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While he prayed, she put her hand over Mansur’s heart and felt a strong beat. She looked round her. Rowley wore hunting clothes and was still furious. A curly-coated water dog sat at his feet. Latin floated over the wall that hid the church. “Pater noster, qui es in caelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum…” The service was nearly over.

When the monks emerged there was much exclaiming and concern over the accident. They wanted to take Mansur to the Abbot’s kitchen to wash and restore him, but he asked to be allowed to rest for a while, so they carried him into the shade of the church wall.

Adelia said she would stay with him.

Rowley frowned but had the sense to see that both of them needed a time of quiet. “There is much I need to discuss with Abbot Sigward,” he said, as if she’d said he should not.

“Then go and do it,” she told him.

“And I am engaged at Wells Cathedral this afternoon.”

She felt a flare of jealousy; God’s business must always supersede any care for her. With anger came recovery, and with recovery came the recall of another matter of importance. She said, coldly, “And while you’re about it, I should be obliged if you would make inquiries about Lady Emma Wolvercote.” Briefly, she told him the mystery of her friend’s disappearance, Allie’s recognition of the mule, her suspicion that there had been foul play. “It must have been somewhere round about.”

She could see he was not impressed.

“I doubt if a child of four can identify one mule from another,” he said. “Emma changed her mind about the meeting place. You should not take it amiss; she will be in touch when she’s ready.”

“Ask, will you?” Adelia spat at him. Her head ached.

“I shall.”

Yes, he will, she thought. She could trust him for that. She remembered that she owed him her life and Mansur’s, and changed her tone. “I am grateful, my lord bishop.”

He was so beautiful to her still, that was the trouble: the way he strode and talked, his nice hands, the eyes that could be easily amused-not bishop-like at all but lustworthy, blast him.

As he went, she heard him lecturing the abbot on the danger of keeping open pits in his ground, especially those with towers of earth beside them.

Mansur’s eyes were closed, and she shut her own, listening to him breathe. She had lost her hat somewhere in the pit and, vainly, she tried clawing some of the earth out of her dark blond hair. Her fingers encountered something substantial that had got entangled in it. With difficulty she retrieved it-a piece of wood that crumbled, as had the spar she had touched in the pit. It was proof, if she’d needed it, that her theory about Arthur and Guinevere’s coffin had been right.

It hadn’t been buried in the Dark Ages; wood from that time rotted in this earth. But the wood of Arthur and Guinevere’s coffin was much, much newer, which meant that the only time it could have reached sixteen feet down was during those few, so few, hours twenty years ago when the earthquake’s fissure had made such a depth available.

Rhys’s Uncle Caradoc hadn’t been vouchsafed a vision; he had seen an actual event.

Misery overtook her. For all her hardheaded search for the truth, something in Adelia had been touched by the golden rays of Arthur. Not so much by the legend itself as the fact that so strong a legend must mean that in the swirling mists of Britain’s darkest time, one man had ensured that the essence of what it was to be British, its very matter, stayed alive through his courage-and that she had been privileged to look on what remained of him.

A greater misery was for the disenchantment and blighted hope of those to whom Arthur’s magic was their life’s blood.

She gritted her teeth. Magic was ephemeral-you couldn’t and shouldn’t depend on it.

So now that she had dispelled it, what was she left with? Something uncomfortable…

From beside her, Mansur said, “They tried to kill us, Adelia.”

She looked at him. His eyes were still closed in exhaustion. “Kill us?”

“The earth did not come down on its own. The mound has stood for many weeks; why should it tip now?”

Dear Father Almighty.

In the relief of being rescued, her joy that Mansur had survived, and seeing Rowley again, she had not questioned that it had been an accident. Now, mentally, she went back into the pit, looking up, experiencing again the terror of that cascading earth.

It had stopped at one point; there had been a pause in the fall. And then it had started again-yes, as if somebody had been dissatisfled with the original push that tumbled the mound on top of them. Whoever it was had then begun shoveling or kicking the residue into the hole to fill it up completely.

Who could hate us that much?

Only Rowley’s appearance on the scene had stopped a murder that, if it had been successful, would have remained undiscovered. She and Mansur could have been blotted out. People would have seen merely that the mound had overtipped.

There was no time to absorb the shock. She was on her feet and running to the abbot’s kitchen.

The bishop of Saint Albans and Abbot Sigward were in conclave at the table; she didn’t notice anybody else.

“Who was there?” she demanded of Rowley. “Somebody tried to bury us. Who was it?”

“Eh?”

“When you rode up. Somebody was at the top of the pit.” She danced from foot to foot in agitation. “They pushed the mound over so that it would bury Mansur and me.”

“I didn’t see anybody.”

“You must have. Somebody was there, Rowley. They kept on… The earth came and came…”

“I swear to you, mistress.” He looked around. “Walt? Did you see anybody by the pit when we came up?”

“I didn’t, my lord.”

“Gervase?”

The young man with the hawk shook his head. “Nobody, my lord.”

Rowley got up from his stool, suddenly full of compassion for her. “It was dreadful for you, my child… For God’s sake, one of you, give this lady some brandy, a restorative. I should not have left her alone…”

“I’m not mad, Rowley,” she said.

“Of course you’re not, but it was too much for you. It was an accident, mistress, a fearful accident.”

They tried to get her to sit down, to drink something, to rest-and their faces all had the same look, not just concern but pity for a woman so unnerved that she had lost her wits.

“Damn you,” she shouted at them. “There was a pause, and then it started again.”

For heaven’s sake, why couldn’t she put into words what she had so clearly seen, tell them what it meant? There must have been somebody…

She stopped short. But there had been another pause. While she’d been struggling to free Mansur’s face, there had been no descent of earth-because whoever it was had seen or heard the approach of Rowley and had run away.

Eventually it was decided that Mansur must be questioned, men being less hysterical than women in the face of adversity.

With irritating gentleness, still offering her various remedies, they escorted her across to the church and rounded its far wall.

Mansur wasn’t there.

Adelia stared at the empty patch of grass on which he’d been lying.

Shouting, they wandered in search of him.

“He’s gone back to the inn,” Rowley said.

They took her to the Pilgrim. He wasn’t there. There were long explanations to the landlord and his wife, and to Gyltha, during which time Adelia watched Gyltha’s face go gray.

Out again. Some to go calling up the empty village street, others to search the abbey grounds more diligently.

Walt forestalled Adelia from going down into the pit again by using the rope to go down himself, but it was obvious-even to Adelia, frantically peering down from the edge-that its earth had swallowed no one since she and Mansur had been lifted out of it.

The bishop of Saint Albans missed whatever appointment it was that he had in Wells in order to ride up into the hills with his men, calling, always calling, so that the sky resounded with the Arab’s name. Until it got too dark to see anything-except the fact that Mansur had disappeared.