation.
When
the dishes were cleared away, musicians playing, and only the wine on the
tables, the servitors in their turn might take their pick of what was left in
the kitchens, and the cooks and scullions were already helping themselves and
finding quiet corners to sit and eat. Cadfael collected a bread trencher and
loaded it with broken meats, and took it out through the great court to Lame
Osbern at the gate. There was a measure of wine to go with it. Why should not
the poor rejoice for once at the king’s cost, even if that cost was handed on
down the hierarchies until it fell at last upon the poor themselves? Too often
they paid, but never got their share of the rejoicing.
Cadfael
was walking back to the hall when his eye fell upon a lad of about twelve, who
was sitting in the torchlight on the inner side of the gate house, his back
comfortably against the wall, carving his meat into smaller pieces with a
narrow-bladed knife. Cadfael had seen him earlier, in the kitchen, gutting fish
with the same knife, but he had not seen the halt of it, and would not have
seen it now if the boy had not laid it down beside him on the ground while he
ate.
Cadfael
halted and gazed, motionless. It was no kitchen knife, but a well-made dagger,
and its hilt was a slender shaft of silver, rounded to the hand, showing
delicate lines of filigree-work, and glowing round the collar of the blade with
small stones. The hilt ended in a twist of silver broken off short. It was hard
to believe, but impossible not to believe. Perhaps thought really is prayer.
He
spoke to the boy very softly and evenly; the unwitting means of justice must
not be alarmed. “Child, where did you get so fine a knife as that?”
The
boy looked up, untroubled, and smiled. When he had gulped down the mouthful
with which his cheeks were bulging, he said cheerfully: “I found it. I didn’t
steal it.”
“God
forbid, lad, I never thought it. Where did you find it? And have you the
sheath, too?”
It
was lying beside him in the shadow, he patted it proudly. “I fished them out of
the river. I had to dive, but I found them. They really are mine, father, the
owner didn’t want them, he threw them away. I suppose because this was broken.
But it’s the best knife for slitting fish I ever had.”
So
he threw them away! Not, however, simply because the jewelled hilt was broken.
“You
saw him throw it into the river? Where was this, and when?”
“I
was fishing under the castle, and a man came down alone from the water-gate to
the bank of the river, and threw it in, and went back to the castle. When he’d
gone I dived in where I saw it fall, and I found it. It was early in the
evening, the same night all the bodies were carried down to the abbey—a week
ago, come tomorrow. It was the first day it was safe to go fishing there
again.”
Yes,
it fitted well. That same afternoon Aline had taken Giles away to St.
Alkmund’s, and left Courcelle stricken and wild with unavailing regrets, and in
possession of a thing that might turn Aline against him for ever, if once she
set eyes on it. And he had done the only, the obvious thing, consigned it to
the river, never thinking that the avenging angel, in the shape of a fisherboy,
would redeem it to confront him when most he believed himself safe.
“You
did not know who this man was? What like was he? What age?” For there remained
the lingering doubt; all he had to support his conviction was the memory of
Courcelle’s horrified face and broken voice, pleading his devotion over Giles
Siward’s body.
The
child hoisted indifferent shoulders, unable to picture for another what he
himself had seen clearly and memorably. “Just a man. I didn’t know him. Not old
like you, father, but quite old.” But to him anyone of his father’s generation
would be old, though his father might be only a year or two past thirty.
“Would
you know him if you saw him again? Could you point him out among many?”
“Of
course!” said the boy almost scornfully. His eyes were young, bright, and very
observant, if his tongue was none too fluent, of course he would know his man
again.
“Sheathe
your knife, child, and bring it, and come with me,” said Cadfael with decision.
“Oh, don’t fret, no one will take your treasure from you, or if later you must
give it up, you shall be handsomely paid for it. All I need is for you to tell
again what you have told to me, and you shan’t be the loser.”
He
knew, when he entered the hail with the boy beside him, a little apprehensive
now but even more excited, that they came late. The music was stilled, and Hugh
Beringar was on his feet and striding towards the dais on which the high table
stood. They heard his voice raised, high and clear, as he mounted and stood
before the king. “Your Grace, before you depart for Worcester, there is a
matter on which I beg you’ll hear me and do right. I demand justice on one here
in this company, who has abused his position in your confidence. He has stolen
from the dead, to the shame of his nobility, and he has committed murder, to
the shame of his manhood. I stand on my charges, to prove them with my body.
And here is my gage!”
Against
his own doubts, he had accepted Cadfael’s intuition, to the length of staking
his life upon it. He leaned forward, and rolled something small and bright
across the table, to clang softly against the king’s cup. The silence that had
fallen was abrupt and profound. All round the high table heads craned to follow
the flash of yellow brilliance that swayed irregularly over the board, limping
on its broken setting, and then were raised to stare again at the young man who
had launched it. The king picked up the topaz and turned it in his large hands,
his face blank with incomprehension at first, and then wary and brooding. He,
too, looked long at Hugh Beringar. Cadfael, picking his way between the lower
tables, drew the puzzled boy after him and kept his eyes upon Adam Courcelle,
who sat at his end of the table stiff and aware. He had command of his face, he
looked no more astonished or curious than any of those about him; only the taut
hand gripping his drinking-horn betrayed his consternation. Or was even that
imagined, to fit in with an opinion already formed? Cadfael was no longer sure
of his own judgment, a state he found distressing and infuriating.
“You
have bided your time to throw your thunderbolt,” said the king at length, and
looked up darkly at Beringar from the stone he was turning in his hands.
“I
was loth to spoil your Grace’s supper, but neither would I put off what should
not be put off. Your Grace’s justice is every honest man’s right.”
“You
will need to explain much. What is this thing?”
“It
is the tip of a dagger-hilt. The dagger to which it belongs is now by right the
property of the lady Aline Siward, who has loyally brought all the resources of
her house to your Grace’s support. It was formerly in the possession of her
brother Giles, who was among those who garrisoned this castle against your
Grace, and have paid the price for it. I say that it was taken from his dead
body, an act not unknown among the common soldiery, but unworthy of knight or
gentleman. That is the first offence. The second is murder—that murder of which
your Grace was told by Brother Cadfael, of the Benedictine house here in
Shrewsbury, after the count of the dead was made. Your Grace and those who
carried out your orders were used as a shield for one who strangled a man from
behind, as your Grace will well remember.”
“I
do remember,” said the king grimly. He was torn between displeasure at having
to exert himself to listen and judge, when his natural indolence had wanted
only a leisurely and thoughtless feast, and a mounting curiosity as to what lay
behind all this. “What has this stone to do with that death?”
“Your
Grace, Brother Cadfael is also present here, and will testify that he found the
place where this murder was committed, and found there, broken off in the
struggle and trodden into the ground, this stone. He will take oath, as I do,
that the man who stole the dagger is the same who killed Nicholas Faintree, and
that he left behind him, unnoticed, this proof of his guilt.”
Cadfael
was drawing nearer by then, but they were so intent on the closed scene above
that no one noticed his approach. Courcelle was sitting back, relaxed and
brightly interested, in his place, but what did that mean? Doubtless he saw
very well the flaw in this; no need to argue against the claim that whoever
stole the dagger slew the man, since no once could trace possession to him. The
thing was at the bottom of the Severn, lost for ever. The theory could be
allowed to stand, the crime condemned and deplored, provided no one could
furnish a name, and proof to back it. Or, on the other hand, this could far
more simply be the detachment of an innocent man!
“Therefore,”
said Hugh Beringar relentlessly, “I repeat those charges I have made here
before your Grace. I appeal one among us here in this hall of theft and murder,
and I offer proof with my body, to uphold my claim in combat upon the body of
Adam Courcelle.”
He
had turned at the end to face the man he accused, who was on his feet with a
leap, startled and shaken, as well he might be. Shock burned rapidly into
incredulous anger and scorn. Just so would any innocent man look, suddenly
confronted with an accusation so mad as to be laughable.
“Your
Grace, this is either folly or villainy! How comes my name into such a
diatribe? It may well be true that a dagger was stolen from a dead man, it may
even be true that the same thief slew a man, and left this behind as witness.
But as for how my name comes into such a tale, I leave it to Hugh Beringar to
tell—if these are not simply the lies of an envious man. When did I ever see
this supposed dagger? When was it ever in my possession? Where is it now? Has
any ever seen me wear such a thing? Send, my lord, and search those soldier’s
belongings I have here, and if such a thing is found in any ward or lodging of
mine, let me know of it!”
“Wait!”
said the king imperiously, and looked from one face to the other with frowning
brows. “This is indeed a matter that needs to be examined, and if these charges
are made in malice there will be an account to pay. What Adam says is the nub
of it. Is the monk indeed present? And does he confirm the finding of this
broken ornament at the place where this killing befell? And that it came from
that very dagger?”
“I
brought Brother Cadfael here with me tonight,” said the abbot, and looked about
for him helplessly.
“I
am here, Father Abbot,” said Cadfael from below the dais, and advanced to be
seen, his arms about the shoulders of the boy, now totally fascinated, all eyes
and ears.
“Do
you bear out what Beringar says?” demanded King Stephen. “You found this stone
where the man was slain?”
“Yes,
your Grace. Trampled into the earth, where plainly there had been a struggle,
and two bodies rolling upon the ground.”
“And
whose word have we that it comes from a dagger once belonging to Mistress Siward’s
brother? Though I grant you it should be easy enough to recognise, once known.”
“The
word of Lady Aline herself. It has been shown to her, and she has recognised
it.”
“That
is fair witness enough,” said the king, “that whoever is the thief may well be
the murderer, also. But why it should follow that either you or Beringar here
suppose him to be Adam, that for my life I cannot see. There’s never a thread
to join him to the dagger or the deed. You might as well cast round here among
us, and pick on Bishop Robert of Salisbury, or any one of the squires down
below there. Or prick your knife-point into a list of us with eyes closed.
Where is the logic?”
“I
am glad,” said Courcelle, darkly red and forcing a strained laughter, “that
your Grace puts so firm a finger on the crux of the matter. With goodwill I can
go along with this good brother to condemn a mean theft and a furtive killing,
but, Beringar, beware how you connect me with either, or any other honest man.
Follow your thread from this stone, by all means, if thread there is, but until
you can trace this dagger into my hands, be careful how you toss challenges to
mortal combat about you, young man, for they may be taken up, to your great
consternation.”
“My
gage is now lying upon the table,” said Hugh Beringar with implacable calm.
“You have only to take it up. I have not withdrawn it.”
“My
lord king,” said Cadfael, raising his voice to ride over the partisan
whisperings and murmurings that were running like conflicting winds about the
high table, “it is not the case that there is no witness to connect the dagger
with any person. And for proof positive that stone and dagger belong together,
here is the very weapon itself. I ask your Grace to match the two with your own
hands.”
He
held up the dagger, and Beringar at the edge of the dais took it from him,
staring like a man in a dream, and handed it in awed silence to the king. The
boy’s eyes followed it with possessive anxiety, Courcelle’s with stricken and
unbelieving horror, as if a drowned victim had risen to haunt him. Stephen
looked at the thing with an eye appreciative of its workmanship, slid out the
blade with rising curiosity, and fitted the topaz in its silver claw to the
jagged edge of the hilt.
“No
doubt but this belongs. You have all seen?” And he looked down at Cadfael.
“Where, then, did you come by this?”
“Speak
up, child,” said Cadfael encouragingly, “and tell the king what you told to
me.”
The
boy was rosy and shining with an excitement that had quite overridden his fear.
He stood up and told his tale in a voice shrill with self-importance, but still
in the simple words he had used to Cadfael, and there was no man there who
could doubt he was telling the truth.
“…
and I was by the bushes at the edge of the water, and he did not see me. But I
saw him clearly. And as soon as he went away I dived in where it had fallen,
and found it. I live by the river, I was born by it. My mother says I swam
before I walked. I kept the knife, thinking no wrong, since he did not want it.
And that is the very knife, my lord, and may I have it back when you are done?”
The
king was diverted for a moment from the gravity of the cause that now lay in
his hands, to smile at the flushed and eager child with all the good-humour and
charm his nature was meant to dispense, if he had not made an ambitious and
hotly contested bid for a throne, and learned the rough ways that go with such
contests.
“So
our fish tonight was gutted with a jewelled knife, was it, boy? Princely
indeed! And it was good fish, too. Did you catch it, as well as dress it?”
Bashfully
the boy said that he had helped.
“Well,
you have done your part very fitly. And now, did you know this man who threw
away the knife?”
“No,
my lord, I don’t know his name. But I know him well enough when I see him.”
“And
do you see him? Here in this hail with us now?”
“Yes,
my lord,” said the child readily, and pointed a finger straight at Adam
Courcelle. “That was the man.”
All
eyes turned upon Courcelle, the king’s most dourly and thoughtfully of all, and
there was a silence that lasted no more than a long-drawn breath, but seemed to
shake the foundations of the hall, and stop every heart within its walls. Then
Courcelle said, with arduous and angry calm:
“Your
Grace, this is utterly false. I never had the dagger, I could not well toss it
into the river. I deny that ever I had the thing in my possession, or ever saw
it until now.”
“Are
you saying,” asked the king drily, “that the child lies? At whose instigation?
Not Beringar’s—it seems to me that he was as taken aback by this witness as I
myself, or you. Am I to think the Benedictine order has procured the boy to put
up such a story? And for what end?”
“I
am saying, your Grace, that this is a foolish error. The boy may have seen what
he says he saw, and got the dagger as he claims he got it, but he is mistaken
in saying he saw me. I am not the man. I deny all that has been said against
me.”
“And
I maintain it,” said Hugh Beringar. “And I ask that it be put to the proof.”
The
king crashed a fist upon the table so that the boards danced, and cups rocked
and spilled wine. “There is something here to be probed, and I cannot let it
pass now without probing it.” He turned again to the boy, and reined in his
exasperation to ask more gently: “Think and look carefully, now, and say again:
are you certain this is the man you saw? If you have any doubt, say so. It is
no sin to be mistaken. You may have seen some other man of like build or
colour. But if you are sure, say that also, without fear.”
“I
am sure,” said the boy, trembling but adamant. “I know what I saw.”
The
king leaned back in his great chair, and thumped his closed fists on the arms,
and pondered. He looked at Hugh Beringar with grim displeasure: “It seems you
have hung a millstone round my neck, when most I need to be free and to move
fast. I cannot now wipe out what has been said, I must delve deeper. Either
this case goes to the long processes of court law—no, not for you nor any will
I now delay my going one day beyond the morrow’s morrow! I have made my plans,
I cannot afford to change them.”
“There
need be no delay,” said Beringar, “if your Grace countenances trial by combat.
I have appealed Adam Courcelle of murder, I repeat that charge. If he accepts,
I am ready to meet him without any ceremony or preparations. Your Grace may see
the outcome tomorrow, and march on the following day, freed of this burden.”
Cadfael,
during these exchanges, had not taken his eyes from Courcelle’s face, and
marked with foreboding the signs of gradually recovered assurance. The faint
sweat that had broken on his lip and brow dried, the stare of desperation
cooled into calculation; he even began to smile. Since he was now cornered, and
there were two ways out, one by long examination and questioning, one by simple
battle, he was beginning to see in this alternative his own salvation. Cadfael
could follow the measuring, narrowed glance that studied Hugh Beringar from
head to foot, and understood the thoughts behind the eyes. Here was a younger
man, lighter in weight, half a head shorter, much less in reach, inexperienced,
over-confident, an easy victim. It should not be any problem to put him out of
the world; and that done, Courcelle had nothing to fear. The judgment of heaven
would have spoken, no one thereafter would point a finger at him, and Aline
would be still within his reach, innocent of his dealings with her brother, and
effectively separated from a too-engaging rival, without any blame to
Courcelle, the wrongly accused. Oh, no, it was not so grim a situation, after
all. It should work out very well.
He
reached out along the table, picked up the topaz, and rolled it contemptuously
back towards Beringar, to be retrieved and retained.
“Let
it be so, your Grace. I accept battle, tomorrow, without formality, without
need for practice. Your Grace shall march the following day,” And I with you,
his confident countenance completed.
“So
be it!” said the king grimly. “Since you’re bent on robbing me of one good man,
between you, I suppose I may as well find and keep the better of the two.
Tomorrow, then, at nine of the clock, after Mass. Not here within the wards,
but in the open—the meadow outside the town gate, between road and river, will
do well. Prestcote, you and Willem marshal the lists. See to it! And we’ll have
no horses put at risk,” he said practically. “On foot, and with swords!”
Hugh
Beringar bowed acquiescence. Courcelle said: “Agreed!” and smiled, thinking how
much longer a reach and stronger a wrist he had for sword-play.
“A l’outrance!” said the king with a vicious snap,
and rose from the table to put an end to a sullied evening’s entertainment.
Chapter
Twelve
ON
THE WAY BACK THROUGH THE STREETS OF THE TOWN, dark but not quite silent,
somehow uneasily astir as if rats ran in a deserted house, Hugh Beringar on his
rawboned grey drew alongside Brother Cadfael and walked his mount for some few
minutes at their foot-pace, ignoring Brother Jerome’s close proximity and
attentive ears as though they had not existed. In front, Abbot Heribert and
Prior Robert conversed in low and harried tones, concerned for one life at
stake, but unable to intervene. Two young men at bitter enmity had declared for
a death. Once both contestants had accepted the odds, there was no retreating;
he who lost had been judged by heaven. If he survived the sword, the gallows
waited for him.
“You
may call me every kind of fool,” said Beringar accommodatingly, “if it will
give you any ease.” His voice had still its light, teasing intonation, but
Cadfael was not deceived.
“It
is not for me, of all men,” he said, “to blame, or pity—or even regret what you
have done.”
“As
a monk?” asked the mild voice, the smile in it perceptible to an attentive ear.
“As
a man! Devil take you!”
“Brother
Cadfael,” said Hugh heartily, “I do love you. You know very well you would have
done the same in my place.”
“I
would not! Not on the mere guess of an old fool I hardly knew! How if I had
been wrong?”
“Ah,
but you were not wrong! He is the man—doubly a murderer, for he delivered her
poor coward brother to his death just as vilely as he throttled Faintree. Mind,
never a word to Aline about this until all’s over—one way or the other.”
“Never
a word, unless she speak the first. Do you think the news is not blown abroad
all through this town by now?”
“I
know it is, but I pray she is deep asleep long ago, and will not go forth to
hear this or any news until she goes to High Mass at ten. By which time, who
knows, we may have the answer to everything.”
“And
you,” said Brother Cadfael acidly, because of the pain he felt, that must have
some outlet, “will you now spend the night on your knees in vigil, and wear
yourself out before ever you draw in the field?”
“I
am not such a fool as all that,” said Hugh reprovingly, and shook a finger at
his friend. “For shame, Cadfael! You are a monk, and cannot trust God to see
right done? I shall go to bed and sleep well, and rise fresh to the trial. And
now I suppose you will insist on being my deputy and advocate to heaven?”
“No,”
said Cadfael grudgingly, “I shall sleep, and get up only when the bell rings
for me. Am I to have less faith than an impudent heathen like you?”
“That’s
my Cadfael! Still,” conceded Beringar, “you may whisper a word or two to God on
my behalf at Matins and Lauds, if you’ll be so kind. If he turns a deaf ear to
you, small use the rest of us wearing out our knee-bones.” And he leaned from
his tall horse to lay a light hand for an instant on Cadfael’s broad tonsure,
like a playful benediction, and then set spurs to his horse and trotted ahead,
passing the abbot with a respectful reverence, to vanish into the curving
descent of the Wyle.
Brother
Cadfael presented himself before the abbot immediately after Prime. It did not
seem that Heribert was much surprised to see him, or to hear the request he put
forward.
“Father
Abbot, I stand with this young man Hugh Beringar in this cause. The probing
that brought to light the evidence on which his charge rests, that was my
doing. And even if he has chosen to take the cause into his own hands, refusing
me any perilous part in it, I am not absolved. I pray leave to go and stand
trial with him as best I may. Whether I am of help to him or not, I must be
there. I cannot turn my back at this pass on my friend who has spoken for me.”
“I
am much exercised in mind, also,” admitted the abbot, sighing. “In spite of what
the king has said, I can only pray that this trial need not be pressed to the
death.” And I, thought Cadfael ruefully, dare not even pray for that, since the
whole object of this wager is to stop a mouth for ever. “Tell me,” said
Heribert, “is it certain that the man Courcelle killed that poor lad we have
buried in the church?”
“Father,
it is certain. Only he had the dagger, only he can have left the broken part
behind him. There is here a clear contest of right and wrong.”
“Go,
then,” said the abbot. “You are excused all duties until this matter is ended.”
For such duels had been known to last the day long, until neither party could
well see, or stand, or strike, so that in the end one or the other fell and
could not rise, and simply bled to death where he lay. And if weapons were
broken, they must still fight, with hands, teeth and feet, until one or the
other broke and cried for quarter; though few ever did, since that meant
defeat, the judgment of heaven convicting, and the gallows waiting, an even more
shameful death. A bitter business, thought Cadfael, kilting his habit and going
out heavily from the gate house, not worthy of being reverenced as the verdict
of God. In this case there was a certain appropriateness about it, however, and
the divine utterance might yet be heard in it. If, he thought, I have as much
faith as he? I wonder if he did indeed sleep well! And strangely, he could
believe it. His own sleep had been fitful and troubled.
Giles
Siward’s dagger, complete with its lopped topaz, he had brought back with him
and left in his cell, promising the anxious fisher-boy either restoration or
fair reward, but it was not yet time to speak to Aline in the matter. That must
wait the issue of the day. If all went well, Hugh Beringar himself should restore
it to her. If not—no, he would not consider any such possibility.
The
trouble with me, he thought unhappily, is that I have been about the world long
enough to know that God’s plans for us, however infallibly good, may not take
the form that we expect and demand. And I find an immense potential for
rebellion in this old heart, if God, for no matter what perfect end, choose to
take Hugh Beringar out of this world and leave Adam Courcelle in it.
Outside
the northern gate of Shrewsbury the Castle Foregate housed a tight little
suburb of houses and shops, but it ended very soon, and gave place to meadows
on either side the road. The river twined serpentine coils on both sides,
beyond the fields, and in the first level meadow on the left the king’s
marshals had drawn up a large square of clear ground, fenced in on every side
by a line of Flemings with lances held crosswise, to keep back any inquisitive
spectator who might encroach in his excitement, and to prevent flight by either
contestant. Where the ground rose slightly, outside the square, a great chair
had been placed for the king, and the space about it was kept vacant for the
nobility, but on the other three sides there was already a great press of
people. The word had run through Shrewsbury like the wind through leaves. The
strangest thing was the quietness. Every soul about the square of lances was
certainly talking, but in such hushed undertones that the sum of all those
voices was no louder than the absorbed buzzing of a hive of bees in sunshine.
The
slanting light of morning cast long but delicate shadows across the grass, and
the sky above was thinly veiled with haze. Cadfael lingered where guards held a
path clear for the procession approaching from the castle, a brightness of
steel and sheen of gay colours bursting suddenly out of the dim archway of the
gate. King Stephen, big, flaxen-haired, handsome, resigned now to the necessity
that threatened to rob him of one of his officers, but none the better pleased
for that, and not disposed to allow any concessions that would prolong the
contest. To judge by his face, there would be no pauses for rest, and no
limitation imposed upon the possible savagery. He wanted it over. All the
knights and barons and clerics who streamed after him to his presidential chair
were carrying themselves with the utmost discretion, quick to take their lead
from him.
The
two contestants appeared as the royal train drew aside. No shields, Cadfael
noted, and no mail, only the simple protection of leather. Yes, the king wanted
a quick end, none of your day-long hacking and avoiding until neither party
could lift hand. On the morrow the main army would leave to follow the
vanguard, no matter which of these two lay dead, and Stephen had details yet to
be settled before they marched. Beringar first, the accuser, went to kneel to
the king and do him reverence, and did so briskly, springing up vigorously from
his knee and turning to where the ranks of lances parted to let him into the
arena. He caught sight of Cadfael then, standing a little apart. In a face
tight, grave and mature, still the black eyes smiled.
“I
knew,” he said, “that you would not fail me.”
“See
to it,” said Cadfael morosely, “that you do not fail me.”
“No
dread,” said Hugh. “I’m shriven white as a March lamb.” His voice was even and
reflective. “I shall never be readier. And your arm will be seconding mine.”
At
every stroke, thought Cadfael helplessly, and doubted that all these tranquil
years since he took the cowl had really made any transformation in a spirit
once turbulent, insubordinate and incorrigibly rash. He could feel his blood
rising, as though it was he who must enter the lists.
Courcelle
rose from his knee and followed his accuser into the square. They took station
at opposite corners, and Prestcote, with his marshal’s truncheon raised, stood
between them and looked to the king to give the signal. A herald was crying
aloud the charge, the name of the challenger, and the refutation uttered by the
accused. The crowd swayed, with a sound like a great, long-drawn sigh, that
rippled all round the field. Cadfael could see Hugh’s face clearly, and now
there was no smiling, it was bleak, intent and still, eyes fixed steadily upon
his opponent.
The
king surveyed the scene, and lifted his hand. The truncheon fell and Prestcote
drew aside to the edge of the square as the contestants advanced to meet each
other.
At
first sight, the contrast was bitter. Courcelle was half as big again, half as
old again, with height and reach and weight all on his side, and there was no
questioning his skill and experience. His fiery colouring and towering size
made Beringar look no more than a lean, lightweight boy, and though that
lightness might be expected to lend him speed and agility, within seconds it
was clear that Courcelle also was very fast and adroit on his feet. At the
first clash of steel on steel, Cadfael felt his own arm and wrist bracing and
turning the stroke, and swung aside with the very same motion Beringar made to
slide out of danger; the turn brought him about, with the arch of the town gate
full in view.
Out
of the black hollow a girl came darting like a swallow, all swift black and
white and a flying cloud of gold hair. She was running, very fleetly and
purposefully, with her skirts caught up in her hands almost to the knee, and
well behind her, out of breath but making what haste she could, came another
young woman. Constance was wasting much of what breath she still had in calling
after her mistress imploringly to stop, to come away, not to go near; but Aline
made never a sound, only ran towards where two gallants of hers were newly
launched on a determined attempt to kill each other. She looked neither to
right nor left, but only craned to see over the heads of the crowd. Cadfael
hastened to meet her, and she recognised him with a gasp, and flung herself
into his arms.
“Brother
Cadfael, what is this? What has he done? And you knew, you knew, and you never
warned me! If Constance had not gone into town to buy flour, I should never
have known…”
“You
should not be here,” said Cadfael, holding her quivering and panting on his
heart. “What can you do? I promised him not to tell you, he did not wish it.
You should not look on at this.”
“But
I will!” she said with passion. “Do you think I’ll go tamely away and leave him
now? Only tell me,” she begged, “is it true what they’re saying—that he charged
Adam with murdering that young man? And that Giles’s dagger was the proof?”
“It
is true,” said Cadfael. She was staring over his shoulder into the arena, where
the swords clashed, and hissed and clashed again, and her amethyst eyes were
immense and wild.
“And
the charge—that also is true?”
“That
also.”
“Oh,
God!” she said, gazing in fearful fascination. “And he is so slight… how can he
endure it? Half the other’s size… and he dared try to solve it this way! Oh,
Brother Cadfael, how could you let him?”
At
least now, thought Cadfael, curiously eased, I know which of those two is “he”
to her, without need of a name. I never was sure until now, and perhaps neither
was she. “If ever you succeed,” he said, “in preventing Hugh Beringar from
doing whatever he’s set his mind on doing, then come to me and tell me how you
managed it. Though I doubt it would not work for me! He chose this way, girl,
and he had his reasons, good reasons. And you and I must abide it, as he must.”
“But
we are three,” she said vehemently. “If we stand with him, we must give him
strength. I can pray and I can watch, and I will. Bring me nearer—come with me!
I must see!”
She
was thrusting impetuously through towards the lances when Cadfael held her back
by the arm. “I think,” he said, “better if he does not see you. Not now!”
Aline
uttered something that sounded like a very brief and bitter laugh. “He would
not see me now,” she said, “unless I ran between the swords, and so I would, if
they’d let me—No!” She took that back instantly, with a dry sob.
“No,
I would not do so to him. I know better than that. All I can do is watch, and
keep silence.”
The
fate of women in a world of fighting men, he thought wryly, but for all that,
it is not so passive a part as it sounds. So he drew her to a slightly raised
place where she could see, without disturbing, with the glittering gold sheen
of her unloosed hair in the sun, the deadly concentration of Hugh Beringar. Who
had blood on the tip of his sword by then, though from a mere graze on
Courcelle’s cheek, and blood on his own left sleeve below the leather.
“He
is hurt,” she said in a mourning whisper, and crammed half her small fist in
her mouth to stop a cry, biting hard on her knuckles to ensure the silence she
had promised.
“It’s
nothing,” said Cadfael sturdily. “And he is the faster. See there, that parry!
Slight he might seem, but there’s steel in that wrist. What he wills to do,
he’ll do. And he has truth weighting his hand.”
“I
love him,” said Aline in a soft, deliberate whisper, releasing her bitten hand
for a moment. “I did not know until now, but I do love him!”
“So
do I, girl,” said Cadfael, “so do I!”
They
had been two full hours in the arena, with never a break for breath, and the
sun was high and hot, and they suffered, but both went with relentless care,
conserving their strength, and now, when their eyes met at close quarters over
the braced swords, there was no personal grudge between them, only an
inflexible purpose, on the one side to prove truth, on the other to disprove
it, and on either side by the only means left, by killing. They had found out
by then, if they had been in doubt, that for all the obvious advantages on one
side, in this contest they were very evenly matched, equal in skill, almost
equal in speed, the weight of truth holding a balance true between them. Both
bled from minor wounds. There was blood here and there in the grass.
It
was almost noon when Beringar, pressing hard, drove his opponent back with a
sudden lunge, and saw his foot slip in blood-stained turf, thinned by the hot,
dry summer. Courcelle, parrying, felt himself falling, and threw up his arm,
and Hugh’s following stroke took the sword almost out of his hand, shivered
edge to edge, leaving him sprawled on one hip, and clutching only a bladeless
hilt. The steel fell far aside, and lay useless.
Beringar
at once drew back, leaving his foe to rise unthreatened. He rested his point
against the ground, and looked towards Prestcote, who in turn was looking for
guidance to the king’s chair.
“Fight
on!” said the king flatly. His displeasure had not abated.
Beringar
leaned his point into the turf and gazed, wiping sweat from brow and lip.
Courcelle raised himself slowly, looked at the useless hilt in his hand, and
heaved desperate breath before hurling the thing from him in fury. Beringar
looked from him to the king, frowning, and drew off two or three more paces
while he considered. The king made no further move, apart from gesturing dourly
that they should continue. Beringar took three rapid strides to the rim of the
square, tossed his sword beneath the levelled lances, and set hand slowly to
draw the dagger at his belt.
Courcelle
was slow to understand, but blazed into renewed confidence when he realised the
gift that was offered to him.
“Well,
well!” said King Stephen under his breath. “Who knows but I may have been
mistaken in the best man, after all?”
With
nothing but daggers now, they must come to grips. Length of reach is valuable,
even with daggers, and the poniard that Courcelle drew from its sheath at his
hip was longer than the decorative toy Hugh Beringar held. King Stephen revived
into active interest, and shed his natural irritation at being forced into this
encounter.
“He
is mad!” moaned Aline at Cadfael’s shoulder, leaning against him with lips
drawn back and nostrils flaring, like any of her fighting forebears. “He had
licence to kill at leisure. Oh, he is stark mad. And I love him!”
The
fearful dance continued, and the sun at its zenith shortened the shadows of the
two duelists until they advanced, retreated, side-stepped on a black disc cast
by their own bodies, while the full heat beat pitilessly on their heads, and
within their leather harness they ran with sweat. Beringar was on the defensive
now, his weapon being the shorter and lighter, and Courcelle was pressing hard,
aware that he held the advantage. Only Beringar’s quickness of hand and eye
saved him from repeated slashes that might well have killed, and his speed and
agility still enabled him at every assault to spring back out of range. But he
was tiring at last; his judgment was less precise and confident, his movement
less alert and steady. And Courcelle, whether he had got his second wind or
simply gathered all his powers in one desperate effort, to make an end, seemed
to have recovered his earlier force and fire. Blood ran on Hugh’s right hand,
fouled his hilt and made it slippery in his palm. The tatters of Courcelle’s
left sleeve fluttered at the edge of his vision, a distraction that troubled
his concentration. He had tried several darting attacks, and drawn blood in his
turn, but length of blade and length of arm told terribly against him. Doggedly
he set himself to husband his own strength, by constant retreat if necessary,
until Courcelle’s frenzied attacks began to flag, as they must as last.
“Oh,
God!” moaned Aline almost inaudibly. “He was too generous, he has given his
life away… The man is playing with him!”
“No
man,” said Cadfael firmly, “plays with Hugh Beringar with impunity. He is still
the fresher of the two. This is a wild spurt to end it, he cannot maintain it
long.”
Step
by step Hugh gave back, but at each attack only so far as to elude the blade,
and step by step, in a series of vehement rushes, Courcelle pursued and drove
him. It seemed that he was trying to pen him into a corner of the square, where
he would have to make a stand, but at the last moment the attacker’s judgment
flagged or Hugh’s agility swung him clear of the trap, for the renewed pursuit
continued along the line of lancers, Beringar unable to break out again into
the centre of the arena, Courcelle unable to get through the sustained defence,
or prevent this lame progress that seemed likely to end in another corner.
The
Flemings stood like rocks, and let battle, like a slow tide, flow painfully
along their immovable ranks. And halfway along the side of the square Courcelle
suddenly drew back one long, rapid step instead of pursuing, and tossing his
poniard from him in the grass, stooped with a hoarse cry of triumph, and
reached beneath the levelled lances, to rise again brandishing the sword Hugh
Beringar had discarded as a grace to him, more than an hour previously.
Hugh
had not even realised that they had come to that very place, much less that he
had been deliberately driven here for this purpose. Somewhere in the crowd he
heard a woman shriek. Courcelle was in the act of straightening up, the sword
in his hand, his eyes, under the broad, streaming brow half-mad with
exultation. But he was still somewhat off-balance when Hugh launched himself
upon him in a tigerish leap. A second later would have been too late. As the
sword swung upward, he flung his whole weight against Courcelle’s breast,
locked his right arm, dagger and all, about his enemy’s body, and caught the
threatening sword-arm by the wrist in his left hand. For a moment they heaved
and strained, then they went down together heavily in the turf, and rolled and
wrenched in a deadlocked struggle at the feet of the indifferent guards.
Aline
clenched her teeth hard against a second cry, and covered her eyes, but the
next moment as resolutely uncovered them. “No, I will see all, I must… I will
bear it! He shall not be ashamed of me! Oh, Cadfael… oh, Cadfael… What is
happening? I can’t see…
“Courcelle
snatched the sword, but he had no time to strike. Wait, one of them is rising…”
Two
had fallen together, only one arose, and he stood half-stunned and wondering.
For his enemy had fallen limp and still under him, and relaxed straining arms
nervelessly into the grass; and there he lay now, open-eyed to the glare of the
sun, and a slow stream of red was flowing sluggishly from under him, and
forming a dark pool about him on the trampled ground.
Hugh
Beringar looked from the gathering blood to the dagger he still gripped in his
right hand, and shook his head in bewilderment, for he was very tired, and weak
now with this abrupt and inexplicable ending, and there was barely a drop of
fresh blood on his blade, and the sword lay loosely clasped still in Courcelle’s
right hand, innocent of his death. And yet he had his death; his life was
ebbing out fast into the thick grass. So what manner of ominous miracle was
this, that killed and left both weapons unstained?
Hugh
stooped, and raised the inert body by the left shoulder, turning it to see
where the blood issued; and there, driven deep through the leather jerkin, was
the dead man’s own poniard, which he had flung away to grasp at the sword. By
the look of it the hilt had lodged downwards in thick grass against the solidly
braced boot of one of the Flemings. Hugh’s onslaught had flung the owner
headlong upon his discarded blade, and their rolling, heaving struggle had
driven it home.
I
did not kill him, after all, though Beringar. His own cunning killed him. And
whether he was glad or sorry he was too drained to know. Cadfael would be
satisfied, at least; Nicholas Faintree was avenged, he had justice in full. His
murderer had been accused publicly, and publicly the charge had been justified
by heaven. And his murderer was dead; that failing breath was already spent.
Beringar
reached down and picked up his sword, which rose unresisting out of the
convicted hand. He turned slowly, and raised it in salute to the king, and
walked, limping now and dropping a few trickles of blood from stiffening cuts
in hand and forearm, out of the square of lances, which opened silently to let
him go free.
Two
or three paces he took across the sward towards the king’s chair, and Aline
flew into his arms, and clasped him with a possessive fervour that shook him
fully alive again. Her gold hair streamed about his shoulders and breast, she
lifted to him a rapt, exultant and exhausted face, the image of his own, she
called him by his name: “Hugh… Hugh…” and fingered with aching tenderness the
oozing wounds that showed in his cheek and hand and wrist.
“Why
did you not tell me? Why? Why? Oh, you have made me die so many times! Now we
are both alive again… Kiss me!”
He
kissed her, and she remained real, passionate and unquestionably his. She
continued to caress, and fret, and fawn.
“Hush,
love,” he said, eased and restored, “or go on scolding, for if you turn tender
to me now I’m a lost man. I can’t afford to droop yet, the king’s waiting. Now,
if you’re my true lady, lend me your arm to lean on, and come and stand by me
and prop me up, like a good wife, or I may fall flat at his feet.”
“Am
I your true lady?” demanded Aline, like all women wanting guarantees before
witnesses.
“Surely!
Too late to think better of it now, my heart!”
She
was beside him, clasped firmly in his arm, when he came before the king. “Your
Grace,” said Hugh, condescending out of some exalted private place scarcely
flawed by weariness and wounds, “I trust I have proven my case against a
murderer, and have your Grace’s countenance and approval.”
“Your
opponent,” said Stephen, “proved your case for you, all too well.” He eyed them
thoughtfully, disarmed and diverted by this unexpected apparition of entwined
lovers. “But what you have proved may also be your gain. You have robbed me,
young man, of an able deputy sheriff of this shire, whatever else he may have
been, and however foul a fighter. I may well take reprisal by drafting you into
the vacancy you’ve created. Without prejudice to your own castles and your
rights of garrison on our behalf. What do you say?”
“With
your Grace’s leave,” said Beringar, straight-faced, “I must first take counsel
with my bride.”
“Whatever
is pleasing to my lord,” said Aline, equally demurely, “is also pleasing to
me.”
Well,
well, though Brother Cadfael, looking on with interest, I doubt if troth was
ever plighted more publicly. They had better invite the whole of Shrewsbury to
the wedding.
Brother
Cadfael walked across to the guest hall before Compline, and took with him not
only a pot of his goose-grass salve for Hugh Beringar’s numerous minor grazes,
but also Giles Siward’s dagger, with its topaz finial carefully restored.
“Brother
Oswald is a skilled silversmith, this is his gift and mine to your lady. Give
it to her yourself. But ask her—as I know she will—to deal generously by the
boy who fished it out of the river. So much you will have to tell her. For the
rest, for her brother’s part, yes, silence, now and always. For her he was only
one of the many who chose the unlucky side, and died for it.”
Beringar
took the repaired dagger in his hand, and booked at it long and somberly. “Yet
this is not justice,” he said slowly. “You and I between us have forced into
the light the truth of one man’s sins, and covered up the truth of another’s.”
This night, for all his gains, he was very grave and a little sad, and not only
because all his wounds were stiffening, and all his misused muscles groaning at
every movement. The recoil from triumph had him fixing honest eyes on the
countenance of failure, the fate he had escaped. “Is justice due only to the
blameless? If he had not been so visited and tempted, he might never have found
himself mired to the neck in so much infamy.”
“We
deal with what is,” said Cadfael. “Leave what might have been to eyes that can
see it plain. You take what’s lawfully and honourably won, and value and enjoy
it. You have that right. Here are you, deputy sheriff of Salop, in royal
favour, affianced to as fine a girl as heart could wish, and, the one you set
your mind on from the moment you saw her. Be sure I noticed! And if you’re
stiff and sore in every bone tomorrow—and, lad, you will be!—what’s a little
disciplinary pain to a young man in your high feather?”
“I
wonder,” said Hugh, brightening, “where the other two are by now.”
“Within
reach of the Welsh coast, waiting for a ship to carry them coastwise round to
France. They’ll do well enough.” As between Stephen and Maud, Cadfael felt no
allegiance; but these young creatures, though two of them held for Maud and two
for Stephen, surely belonged to a future and an England delivered from the
wounds of civil war, beyond this present anarchy.
“As
for justice,” said Brother Cadfael thoughtfully, “it is but half the tale.” He
would say a prayer at Compline for the repose of Nicholas Faintree, a clean
young man of mind and life, surely now assuaged and at rest. But he would also
say a prayer for the soul of Adam Courcelle, dead in his guilt; for every
untimely death, every man cut down in his vigour and strength without time for
repentance and reparation, is one corpse too many. “No need,” said Cadfael,
“for you ever to look over your shoulder, or feel any compunction. You did the
work that fell to you, and did it well. God disposes all. From the highest to
the lowest extreme of a man’s scope, wherever justice and retribution can reach
him, so can grace.”
About
the Author
ELLIS PETERS is
the nom-de-crime of English novelist Edith Pargeter, author of scores of books
under her own name. She is the recipient of the Silver Dagger Award, conferred
by the Crime Writers Association in Britain, as well as the coveted Edgar,
awarded by the Mystery Writers of America. Miss Pargeter is also well known as
a translator of poetry and prose from the Czech and has been awarded the Gold
Medal and Ribbon of the Czechoslovak Society for Foreign Relations for her
services to Czech literature. She passed away in 1995, at the age of 82, at
home in her beloved Shropshire.
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