Raedan gave Selwyn's shoulders a squeeze. "You're just what this old village needs," he said wholeheartedly. "Terrible things have happened."
"Oh?" Selwyn said. "Anything that I should know about?"
Raedan hesitated.
"Even if it's bad news" - Selwyn was aware that his voice was going up, down, and around, and he wished he'd practiced talking as well as walking - "even if it's bad news, somebody has to tell me eventually."
Raedan took a deep breath. "It is bad news," he said, "though nothing touching your family directly. It's Farold, the miller's nephew ... He's dead."
Selwyn was peeved that Raedan mentioned Farold first. Still, it was a logical place to start, rather than with the condemned murderer. "The poor dear," he said. "A drinking accident?"
"No accident at all. He was murdered."
"Really?" Selwyn tried to sound shocked. "Who would do such a thing? Was it Linton?"
Farold gave a very unfinchlike snort.
"No," Raedan said slowly. "Why would you ask that?"
"It just seemed to stand to reason. Who was accused?"
"Selwyn," Raedan answered. "Selwyn Roweson."
"No," Selwyn said. "Not that nice boy."
"Mind, I'm not saying he did it." Luckily, Raedan was watching Selwyn and didn't see Farold, behind him in the cart, making frantic hushing motions at Selwyn. How did Farold ever expect him to get information about the murder without talking about it? Selwyn returned his attention to Raedan, who was saying, "But, unfortunately, all the circumstances seemed to point to him."
"What..." - Selwyn remembered his voice and started again more quietly - "what circumstances?"
"Well, for one thing, there was long-standing rivalry between the two of them over Bowden's daughter, Anora, which ended with Anora agreeing to marry Farold."
Selwyn made a dismissive sound. "A bad choice, there. But, anyway, that's nothing definite. Most likely she would have come to her senses eventually and changed her mind."
Farold spit on the bottom of the cage.
"Possibly," Raedan admitted. "But it was Selwyn's knife that killed Farold."
"Anyone," Selwyn said darkly, "can find someone's knife and use it."
"Again, possibly," Raedan said so smoothly Selwyn couldn't tell whether he knew about his brother's having found the knife or not "But first Selwyn swore he had never been in the village that night, and then - when he found out there was a witness - he admitted he had. It's hard to believe someone whose story keeps changing."
Fool, fool, and fool! Selwyn chided himself for that useless and damning lie. "Maybe he was afraid," he said.
"Who wouldn't be?" Raedan agreed sympathetically.
"Who was the witness?" Selwyn asked.
"Your mother."
It took him a moment to realize that Raedan meant Kendra's mother, Wilona, and not his own. He couldn't, in any case, start poking at her credibility.
"I didn't think he did it," Raedan said. "It's not like him."
"No," Selwyn agreed breathlessly.
"But he was executed for it."
Selwyn couldn't bring himself to ask how, though surely Kendra would have wondered. Raedan had spoken as though it was past; and Selwyn realized with a sick feeling that there was no reason anyone would believe he could have survived in the burial cave this long. Without Elswyth's intervention, he would have been dead by now. In another day or two, once everyone was convinced Selwyn must be dead, they would be releasing his father. And then what? he thought.
By that time they were almost into Penryth, and one voice then another called, "Ho, Kendra!" People came running out to greet him. He had to force himself to be jovial, for Kendra had no special reason to grieve for Selwyn Roweson, no matter how grim his fate.
Girls hugged him and kissed him on the cheek, which was a delicious - though frustrating - sensation. He did his best to avoid the men who would do the same. Several times he was pinched or patted on the bottom. It was not that Selwyn had forgotten how well liked Kendra was, it was just that he had not realized how much enthusiasm people would show.
Then, finally, bringing a crowd with him, he was at the tavern. Orik and Wilona stood in the doorway, both with arms open. Selwyn chose to go to Orik first so that he would have an excuse to break away almost instantly to hug his "mother."
"Father," he murmured, giving a little cough and sniff "Mother." He gave a sniff and cough. "Please ex cuse my cold." He forced a sneeze.
Orik was beaming; Wilona was weeping with joy.
"Come in, everyone," Orik invited. "Help us celebrate."
People cheered, apparently willing to go into the tavern - and put up with having to see Selwyn's father tied up in the corner - if free drinks were involved.
Farold squawked loudly, a reminder - in case Selwyn needed one - that he was there, and not to be left out in the street in Raedan's cart. He sounded more like a chicken than a finch; but Selwyn gave Kendra's brightest smile and brought the cage in with him.
Inside, Wilona took hold of his arm, apparently reluctant to let go, which Selwyn would have excused as motherly excitement at a daughter's return, but Wilona kept dragging on the arm, tugging him in the direction of the back of the tavern, to the family's living quarters.
Oh no! Selwyn thought. The last thing he wanted was to be alone with the mother of the woman he was disguised as.
"Orik," Wilona called over the heads of the crowd of well-wishers who were gathering in the room.
She caught her husband's eye. "One free round," Orik announced to the crowd. Then, "Linton." He held up a forefinger. "You're in charge."
This was not like him at all, to leave customers in the care of customers.
Selwyn realized he'd been wrong before: The last thing he wanted was to be with both the mother and the father of the woman he was disguised as.
The three of them made their way from the tavern into the living quarters, and Orik closed the adjoining door behind them, which only cut down a bit on the noise.
Orik leaned against the door and Wilona folded her arms across her chest and looked at Selwyn.
Selwyn gulped, knowing for sure that something was wrong.
Wilona asked, "What happened with the baby?"
In the cage, Farold made a noise that sounded very much like "Oops."
Chapter Sixteen
"Baby," Selwyn echoed, trying to sound as though he was simply repeating, not questioning - and at the same time trying desperately to think what Orik and Wilona could possibly mean, beyond, of course, the obvious: that Kendra had been sent to the convent at Saint Hilda's not solely for the purpose of education, but to hide the fact that she - an unmarried young woman - was with child.
"The baby," Wilona said, impatience tingeing her voice. "You don't need to be coy with us. We knew about your condition; we're the ones who made the arrangements with the nuns."
"Of course," Selwyn said, still stalling for time. He glanced into the birdcage he still held, on the chance that Farold might be able to give him some guidance. Farold shrugged his fat little yellow shoulders.
Selwyn saw that Wilona looked ready to shake him. He licked his lips. Hesitantly he said, "Ahm, the nuns agreed to raise it."