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Brother Cadfael 12: The Raven in the Foregate

Brother Cadfael 12: The Raven in the Foregate

Titel: Brother Cadfael 12: The Raven in the Foregate Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Ellis Peters
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whip jabbed him sharply in the back, and he swung about, startled, to look up directly into the face of a rider who leaned down to him from the saddle of a fine roan horse. A big, ruddy, sinewy man in his fifties, perhaps, very spruce in his own gear and the accoutrements of his mount, and with the nobleman's authority in his voice and face. A handsome face, bearded and strong-featured, now just beginning to run to flesh and lose its taut, clear lines, but still memorable. The brief moment they spent staring closely at each other was terminated by a second impatient but good-natured prod of the whip's butt against Ninian's shoulder, and the brisk order:
    "Yes, you, lad! Hold my horse while I'm within, and you shan't be the loser. What's afoot in there, do you know? Someone's making a fine noise about it."
    In the exuberance of relief from his terror for Diota, Ninian rebounded into impudent glee, knuckled his forehead obsequiously, and reached willingly for the bridle, once again the penniless peasant groom Benet to the life. "I don't rightly know, master," he said, "but there's some in there saying a man's been taken up for killing the priest ..." He smoothed a hand over the horse's silken forehead and between the pricked ears, and the roan tossed his head, turned a soft, inquisitive muzzle to breathe warmth at him, and accepted the caress graciously. "A lovely beast my lord! I'll mind him well."
    "So the murderer's taken, is he? Rumour told truth for once." The rider was down in a moment, and off through the quivering crowd like a sickle cutting grass, a brusque, hard shoulder forward and a masterful tongue ready to demand passage. Ninian was left with his cheek against a glossy shoulder, and a tangle of feelings boiling within him, laughter and gratitude, and the joyful anticipation of a journey now free from all regrets and reservations, but also a small, bitter jet of sadness that one man was dead untimely, and another now accused of his murder. It took him some little time to remember to pull the hood over his head again, and well forward to shadow his face, but luckily all attention was fixed avidly upon the hubbub within the cemetery garth, and no one was paying any heed to a hind holding his master's horse in the street. The horse was excellent cover, but it did prevent him from advancing again into the wide-open doorway, and even by straining his ears he could make little sense out of the babel from within. The clamour of terrified protest went on for some time, that was plain enough, and the shrill commentary from the bystanders made a criss-cross of conflicting sounds around it. If there were saner voices speaking, Hugh Beringar's or the abbot's, they were drowned in the general chaos.
    Ninian leaned his forehead against the warm hide that quivered gently under his touch, and offered devout thanks for so timely a deliverance.
    In the heart of the tumult Abbot Radulfus raised a voice that seldom found it necessary to thunder, and thundered to instant effect.
    "Silence! You bring shame on yourselves and desecrate this holy place. Silence, I say!"
    And there was silence, sudden and profound, though it might as easily break out in fresh chaos if the rein was not tightened.
    "So, and keep silence, all you who have nothing here to plead or deny. Let those speak and be heard who have. Now, my lord sheriff, you accuse this man Jordan Achard of murder. On what evidence?"
    "On the evidence," said Hugh, "of a witness who has said and will say again that he lies in saying he spent that night at home. Why, if he has nothing to hide, should he find it necessary to lie? On the evidence also of a witness who saw him creeping out from the mill path and making for his home at earliest light on Christmas morning. It is enough to hold him upon suspicion," said Hugh crisply, and motioned to the two sergeants, who grasped the terrified Jordan almost tenderly by the arms. "That he had a grievance against Father Ailnoth is known to everyone."
    "My lord abbot," babbled Jordan, quaking, "on my soul I swear I never touched the priest. I never saw him, I was not there ... it's false ... they lie about me ..."
    "It seems there are those," said Radulfus, "who will equally swear that you were there."
    "It was I who told that I'd seen him," spoke up the reeve's shepherd cousin, worried and shaken by the result he had achieved. "I could say no other, for I did see him, and it was barely light, and all I've told is truth. But I never

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