TEN
Meggie rose from her deep
bow and found the bright blue eyes studying her intently. ‘So that
is who you are,’ he said softly. He glanced at Josse. ‘Who is her
mother?’
Meggie did not know if it was against etiquette to
address a king when he had not first spoken to you, but she did not
let it stop her. ‘My mother was Joanna de Courtenay,’ she
said.
His blue gaze had returned to her. ‘De Courtenay,’
he repeated. ‘I believe I have heard the name before. Did she have
connections at court?’
Meggie opened her mouth to speak, but even as she
did so, Josse trod on her foot, quite hard. ‘A distant cousin, I
believe, my lord,’ he said easily. ‘That is probably why the name
is familiar to you.’
The king studied Josse. Meggie could see that he
was not entirely convinced. A warning sounded in her head. This
is a man to watch, she thought. He is intelligent and
cunning, and he will not easily be deceived.
She wondered why her father did not want her to
reveal Joanna’s connection with the
court . . .
Josse had edged forward so that now he stood
between Meggie and the king. ‘My lord, I regret greatly the
mischance that has brought you here, but might I be permitted to
ask if you can help us with another grave matter?’
The king waved a hand in assent. ‘You may.’
‘You have been in the area for a few days,
sire?’
‘Yes. My agents came here to the abbey, and I took
the chance to visit the chapel which my revered and lamented mother
built in remembrance of my brother, the late king. From there I
went on to the hunting lodge on the Ashdown Forest.’ A smile
quirked the side of his mouth. ‘The sport was excellent.’
‘I am glad to hear it, my lord,’ Josse muttered.
‘Did you – may I ask you if a man by the name of Hugh de Brionne
was of your company?’
The languid air vanished as the king heard the
name. ‘Hugh de Brionne was with me when we reached the abbey,’ he
confirmed. ‘I know him well. He is a sound man.’ Narrowing his
eyes, he stared at Josse as if he were trying to read his mind.
‘You have news of Hugh; I see it in your face. Tell me.’
‘He is dead, sire,’ Josse said simply. ‘His body
was discovered early yesterday, by a bend in the river between here
and Hartfield.’
‘How did he die?’ The words rapped out like a
stabbing knife.
‘It appears he was in a fight. There were the marks
of fists on his face, and his hands were bruised and swollen. There
was a wound to the back of his head, presumably where he fell, and
this is probably what killed him.’
The king did not speak for some time. Meggie crept
closer to Josse, in need of his stolid strength. She was afraid,
and she did not yet understand why.
Eventually, the king closed his eyes and,
with a wince of pain, leaned back on his pillows. ‘Be careful how
you break the news to my companion,’ he said quietly. ‘He is
Olivier de Brionne, and he is Hugh’s brother.’
Josse and Meggie were outside the infirmary. Sister
Liese, coming to check on her patients, had observed the king’s
pallor, and his obvious fatigue, and sent them away. The other man
– Olivier de Brionne, they now knew – was still unconscious.
Josse took hold of Meggie’s hands. ‘This is very
grave,’ he muttered, frowning deeply. ‘We must find Ninian and help
him get right away. No accusations have yet been made against him,
but two men lie wounded and one of them is the king.’ He looked
down at his daughter. ‘I am sorry that I crushed your foot,’ he
said with a faint smile.
‘You did no lasting damage,’ she replied. ‘But,
Father, why did you not wish me to speak of my mother’s court
connections?’
He frowned thoughtfully, trying to find the right
words. ‘Daughter, your mother had no reason to treasure the memory
of what happened to her; far from it. A cousin of hers,
considerably older than she was, took her to King Henry’s Christmas
court one year, because she was young, innocent and very lovely and
the cousin wished to impress the king and his lascivious friends
with new blood. Then—’ He stopped. This was not his story to tell.
If Joanna had not revealed to Meggie the truth of what had happened
to her, then it was not up to Josse to do so. ‘My love, it may be
that one day you will be told,’ he said. ‘There is a connection
between our family and the king, but, if he has forgotten it or did
not know of it, then I do not want to bring it to his mind.’ He
studied her face. ‘Is that enough?’
Slowly, she nodded. She was thinking hard, he could
tell. ‘It is,’ she said presently. ‘I trust you, Father.’
But Josse hardly heard. His mind had gone back to a
day more than eighteen years ago when Joanna had first told him
about herself. They had lain together beside the fire, in the house
where Josse now lived with his extended family. The memory was so
vivid, bringing both overwhelming joy and sudden sharp pain, that
for a moment he felt faint.
Meggie was looking at him anxiously. ‘What is it,
Father?’ she asked. ‘Are you unwell?’
‘No, no!’ He hastened to reassure her. The day he
was remembering was around the time of her conception. Such things
were not for a daughter to hear, although he yearned to tell her.
They all said she was so like him, this beloved child of his, and
such remarks always made his heart glow with pride. But, sometimes,
he wished she looked more like her
mother . . .
He was aware of Meggie beside him, concerned for
him and gently rubbing her fingers across the back of his hand.
‘It’s cold out here, Father,’ she said. ‘You are shivering. Won’t
you go inside?’
He turned to her, shaking himself out of his
reverie and trying to summon a smile. There was enough to worry
about in the here and now without mourning over things he could not
control. ‘Dearest, I must think what to do,’ he said briskly. ‘I
sense some dreadful threat hanging over me – hanging over all of us
– and I am fearful.’ He attempted a laugh but it was a miserable
failure. ‘You will think I am being foolish, no doubt, and—’
But she took his hand and tightened her fingers
around it. ‘No, I don’t,’ she said. ‘For one thing, I hardly ever
think you’re foolish, and for another, I feel exactly the
same.’
He met her eyes. He did not know if to be relieved
that she so readily gave him her support or even more worried
because she shared his fears. On balance, the latter won.
‘We should—’ he began.
Just then one of the nursing nuns appeared in the
infirmary doorway, looked around and caught sight of them. Hurrying
over, she said, ‘I am glad to find you still here, Sir Josse!
Sister Liese sent me to fetch you. The second man brought in
earlier has recovered consciousness. Sister Liese says you must
come.’
With the sense that he was going to some
fateful encounter, Josse squared his shoulders and, with Meggie
beside him, went back into the infirmary.
The young man had awakened to fear so intense that
his first instinct was to leap out of the strange bed with the worn
but clean sheets and run. The smallest movement, however, caused
such a fire of agony in his right side and his left forearm that he
quickly changed his mind. Paralysed by his pain and his terror, he
quickly closed his eyes again, taking refuge in the pretence of
continuing unconsciousness.
He wondered where he was. Risking a quick look, he
saw curtains and, in the narrow gap between them, a glimpse of more
beds and a well-scrubbed stone-flagged floor. He saw a woman in
black, then another. He closed his eyes once more. He must be in
the infirmary at Hawkenlye Abbey. It was the obvious place to bring
a wounded man.
He thought about the fight. He saw again the
blue-eyed man with the knife and the long sword. He recalled the
ferocity of the attack and the terrible moment when he had believed
he was about to die. Then there had been three of them, grappling
together in a painful knot of fists, elbows,
knives . . . Somehow he had defended himself and, as
the hot blood rush had coursed through him, he knew he had made a
strike. Against who, he was not so sure.
He heard voices. His lord’s, speaking to a woman
who sounded calm and composed as she answered the questions. He
listened. They did not seem to be discussing anything of great
note.
Then his lord spoke a name, and suddenly the young
man was fully alert. ‘Hugh de Brionne is dead, they tell me,’ the
lord was saying, ‘and his body lies here at the abbey.’
Hugh was dead. Dead. The young man began to
shake.
‘—must break the news as soon as he wakes up,’ the
lord went on. ‘He will take it hard.’
A tear rolled out of the young man’s eye.
After a moment, he called out in a weak
voice for water, and almost immediately a black-clad nun appeared
in the recess to tend him.
Josse watched as Olivier de Brionne’s bed was
carefully lifted by a quartet of lay brothers and carried across to
where the king lay reclining against his pillows, in the opposite
recess. There were matters to discuss, matters that could not be
yelled out loud over the width of the large room. Turning to
Meggie, gently Josse told her to wait outside. Then he went into
the recess and drew the curtains.
The king said, ‘Josse, this is Olivier de Brionne.
Tell him, if you will, about Hugh.’
Josse turned to look at the young man. He saw
straight away the resemblance to Ninian that Meggie had seen. The
blue eyes were unmistakable. ‘I am very sorry to inform you that
your brother Hugh is dead,’ he said gently.
Olivier opened and closed his mouth a couple of
times, licked his dry lips and said, ‘I heard them say so. How did
he die?’
‘From the bruises and abrasions to his face and his
knuckles, it appears he was in a fight,’ Josse replied. His heart
ached with pity for the young man’s evident anguish. ‘His opponent
drove him backwards, or perhaps pushed him, and he fell, crushing
his skull against a stone.’
‘Crushing his skull,’ Olivier repeated in a
whisper. Then he screwed his eyes up tightly, as if trying to shut
out the dreadful image.
Josse wished there were some comfort that he could
offer. He had been informed – by Hugh and Olivier’s own mother – of
the relationship between her sons. The brothers are not
close, she had said. Yet, observing Olivier’s evident grief and
distress, he wondered if she had misread her sons.
‘I do not think that he suffered,’ Josse said,
looking down at the pale, strained face. ‘The blow would have
knocked him out instantly.’
Olivier said nothing for some time. Then his eyes
opened and he stared at Josse. ‘Who killed him?’ he whispered.
‘Have you any idea?’
‘No,’ Josse admitted. ‘Gervase de Gifford, who is
sheriff of Tonbridge, is on his way here.’ A messenger had been
sent urgently to find him as soon as the identity of Olivier’s
companion had been revealed. ‘He is an efficient and resourceful
man, and he does not give up. He will bring your brother’s murderer
to justice, have no fear.’
Momentarily, Olivier closed his eyes again, and
Josse, respecting his grief, bowed his head.
But then Olivier spoke. ‘I have a suggestion,’ he
said.
Josse glanced at the king, who nodded. ‘We would
hear it, if you please,’ Josse said.
Olivier was silent for some time, as if collecting
his thoughts. Then he said, ‘I must first apologize most sincerely
for my part in the business regarding the young girl.’
Josse, who had almost forgotten about Rosamund,
mentally kicked himself. Dear Lord, but there was so much to this!
‘And what was your part, exactly?’ he asked.
Olivier looked shamefaced. ‘I hate to speak ill of
my dear brother, but the idea was his. I – we observed that our
lord the king was much taken with her when he saw her up by the
chapel and—’
‘Most assuredly I was not,’ the king’s hard, cold
voice interrupted. ‘You and Hugh were gravely mistaken,
Olivier.’
‘Yes, my lord, and I must humbly beg your pardon,’
Olivier said hastily. ‘Believing we were acting in a way that would
please you, Hugh sent me to find her and bring her to you. I was to
go to join you at the hunting lodge and present the girl to you
there so that you—’
‘Enough!’ roared the king.
Olivier flinched as if he had been struck. ‘I did
not know what had become of my brother,’ he said in a whisper. ‘I
thought I had better proceed with the plan alone, which is what I
did.’ He hesitated.
‘You said you had a suggestion,’ Josse prompted him
gently. ‘May we hear it?’
Olivier shot him a quick look, almost instantly
dropping his head. ‘I am reluctant to speak it,’ he muttered.
The king made an explosive sound of impatience.
‘For God’s sake, Olivier, pull yourself together!’ Perhaps feeling
he had spoken too harshly to a man who had so recently learned of a
bereavement, he added, slightly more kindly, ‘If you have
information that has any bearing on Hugh’s death, it is your duty
to pass it on so that it can be acted upon.’
Olivier drew a shaking breath. ‘Very well.’ He
looked up at Josse. ‘What I have to say is this. Up in the clearing
by the chapel, my lord and I were attacked by a madman wielding a
sword and knife, and both of us were badly wounded.’ He winced, as
if speaking of his wound had made it throb with pain. ‘The madman
was acting, or so it would seem, in defence of the two women, the
girl and her older companion.’
Josse realized that he meant Meggie. He felt very
cold suddenly.
‘I believe,’ Olivier went on slowly, ‘that it may
have happened this way: the madman somehow learned of Hugh’s plan
and, while I was engaged with taking the girl to the hunting lodge,
he sought out Hugh and challenged him, demanding to know where the
girl was. Hugh, determined to carry out his scheme, would not tell
him, and the two men fought. Perhaps the madman did not mean to
kill him –’ he turned earnest blue eyes first to the king and then
to Josse – ‘but, all the same, my brother died.’
Josse’s heart was thumping very hard. The
madman. Ninian. Dear Lord, this man was suggesting that Ninian
had killed Hugh de Brionne!
He hadn’t, he could not have done, Josse told
himself over and over again.
But then, as if in a waking dream, he seemed to
hear his own voice speaking.
I fear we must face the possibility that the man
who fought the dead man is the one person who ought to be here and
isn’t. Whom none of us has seen since the evening we discovered
that Rosamund was missing.
Ninian.
The king lay back and closed his eyes. He was
alone; a state so rare in his life that he was tempted to simply
relish the moment. It would not last, for the old knight Josse
d’Acquin had just been informed that the sheriff had arrived and so
had hurried away to inform him of the recent developments. Soon
both of them would be there, and undoubtedly they would very
quickly be joined by the gaggle of self-promoting lords and
lordlings that habitually flocked in the king’s wake like seagulls
after a fishing boat. Not to mention his
bodyguards . . .
The curtains that enclosed the recess had been left
partly open, and he looked out at the infirmary. He usually had an
instinctive reaction against all abbeys: the result of having spent
the first years of his life a virtual prisoner in his mother’s
beloved Fontevrault. They had thought to make a monk of him, but
even as a child he had summoned the means to demonstrate in no
uncertain terms that, no matter what they did, that was
never going to happen. He had escaped the cloister, yes, but those
early experiences had left him with a deep-seated revulsion against
the soft footfalls and the sombre robes of the avowed.
It was strange, then, he mused, that this Hawkenlye
Abbey did not make his skin crawl. Quite the opposite, in fact;
against all expectations, he was enjoying himself. The wound in his
shoulder was not severe, and it was pleasant to be fussed over. In
addition, that glorious woman was here and, whatever happened, he
was determined to see her again, preferably alone.
Meggie. Her name was Meggie.
She had raised her sword to him, and normally that
was a hanging offence. They would call it treason, in fact, and so
the means of death would be longer drawn out and decidedly more
painful. For a moment he thought of her suffering. Dying. It was
not a good thought. He would spare her, he decided. He would make
no accusation against her. She would be so very grateful, but he
was sure he could come up with a way in which she could demonstrate
that gratitude.
He thought about that, too.
Presently, his breathing slowing once more, he
recalled that she had said her mother’s name was Joanna de
Courtenay. She’d had a distant cousin at court. He let his mind
wander freely, and after a while a memory surfaced.
It had been one of those wild, rollicking Christmas
celebrations when it seemed that almost all the rich and the
powerful in the land gathered together, determined to have a good
time. It had been at Windsor; he thought hard and tried to recall
the year. It had been soon after his elder brother Henry, the Young
King, had died, succumbing to a terrible attack of dysentery
following his hare-brained looting of the holy shrine at
Rocamadour. The Young King died in 1183, so the Christmas in
question must have been 1184. And a laughing, dashing, daredevil of
a man called Denys de Courtenay had brought a young cousin to
court, and the king had bedded her every night for almost a
fortnight.
King John smiled at the memory. He’d had his fair
share of women that Christmas, but he hadn’t been invited to share
any of his father’s. He remembered Joanna de Courtney, though; she
had been gorgeous, and they’d all envied King Henry and grumbled
because a bandy, randy old man had won the best pickings of the
season.
If she had borne a child following the rampant days
of that Christmas, he had never heard tell of it. Meggie was too
young to have been conceived so long ago and, besides, Josse
d’Acquin had said she was his daughter and the resemblance between
them supported the claim.
Yet there had been a child; a son. He was certain
of it, for the evidence had been right before his eyes only a
matter of hours ago. A young man had stood challenging him, a sword
in one hand and a knife in the other, and for a weird, disorienting
moment John had thought he was looking at his own father, as he had
looked in John’s earliest memories.
If he was right – and in his mind there was no
shadow of a doubt – then his opponent in that short and ferocious
struggle up by the chapel had been his half brother.
A slow smile spread across the king’s face. He did
not care to have stray half brothers loose in the land; you never
know when some hothead might decide to make such a man a rallying
point for insubordination. Well, this particular bastard brother
had just attacked his king and gravely wounded one of his close
companions, which had effectively signed his death warrant.
It was just a matter of catching him.
There was the sound of booted feet coming into the
quiet infirmary; it appeared that Josse had located the sheriff.
Swiftly, the king turned his mind to the orders he would issue, and
then it would only be a matter of time before his blue-eyed half
brother was screaming out his death agony.
The king’s smile broadened, and he gave a soft
laugh.