The interior was as neat, tidy and clean as he had expected. There was a small hearth in the centre of the beaten earth floor, stones laid in a circle, with kindling and small logs laid ready. Over the hearth, hanging from a simple tripod, was an ancient blackened pot. Empty.
On the far wall were several wooden planks serving as shelves, each bearing a load of containers of various sizes. There were also some implements: a knife, a mortar and pestle, some small pottery bowls, a row of flasks. All appeared scrupulously clean.
There was a three-legged stool beside the hearth, and, hanging on the wall behind it, a heavy cloak.
A short ladder led to an upper platform; standing on the second rung, Josse found his eyes came level with the platform. On it were a straw-stuffed palliasse and some covers.
Making a mental note to come back and inspect the shelves if he had no luck in the herb garden, Josse went outside again, looping the twine back through its eyes and re-tying it to secure the door. His knot, he noticed, was nowhere near as elegant as Mag’s.
He ignored the vegetable patch, on the grounds that even the most junior wise woman would know better than to grow her wolfs bane in with her cabbages. Squaring his shoulders — he was feeling distinctly uneasy about his quest — he walked over to the carefully-tended rectangle where Mag Hobson had cultivated her herbs.
Some plants he recognised straight away. Evergreen ivy, juniper and the tough, spineless stems of broom. Others he was less sure about: some tiny green shoots poking out from the ground could be saffron and these woody stems, sharp-edged where the dead growth of last year’s flowering had been cut back, might they be dill? He grinned to himself. They might. But, given the paucity of his herbal knowledge, they might be virtually anything.
Divisions had been made in the garden by means of low hedges of box. There was a small bed, roughly square, which was entirely hedged in; wondering if this were a method which Meg had employed to keep the most deadly plants separate, Josse went to have a closer look.
Hunching into his cloak, putting up the hood — he was rapidly becoming colder and colder — he crouched down over the sleeping ground.
The earth had recently been disturbed, that he could see. But it looked more as if someone had been planting things than digging them up. Would that be right? Would a herbalist be planting, in the middle of an icy February? He had no idea. This, he realised, was hopeless; unless he dug over the entire bed and just happened to find the radish-shaped tubers of wolf’s bane — and was he going to be able to distinguish them from similar tubers, without the grave risk to himself of putting them to the tasting test? — then he might as well give up.
Wearily, he rubbed his hands over his face. It had seemed such a good idea, but-
‘Don’t move,’ a voice said softly right in his ear. He gave a great instinctive start — he had heard nothing! no footfall, no sinuous approach — which wasn’t very sensible since someone was holding a blade to his throat.
He said, equally softly, ‘I won’t. Not until you move that knife.’
As soon as he spoke, he felt his assailant relax.
And Joanna said, ‘Sir Josse! I thought you were-’ She stopped.
‘Denys de Courtenay?’
She stood a pace off, eyeing him. In the dim light of the clearing, it was difficult to read her face, shaded as it was by a fold of her woollen shawl. To her credit, she didn’t even try saying innocently, ‘Denys who?’ Instead, sheathing her knife, she remarked, ‘You’ve met him, then.’
‘Not I. But while I was being cared for by the sisters at Hawkenlye Abbey — for the after-effects of my concussion — he paid a visit to its Abbess.’
‘Abbess Helewise.’ She nodded. ‘I have heard tell of her.’
‘Do I sense approval?’
‘You do. They — my informant held her in high regard. She — they only knew of the Abbess by repute, but that was enough for the formation of a good opinion.’
‘Rightly founded. Abbess Helewise is a fine woman. Who, I might add, shares your opinion of Denys de Courtenay.’
‘I was not aware of having ventured an opinion,’ Joanna said frostily.
‘You don’t deny that you know him?’
She hesitated. ‘No. There seems little point. He and my late father were cousins.’
‘And he is searching for you,’ Josse said. ‘According to him, you are half out of your wits with grief, unhinged from the pain of losing your husband in a hunting accident and you-’
‘I’m what?’ She burst out laughing, a musical peal that rang through the silent glade. ‘Is that the best he could do? Anxious cousin, sole strong, protective male relation, searching for grief-stricken and feeble young widow? Great heavens, I’d have thought Denys could have come up with something a little more original.’
‘Neither Abbess Helewise nor I believed him,’ Josse said.
‘Why not?’ she demanded instantly.
‘Me, because I had met you. Seen your fear, observed your desperate need to hide from someone, whom I guessed to be Denys. The Abbess because, as I said, she has met him.’
‘And she didn’t take to him.’ It was a statement, not a question.
Josse laughed briefly. ‘You could say that.’ His knees were beginning to ache from contact with the cold ground. ‘May I get up?’
‘Oh, yes, yes. Of course.’
They faced each other from two paces apart. He could see her face more clearly now; the dark eyes were watchful, and the slight frown suggested she was thinking hard.
Thinking that it might not be such a bad idea after all to confide in him?
He said tentatively, ‘I have a great will to help you, Joanna. I believe I know more about you than you think and, if you will accept my word, I swear to you that I will protect you from-’
‘I don’t need protection!’ she cried.
He took a step closer to her. ‘No?’ he shouted. ‘Perhaps not, although I wouldn’t back your small blade against the man who damned nearly smashed my head in, for no greater provocation than that he didn’t want me following him!’
‘You let him take you unawares,’ she shouted back, ‘as you did just now with me! I know him better, sir knight, and I take more care!’
‘He will find you, Joanna!’ Josse insisted. ‘You know now what methods he uses — you must agree!’
She had gone very still. ‘Methods?’ she repeated, her voice a whisper.
Good God, didn’t she know? ‘Mag Hobson is dead,’ he said gently.
‘Yes, so I heard.’
‘You have contact with the world, then? You speak to people, now and again?’
She shrugged that off. ‘I go in for provisions sometimes. My face well covered, you’ll be relieved to hear. News of Mag’s death was still fresh, the last time I visited Tonbridge.’
‘So fresh, I would judge, that they didn’t know how she died.’
‘She drowned! Slipped on the icy bank and fell into the pond!’ He made no answer. ‘Didn’t she?’
He was reluctant to tell her. But perhaps, if he did, it would serve to persuade her of her vulnerability.
No woman, he was sure, not even Joanna, was a match for Denys de Courtenay.
‘Mag was attacked,’ he said neutrally. ‘She was beaten, some of her fingers were broken, then her head was held down under the water till she was dead.’
Joanna’s hands flew to her mouth, half muffling her cry. ‘Oh, no! Oh, Mag, no!’
Pursuing the advantage of having breached her defences, he said, ‘To make her tell him where you were, do you think? To make her reveal the whereabouts of that old manor house she took you to? Where she hid you away, so that he couldn’t find you? Where she-’
‘Stop!’ she shouted. Then, her shoulders beginning to heave as her sobs took hold, she said shakily, ‘Please, please, stop!’
And the gloved hands now entirely covered her face as Joanna gave herself to her grief.
It was more than he could stand. He stepped forward and took her in his arms, cradling her face against his chest, stroking the back of her head. The rough shawl fell back, and he felt her smooth hair, slipping easily beneath the leather of his gloved palm. ‘I’m sorry,’ he murmured, ‘so sorry, Joanna. But you have to know the truth, you must be aware of the lengths he will go to in order to find you.’