The Devils Novice
devil a man of us knew whose he was or
where he came from. There’s a man of mine has an assart west of here, an island
on the moss, and cuts turf there for himself and others. That’s what he was
about when he caught sight of yon creature wandering loose, saddle and bridle
and all, and never a rider to be seen, and he tried to catch him, but the beast
would have none of it. Time after time he tried, and began to put out feed for
him, and the creature was wise enough to come for his dinner, but too clever to
be caught. He’d mired himself to the shoulder, and somewhere he tore loose the
most of his bridle, and had the saddle ripped round half under his belly before
ever we got near him. In the end I had my mare fit, and we staked her out there
and she fetched him. Quiet enough, once we had him, and glad to shed what was
left of his harness, and feel a currier on his sides again. But we’d no notion
whose he was. I sent word to my lord at Wem, and here we keep him till we know
what’s right.”
    There
was no need to doubt a word, it was all above board here. And this was but a
mile or two out of the way to Whitchurch, and the same distance from the town.
    “You’ve
kept the harness? Such as he still had?”
    “In
the stable, to hand when you will.”
    “But
no man. Did you look for a man afterwards?” The mosses were no place for a
stranger to go by night, and none too safe for a rash traveller even by day.
The peat-pools, far down, held bones enough.
    “We
did, my lord. There are fellows hereabouts who know every dyke and every path
and every island that can be trodden. We reckoned he’d been thrown, or
foundered with his beast, and only the beast won free. It has been known. But
never a trace. And that creature there, though soiled as he was, I doubt if
he’d been in above the hocks, and if he’d gone that deep, with a man in the
saddle, it would have been the man who had the better chance.”
    “You
think,” said Hugh, eyeing him shrewdly, “he came into the mosses riderless?”
    “I
do think so. A few miles south there’s woodland. If there were footpads there,
and got hold of the man, they’d have trouble keeping their hold of this one. I
reckon he made his own way here.”
    “You’ll
show my sergeant the way to your man on the mosses? He’ll be able to tell us
more, and show the places where the horse was straying. There’s a clerk of the
bishop of Winchester’s household lost,” said Hugh, electing to trust a plainly
honest man, “and maybe dead. This was his mount. If you learn of anything more
send to me, Hugh Beringar, at Shrewsbury castle, and you shan’t be the loser.”
    “Then
you’ll be taking him away. God knows what his name was, I called him Russet.”
The free lord of this poor manor leaned over his wattle fence and snapped his
fingers, and the bay came to him confidently and sank his muzzle into the
extended palm. “I’ll miss him. His coat has not its proper gloss yet, but it
will come. At least we got the burrs and the rubble of heather out of it.”
    “We’ll
pay you his price,” said Hugh warmly. “It’s well earned. And now I’d best look
at what’s left of his accoutrements, but I doubt they’ll tell us anything
more.”
    It
was pure chance that the novices were passing across the great court to the
cloister for the afternoon’s instruction when Hugh Beringar rode in at the
gatehouse of the abbey, leading the horse, called for convenience Russet, to
the stable-yard for safe-keeping. Better here than at the castle, since the
horse was the property of the bishop of Winchester, and at some future time had
better be delivered to him.
    Cadfael
was just emerging from the cloister on his way to the herb garden, and was thus
brought face to face with the novices entering. Late in the line came Brother
Meriet, in good time to see the lofty young bay that trotted into the courtyard
on a leading-rein, and arched his

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