Brother Cadfael 08: The Devil's Novice
kindled into enthusiasm, 'A tall dark bay, with white blaze on his face from forehead to nose, and two white forefeet.'
Noteworthy enough, then, to be readily recognised when found, and moreover, to be a prize for someone. 'If somebody wanted the man out of this world, for whatever reason,' said Hugh to Cadfael afterwards in the herb garden, 'he would still have a very good use for such a horse as that. And somewhere between here and Whitchurch that beast must be, and where he is there'll be threads to take up and follow. If the worst comes to it, a dead man can be hidden, but a live horse is going to come within some curious soul's sight, sooner or later, and sooner or later I shall get wind of it.'
Cadfael was hanging up under the eaves of his hut the rustling bunches of herbs newly dried out at the end of the summer, but he was giving his full attention to Hugh's report at the same time. Meriet had been dismissed without, on the face of it, adding anything to what Canon Eluard had already elicited from the rest of the Aspley household. Peter Clemence had come and gone in good health, well-mounted, and with the protection of the bishop of Winchester's formidable name about him. He had been escorted civilly a mile on his way. And vanished.
'Give me, if you can, the lad's answers in his very words,' requested Cadfael. 'Where there's nothing of interest to be found in the content, it's worth taking a close look at the manner.'
Hugh had an excellent memory, and reproduced Meriet's replies even to the intonation. 'But there's nothing there, barring a very good description of the horse. Every question he answered and still told us nothing, since he knows nothing.'
'Ah, but he did not answer every question,' said Cadfael. 'And I think he may have told us a few notable things, though whether they have any bearing on Master Clemence's vanishing seems dubious. Canon Eluard asked him: "And you saw no more of him?" And the lad said: "I did not go with them." But he did not say he had seen no more of the departed guest. And again, when he spoke of the servants and this Foriet girl, all gathered to speed the departure with him, he did not say "and my brother." Nor did he say that his brother had ridden with the escort.'
'All true,' agreed Hugh, not greatly impressed. 'But none of these need mean anything at all. Very few of us watch every word, to leave no possible detail in doubt.'
'That I grant. Yet it does no harm to note such small things, and wonder. A man not accustomed to lying, but brought up against the need, will evade if he can. Well, if you find your horse in some stable thirty miles or more from here, there'll be no need for you or me to probe behind every word young Meriet speaks, for the hunt will have outrun him and all his family. And they can forget Peter Clemence - barring the occasional Mass, perhaps, for a kinsman's soul.'
Canon Eluard departed for London, secretary, groom, baggage and all, bent on urging King Stephen to pay a diplomatic visit to the north before Christmas, and secure his interest with the two powerful brothers who ruled there almost from coast to coast. Ranulf of Chester and William of Roumare had elected to spend the feast at Lincoln with their ladies, and a little judicious flattery and the dispensing of a modest gift or two might bring in a handsome harvest. The canon had paved the way already, and meant to make the return journey in the king's party.
'And on the way back,' he said, taking leave of Hugh in the great court of the abbey, 'I shall turn aside from his Grace's company and return here, in the hope that by then you will have some news for me. The bishop will be in great anxiety.'
He departed, and Hugh was left to pursue the search for Peter Clemence, which had now become, for all practical purposes, the search for his bay horse. And pursue it he did, with vigour, deploying as many men as he could muster along the most frequented ways north, visiting lords of manors, invading stables, questioning travellers. When the more obvious halting places yielded nothing, they spread out into wilder country. In the north of the shire the land was flatter, with less forest but wide expanses of heath, moorland and scrub, and several large tracts of peat-moss, desolate and impossible to cultivate, though the locals who knew the safe dykes cut and stacked fuel there for their winter use.
The manor of Alkington lay on the edge of this wilderness of dark-brown pools and quaking mosses
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