16 - The Three Kings of Cologne

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Book: 16 - The Three Kings of Cologne by Kate Sedley Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kate Sedley
Tags: Fiction, Historical, Mystery & Detective, rt, tpl
my waist. Then she scrubbed my back, laughing and wrinkling her nose at the disgusting smell of the clothes I had dropped on the floor. One thing very nearly led to another, but the patter of feet up and down the stairs reminded us that it was far too early in the evening for any kind of dalliance. So Adela found me a clean shirt and my only other decent pair of hose and, when I had got out of the tub, set about soaking the offending garments in my bath water. While all this was going on, and I was rubbing myself dry on the piece of rough sheeting we kept for that purpose, I took the opportunity to tell her about my conversations with Sister Walburga and Jonathan Linkinhorne.
    ‘What I don’t understand,’ Adela said, as she laid the kitchen table with plates and spoons for supper, ‘is how Isabella’s body came to be buried in that plot of ground if, as everyone insists, it had never been used as a graveyard. Digging a grave, even a shallow one, can’t be easy. And that spot is near enough to both the nunnery and Saint Michael’s church that anyone doing so would surely have been bound to attract attention at some point in the proceedings. Even under cover of darkness, you’d think that someone would have seen or heard something at some time.’
    She was right. I hadn’t until that moment thought of it myself, although no doubt I would have done so eventually. But then, there was much about the case that I hadn’t had occasion to consider as yet. All the same, I used it as an excuse to get my arm around her waist and tell her what a clever woman she was, while at the same time trying to insinuate one hand into the top of her skirt.
    She gently pushed me away, a warning glint that I recognized in her fine dark eyes.
    ‘Don’t patronize me, Roger.’
    I held up my hands in surrender. ‘Pax! Pax!’ I said, laughing. ‘I’m sorry.’
    She accepted my apology with her usual good grace, and called the children down to supper. Elizabeth and Nicholas, ever hungry, stormed in and climbed on their stools, waiting impatiently for their bowls of stew to be passed to them. Adam, who had already been fed, was free to roam about the kitchen at will, but most unexpectedly chose to clamber on to my knees and lay his head against my chest. It made eating difficult, but when Adela offered to relieve me of my burden, I smiled and shook my head.
    ‘No. Let him be.’
    She returned my smile, knowing, with that intuition wives develop, that I was thinking of those other parents whose understanding of their child and her needs had led eventually to total estrangement. And when, after ten minutes or so, Adam wriggled free of my embrace and trotted off about his own small affairs without any reproaches or efforts to detain him on my part, she smiled at me again, more lovingly than ever.
    ‘What will you do next?’ she asked.
    I shrugged. ‘I can do nothing tomorrow, it being Sunday. But on Monday, I think I must walk to Clifton and try to find this Emilia Virgoe, Isabella’s nurse.’
    But late that night, lying in my arms, content and drowsy after making love, Adela suddenly roused herself, raising her head from the pillow to ask, ‘How could any mother and father be so ignorant of what their child was doing? Who she was seeing? And surely when she disappeared like that, they should have bestirred themselves to make more enquiries than they did?’
    I could tell from her tone of voice that she was worried, foreseeing, as I had done, a future when these problems might be ours, and frightened for the outcome. I tightened my hold on her.
    ‘We’re not the Linkinhornes,’ I reassured her. ‘We shan’t expect to command our children’s love, or feel slighted if they withhold it. Or at least not so that it shows. And we’d never let our resentment of their behaviour get in the way of doing what was right. If Elizabeth or Nicholas or Adam vanished without a word, we’d move heaven and earth to find out what had happened to him

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