Blood Runs Thicker by Sarah Hawkswood (best english books to read for beginners txt) ๐
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- Author: Sarah Hawkswood
Read book online ยซBlood Runs Thicker by Sarah Hawkswood (best english books to read for beginners txt) ๐ยป. Author - Sarah Hawkswood
He led the way into the hall, where the rushes had been swept away and left the hard earth bare. It looked a lifeless place, though wall and roof were both in good condition. It was simply wood and daub and stone. At one end was a table and a lordโs seat, and to one side two long benches against the length of wall. The steward invited Catchpoll to sit.
โI am Guthlac, steward of Tredington. How can I help in anything to do with the death of the lord Osbern?โ The man was not challenging, but curious. โHe has not been here since, let me see, a week after Easter that would be.โ
โDid he bring his lady?โ
โNo. Havenโt seen her in nigh on three years. He came as usual with the messire Baldwin, though I must gets used to calling him lord now.โ He sighed and shook his head. โThe lord Osbern was not an easy man to please, and the sonโโ
โAye, we have met the son.โ Catchpoll did not need to say more. โIt was the son who has been here though, in this last week.โ
โHe came to see the harvest was brought in but I had it in hand before he arrived. Cuthwin, who is the weather-feeler, he swore the weather would break within a week, as it did, and so I had everyone out early. Our neighbours might scoff and say every extra day improves the grain, but I would rather it was a little less plump but not ruined by the wet. We was all gathered in two days before the storm broke, and thereโs no smile on the faces of those who mocked but have wheat all flattened and wet to rotting.โ Guthlac gave a small, grim smile. โMessire Baldwin berated me for starting too early, but better safe than sorry. I only wish my son Will was as cautious as I am, but it will come with years, no doubt.โ
โSo he is not as like unto his father as the messire to the lord Baldwin then,โ observed Catchpoll, with a wry smile, indicative of age looking upon youth and finding it rash.
โNo, not like me.โ There was something, one note in that voice, that made Catchpoll wonder.
โTakes after his mother then.โ The tone was cheerful, but the serjeantโs eyes missed nothing.
โAye, that would be it.โ Guthlac did not seem the least cheered, nor believing, but resigned. It was the same look Catchpoll had seen on other faces before, faces like Edmundโs in Lench.
โAnd think on that, friend, for a mother who sees a son in her image is proud as a cock at dawn, and a happier woman for it. We all likes happy wives; they chide the less.โ Catchpoll thus set himself beside Guthlac in the unity of husbands.
โMine will neither chide nor comfort for long.โ Guthlac closed his eyes for a moment, then raised them. โNot a mite of fat on โer, and can scarce take a breath. She says as she feels she is drowning to death, poor soul.โ
โSorry I am then to make light,โ Catchpoll looked serious once more, โand I come at a bad time, but I has questions as needs answers, Master Steward, and only here can I find them.โ
โThen ask, Serjeant.โ
โThe messire Baldwin came to the manor a bit over a week ago, he says. Was he here all the time?โ It was a thought that had been growing in Catchpollโs mind as he rode.
โNo, that he was not. He came, and in a foul mood, but that was common. If he came alone, and that was most of the time, he came scowling and finding fault. The lord Osbern, God rest him,โ and Guthlac crossed himself, but it was perfunctory and a show only, โwould rant and rave at him, and he do the same back, and then father would send son here to calm down. We was the ones who suffered his lashing tongue, and not just tongue neither.โ
โThat also we have seen in Lench.โ Catchpoll nodded.
โHe has the Devil in him, that one. The Devil was in his mother, if ever she got stormy, which was often, but then she had a sort of life-fire about her when happy that was so bright, like sun at noon, that her temper was forgiven. I always thought as she died young because she lived all her life in few years.โ Guthlac gave a sigh.
Catchpoll noted the adoration, the same that they had heard from Walter Pipard. The lady had cast a spell, on men at least.
โSo the messire came, grumbled and did what?โ
โHe sat upon his horse and watched the harvesting for a day, and then grumbled that sitting in the saddle so long made his arse ache.โ The steward gave a little snort. โAsk us all if we would exchange that for our aching backs and blistered palms, eh?โ
โYou should not speak like that about the lord Baldwin.โ The young man, the son Will, stood in the doorway, giving his new lord his title straight away.
โIt is true, nonetheless, and to the sheriffโs man one speaks true, son.โ
โHe will be a good lord,โ declared Will, firmly.
โWe hopes and prays so, but he does before he thinks and you need to be the voice that urges waiting.โ
โOld men wait, and all they find is cold earth.โ Will was clearly in the same mould as his new master.
โBut the messire did not wait about here in Tredington after seeing the harvest was being brought in.โ
โNot once he had complained and complained at me cutting early, no.โ Guthlac sounded not just downtrodden but actually a little resentful, since he clearly thought his actions had been right.
โDid he go out riding in the day, or mayhap brought a hawk?โ Catchpoll was pretty sure that the answer would be negative but would bring forth the one he expected.
โNo, no. He left, and returned three days after, grim of face, which was unusual when he went off.โ
โSo he did this when
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