Hermit of Eyton Forest

Read Hermit of Eyton Forest for Free Online Page A

Book: Read Hermit of Eyton Forest for Free Online
Authors: Ellis Peters
Tags: Fiction, General, Historical, Mystery & Detective, Political
Eaton,
and the one criticism that ever came to Cadfael’s ears concerning Cuthred was
that he was too modest, and at first deprecated, and later forbade, the too
lavish sounding of his praises abroad. No matter what minor prodigy he brought
about, averting by his prayers a threatened cattle murrain, after one of
Dionisia’s herd sickened, sending out his boy to give warning of a coming
storm, which by favour of his intercessions passed off without damage, whatever
the act of grace, he would not allow any of the merit for it to be ascribed to
him, and grew stern and awesomely angry if the attempt was made, threatening
the wrath of God on any who disobeyed his ban. Within a month of his coming his
discipline counted for more in the manor of Eaton than did either Dionisia’s or
Father Andrew’s, and his fame, banned from being spread openly, went about by
neighbourly whispers, like a prized secret to be exulted in privately but
hidden from the world.

 
     
     
    Chapter Three
     
    EILMUND,
THE FORESTER OF EYTON, came now and then to chapter at the abbey to report on
work done, or on any difficulties he might have encountered, and extra help he
might need. It was not often he had anything but placid progress to report, but
in the second week of November he came one morning with a puzzled frown fixed
on his brow, and a glum face. It seemed that a curious blight of misfortune had
settled upon his woodland.
    Eilmund
was a thickset, dark, shaggy man past forty, very powerful of body, and sharp
enough of mind. He stood squarely in the midst at chapter, solidly braced on
his sturdy legs like a wrestler confronting his opponent, and made few words of
what he had to tell.
    “My
lord abbot, there are things happening in my charge that I cannot fathom. A
week ago, in that great rainstorm we had, the brook that runs between our
coppice and the open forest washed down some loose bushes, and built up such a
dam that it overflowed and changed its course, and flooded my newest planting.
And no sooner had I cleared the block than I found the flood-water had undercut
part of the bank of my ditch, a small way upstream, and the fall of soil had
bridged the ditch. By the time I found it the deer had got into the coppice.
They’ve eaten off all the young growth from the plot we cropped two years ago.
I doubt some of the trees may die, and all will be held back a couple more
years at least before they get their growth. It spoils my planning,” complained
Eilmund, outraged for the ruin of his cycle of culling, “besides the present
loss.”
    Cadfael
knew the place, Eilmund’s pride, the farmed part of Eyton forest, as neat and
well-ditched a coppice as any in the shire, where the regular cutting of six-
or seven-year-old wood let in the light at every cropping, so that the wealth
of ground cover and wild flowers was always rich and varied. Some trees, like
ash, spring anew from the stool of the original trunk, just below the cut.
Some, like elm or aspen, from below the ground all round the stump. Some of the
stools in Eilmund’s care, several times cropped afresh, had grown into groves
of their own, their open centres two good paces across. No grave natural
disaster had ever before upset his pride in his skills. No wonder he was so
deeply aggrieved. And the loss to the abbey was itself serious, for coppice
wood for fuel, charcoal, hafts of tools, carpentry and all manner of uses
brought in good income.
    “Nor
is that the end of it,” went on Eilmund grimly, “for yesterday when I made my
rounds on the other side of the copse, where the ditch is dry but deep enough
and the bank steep, what should have happened but the sheep from Eaton had
broke out of their field by a loose pale, just where Eaton ground touches ours,
and sheep, as you know, my lord, make nothing of a bank that will keep out
deer, and there’s nothing they like better for grazing than the first tender
seedlings of ash.

Similar Books

The Survival Kit

Donna Freitas

LOWCOUNTRY BOOK CLUB

Susan M. Boyer

Love Me Tender

Susan Fox

Watcher's Web

Patty Jansen

The Other Anzacs

Peter Rees

Borrowed Wife

Patrícia Wilson

Shadow Puppets

Orson Scott Card

All That Was Happy

M.M. Wilshire