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Brother Cadfael 13: The Rose Rent

Brother Cadfael 13: The Rose Rent

Titel: Brother Cadfael 13: The Rose Rent Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Ellis Peters
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rich, moist earth.
    Someone had been before him here, the grasses were parted and bent aside by the passage of at least one person, probably more. That was nothing very unusual, boys roam everywhere in their play, and in their mischief, too. What was less usual here was the deep groove driven into the moist soil uncovered by the recent lowering of the level, and prolonged into the grass above. A boat had been drawn aground there, and no long time ago, either. At the town end of the bridge there were always boats beached or moored, handy for their owners' use. But seldom here.
    Cadfael squatted close to view the ground. The grass had absorbed any marks left by feet, except for the lowest lip of the land, and there certainly at least one man had trampled the moist ground, but the mud had slithered under him and obliterated any shape he had left behind. One man or two, for the spread of slippery mud showed both sides of the groove the skiff had made.
    If he had not been sitting on his heels he would never have caught the single alien thing, for there under the arch there was no glint of sunlight to betray it. But there it was, trodden into the disturbed mud, a metallic thread like a wisp of reddish-gold straw, no longer than the top joint of his thumb. He prised it out and it lay in his palm, a tiny arrow-head without a shaft, bent a little out of shape by the foot that had trodden it in. He stooped to rinse it in the edge of the river, and carried it out into the sunshine.
    And now he saw it for what it was, the bronze tag which had sealed the end of a leather girdle, a delicate piece of work, incised with punch and hammer after being attached to the belt, and surely not torn from its anchorage now without considerable violence and struggle.
    Cadfael turned in his tracks, strode up the steep path to the road, and set off back along the Foregate at his fastest pace.
    Chapter Seven
    This is hers," said Niall, looking up from the scrap of bronze with a fixed and formidable face. "I know it, though I did not make it. It belongs to that girdle she took back with her, the morning Brother Eluric lay here dead. I made the new buckle to match this design, this and the rosettes round the tongue-holes. I should know it anywhere. It is hers. Where did you find it?"
    "Under the first arch of the bridge, where a boat had been hauled up in hiding."
    "To carry her away! And this - trodden into the mud, you say. See, when this was set in place it was hammered home into the leather with the pattern, it would not come loose easily, even after years, and with the leather softening and thinning from use, and perhaps a little greasy with handling. Someone was rough with the girdle, to tear this away."
    "And with the lady also," Cadfael agreed grimly. "I could not be sure, myself, I hardly saw the girdle when she took it in her hands that day. But you could not be mistaken. Now I know. One step at least on the way. And a boat - a boat would be the simplest means of all of carrying her off. No neighbour passing close, to query such large freight, no one ashore to wonder at any passing skiff, they're common enough along the Severn. The girdle from which this came may well have been snatched to help to bind her."
    "And she to be used so foully!" Niall wiped his large, capable hands on the rag of woollen cloth on his bench, and began purposefully unfastening and laying by his leathern apron. "What is to be done now? Tell me how best I can help - where first to look for her. I'll close my shop -"
    "No," said Cadfael, "make no move, only keep watch still on the rose-bush, for I have this strange fancy the life of the one is bound up fast with the life of the other. What is there you could do elsewhere that Hugh Beringar cannot? He has men enough, and trust me, they're all hard at it, he'll see to that. Stay here and be patient, and whatever I discover you shall know. Your business is bronze, not boats, you've done your part."
    "And you, what will you do now?" Niall hesitated, frowning, unwilling to be left with the passive part.
    "I'm off to find Hugh Beringar as fast as I can, and after him Madog, who knows all there is to know about boats, from his own coracles to the freight barges that fetch the wool clips away. Madog may be able to tell what manner of boat it was from the very dent it left behind in the mud. You bide here and be as easy as you can. With God's help we'll find her."
    He looked back once from the doorway, impressed by the

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