Brother Cadfael 14: The Hermit of Eyton Forest
Cadfael reasonably, 'what does he want with the castle? I should have thought he'd be hotfoot for Oxford to hale his sister out of the trap.'
'He'd rather lure Stephen to come to him, and draw him off from his own siege. My man says the castle at Wareham's none too well garrisoned, and they've come to a truce agreement, and sent to the king to relieve them by a fixed date, a know-all, but truly well informed, though even he doesn't know the day appointed - or if he fails them they'll surrender. That suits Robert. He knows it's seldom any great feat to lure Stephen off a scent, but I fancy he'll hold fast this time. When will he get such a chance again? Even he can't throw it away, surely.'
'There's no end to the follies any man can commit,' said Cadfael tolerantly. 'To give him his due, most of his idiocies are generous, which is more than can be said for the lady. But I could wish this siege at Oxford might be the end of it. If he does take castle and empress and all, she'll be safe enough of life and limb with him, it's rather he who may be in danger. What else is new from the south?'
'There's a tale he tells of a horse found straying not far from the city, in the woods close to the road to Wallingford. Some time ago, this was, about the time all roads out of Oxford were closed, and the town on fire. A horse dragging a blood-stained saddle, and saddlebags slit open and emptied. A groom who'd slipped out of the town before the ring closed recognised horse and harness as belonging to one Renaud Bourchier, a knight in the empress's service, and close in her confidence, too. My man says it's known she sent him out of the garrison to try and break through the king's lines and carry a message to Wallingford for her.'
Cadfael ceased to ply the hoe he was drawing leisurely between his herb beds, and turned his whole attention upon his friend. 'To Brian FitzCount, you mean?'
The lord of Wallingford was the empress's most faithful adherent arid companion, next only to the earl, her brother, and had held his castle for her, the most easterly and exposed outpost of her territory, through campaign after campaign and through good fortune and bad, indomitably loyal.
'How comes it he's not with her in Oxford? He hardly ever leaves her side, or so they say.'
'The king moved so much faster than anyone thought for. And now he's cut off from her. Moreover, she needs him in Wallingford, for if that's ever lost she has nothing left but an isolated holding in the west country, and no way out towards London. She may well have sent out to him at the last moment, in so desperate a situation as she's in now. And rumour down there says, it seems, that Bouchier was carrying treasure to him, less in coin than in jewels. It may well be so, for he needs to pay his men. Loyal for love though they may be, they still have to live and eat, and he's beggared himself already in her service.'
'There's been talk, this autumn,' said Cadfael, thoughtfully frowning, 'that Bishop Henry of Winchester has been busy trying to lure away Brian to the king's side. Bishop Henry has money enough to buy whoever's for sale, but I doubt if even he could bid high enough to move FitzCount. All this time the man has shown as incorruptible. She had no need to try and outbid her enemies for Brian.'
'None. But she may well have thought, when the king's host closed round her, to send him an earnest of the value she sets on him, while the way was still open, or might at least be attempted by a single brave man. At such a pass, it may even have seemed to her the last chance for such a word ever to pass between them.'
Cadfael thought on that, and acknowledged its truth. King Stephen would never be a threat to his cousin's life, however bitter their rivalry had been, but if once she was made captive he would be forced to hold her in close ward for his crown's sake. Nor was she likely ever to relinquish her claim, even in prison, and agree to terms that would lightly release her. Friends and allies thus parted might, in very truth, never see each other again.
'And a single brave man did attempt it,' reflected Cadfael soberly. 'And his horse found straying, his harness awry, his saddlebags emptied, and blood on saddle and saddlecloth. So where is Renaud Bourchier? Murdered for what he carried, and buried somewhere in the woods or slung into the river?'
'What else can a man think? They have not found his body yet. Round Oxford men have other things to do this autumn
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