ring. He had neither horse nor weapon, nor any means of getting either. Domville, once apprised of his flight, had had the grey horse removed from the common stable where Simon had taken him, and locked away privately, for fear his owner should venture in during the night to get possession of him and make a bid for escape. It was only a matter of time before he was re-taken.
Simon made his way deep into the woods downstream, until he considered he must have penetrated somewhere near the place where Joscelin had come ashore. Here, well inland, the growth was thick, with plenteous underbrush, and he found two separate small streams making their way towards the river. Wet as he would already be, Joscelin could well afford to use the bed of one of these as his path, in case they brought out dogs to hunt him. Simon followed the second stream inland into deep woodland. When he halted to listen, there was no sound anywhere about him but the occasional note of a bird. He stood with pricked ears, and began to whistle a dance tune they had picked up together from Domville's chaplain, who had a gift for music, and relished secular songs as well as the liturgy.
Simon had made his way gradually a further quarter of a mile away from the river, still whistling his estampie at intervals, before he got a response. The thick bushes on his right rustled, a hand was put out to part them, and he caught the gleam of a wary eye peering out.
"Joss?" he said in a whisper. Even if the hunt had not yet come this way, an inquisitive peasant gathering wood could give the alarm and spoil all. But the woodland silence hung undisturbed.
"Simon?" He was slow to trust. "Are they making you their decoy? I never touched his damned gold."
"I never thought you did. Hush, keep in cover!" Simon drew nearer, to hear and be heard in whispers. "I'm here alone, I came to look for you. You can't lie out tonight, soaked from the river. I can't get your horse out to you yet, he's locked away. And all the roads are barred. You'll have to sit it out in hiding a day or so, until they lose interest and grow slack. He'll give over wanting your blood, once tomorrow's over."
The bushes shook with Joscelin's tremor of protest and detestation, for after tomorrow all would be lost, and all won. "God witness," he said through his teeth, "I'll not give over thirsting for his. If they do marry her, I can still widow her."
"Hush, you fool, never say such things! Supposing others heard you! You're safe enough with me, I'll help you as best I can, but ... Be still and let me think!"
"I can shift for myself," said Joscelin, rising cautiously erect in his covert, soiled and draggled, his fair hair plastered to his head still, but drying in wilful drifts of yellow at his temples. "You're a good fellow, Simon, but I advise you take no foolish risks for me."
"What do you want me to do?" Simon sounded exasperated. "Stand back and let you be taken? See here, the safest place for you now, the one place they'll never think to look, is inside the bishop's grounds. Oh, not in house or stables or court, naturally. But that's the one household and garden this hunt is going to pass by. Everyone else's barns and byres will be ransacked. There's a hut in the corner of the grounds, by the door I came out at, where they store the hay from the back field. You could lie dry enough there, and I could bring you food - and the wicket in the wall we can bar inside, no one can come through from without. Then, if I can get Briar out to you somehow ... What do you say?"
It was good sense enough, and Joscelin said yes to it with fervour and gratitude. What he did not say was that the want of a horse was nothing to him as yet, for he had no intention of going anywhere until either he had found some way of rescuing Iveta, or lost hope and heart and probably life in the attempt.
"You're a good friend, and I won't forget it. But take care for yourself, one of us in this coil is enough. Listen!" He caught