“It sounds as though the cows have not been milked,” Fallach announced, interpreting the sound as she had but before she could articulate it.
They rode into the yard and looked ’round. Sure enough, two cows were bellowing in plaintive tones in a nearby paddock. Chickens ignored them and continued pecking their haphazard way around the yard. Other animals meandered here and there: a few sheep, several goats. Apart from that the place seemed deserted.
Fidelma dismounted and stood looking around.
Fallach had also slid from his horse, and tied their horses to the rail before striding forward to the house, shouting loudly for the wife of Febrat. There was no respond.
“Shall we search inside, lady?” he asked.
Fidelma sighed deeply.
“Our first duty is to put those animals out of their misery,” indicating the two cows. “Find buckets. You take one and I will take the other.”
Fallach looked shocked.
“But lady, I am a warrior. .”
“I am sure the poor beasts will overlook that fact as they will overlook the fact that I am a dálaigh and sister to the king,” she replied with a smile of sarcasm.
He flushed and turned to search for buckets.
A while later when the lowing of the cows had ceased and the buckets were almost full, Fidelma and Fallach stood up and moved the milk into the cool of the farmhouse.
“Well, it is clear that no one is here,” Fallach announced, peering around.
“We will search. You try the outbuildings and also watch out for any sign that a raid might have taken place. I will look inside.”
Fallach frowned.
“You do not think that this time Febrat is right. .?”
“The time to think about conclusions is after we have found some facts,” she replied, and went inside.
Febrat and Cara certainly kept a tidy house. Not just tidy but Fidelma found that, surprisingly for a farmer, there were several rich artifacts adorning the place and tapestries of good quality hanging from some of the walls and on the bed. She examined them with interest.
She frowned suddenly. The tapestry on the bed covered it neatly. She swung ’round. Certainly everything in the farmhouse was neat and placed in order. Her eyes dropped to a piece of woven rug by the bedside. Again she was slightly surprised for this was a sign of wealth and quality of living. Most farm folk did not concern themselves with floor coverings, even those of better standards would simply have bare boards on the floor while the great majority made do with earthen floors, trodden hard into an almost marble-like surface by the stamp of generations of feet upon it. But Febrat and Cara obviously liked to live well or were used to living well. This thought caused something to stir in her mind, something that was not quite right. It was the fact that Febrat had been described as an itinerant laborer. The thoughts went through her mind quickly as she glanced at the bedside rug, a sheepskin.
Then her eyes narrowed. There appeared to be a discolored patch on the rug.
She stooped down and placed her hand on it. It was damp. She sniffed at her fingertips but there was no odor. It seemed that only water had been spilt on it. But water would have dried long before Febrat had completed his journey to her court that morning.
She picked up the rug and moved to the door. As she did so the sunlight shot through the clouds. It caught on the sheepskin that she was holding; on the creamy white of the wool. Something caught her eye among the patch of white woolen threads. It was a few dark spots, which had been missed by the water.
She licked her fingertip and rubbed. A tinge of red remained on her fingers. The spots had been dried blood.
She stared at her fingers for a time before returning the sheepskin, and turning to the cupboards and examining the contents. She noticed that Cara had a large wardrobe compared with the average farmer’s wife and she found a box of personal items of jewelery. Cara was obviously someone who believed in personal adornment. And the jewels were valuable.
She went outside to join Fallach.
“Did you find anything?” she asked as he came out of a barn door.
He shook his head.
“Nothing. There are no signs of violence or destruction. I am afraid that Febrat has let his imagination run wild again.”
“But what of the missing wife, Cara?” Fidelma pointed out. Fallach shrugged.
“Maybe she has gone to visit friends or relatives.”
“Again?”
Fallach looked puzzled at her inflection.
Fidelma did not answer his questioning glance but began to walk across the farmyard to the barn, when she suddenly bent down and picked up a branch.
“What tree would you say that came from?”
Fallach barely glanced at it.
“It’s an alder, of course.”
Fidelma gazed around at the trees surrounding them. Oaks and yew but there was no sign of an alder. She dropped the branch and continued to the barn. Inside was a cart, the usual type of cart found on a farm, which could be pulled by a single ass. Its large wheels were still damp with drying mud. On the cart was a large metal bladed spade, a ráma for digging earth. The blade had similar wet mud on it.
She glanced ’round the interior of the barn. There seemed nothing out of place. Certainly no sign of anything that could be interpreted as an indication of an attack or violence. Her eye caught sight of a wooden chest in a corner. Part of its exterior had drying mud clinging to it and the muddy imprint of a hand. The chest was fastened with an iron lock and there was no key in it or sight of a key. She turned to Fallach.
“Find a hammer and open that,” she instructed.
Fallach whistled in surprise.
“But, lady. .”
“I take responsibility.”
He paused only a moment more and then did as he was told.
Inside the chest was a small hand pick, and wrapped in sacking a large number of what seemed to be lumps of metal. Fallach looked puzzled and reached in to pick one up.
“Silver!” he whispered. “Great nuggets of silver.”
“And excavated recently,” said Fidelma, bending down and pointing to the bright marks on the nuggets and the marks on the hand pick.
“I know there are places to the north-east of here, mountains where those who mine lead and other metals say that veins of silver are to be seen. But these are nuggets. Rich ones.”
Fidelma rose to her feet.
“Replace them and let us continue with our task. If, as you say, Febrat’s wife was staying with friends or relatives, exactly who would she have gone to visit?”
Fallach grimaced as he replaced the lid of the box.
“You mean near here?”
“Near here will do to start with,” affirmed Fidelma patiently.
“Well, Cara’s mother, the lady Donn Dige, lives half-an-hour’s ride in that direction,” he pointed to the south.
Fidelma’s eyes widened a fraction at the name.
“Donn Dige? Isn’t she. .?”
“She was sister to a prince of the Eóghanacht Áine,” confirmed Fallach. “Her brother was killed at the battle of Cnoc Áine just two years ago.”
Fidelma sighed. So that explained the comparative wealth displayed in the farmhouse. Cara was not the average farmer’s wife but the daughter of a princely ruling house.
“Someone should have explained that to me,” she muttered almost petulantly.
“Does it matter?” inquired Fallach innocently. “It does not bear on the fact that Febrat is mad.”
“Perhaps, perhaps not,” agreed Fidelma. She glanced at the cart again. “Those wheels have been through a lot of mud. Let’s see if we can pick up the trail of its last journey.”
Fallach looked at her curiously.
“Why would you want to do that? The cart is just a normal farm cart. I have often seen Febrat driving it. It has nothing to do with any imagined Uí Fidgente raid.”
“Indulge me, Fallach,” said Fidelma, mounting her horse.
> They rode out of the farmyard, eyes on the ground seeking the tracks of the cart. To Fidelma’s surprise they found no tracks at all. Some instinct told her to circle to the north, following a stony track. They had to go some distance from the farm buildings before they found traces of the almost obscured tracks. They moved down a narrow path through fields of cereal crops and then cut across a plowed field and then over coarse uncultivated land. It began to be very stony. She suddenly paused and saw several newly cut branches of alder lying discarded on the rocky soil. She slid from her horse and examined them. Sections of the branches about ten or fifteen feet in length had been cut, spreading out their twigs and leaves like a broom. She peered around and, to Fallach’s surprise, spent some time peering at the stony ground.
“We seem some way from an alder wood,” she observed. “And these branches appear to have been dragged here.”
Fallach did not reply, as he had no idea what to answer.
“If I am not mistaken, that is Uí Fidgente territory,” Fidelma said, pointing to the north as she remounted her horse. “I presume that Faramund’s farmstead lies in that direction?”
“It does. He is a good man, even though he is one of the Uí Fidgente. Even Febrat’s wife Cara told us that he was a good neighbor. Febrat confirmed that before he became sure that Faramund was leading these imaginary raids, he and his wife often invited him over to feast with them.”
Fidelma nodded.
“You found him reasonable enough when you questioned him with Díomsach? You discovered no threat from him?”
“None.”
Fidelma halted and looked back toward the southern hills.
“I have changed my mind,” she said. “Let us go and see if Cara is at the home of her mother.”
“The homestead of the lady Donn Dige?” Fallach was surprised but he shrugged and turned his horse in that direction.
The house of Donn Dige was a small fortified building, which spoke of the wealth that the sister of a petty-king would have. There were a few men working in neighboring fields. It was a far richer farmstead than the house of Febrat and his wife.
A short, almost muscular woman awaited them at the entrance. She had graying hair and coarse features and watched them suspiciously.
“Good day, Doireann,” called Fallach as they approached. “Is the lady Donn Dige at home?”
The woman’s narrowed eyes continued to rest on Sister Fidelma.
“Who wants to know?” she said ungraciously.
Fallach glanced in embarrassment at his companion and was about to open his mouth when Fidelma intervened.
“Tell her that it is Fidelma of Cashel who wants to know,” she snapped. “And if she hesitates to welcome the sister of the King of Muman, tell her, it is a dálaigh of the courts that seeks her out, and be quick, woman.”
The woman called Doireann blinked for a moment and then, with deliberate slowness, she turned and made her way into the house while Fallach and Fidelma dismounted in the courtyard and hitched their horses to a rail erected for that purpose. By the time they had done this, the woman had reappeared and waved them forward into the building.
Donn Dige received them. She was a dignified and elderly woman, whose rank showed in her stature and clothing. Had she stood, she would have been tall. Fidelma noticed the crutch at her side. The elderly woman saw the glance and smiled ruefully.
“A riding accident, so you will forgive my inability to rise to greet you. Alas, it also confines me to the house.”
The greetings were pleasant and in contrast with the curtness of her servant, Doireann. Refreshments were offered and accepted.
“What can I do for you, Fidelma of Cashel?” Donn Dige said, after the rituals had been observed.
“Let me begin by asking whether your daughter, Cara, is staying with you?”
The elderly woman’s eyes narrowed suspiciously.
“I have not seen my daughter this last month. Why do you ask?”
Fidelma hid her surprise.
“Not for a month?”
“Why do you ask?”
“Her husband has reported her missing and claims his farm was raided by the Uí Fidgente.”
Donn Dige compressed her mouth for a moment.
“Again? Is this the same claim that he made last week?”
“It is a claim he made this morning,” intervened Fallach.
“If you have not seen your daughter, Cara, for a month how do you know about the previous claims?” pressed Fidelma.
“Simple enough. Doireann is my messenger and news-bringer.”
“Though it is surely a short ride from Febrat’s farmstead to here,” Fidelma reflected, “which makes me wonder why your daughter has not visited you this last month.”
Donne Dige smiled, perhaps a little sadly.
“My daughter has her own worries and she will come in her own good time. Doireann tells me that she has been greatly worried about Febrat.”
“In what way?” demanded Fidelma.
“What way would anyone be worried when one’s partner starts to claim that events are happening when one knows that they are not?”
“You daughter believes that her husband is losing his reason?”
“Of course. What else can it be?”
“Doireann has reported to you that Cara is absolutely sure that there is no reason for Febrat to make these claims?”
“None. Have you been to the farm yet? What does Cara say about this latest claim?”
“Your daughter is not at the farm.”
Donn Dige’s eyes widened slightly.
“Is there any sign of a raid?” she asked anxiously.
“None at all,” Fallach said quickly. “The animals are there, the house is untouched by any sign of an attack. .”
“Then she has gone visiting,” smiled the elderly woman in relief. “I shall send for Doireann to. .”
She was about to reach for a bell on a side table when Fidelma stayed her.
“Let us sort out a few things first,” she insisted gently. “Are there any problems between your daughter and her husband?”
“Problems?”
“Marital problems.”
“As far as I am aware, there were none before Febrat started these hallucinations. However, if you must know, I disapproved of my daughter’s choice of husband.”
“Why?”
“He was of inferior rank. My brother was prince of a territory whose honor price was seven cumals. My daughter, by rank and learning, had an honor price of a full cumal while Febrat had the value of a colpach, no more.”
A colpach was the value of a two-year-old heifer, compared to a cumal equivalent to the value of three milch cows.
Fidelma frowned.
“Do you mean that he did not own the farmstead?”
Donn Dige sniffed in disgust.
“Of course not. Apart from some gifts from my family to Cara, they have no substance to call their own. Since my brother’s death in battle, our branch of the family has been in reduced circumstances.”
“Then the rich tapestries and objects in the farmhouse. .?”
“A few gifts and loans by my family so that Cara would have some semblance of the rank to which she had been accustomed.”
“Who owns the farm?”
“My cousin, the Lord of Orbraige. Febrat is simply his tenant at will.”
“Was the fact that Febrat was of inferior rank to your daughter, and thereby without wealth, your only objection to their marriage?”
“It was a major factor,” confirmed the elderly woman. “But, in truth, and I admit that I am prejudiced, I simply did not like him. He had the look of a hungry wolf, the bright intensity of his eyes, longing and underfed.”
“So all the wealth in the house belongs to your daughter?”
“He had nothing at all apart. .”
“Apart from what?” prompted Fidelma.
“He had a little patch of land on a hill that actually bordered between his place and t
he river of the plain. A piece of worthless stone hill that used to mark the boundary of the Uí Fidgente land. It was all he could buy with money he had saved as an itinerant laborer. A stupid waste for it is useless for grazing and useless for planting. A stony, infertile land called Cnoc Cerb.”
Beside her, Fallach let out a sharp breath.
“Isn’t cerb the ancient word for. .?”
“It’s an old name, Hill of Silver,” replied Fidelma, swiftly moving on. “But apart from your reservations, Donn Dige, I presume that there were no other objections to this marriage? Your daughter was in love with him?”
“Love!” sniffed Donn Dige, as if such a thing were not even worth discussing.
“When was the marriage?”
“Six months ago.”
“And the marriage has proved a happy one?”
“As I said, the only thing that worried my daughter, according to Doireann, was this recent business of imagining the Uí Fidgente were raiding the farmstead. I understand that it happened two times and two times it was shown to be in his imagination.”
“And at the time these raids were supposed to take place, your daughter was not at the farmstead. Was she staying with you?”
“I am not my daughter’s keeper. I have no idea where she was.”
“Tell me something about Febrat’s background.”
“There is nothing to tell. I believe that his parents died when he was a child. The mother died in childbirth and the father later on. The father was a sen-cleithe, a herdsman, and that was the occupation Febrat followed until he met my daughter. . But where is my daughter?” Donn Dige suddenly demanded.
“I intend to find out,” Fidelma said softly as she stood up.
Donn Dige suddenly looked pale and her features no longer had the haughty expression. For all her haughtiness and keeping her emotions to herself, the hurt that her daughter had not visited her shone in the pale eyes of the elderly woman.
“Has Febrat killed her and pretended that the Uí Fidgente have carried her off?”
“What makes you ask that?”
“It stands to reason. The man has become mad. . or cunning. He went to Díomsach the chief with outlandish tales of raids twice. Twice the claims were investigated. According to you he went a third time today and it is likely that he thought that Díomsach would not even bother to investigate and simply throw him out of his fortress.”
Whispers of the Dead sf-15 Page 22