She rolled on her side, her back to the fire's warmth, and very soon fell asleep.
SEVEN
T
he man felt as if his head had been invaded by other people's thoughts. They were in there, the voices, inside his skull. They ordered him to do things, and when he got it wrong, they grew angry. Lying in the darkness, he gave a low moan, quickly suppressing it. The others had mocked and laughed at him quite enough for one day, and he would not give them the satisfaction of starting all over again.
He did not understand. It was all so confusing.
It had been late in the day when he and the girl had reached the hunting lodge. He would have gone in earlier, but he dared not do so until his lord arrived. He had taken the girl back to the river, and they had played a game, making a dam out of driftwood across a little stream that wound down the bank to join the main current. She had enjoyed that, and so, he had to admit, had he.
He
liked
the girl. She was pretty, she was quick-witted and she made him laugh.
Then the self-doubt had returned and the silent questions had started up again. Was he doing the right thing? Ought he to return her to her family? Oh, but he had to go on! The voices told him so. They said it was the only way to get what he so desperately wanted.
He and the girl had been mounted on his horse, waiting on a low rise above the lodge, when his lord finally arrived. The lord was in a good mood, laughing loudly and joking with the men. They all went inside, and the man knew he could wait no longer. He said to the girl, âWe can go in now!'
She looked at him brightly. âIs the party going to be soon?'
âYes, yes! Very soon.'
She had paused to fluff up her pretty hair and brush the dust off her cloak. The little gestures had gone straight to his heart. Before emotion could undermine him â
remember why you are doing this!
â he tightened his hold around her waist and kicked his heels into Star's sides.
He went first into the lodge, holding her hand and drawing her in after him. Nobody noticed them to begin with. The lord was sitting in a fine leather-seated chair beside the fire, and two of his body servants were pulling off his boots. The boots were caked in mud. More servants had heated wine, and the aroma of spices was heavy on the air. The lord's men all had mugs in their hands and were drinking greedily. As the man watched from the fringes of the group, the lord reached out a hand and took his own fine silver goblet from the servant who bowed low beside him.
âTo the chase!' he roared, and all the others joined the toast. âTo Madame Roe and Lord Fallow! Long may they thriveâ'
âAnd long may we hunt them!' the men yelled back.
Then the lord caught sight of him. âThere you are!' he exclaimed. âWe missed you on the hunt today. Where have you been?'
A narrow path opened up between the men crowding around the lord. His heart hammering in his chest, slowly the man walked along it. The girl's small hand in his was hot and sweaty with nervous excitement.
The lord's eyes fell on her and for an instant opened in recognition.
âI have brought you an unexpected guest, my lord,' the man began, âfor I know thatâ'
He did not have the chance to explain himself. As if his lord saw everything that had happened in the past two days in the blink of an eye â he probably did, for he was very, very clever and his mind worked as fast as quicksilver â he turned to the man and fixed him with eyes that blazed with fury.
Into the hush that had suddenly descended, he said in an icy voice, âSo you bring me a girl?'
âI thought â Iâ' the man stammered.
The lord, as if aware of all the ears straining to hear, flung out his arm in a wide gesture. âGet out, the lot of you,' he shouted. âGo and hurry those blasted cooks. I want my dinner!'
One by one the others shuffled away. The man and the girl stood side by side before the lord. âYou were saying?' the lord prompted silkily.
The man sidled closer. Speaking almost into his lord's ear, he whispered, âWe â I know that your preference is for young women, my lord. Why, your good lady wife was scarce more than this girl's age when you wed her, and sheâ'
The lord flung out his balled fist, and it was only the man's quick reaction that saved him. âDo not dare speak of my wife!' the lord hissed. His face was scarlet with fury, the bright eyes swelling alarmingly above the puffy cheeks. âShe was young, yes, when first I laid eyes on her, but she was precociously mature and already a woman!' He paused, panting. âWhat do you think I am?' he demanded, the low, controlled voice almost worse than the awful shouting. âYou have brought me a
child
!'
The man wanted to weep. Everything had gone amiss. He had got it wrong, as so often he did. Already, the voices were starting up their clamour inside his head, jeering at him, accusing him, calling him a fool.
His lord had beckoned to the girl, and she was slowly walking up to him. He held out a hand, and she took it. He was speaking to her; the man knew he must be because he could see the lord's lips moving. He told the voices to be quiet so that he could listen.
ââyour name, child?' the lord was asking.
âRosamund Warin.' The girl spoke up clearly, causing the lord to smile.
âRosamund,' he said. âRose of the world. Warin . . . Yes, I know the name. Who is your father, Rosamund Warin?'
âHe is called Dominic and he lives at New Winnowlands.'
âI know that name, too,' mused the lord. He frowned in concentration for a few moments, and then, his prodigious memory coming to his aid, he said, âThe abbess of Hawkenlye was called Warin.'
âYes, she's my grandmother, only she's not abbess there any more. Sheâ' Rosamund did not go on. The man wondered why. It was not that the lord had stopped her; more as if she herself had elected not to say any more.
The lord did not appear to have noticed.
The man watched him intently. As if the lord felt his eyes on him, he looked up and stared right at him.
The man bowed his head to receive whatever furious invective the lord chose to hurl at him. He did not even dare to think what his punishment would be. It would be severe and it would be painful, that was for sure.
The lord's voice said calmly, âLook at me.'
Slowly, the man obeyed. To his huge surprise, the lord was smiling. âYou are a fool,' he said, quite pleasantly, âbut then I expect you already know that, for people no doubt tell you all the time.'
âYes, my lord,' the man muttered. He very much wanted to lower his eyes, for the lord's hard stare was paining him, but he did not dare.
âA fool, but it may yet be that in your folly you have unwittingly done me a service,' the lord went on. He paused, frowning. âYes,' he said softly, more to himself than to the man. âYes, I believe that would work very well . . .'
The man waited. Between him and the lord, Rosamund stood quite still, like a slender statue. The lord turned to her. âWhy were you brought here, child? Do you know?' he asked her kindly.
âHe said there was to be a party,' she said, nodding her head towards the man. âHe told me I would meet you, lord, and he said it was a surprise.' She stopped, and it seemed to the man, watching her back, that her shoulders drooped a little.
The lord must have noticed, too. âWould you like to go home?' he said gently.
Her head shot up. â
May
I?' Then, as if she remembered her manners: âI mean, after the party, of course.'
âOf course,' the lord echoed. He leaned towards her. âTomorrow I shall take you back to Hawkenlye Abbey,' he announced.
âBut my grandmotherâ' The girl bit off the rest of whatever she was going to say. If she had been about to point out again that her grandmother was no longer abbess of Hawkenlye, she must have thought better of it. Perhaps, the man reflected, she had decided that being taken to the abbey was as good an offer as she was going to get and she had better accept it. âThank you, my lord,' she said instead. âThat would be most convenient.'
âGood,' the lord said. Then, his eyes dancing with light as if he were contemplating some wonderful event: â
Good
!' He clapped his hands, yelled to the others that they could come back and told them to bring the food with them.
The remainder of the evening had passed in a blur. Everyone had drunk a lot, and the shouting and the singing had all resonated inside the man's head, competing with the voices that alternately cajoled, threatened and, very occasionally, praised him.
The others made him the butt of their mocking jokes, and it had hurt him. He had done all this, conceived his brilliant plan, to stop them treating him like an idiot. He had truly believed that bringing the girl would please his lord so much that the lord would turn to him, thank him and announce that he was to be advanced to the post of one of the lord's close guard. That would have shown them, all of them, for at long last he would have been in his rightful place at his lord's side.
Where he, of all men, surely belonged. Even if nobody ever seemed to remember it.
It was late now, and everybody was sleeping. The girl had been accorded a corner to herself, and the lord had made sure that she was snug and comfortable. He had commanded that the men respect her privacy, and the man knew that nobody would dare to disobey. The girl was safe now.
Somehow, despite the fact that his plan had gone so badly awry, he could not help being glad about that. It had never been his intention to hurt her. He'd just had to use her as a means to an end, in much the same way that people used him.
Tomorrow they were taking her back to the abbey. The lord had seemed very pleased about that. The man tried to think why. He was quite good at thinking, or at least he was when the voices gave him a bit of peace. They were quiet now â perhaps, like the others, they, too, were asleep â and the man frowned as he thought about why the lord might be happy to go to the abbey.
An image began to firm in his mind. It was misty and vague at first, but then it solidified and he knew what he was seeing.
Of course
.
A slow smile spread across his face. He drew up his cloak, made himself comfortable and very soon, against all his expectations, he fell asleep.
Helewise woke very early the next morning, worrying about Rosamund and trying to puzzle out whether the death of this Hugh de Brionne could be connected with the girl's disappearance. She got up quietly â Tiphaine was still asleep â and built up the fire in the hearth. She knelt beside it to say a heartfelt prayer for her granddaughter's safety: âPlease, dear Lord, let her be waking in warmth and safety this morning. Let her find her way back to we who love her.'
She prayed for a little longer, then stood up and, with quick, decisive movements, put water on to heat and set about making the breakfast porridge. The Lord could not bring Rosamund home by himself, and it was up to Helewise to do whatever she could to help. She did not know quite why, but she had the growing conviction that she must tell Josse the dead man's name as soon as she could. She ate her bowl of hot food standing up, swallowing it so fast that she burned her throat. Then she shook Tiphaine gently, told her where she was going and set off.
The morning was still young as she strode along. In the weak sunlight the grass by the track was glistening with frost; the first frost of the autumn.
Hurry
, she told herself. She increased her pace.
By the time she reached the House in the Woods, she was out of breath and glowing. She ran up the steps and opened the door, finding Josse and Geoffroi eating at the big table by the hearth. Ignoring their surprised expressions, she said, âThe dead man's name was Hugh de Brionne. Tiphaine overheard my son Leofgar identify him last night.' She pulled up a bench and sat down on it, only then realizing that she felt quite exhausted.
Josse was staring at her, repeating the name under his breath. âHugh de Brionne. Aye, I know the family. His father Felix and I both saw service with King Richard.' He narrowed his eyes, clearly concentrating hard. âAye, now that I know the man's identity, I can see that he did indeed look a little like his father, although his face was badlyâ' Belatedly, he recalled his son's presence. âEr, his face had suffered some wounds, and so I did not see the resemblance yesterday.'
âIt is easier to detect similarity between two people when you are looking out for it,' she said. âYou had no idea who the dead man was.'
He gave her an affectionate smile. âKind of you to say so,' he murmured. Then, speaking so softly that he merely mouthed the question: âHas Meggie turned up?'
She shook her head. So Meggie was not here at the house either . . .
Josse had turned to Geoffroi, who was listening wide-eyed to the conversation about the dead man. âSon,' he said, âI have to go to speak to Gervase. Somebody must go to inform the dead man's parents what has happened and, since I know Felix de Brionne, I think it ought to be me.'
Geoffroi nodded. âCan I come too?'
Josse put his arm round his son's shoulders. âYou could,' he said, âbut, if you are willing, I have a much more important job for you.'
Geoffroi's expression brightened. âWhat is it?' he asked eagerly.
âSon, Helewise has to get back to the hut, and neither Ninian nor Meggie has yet returned. I need someone here who can come and find me if anything happens, and, since Will, Ella, Tilly and Gus all have a full day's work ahead of them, the obvious person to ask is you.'
For a moment Helewise thought the boy would see through the ruse. Josse was right: the house of a mother and father being informed of their son's death was no place for anyone who did not have to be there, especially one of such tender years as Geoffroi. The boy's expression was at first doubtful, but then, as he thought about the suggestion, his face cleared. âI'll ride like the wind and by the most secret ways,' he said excitedly. âI'llâ'