The Good Knight (A Gareth and Gwen Medieval Mystery)

Free The Good Knight (A Gareth and Gwen Medieval Mystery) by Sarah Woodbury

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Authors: Sarah Woodbury
now?”
    “Madog has come with the body.”
    If Hywel hadn’t sworn again, Gwen might have. Then he canted his head to Gwen. “Come.”
    Gwen trotted after Hywel, towards the far door through which she and Gareth had entered the building last night, with Evan at her heels.
    Madog and ten men from his garrison milled about a cart with Anarawd’s wrapped body in the bed. His face expressionless, King Owain, Cadwaladr beside him, gazed down at the body. A portion of the crowd from the great hall had followed him out the door and now clustered behind him, unsure of what to do. News of King Anarawd’s death had been an opportunity for speculation and gossip, but its reality was something else entirely.
    “Enough!” King Owain said. “This is not a market stall. Be about your business.”
    Mumbling among themselves, the people in the crowd dispersed. Cadwaladr clapped a hand on King Owain’s shoulder in apparent sympathy and turned away, leaving King Owain and Madog alone by the cart. King Owain lifted his head and looked around the courtyard until he spied Hywel, still standing by the side door with Gwen. With a wave of his hand, he gestured them over.
    “You know what to do,” he said when Hywel reached him.
    “Yes, Father.”
    King Owain turned away.
    “Where shall we put him, my lord?” Madog said. “The weather has been so warm he stinks already.”
    “Unfortunate but unavoidable,” Hywel said. “We’ll try to make this quick. Bring him to the barracks.”
    More curious than she wanted to admit, Gwen went with Hywel and the men-at-arms carrying Anarawd’s body. The long, low building sat by the gatehouse. It contained a large, open sleeping space, but also dozens of small rooms. Just as they reached it, Hywel’s elder brother, Rhun, stepped from the main doorway. Hywel pulled up short.
    He held out his hand to Rhun, who took it, and the two men embraced. “I’m sorry this isn’t going to end in a wedding,” Hywel said. “You can imagine how upset Elen is with this news.”
    “Where is she?” Rhun said.
    “In the hall,” Hywel said. “I saw her greet Uncle Cadwaladr after Father dismissed him.”
    Rhun choked on a laugh. “I’ll rescue her in a moment.” He surveyed Anarawd’s body and then turned to Gwen who stood quietly to one side. “Are you sure you want to be present when my brother examines him?”
    “I’ve already seen the body,” she said. “Sir Gareth and I were the ones who found him.”
    She didn’t say anything of what she and Gareth had discovered about his murder, however. If Hywel was secretive to a fault, Rhun was too open and might reveal what he knew to the wrong person. Everyone might hear about the knife wound soon enough, but she’d wait to tell anyone else until she’d spoken to Hywel about it.
    “Then I leave him in good hands.” Rhun clapped Hywel on the shoulder and walked away.
    Once inside the tiny chamber, Hywel lit the lamps and dismissed the guards. Together, he and Gwen stripped Anarawd of his fine clothes and armor, revealing a well-muscled but oft-wounded body. “This must have hurt.” Gwen traced a thick scar under the man’s right rib.
    “That came from the 1136 war when we defeated the Normans in Deheubarth,” Hywel said. “I was fighting alongside him, although I was only sixteen at the time.”
    “How old is—was—Anarawd?” Gwen circled the table to survey the body from every angle. The man seemed smaller now, more fragile. So he’d proved to be in the end. As they all were.
    “Seven years ago he was in his early thirties. He’s forty now, maybe,” Hywel said. “His father was nearly this age when he married my aunt, who was only fifteen at the time. They eloped.” He grinned. “I would have liked to have been there to see my grandfather’s face when he found out.”
    “Your grandfather didn’t approve of the union?” Gwen had begun sorting through Anarawd’s clothes, emptying the contents of his pockets and now looked

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