newness of her bereavement, this thought troubled her. She bit a hesitant lip. "You think it may have been one of those young men? Or more of them together? That they burned with their grudge until they followed him in the dark, and took this way?"
"It's being both thought and said," owned Hugh, "by many people who witnessed what happened by the river."
"But the sheriff's men," she pointed out, frowning, "surely took up many of those young men long before my uncle went to the fairground. If they were already in prison, they could not have harmed him."
"True of most of them. But the one who led them was not taken until the small hours of the morning, when he came reeling back to the town gate, where he was awaited. He is in a cell in the castle now, like his fellows, but he was still at liberty long after Master Thomas failed to come back to you, and he is under strong suspicion of this death. The whole pack of them will come before the sheriff this afternoon. The rest, I fancy, will be let out on their fathers' bail, to answer the charges later. But for Philip Corviser, I greatly doubt it. He will need to have better answers than he was able to give when they took him."
"This afternoon!" echoed Emma. "Then I should also attend. I was a witness when this turmoil began. The sheriff should hear my testimony, too, especially if my uncle's death is in question. There were others - Master Corbiere, and the brother of the abbey, the one you know well ..."
"They will be attending, and others besides. Certainly your witness would be valuable, but to ask it of you at such a time..."
"I would rather!" she said firmly. "I want my uncle's murderer caught, if indeed he was murdered, but I pray no innocent man may be too hurriedly blamed. I don't know - I would not have thought he looked like a murderer ... I should like to tell what I do know, it is my duty."
Beringar cast a brief glance at his wife for enlightenment, and Aline gave him a smile and the faintest of nods.
"If you are resolved on that," he said, reassured, "I will ask Brother Cadfael to escort you. And for the rest, you need have no anxieties about your own situation. It will be necessary for you to stay here until this matter is looked into, but naturally you will remain here in Aline's company, and you shall have every possible help in whatever dispositions you need to make."
"I should like," said Emma, "to take my uncle's body back by the barge to Bristol for burial." She had not considered, until then, that there would be no protector for her on the boat this time, only Roger Dod, whose mute but watchful and jealous devotion was more than she could bear, Warin who would take care to notice nothing that might cause him trouble, and poor Gregory, who was strong and able of body but very dull of wit. She drew in breath sharply, and bit an uncertain lip, and the shadow came back to her eyes. "At least, to send him back ... His man of law there will take care of his affairs and mine."
"I have spoken to the prior. Abbot Radulfus sanctions the use of an abbey chapel, your uncle's body can lie there when he is brought from the castle, and all due preparations will be made for his decent coffining. Ask for anything you want, it shall be at your disposal. I must summon your journeyman to attend at the castle this afternoon, too. How would you wish him to deal, concerning the fair? I will give him whatever instructions you care to send."
She nodded understanding, visibly bracing herself again towards a world of shrewd daily business which had not ceased with the ending of a life. "Be so kind as to tell him," she said, "to continue trading for the three days of the fair, as though his master still presided. My uncle would scorn to go aside from his regular ways for any danger or loss, and so will I in his name." And suddenly, as freely and as simply as a small child, she burst into tears at last.
When Hugh was gone about his business, and Constance had withdrawn at Aline's
The Big Rich: The Rise, Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes