Candace Robb - The Cross Legged Knight
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- Название:The Cross Legged Knight
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- Издательство:Random House
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- Год:2011
- ISBN:9781446439296
- Рейтинг книги:4 / 5. Голосов: 1
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‘They are certain the person broke in because of your presence?’
‘It happened last night, the first night we spent under their roof — what else could they think? I must speak with my guild master.’
‘He will surely be able to help, or Bishop Wykeham. But you said this morning someone came to the Dales’ house?’
‘A tawyer, pounding on the door, demanding to know whether his wife had been at the house — the bishop’s house — last night. He was drunk, quite red in the face and impossible to calm. She had not come home.’
‘Eudo the tawyer?’
‘The very man.’ Fitzbaldric looked surprised. ‘How did you guess?’
‘Where is he now?’
‘I escorted him to the shed where the woman lies. He bent over her ruined body, searching …’ Fitzbaldric put a hand to his stomach. ‘It sobered him and he said that he wished to be alone with her.’
‘So he was able to recognize her.’
‘He believed it to be her, though she is so disfigured.’ Fitzbaldric crossed himself. ‘I honoured the man’s wish for solitude, though I told the people in whose shed his wife lies of his presence. They said they would send for Father Linus of St Michael-le-Belfrey, the priest who gave the woman the last rites.’
Owen was glad of that. He had worried that Eudo might do himself or others harm — he was a passionate, sometimes violent man, if Cisotta’s stories were true.
‘When I returned, Julia Dale was telling Adeline about the man’s wife. She was a weaver of charms, Julia said.’
‘She was a midwife.’ Owen was disappointed that the man looked baffled.
‘Adeline and I knew her not, nor her husband. But you have not told me how you guessed who he was.’
‘I brought a piece of clothing from the fire. My wife knew it.’ Owen nodded towards Lucie as she came through the door from the kitchen.
‘Mistress Wilton.’ Fitzbaldric bobbed his head.
Lucie smiled warmly at him. Owen wished he knew what Magda had said to her.
‘Poins is covered now, if you wish to see him,’ Lucie said.
Fitzbaldric looked uncertain.
‘I shall tell the bishop of your plight,’ said Owen.
‘Do not trouble yourself. I shall speak with him.’ Fitzbaldric bowed to Lucie, to Owen and, with the posture of a man facing an onerous task, headed for the kitchen, letting the door bang shut behind him.
The smile faded from Lucie’s face. So it had been a mere courtesy.
Owen took her arm. He wanted to make sure of her state of mind before he went on to his business of the day and he wanted to reassure her that Poins would be out of their house as soon as another place had been found for him.
Lucie tried to pull her arm away. ‘You need sleep,’ she said.
‘And what of you? I can feel how you are trembling.’
‘It is not just Cisotta, but the fire. I imagine it happening to us. What if we could not get the children out in time? What if no one thought to go up to the solar for them? It almost happened to the Fitzbaldrics’ maidservant.’
‘But it did not happen to us.’
‘No.’ Lucie did not look comforted. ‘Yours is a rough touch for one who claims to be concerned for my welfare. What is this about?’
‘What did you tell Fitzbaldric before I arrived?’
‘Ah, that is what worries you.’ Lucie jerked her arm out of Owen’s grasp. ‘What do you fear that I told him? That Poins strangled Cisotta with his belt? I am not a fool, Owen. I kept the conversation to Poins. And you? Did you show him the belt? Ask him whether he recognized it?’
‘No. I am not certain how much to tell him.’ He felt the fool, having voiced his worry without thinking how it would sound.
‘So you distrust Fitzbaldric?’
‘I have not yet decided how to approach him. His visit caught me unprepared. Did he tell you that Eudo came to the Dales’ house this morning, drunk?’
‘No.’ Lucie’s arm went limp.
‘No doubt that is why Eudo did not notice Cisotta’s absence until morning.’
‘Poor Anna,’ Lucie whispered.
‘Aye.’ Owen realized the man’s eight-year-old daughter must have taken care of her younger brothers through the night. ‘Fitzbaldric took Eudo to the shed where Cisotta lies. Now he wants to know why the woman was at his house.’
‘As do we all.’
‘His visit this morning was just the beginning of the burden of keeping Poins here.’
‘Are we to toss him out on the street?’
‘We must find another place for him to be nursed. Do you think they would take him at St Leonard’s Hospital?’
‘They might. But Magda would not see to him there. Why do you want him gone?’
‘It is too much for this household. I must spend my days searching for Cisotta’s murderer, eh? Seeing to Wykeham’s safety. I cannot help you here. You have enough with the shop.’
‘I want to help you find Cisotta’s murderer.’
‘You can help best by giving me nothing to worry about.’
‘Like a child, or a favourite lap dog?’
It seemed he could say nothing right. ‘Lucie, you have been through so much with your injuries and the loss of our child. You cannot be unaware of the way you have been behaving since the accident.’
‘Of course I am aware.’ Her voice was tight, her lips pinched. ‘But Cisotta is dead, the woman who sat beside me so many days, selfless as ever Magda was. I must do something to help. I cannot sit waiting for you. Let me do what I can.’
He did not like it. ‘Do you trust yourself?’
Her eyes wavered a moment, but then she faced him squarely with the familiar level gaze that he had not seen since the accident. ‘I do.’
There was something she might do, but he doubted she would agree. Still, if he suggested it and she refused, she could not accuse him of not considering her offer. ‘Emma Ferriby — would you be willing to speak with her, discover her family’s movements yesterday, and on the day of the accident at the lady chapel when the tile almost hit Wykeham?’
‘The bishop cannot think the Pagnells might be behind Cisotta’s murder?’
‘The tile and Cisotta’s death might not be connected,’ said Owen. ‘Perhaps not even the fire.’
‘Then Wykeham has been visited by a string of random misfortunes.’
‘Aye. And I am uneasy with that conclusion.’
Lucie looked uncertain. ‘But Emma and her family.’
‘I know. Would you feel a traitor to your friend?’
‘Let me think.’
‘There will be much to do in the shop with so many having helped at the fire last night — burns, sore throats, injuries. Perhaps you have not the time for this.’
‘You want me to decline, is that it? How clever — ask me to do something you might be sure I’ll refuse to do. I am not mad, nor so weak I cannot think, cannot read you. I am willing to do anything necessary to find Cisotta’s murderer, even this, what you ask. And if that man who lies in our kitchen is the murderer, I pray he lives to suffer even worse than he has already.’ Lucie’s face was flushed, her chin high, her hands fists held tight to her body, as if they must hold her down.
He put his arms round her, not in restraint as before, but in affection. ‘I shall be grateful for your help,’ he said. ‘I could not think how I might approach them without making them too aware of what I was doing.’
She relaxed her arms, then lifted them to encircle him and pressed her forehead against his shoulder.
‘Promise me you will be careful,’ Owen whispered.
‘I meant to take Emma a sleep potion today and so I shall. She will want me to stay to tell her of the fire and of Poins.’
He did not warn her to watch how much she told Emma. He must trust her.
Brother Michaelo had interrupted Thoresby’s morning prayer to tell him that Wykeham had a visitor, Godwin Fitzbaldric. It was no surprise that the man was distraught, but Thoresby wondered what he wanted of Wykeham, whether he was apologizing for the destruction of the house, or demanding new lodgings. Thoresby noticed the voices now, Wykeham’s calm, reassuring; Fitzbaldric’s loud, imploring. He did not like the sound of that. In a short while he learned that he had interpreted the voices correctly. Wykeham came to confer with him while his tenant waited in the hall.
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