âBecause William was a saint, and Mabon was irreligious?'
Edward's smile was pained. âWilliam had his faults, believe me. He was cloyingly pious for a start. However, Mabon was a fine man, and he
was
religious â he just did not allow himself to be confined by Church dogma. I admired him for that.'
âYour patrol,' prompted Geoffrey.
Edward sighed. âAlberic and I were gone for almost two weeks, hunting a band of villains who were robbing travellers. It was dreadful work â hot, tiring and dirty. When we arrived in Kermerdyn, no one was home except Leah, who was ill. We availed ourselves of a bed in her home for the night and learned of William's death the next morning.'
âDo you believe he was poisoned?'
Edward was silent for a while, then nodded. âYes. I thought so at the time and I have no reason to revise my opinion. He said he had a secret, and a lot of people were eager to learn it. Of course, William dead meant it was lost for ever, so the killer made a grave mistake.'
âWhat was this secret?'
Edward sighed. âI do not believe there was one. William may have been speaking figuratively â to explain his turn to goodness in a way he thought others would understand. But it killed him, because someone decided to take it from him.'
âDid anyone stand out to you as a suspect?'
Edward shrugged. âDelwyn, Sear, Alberic, Cornald, Pulchria, Hywel, Bishop Wilfred, various servants. Not Richard, because he was devastated by his brother's death, and not Leah because she was too unwell. However, your silly shooting contest has been good for one thing.'
âAnd what is that?'
âYou can cross me off your list of culprits for trying to kill you last night. I am a fine shot with a familiar weapon, but it takes me a while to get used to strange ones.'
He sauntered away, leaving Geoffrey not sure what to think.
When it was time for Sear and Alberic to demonstrate their skills, both did so with a careless confidence that demonstrated their superior ability. They beat Richard's score, and Sear was smugly aloof when Adrian declared him in the lead, with Alberic second.
âYou will not do better,' Sear informed Roger. âYou and your friend will lose.'
âWe will see about that,' growled Roger angrily, seizing the crossbow in his big hands âCome on, Geoff.'
The crossbow was not Roger's forte, but pure bloody-mindedness led him to put three bolts in a neat triangle in the target. Unfortunately, they were all to one side, so although he scored more highly than Alberic, he was still behind Sear.
âI have been asking everyone about Mabon,' said Geoffrey to Sear and Alberic, while Roger wound the weapon for the next contender. âDo
you
have any idea who might have killed him?'
âRichard,' said Sear immediately. âAnd he probably shot at you, too, because he has more than ably demonstrated that he is skilled with a crossbow.'
âWhy would he do either?' asked Geoffrey, not pointing out that Sear was highly skilled with a crossbow, too.
âBecause he is that kind of man,' replied Sear shortly. âCruel, vicious and unfathomable.'
âEasy, Sear,' said Alberic softly. âWe have no evidence to make accusations.'
âOr else it was Delwyn,' Sear went on. âHe is sly enough to resort to poison, so he may have killed William all those years ago, too. I doubt he is much good with a crossbow, though.'
âI can shoot,' objected Delwyn, hearing the last part. He snatched the bow from Roger and demonstrated a respectable skill, although nothing to match that of the knights.
âWhere did you learn to do that?' asked Alberic uneasily. âDid Mabon teach you?'
âNo,' said Delwyn haughtily, shoving the weapon back at Roger and beginning to stride away. âI was not always a monk. And, for your information, you are
all
suspects for murdering Mabon in my eyes. The only one who is innocent is me, because I was praying at the time.'
âYour alibi is God?' asked Sear mockingly. âI doubt that will convince Sir Geoffrey.'
âIt will if he is not a heathen,' called Delwyn, stamping away.
âI have changed my mind,' said Sear, watching him. â
He
is the culprit. He probably killed William, too, because he was seen loitering in the kitchen near the butter.'
It was Geoffrey's turn to shoot, but Gwgan reached the crossbow first. Geoffrey had not known he had been standing so close, and realized uncomfortably that the Welshman possessed the ability to blend into the background. It was a trick he had seen other politicians employ, and it crossed his mind that Gwgan might be conducting his own enquiry into what happened to Mabon â not by asking questions, but by watching and listening. He decided to find out.
âWhat have you learned about Mabon's murder?'
Gwgan's eyebrows shot up. âWhat makes you think I have been looking into it?'
âYou are Prince Hywel's counsellor, and he will want to know what happened to Kermerdyn's abbot. Of course you have been exploring the matter.'
Gwgan smiled. âYou are right, although I have nothing to show for my efforts. Mabon had his eccentricities, but I do not see them as reasons to kill him. It was the same with William fitz Baldwin â most folk liked him, but it did not stop someone from feeding him poison.'
âYou think the same person dispatched them both?'
Gwgan thought carefully. âIt is possible, although Mabon seems to have died almost instantly, whereas poor William lay ill for days, vomiting up anything he ate.'
âMabon, Cornald and Richard noticed he had black fingers,' said Geoffrey. âAnd Pulchria claimed he had seizures, too.'
Gwgan nodded, then shuddered. âGod save us all from such a terrible fate! He was out of his mind most of the time, babbling all sorts of rubbish.'
âAbout his secret?'
Gwgan waved a dismissive hand. âThe tales about his secret are nonsense. William
did
change when he arrived in Kermerdyn and started building a castle, but that was because he was in Wales. It brings out the goodness in people.'
Geoffrey did not think he would regale the King with that particular theory.
âMabon thought it was something to do with a vision William had in the river.'
Gwgan shrugged. âThen why did William keep it a secret? Why not tell everyone?'
It was a valid point, and Geoffrey barely noticed when Gwgan put three neat crossbow bolts into the centre of the target with a cool panache that indicated he was a warrior as well as a diplomat, thinking through the counsellor's claim. Adrian called out to announce that the score was equal to Sear's.
âCome on, Geoff lad,' said Roger, shoving the crossbow in his hands. âIt is your turn. You have to do better than Sear and Gwgan to win. You can do it.'
âIt is discourteous to defeat your guests,' muttered Olivier in his other ear. âAnd Goodrich is known for its good manners, so watch what you do.'
âIgnore him,' breathed Roger. âThere is more at stake here than your manor's reputation. That Sear needs to be taught a lesson.'
Geoffrey turned to Olivier. âDoes Joan keep wolf-tooth in the castle? For killing rats?'
âOf course not,' replied Olivier with a frown. âThere are far better substances than wolf-tooth for killing rats. However, I imagine it is readily available in the village. Why? Are you thinking that one of us might have made an end of Mabon? If so, you are wrong. He was a trying guest, but he was on the verge of leaving. We had no reason to dispatch him.'
âNever mind that,' snapped Roger. âConcentrate on the task in hand. You
must
win.'
âManners, Geoffrey,' warned Olivier.
â
You
should not be taking part in this contest,' said Adrian suddenly. âSurely, you have had enough bloodshed and slaughter?'
Geoffrey regarded him askance. âIt is a straw target, Father. I doubt it will mind.'
âYou imperil your immortal soul if you continue to hone these diabolical skills,' declared Adrian. âAnd, as your household priest, I order you to desist.'
âListen to him, Geoffrey,' said Joan.
âThen I declare the winners to be Sear and Gwgan,' announced Adrian loudly, before Geoffrey could tell Adrian what to do with his strictures. âThe gold will be divided between them. Unless they are good, decent men, who will donate it to the poor.'
âWhy did you not tell him to go to the Devil?' demanded Roger, when the priest had flounced off with the purse without giving Sear and Gwgan an opportunity to object. âYou let Sear win.'
Geoffrey turned to Joan and started to laugh. âDid you put Adrian up to that?'
Joan regarded him coolly. âWhat if I did? You would have won, and it would not have been polite. I am
glad
Adrian is determined to save you from eternal damnation and so agreed to intervene.'
But Geoffrey was actually more concerned with the dangers on Earth, and determined that he would carefully watch what he, Hilde and Roger ate and drank on the trip to Kermerdyn. Especially butter or potions in small bottles.
Eight
Brechene, October 1103
Unlike the journey to Goodrich, the track into Wales was dry and hard, and made for excellent riding. Geoffrey's companions did not object to his rapid pace, although it still took longer than it should have done. Hilde and Pulchria did not slow them down, but Leah's debilitating headaches did, and concern for her well-being forced them to stop early nearly every day. The men did not object to the shorter journeys, happy that the presence of women meant the party tended to find shelter in inns and villages, rather than under hedges or in barns.
It was a large company â Richard and Cornald each had several servants â and an ostentatious one. All six knights â Geoffrey, Roger, Sear, Alberic, Richard and Edward â wore white surcoats, and so did Gwgan. Cornald, Pulchria and Leah dressed in a way that said they were people of substance, and, with such an overt display of affluence, Geoffrey expected them to be ambushed at every turn. Richard and Gwgan almost came to unfortunate ends when an unseen attacker threw knives at them, but otherwise there was no trouble, and Geoffrey supposed the presence of so many warriors deterred casual robbers.
Within the company, meanwhile, there were more feuds and factions than Geoffrey could number, and they seemed to alter with every mile. Sear and Alberic switched back and forth from being Richard's bosom friend to his bitter enemy with bewildering rapidity. Concurrently, Geoffrey and Edward were increasingly hard-pressed to prevent Sear and Roger from fighting. Throughout it all, Pulchria caused divisions with her assignations, and Cornald continued to give the impression that he was blithely unaware of her activities.
Delwyn annoyed everyone by complaining about the weather, the horses, the conversation and, most of all, the fact that Geoffrey had put him in charge of Abbot Mabon's body, which was being carried on a cart. Geoffrey was glad the weather had cooled, because Goodrich had no resident embalmer. Delwyn saw to the corpse on its cart each night, but his duties were perfunctory, and he gave no indication that he grieved.
Geoffrey was pleasantly surprised by Gwgan, who transpired to be intelligent and urbane. The Welshman was delighted to discover that Geoffrey spoke his language, and encouraged him to converse as often as possible. Geoffrey liked learning languages and was more than happy to oblige. He often sought out Gwgan's company and was even happier when Edward joined them in lively, intellectual discussions of the kind Geoffrey experienced too infrequently in his life as a soldier. They talked about Mabon's death, too.
âDid you ever reach any conclusions about who killed the abbot?' Edward asked Gwgan one day, as the three rode together. He spoke Latin, as they always did when they did not want the rest of the party to eavesdrop. âI know you tried to investigate the matter for Prince Hywel.'
Gwgan grimaced. âUnfortunately not. I am inclined to discount Richard, because he is too savage to use poison. Besides, he hates the notion of killing by toxins after the way William died.'
Edward shuddered. âI was not at William's deathbed, but the affair sounded terrible.'
âIt was,' agreed Gwgan. He crossed himself suddenly, something Geoffrey had not seen him do before. âI was appalled by the length of time it took him to die.'
âDays,' said Edward, shaking his head.
Gwgan nodded slowly. âIf William was poisoned, then his killer is evil beyond words. I am no expert in the field, but I know there are substances that can end a man's life far more quickly and without the agonies poor William suffered.'
âWhat a grim discussion!' said Edward, after a reflective silence. âI should never have raised the subject of murder. Forgive me. We shall talk about Socrates instead.'
âOnly if we do not dwell on the fact that Socrates was poisoned, too,' said Geoffrey. âOr the fact that he asked a lot of questions, but did not answer many.'
Gwgan laughed. âIt sounds safer to concentrate on his philosophy.'
âThen we shall debate a Socratic paradox,' determined Geoffrey. âHow about the notion that all virtue is knowledge?'
Roger disapproved of their discussions, especially as they were conducted in a language he did not understand. Meanwhile, Sear and Alberic mocked them incessantly, and Richard obviously itched to, but Leah had whispered something the first time he had started to make a disparaging remark, and he had desisted since. Geoffrey was grateful to Edward, who was blessed with a remarkable ability to keep the peace, which he achieved with unfailing cheerfulness and a battery of diplomatic interruptions.