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His vision swirling from the tumble, Geoffrey hauled himself up onto his hands and knees just in time to see his quarry disappearing into the shrubs that grew profusely along that part of the river bank. Geoffrey tried to scramble to his feet, but his senses swam and he fell to his knees again. As he did so, the bowman glanced fearfully backwards, so that Geoffrey had a fleeting impression of his face, before he disappeared into the dense undergrowth that led to the water’s edge. Geoffrey rubbed his eyes, trying to clear his vision, realising with a lurching disappointment that he had not seen enough to recognise who it was who had almost succeeded in killing him.

Trying to catch his breath, Geoffrey stood unsteadily, knowing that further pursuit of the archer was hopeless. Instead, he went to see whether he had harmed the driver of the cart. It lay on its side, one wheel bent, and the other lying in pieces next to it. The mule was trotting up the path, already some distance away. Sitting among the wreckage was the parish priest, rubbing his wrist and surveying the remains of his cart in shock.

“Oh, Lord!” muttered Geoffrey, torn between mounting a hunt for the archer and helping Father Adrian. “Are you hurt?”

Adrian shook his head and allowed Geoffrey to assist him to his feet. “But unfortunately, the same cannot be said for my cart. I doubt even the best blacksmith could repair that.”

“I am sorry,” said Geoffrey, genuinely contrite. “I will buy you another one.”

“Will you, now?” asked Adrian, the hint of a smile playing about his eyes. “And what with? I hear you brought no booty home from the Holy Land, unlike your young men-at-arms.”

“I have some books that I could sell,” said Geoffrey defensively.

The priest shook his head, and laughed. “Never sell a book, Sir Geoffrey. They are not so easy to come by that they can be dispensed with so casually.”

“I have an Arabian dagger, then,” said Geoffrey. “Should your taste extend to murder weapons.”

Adrian shuddered. “It does not. But never mind the cart-I was lucky it survived the winter, and I will not be needing it now that I hear Goodrich is to pass to the Earl of Shrewsbury. I doubt he will be requiring my services as parish priest.”

“He has a priest of his own,” said Geoffrey. “He acts as his scribe. Let me see your hand. Is it broken, do you think?”

“No,” said Adrian, flexing it. “Although it might well have been, given the speed at which you hurled yourself from the woods. What were you doing? What if I had been an old woman or a small child, instead of a young and resilient priest?”

“I am sorry,” said Geoffrey, a second time. “The man I was chasing fired an arrow at me. As you can imagine, I was keen to catch him and ask him why.”

“An arrow?” echoed Adrian. He rubbed at the bristles on his chin. “Bows and arrows are not common around here, because we are in the King’s forest. It will not have been one of Goodrich’s villagers. Perhaps it was someone from Lann Martin, doing some illegal hunting.”

“Caerdig told me that none of his villagers hunt,” said Geoffrey, thinking about Aumary’s death. “Do you know different?”

Adrian shook his head. “Not for certain, but it has been a long winter and food is scarce. It would not surprise me to know that some people transgress the King’s laws and hunt for hares and fowl. I suppose it is even possible that Caerdig might not know about it.”

“He cannot be a good leader,” said Geoffrey, “if he does not know that his people break the law.”

“He does well enough,” said Adrian. He took a deep breath. “Help me move this wreckage off the path, or it will cause another mishap.”

“Shall I fetch back your mule?” asked Geoffrey, watching the animal amble round a corner and disappear from view.

“It knows its way home,” said Adrian. “But I am concerned about this archer. I hope this nasty incident will not herald the return of outlaws to the area. It is possible that rumours have already spread that Godric has died and that the Earl of Shrewsbury is to inherit, and the villains of the area are massing to take advantage of the chaos that is inevitable when one master takes over from another.”

Geoffrey suspected that the archer’s attempt to kill him had nothing to do with mere outlaws, and was more likely to be connected to one of the murderous occupants of the castle, but he did not want to discuss it with the priest.

He searched his memory yet again for some recognition of the face he had glimpsed so briefly, but the features remained shadowy and blurred. He was fairly certain it was not one of his brothers, since they all had good reason to want him alive. Was it one of the Earl’s retinue-Malger, perhaps, or Drogo? Could it have been someone employed by his brothers-their truce was only a recent agreement, and perhaps news had not yet reached their hired assassins? He looked down the path after the mule, and rubbed his chin thoughtfully.

“What were you doing in the woods anyway?” asked Adrian. “It is almost dark.”

Geoffrey saw no reason not to tell him. “I was looking for Rohese. She went into hiding the night the Earl favoured Goodrich with his presence, and has not been seen since.”

“Poor child!” said Adrian, horrified. “I heard the Earl intended to have her, but that she could not be found. Do you think she might be in these woods? How could she have escaped from the castle?”

Geoffrey shrugged. “Perhaps she did not, but no one has seen her in it.”

“Poor child,” said Adrian again. “Can I help you look? It is growing dark, but there is light enough to see by yet.”

“I do not think she is here,” said Geoffrey. Not alive, anyway, he added to himself. “I will look in the castle again.”

“You are kind to be so concerned,” said Adrian. “Enide told me you had a good heart. No one else at the castle seems concerned for their father’s whore.”

“Chambermaid,” corrected Geoffrey. He caught Adrian’s eye and they smiled at each other.

“I was coming to the castle anyway,” said Adrian. “I have had word that Godric is finally laid out in the chapel, and I wanted to say a mass for him.”

Geoffrey was sure that Godric’s black soul was in need of all the masses it could get, so he led Adrian along the path to the front of the castle, and hammered on the gates to be let in. The guards did not even break their conversation-something to do with pig breeding-to acknowledge them. Geoffrey was certain that their futures would be bleak indeed if they did not look more lively when the Earl came into power.

The castle chapel contained no Godric, and Geoffrey assumed that Walter had still not moved him out of his bedchamber. He wondered whether Godric’s poor corpse would even manage to arrive at its own funeral, given the stately progress of the body to its grave so far. Meanwhile, the hall was deserted, and so Geoffrey led Adrian up the stairs to Godric’s room.

Godric looked considerably more decent than he had that morning. The bedcovers had been straightened, and the body laid neatly on top of them. It was clean, too, and wrapped in Mabel’s grey sheet. Coins were placed across the eyes to keep them closed-although Geoffrey wondered if they would be there the following morning if no vigil were kept-and two candles had been lit, one at the head and the other at the feet.

Meanwhile, Geoffrey still had not examined the documents that he had retrieved from Enide’s old hiding place. He sat on a low bench in the garderobe passage, and pulled them from inside his shirt, listening with half an ear to the dull mutter of Adrian’s prayers coming from the bedchamber. Since the passage was dark, he lit a candle.

Geoffrey looked at what lay in his hands. There were two documents, folded together and held in place by a small metal pin, and the leather pouch. He unfastened the pin, and inspected the parchments first. One was an itinerary of a journey Godric had taken around Normandy from January to April 1063 with the Conqueror. Geoffrey was bemused until he realised that Stephen had been born in the November of 1063. Here then was the alleged proof that Stephen was no son of Godric’s, since Godric had been absent at the time that Stephen had been conceived. The second document stated that Godric had been married to Herleve of Bayeux in the spring of 1059, with a note scrawled across the bottom to say that one Walter Mappestone, a babe in arms, had been among the wedding guests.