Munio stared at the two locals, who were of a mind to ignore him and remain, but then Munio jerked his chin at the landlord, and suddenly the table was entirely empty but for the Prioress and her friend; the traders were whisked away like dirty platters, and the two Bavarians took one look at the way they had been ejected, and decided not to argue. It was always the way for a sensible traveller: while in a foreign land, it was better to avoid disputes.
‘So, lady,’ Munio said, when they were sitting, ‘we wanted to talk with you a little about the murder of your maid. Our apologies for this. It must be hard for you, having lost your sole companion.’
Simon was sitting next to Munio, and he saw the woman shoot the
‘It is hard. I have lost much since I arrived here,’ she said in a broken voice. ‘At least some have made me welcome and have been keen to comfort me in my sadness.’
Looking at him, she thought Munio appeared less than sympathetic to her. He was a typical, hard-faced man like so many of these tough Galicians. No sense and less feeling. He had no idea how much it meant to her, losing her maid. Of course he couldn’t understand how much she had then lost last night. No one could. That relic was all that kept the convent going.
My God! she prayed. Saint Peter, please don’t let us lose it for ever! Make that devil Domingo bring it back to me. How can we survive without that relic? Without it, our whole priory must fail!
He had spoken again, but as her gaze moved to him and she tried to concentrate, she saw that Simon had caught the innkeeper’s attention and was demanding drink. He seemed a little slow already, she thought, and shifted in her seat, squirming away from him.
‘What?’ she asked.
‘Are you aware of any distinguishing marks upon your maid’s body?’ Munio repeated steadily in English.
‘I don’t know … What an extraordinary question!’
‘Not so strange as that,’ Simon said, a little thickly. There was no air in the square, no breeze to cool the forehead, and he really did feel quite odd, as though the room would start spinning any moment. Except he wasn’t in a room.
To ease his strangely whirling mind, he concentrated hard on the conversation. Munio was taking too long. Why didn’t the man get to the point? ‘Look, your maid, she was so badly beaten … why would someone do that to her? There must have been a reason! Did she have any enemies?’
‘No, but I told you that she was delivering money for me. Surely she was found on the way with my purse, and that was why she was taken. Perhaps someone saw her and took an interest in a pretty young woman like her. Oh, how should I know? And what does it matter? The fact is, she’s dead, and that’s all there is to it.’
Baldwin glanced at Simon. He had seen the look on his old friend’s face, and he wondered: was Simon quite well?
Dona Stefania could see that her answer had nonplussed them. At her side, she could sense that Parceval was impressed too.
It was Simon, though, who blurted out, ‘Go on, ask her about Ramon!’
‘What did he say?’ She understood English perfectly well, but Dona Stefania cast Simon a look that would have suited a small toad, convinced that he was drunk. Just like her husband. She could never have respect for a man who was inebriated. He might rape her, just as her husband had that time.
‘Dona Stefania,’ Baldwin said, ‘I am sorry that we must ask these questions, but we have to try to learn what happened to Joana — and ensure that the dead woman was indeed Joana. Ramon has apparently left the city, so we wanted to ask: could you have been mistaken about her identity?’
‘I don’t know what you could mean,’ she began, and then she saw his expression. ‘You mean Frey Ramon …? So at last you understand my fears?’
‘What fears?’ Baldwin asked.
‘As I said before, he could have persuaded poor Joana to pretend that Don Ruy had spoken to her and demanded money. When Ramon got the money, he killed her and fled.’
‘That is one possibility. Another is that both fled together, with your money,’ Baldwin said.
‘You really think she
‘The poor girl was so viciously beaten; no woman deserved such a fate,’ Parceval said, resting a hand on hers. ‘I think I can throw some light on the matter.’
‘Please speak,’ Munio said.