‘I understand,’ Josse said.
‘Also there is the priest to see, and arrangements to discuss.’ Ambrose’s face darkened into a frown.
‘I will ride to break the news to Galiena’s family, if that is what you wish of me,’ Josse offered.
‘Will you?’ Again, the fiercely intent look. ‘Can I trust you to find the right words, Josse? They are a close and loving family and this will be a bitter blow for them.’
‘I can only do my best, but you have my word that I will try to be gentle and considerate,’ Josse said with dignity.
Instantly Ambrose’s hand was on his arm. ‘I apologise, Josse. I did not mean to imply otherwise. It is merely that in circumstances such as these, when a man longs to perform a delicate task himself, it is hard to entrust it to another.’
Again Josse muttered, ‘I understand.’
‘You will go, then?’ Ambrose appeared to need confirmation.
‘Tell me where to go and I will set out straight away.’
In the event, it was not until after the noon meal that Josse set out. The Abbess, informed of the arrangement, gave him a look in which he read both compassion — presumably for the unpleasant task he had taken on himself — and, he thought, a certain admiration. Or perhaps the latter was merely wishful thinking. Either way, he recalled with pleasure that she had said she would keep him in her thoughts until his return and pray that he find the right words with which to inform Galiena’s family that she was dead.
The fact that he had found her sitting in her chair and busy working had been immensely reassuring. Aye, it was still just possible that whatever she had drunk from the bottle meant for Galiena might yet work some harm in her but, with every hour that passed, surely that possibility grew less. Or so he fervently hoped.
She came to the stables to see him on his way. Studying her closely, he perceived a faint flush in her cheeks. ‘You are quite well, my lady?’ he asked. ‘You ate a good dinner? With — er, with no ill effects?’
‘I am quite well, Sir Josse,’ she agreed, smiling. ‘I ate heartily and feel the better for it. My digestion, I assure you, has never been better. Do not worry,’ she added kindly, ‘I have suffered no hurt. The mystery of what caused Galiena’s death is not to be so easily solved.’
‘Aye, I fear you are right.’ He remembered, against his will, that sudden moment of suspicion. Was it possible she had been poisoned deliberately? But — for surely his instinctive thought was miles from the truth — by whom? And why?
He finished fastening his small pack to Horace’s saddle and, unhitching the reins, clucked to the horse to move on out into the sunshine.
‘First things first, though,’ the Abbess said encouragingly. ‘You must complete your mission and I must make arrangements with Father Gilbert. We should bury the poor young woman as soon as we can, I think, for nothing is to be gained by waiting and also there is-’ Abruptly she broke off but he was almost certain she had been going to say that there was also the hot weather to consider.
‘Aye, my lady,’ he said quietly. ‘I know.’
She walked beside him as he led Horace to the gate. Then, picking up his dagger and sword from Sister Ursel in the porteress’s little room beside the entrance and settling them in their sheaths at his belt, he swung himself up into the saddle and looked down at her.
‘Good luck,’ she said. ‘Return to us soon.’
‘I will, God willing.’
The echo of her soft ‘Amen’ stayed in his ears as he rode away.
Ambrose had given him clear directions for finding his way to the house of Galiena’s kin. It lay to the north-east of the Ryemarsh estate and, approaching from Hawkenlye, Josse’s quickest route was to cut across country north of Newenden, aiming for the little fledgling settlement of Small Hythe. ‘Keep well above the inlet that flows down on its southern side,’ Ambrose had said, ‘for the stretch of water is tidal and can be treacherous, even when the weather has been dry.’ Galiena’s family home, he said, was to the north-east of Small Hythe; if necessary, Josse might ask for further directions there since, according to Ambrose, anyone could tell Josse where to find the house.
Galiena’s father was called Raelf and his manor was at Readingbrooke. Pressed for further details, Ambrose would only say that Raelf’s wife was named Audra and that there were four other daughters all younger than Galiena.
It was to this unsuspecting and, according to Ambrose, close-knit and loving family that Josse was now bound with such terrible news.
Despite the fine weather and the beauties of the June countryside, he could not find the smallest element of pleasure in the day.
He rode into Small Hythe in the late evening. He had not hurried; he had no intention of going on to Readingbrooke until morning. He had vaguely thought that he would look for somewhere to put up for the night in Small Hythe; it was possible there might be an inn or he could seek out a friendly farmer willing to offer a night’s accommodation in exchange for a modest payment. However, as the sun set in rich, burning shades of orange across the perfect, dark blue sky, he changed his mind. For one thing, there was nothing remotely like an inn in the tiny settlement of Small Hythe, which, as far as Josse could see in the fading light, consisted of a few wooden huts along a dried-up, muddy creek. For another thing, he knew he did not want company. All through the journey he had been thinking ahead to his meeting with Galiena’s family and somehow his sombre cast of mind did not seem suitable for venturing into a tavern or a farmer’s kitchen and making small talk.
No. He would make a private camp somewhere and keep his own company. He had a pair of thick blankets rolled up behind his saddle and it would not be the first time he had slept out of doors. Sister Basilia had made up a package of the best that Hawkenlye’s kitchens could offer a traveller and he was already looking forward to tucking into the meats and the sweet pastries. There was also a small flagon of wine and Josse knew from long experience that the cellarer nun, Sister Goodeth, would not have provided for him anything but her best.
He rode slowly along the creek, the last of the setting sun behind him throwing his long shadow on ahead of him. He was on the creek’s north bank — it seemed to run almost due west to east — and on his left side, the land rose in gentle folds up to where, to judge from Ambrose’s directions, he guessed he would find Readingbrooke.
As he rode on, a new sound on the still air gradually permeated his consciousness. Drawing rein so as to listen, he tried to identify what it was. It grew steadily louder and, with a smile, he recognised what it was.
It was the sound of running water.
Dismounting and walking forward right to the edge of the creek, he looked down. What had appeared to be a dry stream bed with a soggy, muddy bottom was turning, quite quickly, into a narrow river. Gathering together what he knew of the marshlands — which was not much — he realised what had happened. Somewhere a long way off to the south and the east lay the sea. And the tide had turned.
He stood for some time watching the moving water. Looking back along the creek towards Small Hythe, he now noticed that wooden platforms had been constructed, extending out from the northern bank and over the water. Whatever the men of the settlement did there, it must, Josse concluded, depend to a degree on the water.
The sound was comforting. He decided to make his camp somewhere near enough to the creek so that he could continue to hear the water as he settled down for the night. It might just help him to sleep.
He had the soldier’s knack of quickly and efficiently making himself comfortable in the field. Turning to his left, leading Horace now, he climbed a short, shallow slope that rose up to the side of a small stream flowing down to meet the creek. Where the slope levelled out, he found a sheltered spot between a length of hawthorn hedge and a gnarled old willow tree. If it should rain in the night — unlikely, Josse thought, since the sky was still clear and what wind there was came from off the land and not up from the south-west — then the thick foliage of the tree would shelter him. And the hawthorn, curving round in an arc from the distant line of the creek, would act as a windbreak if the breeze turned into something more spiteful.