no need to conceal, if that were all.â
âAnd there is no trace of violence,â said Cadfael.
âThen how did she die? Not from illness, or she would have been in the churchyard, shriven and hallowed. How else? By poison?â
âThat is possible. Or a stab wound that reached her heart may have left no trace now in her bones, for they are whole and straight, never deformed by blow or fracture.â
Radulfus replaced the linen cloth, smoothing it tidily over her. âWell, I see there is little here a man could match with a living face or a name. Yet I think even that must be tried. If she has been here, living, within the past five years, then someone has known her well, and will know when last she was seen, and have marked her absence afterwards. Come,â said the abbot, âlet us go back and consider carefully all the possibilities that come to mind.â
It was plain to Cadfael then that the first and most ominous possibility had already come to the abbotâs mind, and brought deep disquiet with it. Once they were all three back in the quiet of the parlour, and the door shut against the world, the name must be spoken.
âTwo questions wait to be answered,â said Hugh, taking the initiative. âWho is she? And if that cannot be answered with certainty, then who may she be? And the second: Has any woman vanished from these parts during these last few years, without word or trace?â
âOf one such,â said the abbot heavily, âwe certainly know. And the place itself is all too apt. Yet no one has ever questioned that she went away, and of her own choice. That was a hard case for me to accept, as the wife never accepted it. Yet Brother Ruald could no more be barred from following his soulâs bent than the sun from rising. Once I was sure of him, I had no choice. To my grief, the woman never was reconciled.â
So now the manâs name had been spoken. Perhaps no one even recalled the womanâs. Many within the walls could never have set eyes on her, or heard mention of her until her husband had his visitation and came to stand patiently at the gates and demand entry.
âI must ask your leave,â said Hugh, âto have him view this body. Even if she is indeed his wife, truly he may not be able to say so now with any certainty, yet it must be asked of him that he make the assay. The field was theirs, the croft there was her home after he left it.â He was silent for a long moment, steadily eyeing the abbotâs closed and brooding face. âAfter Ruald entered here, until the time when she is said to have gone away with another man, was he ever at any time sent back there? There were belongings he gave over to her, there could be agreements to be made, even witnessed. Is he known to have met with her, after they first parted?â
âYes,â said Radulfus at once. âTwice in the first days of his novitiate he did visit her, but in company with Brother Paul. As master of the novices Paul was anxious for the manâs peace of mind, no less than for the womanâs, and tried his best to bring her to acknowledge and bless Rualdâs vocation. Vainly! But with Paul he went, and with Paul he returned. I know of no other occasion when he could have seen or spoken with her.â
âNor ever went out to field work or any other errand close to that field?â
âIt is more than a year,â said the abbot reasonably. âEven Paul would be hard put to it to say where Ruald served in all that time. Commonly, during his novitiate he would always be in company with at least one other brother, probably more, whenever he was sent out from the enclave to work. But doubtless,â he said, returning Hughâs look no less fixedly, âyou mean to ask the man himself.â
âWith your leave, Father, yes.â
âAnd now, at once?â
âIf you permit, yes. It will not yet be common knowledge what we have