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Brother Cadfael 11: An Excellent Mystery

Brother Cadfael 11: An Excellent Mystery

Titel: Brother Cadfael 11: An Excellent Mystery Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Ellis Peters
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contention. If only he had spoken out what he felt in his heart at the first sight of her, even hampered as he had been by the knowledge of the blow he was about to deal her, and gagged by that knowledge when for once he might have been eloquent. She might have listened, and at least delayed, even if she could feel nothing for him then. She might have thought again, and waited, and even remembered him. Now it was far too late, she was a bride for the second time, and even more indissolubly.
    This time there was no question of argument. The betrothal vows made by or for a small girl might justifiably be dissolved, but the vocational vows of a grown woman, taken in the full knowledge of their meaning, and of her own choice, never could be undone. He had lost her.
    Nicholas lay all night in the small guest-chamber prepared for him, fretting at the knot and knowing he could not untie it. He slept shallowly and uneasily, and in the morning he took his leave, and set out on the road back to Shrewsbury.

Chapter Five
    I t so happened that Brother Cadfael was private with Humilis in his cell in the dortoir when Nicholas again rode in at the gatehouse and asked leave to visit his former lord, as he had promised. Humilis had risen with the rest that morning, attended Prime and Mass, and scrupulously performed all the duties of the horarium, though he was not yet allowed to exert himself by any form of labour. Fidelis attended him everywhere, ready to support his steps if need arose, or fetch him whatever he might want, and had spent the afternoon completing, under his elder's approving eye, the initial letter which had been smeared and blotted by his fall. And there they had left the boy to finish the careful elaboration in gold, while they repaired to the dortoir, physician and patient together.
    'Well closed,' said Cadfael, content with his work, 'and firming up nicely, clean as ever. You scarcely need the bandages, but as well keep them a day or two yet, to guard against rubbing while the new skin is still frail.'
    They were grown quite easy together, these two, and if both of them realised that the mere healing of a broken and festered wound was no sufficient cure for what ailed Humilis, they were both courteously silent on the subject, and took their moderate pleasure in what good they had achieved.
    They heard the footsteps on the stone treads of the day stairs, and knew them for booted feet, not sandalled. But there was no spring in the steps now, and no hasty eagerness, and it was a glum young man who appeared, shadowy, in the doorway of the cell. Nor had he been in any hurry on the way back from Lai, since he had nothing but disappointment to report. But he had promised, and he was here.
    'Nick!' Humilis greeted him with evident pleasure and affection. 'You're soon back! Welcome as the day, but I had thought…' There he stopped, even in the dim interior light aware that the brightness was gone from the young man's face. 'So long a visage? I see it did not go as you would have wished.'
    'No, my lord.' Nicholas came in slowly, and bent his knee to both his elders. 'I have not sped.'
    'I am sorry for it, but no man can always succeed. You know Brother Cadfael? I owe the best of care to him.'
    'We spoke together the last time,' said Nicholas, and found a half-hearted smile by way of acknowledgement. 'I count myself also in his debt.'
    'Spoke of me, no doubt,' said Humilis, smiling and sighing. 'You trouble too much for me, I am well content here. I have found my way. Now sit down a while, and tell us what went wrong for you.'
    Nicholas plumped himself down on the stool beside the bed on which Humilis was sitting, and said what he had to say in commendably few words: 'I hesitated three years too long. Barely a month after you took the cowl at Hyde, Julian Cruce took the veil at Wherwell.'
    'Did she so!' said Humilis on a long breath, and sat silent to take in all that this news could mean. 'Now I wonder…No, why should she do such a thing unless it was truly her wish? It cannot have been because of me! No, she knew nothing of me, she had only once seen me, and must have forgotten me before my back was turned. She may even have been glad…It may be this is what she always wished, if she could have her way…' He thought for a moment, frowning, perhaps trying to recall what that little girl looked like. 'You told me, Nick, that I do remember, how she took my message. She was not distressed, but altogether calm and

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