Brother Cadfael 13: The Rose Rent
bewilderedly from face to face. "You'll hardly find a soul in our house who is not anxious, and they show it, but I've noticed nothing amiss with her more than with all the rest of us. Why? What is this, my lord? Do you know something of Bertred that I do not know? Not guilt! Impossible! He's run himself raw scouring the town for my cousin... a decent man... You cannot have taken him in any wickedness...?"
It was a reasonable supposition, when the lord sheriff began asking such close questions about any man. Hugh put him out of his defensive agitation, but without over-haste.
"I know no wrong of your man, no. He is the victim of harm, not the cause. This is bad news we have for you, Master Coliar." Its purport was already implicit in his tone, but he put it into words bleak and blunt enough. "An hour ago the brothers working on the Gaye plucked Bertred out of the river and brought him here, dead. Drowned."
In the profound silence that followed Miles stood motionless, until finally he stirred and moistened his lips.
"Where is he?"
"Laid decently in the mortuary chapel here," said the abbot. "The lord sheriff will take you to him."
In the dim chapel Miles stared down at the known face now so strangely unfamiliar, and shook his head repeatedly and vigorously, as though he could shake away, if not the fact of death, his own shock at its suddenness. He had recovered his down-to-earth calmness and acceptance. One of his weavers was dead, the task of getting him out of here and into his grave with proper rites fell to Miles as his master. What was due from him he would do.
"How could this be?" he said. "Yesterday he came late in the evening for his meal, but there was nothing in that, all day he'd been out abroad with your men, my lord. He went to his bed soon after. He said good night to me, it must have been about the hour of Compline. The house was already quiet, but some of us were still up. I never saw him again."
"So you don't know whether he went out again by night?"
Miles looked up sharply, the blue of his eyes at their widest startlingly bright. "It seems that he must have done. But in God's name, why should he? He was tired out after a long day. I know no reason why he should have stirred again till morning. You said it was but an hour since you took him out of the Severn..."
"I took him out," said Cadfael, unobtrusive in a dark corner of the chapel. "But he had been there more hours than one. In my judgement, since the small hours of the morning. It is not easy to say how long."
"And, look, his brow is broken!" The wide, low forehead was dry now, but for the damp fringe of hair. The skin had shrunk apart, leaving the moist wound bared. "Are you sure, Brother, that he drowned?"
"Quite sure. How he came by that knock there's no knowing, but he surely had it before he went into the water. You can't tell us anything that may help us, then?"
"I wish I could," said Miles earnestly. "I've seen no change in him, he's said nothing to me that could shed any light. This comes out of the dark to me. I cannot account for it." He looked doubtfully at Hugh across the body. "May I take him home? I'll need to speak with his mother first, but she'll want him home."
"Naturally," agreed Hugh resignedly. "Yes, you may fetch him away when you will. Do you need help with the means?"
"No, my lord, we'll do all ourselves. I'll bring down a handcart and decent covering. And I do thank you and this house for the care you've had of him."
He came again about an hour later, looking strained from the ordeal of breaking bad news to a widow now childless. Two of his men from the looms followed him with a simple, high-sided handcart used for wheeling goods, and waited mute and sombre in the great court until Brother Cadfael came to lead them to the mortuary chapel. Between them they carried Bertred's body out into the early evening light, and laid him on a spread brychan in the cart, and covered him tidily from view. They were still about it when Miles turned to Cadfael, and asked simply: "And his clothes? She should have back with him all that was his. Small comfort for a woman, but she'll want them. And she'll need what they'll fetch, too, poor soul, though I'll see she's taken care of still, and so will Judith... when she's found. If..." His mind seemed to be drifting back into expectations of the worst, and fiercely rejecting them.
"I had forgot," Cadfael owned, never having handled the clothes stripped from Bertred's body.
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