Brother Cadfael 12: The Raven in the Foregate
accident, and he could not haul the priest out of the water, and took fright, and dared not speak, knowing that the bad blood between them was common knowledge. A couple of nights in a cell won't hurt him. And if he holds out stoutly any longer than that," said Hugh, rising, "then he deserves to get away with it. The parish will think so."
"You are a devious creature," said Cadfael, in a tone uncertain between reproach and admiration. "I wonder why I bear with you?"
Hugh turned in the doorway to give him a flashing glance over his shoulder. "Like calling to like, I daresay!" he suggested, and went striding away along the gravel path, to disappear into the gathering dusk.
At Vespers the psalms had a penitential solemnity, and at Collations in the chapter house after supper the readings were also of a funereal colouring. The shadow of Father Ailnoth hung over the death of the year, and it seemed that the year of Our Lord 1142 would be born, not at midnight, but only after the burial service was over, and the grave filled in. The morrow might, according to the Church's calendar, be the octave of the Nativity and the celebration of the Circumcision of Our Lord, but to the people of the Foregate it was rather the propitiatory office that would lift their incubus from them. A wretched departure for any man, let alone a priest.
"On the morrow," said prior Robert, before dismissing them to the warming room for the blessed last half-hour of ease before Compline, "the funeral office for Father Ailnoth will follow immediately after the parish Mass, and I myself shall preside. But the homily will be delivered by Father Abbot, at his desire." The prior's incisive and well-modulated voice made this statement with a somewhat ambiguous emphasis, as if in doubt whether to welcome the abbot's decision as a devout compliment to the dead, or to regret and perhaps even resent it as depriving him of an opportunity to exercise his own undoubted eloquence. "Matins and Lauds will be said according to the Office of the Dead."
That meant that they would be long, and prudent brothers would be wise to make straight for their beds after Compline. Cadfael had already turfed down his brazier to burn slowly through the night, and keep lotions and medicines from freezing and bottles from bursting, should a hard frost set in again in the small hours. But the air was certainly not cold enough yet for frost, and he thought by the slight wind and lightly overcast sky that they would get through the night safely. He went thankfully to the warming room with his brothers, and settled down to half an hour of pleasant idleness.
This was the hour when even the taciturn relaxed into speech, and not even the prior frowned upon a degree of loquacity. And inevitably the subject of their exchanges tonight was the brief rule of Father Ailnoth, his grim death, and the coming ceremonial of his burial.
"So Father Abbot means to pronounce the eulogy himself, does he?" said Brother Anselm in Cadfael's ear. "That will make interesting listening." Anselm's business was the music of the Divine Office, and he had not quite the same regard for the spoken word, but he appreciated its power and influence. "I had thought he'd be only too glad to leave it to Robert. Nil nisi bonum. Or do you suppose he looks upon it as a fitting penance for bringing the man here in the first place?"
"There may be something in that," admitted Cadfael. "But more, I think, in a resolve that only truth shall be told. Robert would be carried away into paeans of praise. Radulfus intends clarity and honesty."
"No easy task," said Anselm. "Well for me no one expects words from me. There's been no hint yet of who's to follow in the parish. They'll be praying for a man they know, whether he has any Latin or not. Even a man they did not much like would be welcomed, if he belongs here, and knows them. You can deal with the devil you know."
"No harm in hoping for better than that," said Cadfael, sighing. "A very ordinary man, more than a little lower than the angels, and well aware of his own shortcomings, would do very nicely for the Foregate. A pity these few weeks were wasted, wanting him."
In the big stone hearth the fire of logs burned steadily, sinking down now into a hot core of ash, nicely timed to last the evening out, and die down with little waste when the bell rang for Compline. Faces pinched with cold and outdoor labour during the day flushed into rosy content, and chapped hands
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher