down on all fours, and bucked. Then, before the horrified gaze of a gathering crowd, it lay down and deliberately rolled upon its rider.
Giles screamed and screamed again. There was a sickening sound of snapping bones and still he screamed. Joscelin flung aside the remnants of the stool and ran to lay hold of the stallion’s bridle. Others hurried forward to help restrain the horse and prevent it from rolling again while the coper and another merchant dragged Giles clear. Someone else brought a rope to bind the destrier.
Leaving the horse to others, Joscelin turned and dropped to his knees beside Giles. The latter was still alive but for how long was a moot point. Blood bubbled out of his mouth with each released breath, a sign that one or more of his broken ribs had punctured a lung.
‘Let me pass!’ cried a woman’s voice, imperative with fear. ‘In God’s name, let me pass. I am his wife!’
Linnet de Montsorrel fought her way through the crowd, many of whom had diverted from the fairground to view this far more interesting spectacle. Reaching her husband, she knelt at his side. ‘Giles . . .’ She touched his hair with her fingertips, a look of disbelief on her face. Then she raised her eyes to Joscelin.
He shook his head. ‘His ribs have broken inward. Someone has gone for a priest. I am sorry, my lady.’
She shuddered. ‘I saw you arguing.’
‘I had to strike the horse. He was going to ride Martin and me down.’ He looked rapidly around the crowd and breathed a sigh of relief when he saw Martin standing with Ironheart. The child was pale, more eyes than face, and his tunic was stained and torn but he looked otherwise unscathed.
‘I wished myself free of him yesterday,’ Linnet whispered. ‘But not now, not like this.’
Joscelin turned back to her. The expression on her face filled him with an uncomfortable mixture of pity and guilt. His father had warned him about Giles de Montsorrel’s jealousy and he had chosen not to heed. ‘It is not your fault, my lady,’ he said, laying his hand over hers.
She shook her head and removed her self from his touch. ‘But it is,’ she replied. ‘You do not understand.’
The crowd was being encouraged to disperse by the justiciar’s serjeants and a moment later Richard de Luci himself stooped over Giles. He grimaced at the signs of internal damage. ‘I saw that horse earlier and thought he was a rogue,’ he said. He gave Joscelin a brief piercing look but said nothing aloud about the human conflict that had played its part in the tragedy.
De Luci stood aside to permit a priest to take his place. ‘My personal chaplain,’ he identified, as he assisted Linnet to her feet. ‘My lady, I will ensure your husband has the comfort of God in his extremity and that you are seen safely to your lodgings.’
‘Thank you, my lord, I am grateful,’ Linnet’s response was flat with shock. Two dusty brown patches smeared her gown where she had been kneeling.
De Luci patted her hand and began making arrangements to bear Giles home delegating Joscelin to provide escort.
‘My lord?’ Joscelin looked at de Luci askance and touched the angry weal traversing the left side of his face. The chaplain was shriving Giles lest he should die on the way home. Linnet de Montsorrel had taken her son from her maid and, ashen-faced, was hugging him tightly in her arms. ‘Are you sure you want me for this duty?’
Again de Luci gave him that piercing look. ‘You’re the best man I have. I could send FitzRenard but I really need him elsewhere.’ He gnawed on his thumb knuckle, briefly pondering. ‘I’ll send someone over to relieve you before vespers. With Montsorrel stricken like this, it will be prudent, I think, to have royal troops keep a friendly eye on his household.’
7
In the bedchamber above the hall, Linnet listened to her husband’s breathing. The sound was akin to a dull-bladed saw dragging through wood. Mad, she thought, I will go mad, and turned
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