As an apprentice, Brenna had gathered and preserved herbs while applying herself to the religious and academic studies fit for the late Queen Joanna of Gowrys’ daughter. When Brenna had reached the age of sixteen, Ealga brought her back to the Gododdin hills so that Joanna’s prophecy for peace might be fulfilled before the Gowrys and O’Byrnes killed each other off. Although by what means Brenna was to bring down the house of the O’Byrnes, her guardian had not explained—if she even knew. God knew, Ealga assured her. He would not have given Joanna such a vision if He had no plan.
Surely being hunted like an animal by one clan and considered a messiah-like herald to war by the other wasn’t part of the Creator’s—
A flash of white amidst the trees below drew Brenna’s attention from the stranger with a start. Faol! The silver-white wolf had circled and was stalking the man again. She bit her lip, subduing the urge to whistle for the animal to come to her. That would certainly draw the stranger’s attention.
Though his horse nervously pranced along the bank, the man thankfully appeared oblivious to her pet’s proximity. Aye, the animal would know what the man would not. Thanks be to God, the horse could not speak. The increasing wind wrapped the man’s cloak about an able and muscular build, piquing her curiosity all the more. Had he a face as fine?
Not that she’d ever know. Brenna shook the morose reminder aside. Spawned by the loss of her one human companion, such notions smote her at the least expected times, always at war with her faith that God’s grace was sufficient, even in loneliness.
The sudden hiss and thud of a flying arrow finding its mark cut short her unbidden longing. The stranger stiffened, arching backward. The sword fell from his hand. Impaired by his wind-tossed cloak, he grabbed in futility at the missile lodged in his back with the other.
Brenna’s sharp gaze fixed on the bright red and green fletching of the arrow. God’s mercy, he’s been ambushed!
A figure, garbed in the brown and gray of his surroundings, emerged from the thick forest at the edge of the bog. No clan colors did he boast. Yet the Gowrys’ red and green fletching was on the arrows.
As she puzzled, the assailant drew back another deadly shaft and, with a banshee-like howl that caused his prey to turn toward him, let it fly at the staggered stranger. This time, the impact drove the victim backward, sending him off the horse’s flank. The stranger struck the ground, breaking off the arrow in his back as he rolled over and to his feet with his sword in his good hand.
The assailant dashed back into the cover of the wood and after what seemed but a breath later emerged mounted on a brown horse, unremarkable compared to the fine dappled one that trotted off in the distance. With another bone-scraping howl, he charged the wounded man. The stranger, no novice to be sure, stood his ground before the pounding hooves of the oncoming steed, sword raised.
The ring of metal striking metal cracked sharp as thunder in a summer sky. The momentum carried the deadly predator past his target. He turned his horse, its nostrils blowing clouds in the cold air. His weakened prey staggered in a turn for the next onslaught, making no effort to run from the villain who charged at him again.
She had to do something. Brenna unslung her bow, but the distance was too great to ensure a hit. If she missed, she’d expose herself to the same danger. Caution and the urge to help the helpless warred within. She was a healer, not a slayer.
Beyond, the murderous intruder rode straight at the stranger. Even if he chose, the stranger could not reach the protection of the trees in time to escape the hooves of the snorting horse. Despite his effort to sidestep, the charging animal struck him a mighty blow, hurling him toward some ice-encrusted brush near the woods’ edge.
The stranger dragged himself into the thin cover and reached for a stalwart sapling to pull himself to his feet. Below Brenna’s perch on the rocky crag, the horseman brought his mount to an abrupt, rearing halt and dismounted. Drawing a short sword from his hip, he advanced for the kill.
Brenna leapt to her feet, throwing caution to the wind. But the shout on the tip of her tongue stalled as yet another banshee wail filled the winter hush of the landlocked basin—animal, not human.
From out of nowhere, a bolt of snarling, silver-white fur slammed into the assailant, knocking him over like a chess piece. The weapon in his hand flew, harmless, toward the now still man in the brush.
“Faol!” Surprise robbed Brenna’s voice of its strength.
Faol took a stand over the blade, wedging himself between its owner and the fallen stranger. Teeth bared, his warning growl drifted to where Brenna watched in open-mouthed wonder. Faol had chosen to even the fight. Never had she known such pride and fear at the same time. The wolf was fiercely protective of Brenna, but of no other living soul—until now.
Would Faol let the burly assailant retreat? If the wolf did and the man fetched the bow Brenna could clearly see slung on the horse, would her wolf have sense enough to run? She searched the landscape beyond the standoff of man and beast. Where were the stranger’s companions? How could this be happening?
Exactly as she anticipated, the intruder backed toward his steed for the weapon slung there. Her limbs thawed, clearing her mind for the action. She had no choice. Brenna drew an arrow from the quiver strapped across her back.
Nocking the arrow, she raised the weapon and pulled back the string. Second thought reared its head. She’d never shot a human.
But then, like as not, she’d not hit the man.
Below, the would-be murderer continued to curse the snarling wolf standing between him and his victim’s body. Ever so surely, he reached for his quiver of arrows.
Brenna hesitated no more. Father, send it straight and true, according to Thy will.
She let the missile fly along with her breath. It shot up in a graceful arch and, much to her astonishment, ran through the leather protection of the assailant’s hand, pinning it and the glove to the saddle. Given the distance, she’d aimed at his body, but this sufficed.
Startled, the man broke off the arrow to free his hand, all the while looking about in wild disbelief. Brenna ducked deep into the crevice. She’d done what she had to do, but a rise of queasiness now battled her alarm. Faith, would she have to tend the very wound she’d inflicted, or would he find and kill her first?
After an unendurable wait she peered out of her hiding place once more to find her answer.
Neither. For once, the superstition surrounding her and the ruins worked to her favor. Abandoning his victim and precious sword to the growling wolf, her target wrestled to mount his steed. The startled horse danced away, dragging him with one foot hung in the stirrup while he desperately grasped the saddle with his uninjured hand. His head swiveling to keep an eye on the growling wolf and seek the source of his attack, the would-be assassin hopped in three full circles, one of them through the shallows of the lake, before he managed to gain his seat.
There his courage caught up long enough for him to pause and snatch up the reins of the dapple gray, which had wandered a short distance down the shoreline. Disgust thinned Brenna’s lips. The churl was not only a cowardly murderer, but a horse thief as well.
He could not be one of her clan, she hoped as much as prayed. Scratching a livelihood from the hills to which they’d been exiled had left the Gowrys so poor that the days of pageantry and marking their arrows with their colors were part of the past. Was it possible another enemy of the Glenarden used the same fletching?
Much as she was tempted to scurry down the rocky incline straight to the wounded man’s aid, the years of caution instilled by Ealga prevailed. Running both horses as though every Gowrys’ ghost were on his heels, the assailant grew smaller and smaller until he disappeared in the pass. Of course, he might return once he came to his senses. Worse yet, what if his victim’s companions returned and found her in the open with no place to run?
But the stranger was clearly hurt, or perhaps, still as he lay, already dead. And Faol, which should mean fool rather than wol
f … well, Brenna wasn’t certain what the wolf was up to. She’d never seen him behave in such a peculiar manner.
Am I healer or fugitive? Brenna listened intently to the hush of the surrounding hills, broken only by the occasional bluster of the wind. The weather was worsening. A fit man, or woman for that matter, wouldn’t last long in this, much less one wounded and undoubtedly bleeding.
Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these … ye have done it unto Me. The sisters who taught her God’s Word turned away no one in need. And neither would she—despite the poor company he kept.
The snow fell upon her descent as though hurled from Ben Ledi. Rare as they came, such snow-fat storms from the Mountain of Light that guarded the entrance to the Highlands made the steep slope all the more treacherous and closed off the passes, sometimes for weeks. Keen as she was to the signs of weather, Brenna hadn’t expected this. But then nature did not always reveal its secrets.
Scree near the bottom of the slope sent Brenna sliding with the loose, ice-glazed stones into a dense thicket of scrub conifer and juniper. As she struggled to her feet, all speculation about nature’s whimsy was banished by a rumbling in her ear. The howling wind had either picked up, or an accompanying drum of horses approached.
Pulling back into the cover of the wild brush, Brenna crouched in the narrow of a deer path, waiting until the horses and riders materialized. O’Byrnes! But would they see their fallen colleague? And—a terrible thought—would they see Faol?
Her heart beating twice its normal rate, Brenna eased a frozen branch of evergreen aside to look for her pet. Instead of shrinking deeper into the forest cover, Faol lay stretched out next to the man, his thick white coat blending with the snow-blanketed landscape.
Now ’twas certain the wolf was mad—his skin alone was worth a goodly sum. What was so exceedingly special about this man?
There were six riders at first. A fair-haired one sported the red, silver, and black colors of the O’Byrnes on the brat. Instead of riding around to where the stranger had fallen, they waited, fully mounted, and laughed amongst one another in a camaraderie Brenna might have envied under other circumstances. Faith, but she missed someone to speak to. Aside from a wolf and the too few visits from the hermit priest in the glen, there was no one.
Many were the nights Ealga had heralded her with tales of how her mother and father had met. How Llas of Gowrys and Tarlach of Glenarden had been best of comrades then. Until Llas met Brenna’s mother, Joanna, who was since childhood betrothed by the church to Tarlach.
“To preserve the Grail lines, child,” Ealga explained when Brenna wrestled with the unfairness of her mother being promised to someone she’d never met. “The O’Byrnes carry the Davidic blood passed on in Erin after the fall of the Holy City. And your dear mother, Joanna, carried the Briton royal and the apostolic blood of St. Joseph, come to these shores after the resurrection of our Lord.”
“But Father wasn’t royal or priestly?”
Brenna could still see Ealga’s ever-patient, ever-loving smile. “His lineage was just as precious, but he wasn’t among the chosen.”
The chosen. Those gifted few who excelled in war and in their studies in universities like Glaston or Llanwit. Once versed in the arts and sciences of the ancients and the Word of God, these students were then groomed, according to his or her gifts, for the mission of the church.
“Tarlach was trained as a scholar, warrior, and king,” Eagla told Brenna. “His quest? To keep the kingdom of Glenarden a Christian one. He was to wed Joanna, a Grail priestess of the most devout and scholarly of Briton and apostolic lineages.”
Missionaries in their own way, Ealga had explained, these women sometimes married into a pagan court to seal an alliance and produce a Christian heir.
“What the swords of the Christian kings could not conquer, love did.”
Brenna loved that part of her nurse’s tales.
“But the sacred bloodlines have always been fostered and protected on all our isles by the church fathers. Arthur’s is such a marriage. His mother, Ygraine’s, and Aedan’s. His aunt Morganna and Orkney’s Cennalath as well.”
But of most import to Brenna was that Joanna had renounced her honored calling to marry for love … and paid a horrible price.
A boisterous “Ho!” from the far side of the abandoned lake rath pulled Brenna from past to present. More hunters approached … including a dog handler and two great wolfhounds.
Brenna blanched. Dare she hope the blizzard would mask Faol’s scent? If not—
The handler released the hounds, but instead of heading in Faol’s direction, the dogs began to run in circles among the riders, barking wildly. The chaos caused the horses to rear and bolt so that the crazed canines were soon leashed again and led away toward the pass.
Brenna clasped her hands to her chest. Father God be thanked!
Meanwhile, the men below gestured and looked about, uncertain as to what to do about their missing comrade. With the tracks of the earlier conflict blotted out by the sudden increase of ground cover, there was little to make them look closely at the forest’s edge, where Faol and the injured man lay still as death. Brenna could see them only because she knew where to look. She hoped, at least for Faol’s sake, the wolf and man would not be seen. But for the man to survive …
’Twas God’s decision to make. Even as Brenna accepted the truth, her heart lacked the conviction that she knew she should feel. Since the day Brenna had found Faol, abandoned and half-starved, she was the only mother the orphaned wolf pup had known, just as Ealga had been hers. To lose her constant companion to the hunters …
The men divided and circled the shore of the lake. Twice they rode past the spot where Faol and the still man lay in the cover of wild brush and snow, and twice the searchers missed seeing them. At long last they regrouped and left, led by the fair-haired man through the pass leading down to the lowland from the basin. Ealga had branded her parents’ murderer as a golden-haired monster, so this strapping fellow was surely his son.
And there Faol lay next to his charge like a self-appointed guardian angel, escaped by a thousand heartbeats from her worst nightmare. Father God be thanked.
Brenna’s knees ached as she straightened from her crouched position. Wriggling her toes in her deerskin boots, she warily studied the pass where the O’Byrnes had retreated. Even if they went straightaway to their fine keep, ’twould take the balance of the night by a leaping fire and considerable drink to thaw from this blizzard.
A howl sharper than the wind broke the hush surrounding her. Faol. Standing a few feet away from the fallen man, the wolf looked in her direction as if to say it was safe to come out and see what he’d done. The proud wag of his tail slung snow in all directions. Mother of mercy, he’d brought home prizes from his hunts before and left them at the entrance of the cave, but this surpassed them all.
Chapter Three
Despite the icy weather pelting the mountainside, Brenna was sweat soaked by the time she and Faol dragged the unconscious man into the shelter of her home—a cave, but no ordinary one.
A crook in the entrance chamber, combined with the hide hung over the opening that separated the inner cave from the outer, cut the icy fingers of the wind off at the knuckle. The hot spring in the bowel of the mountain, a natural heat that drove them to the outer cave in summer, warmed the inner chamber.
“Thank you, Father God,” she said, grateful that the stranger still breathed after being dragged on his cloak up a rocky mountainside. The glorious warmth embraced them, even though she’d banked the fire early that morning.
After covering the stranger with such blankets and skins as she had and propping his fine sword against the wall, Brenna stirred the coals on the hearth and added wood. Soon the fire’s shadows danced on the walls and ceiling of the stone enclosure. As her aching fingers began to thaw, she watched the smoke swirl upward through a blackened fissure in the ceiling. Brenna could only guess where it exited.
/> Her stomach growled, reminding her that she’d not eaten since that morning. Tempting as it was to stuff down one of the cold bannocks she’d baked on the hearth the night before, Brenna turned her attentions to her patient. The oat flatbread would have to wait. A long night awaited her, but undoubtedly it would be even longer for him.
If he’d not bled too much already.
The frontal shaft, fired dead on at close range, had gone clean through his shoulder. But the one fired deceitfully at his back had broken off. Upon cutting away his velvet tunic and the embroidered linen shirt beneath, both as princely as the gold ring on his right hand, Brenna removed the absorbent fungus she’d stripped from a nearby ash and applied to the wounds before she had moved him. Now his muscled flesh, mottled with dried, blackened blood, began to ooze fresh blood. The cold must have slowed the bleed, for the bruising appeared little worse than when she’d covered the wounds at the beginning of their journey.
But now she knew the wounds needed to bleed freely to rid the body of contamination. And the broken shaft and arrowhead had to be removed, by whatever means necessary.
She began to assemble what she’d need for the surgery. Ealga’s tools, now Brenna’s own. Hot, healing water from the spring. Poultices of wood sorrel and bugle. Strips of cloth rent from her late nurse’s clothing.
What if he’s an O’Byrne?
The thought stopped Brenna in her tracks.
Fine time to be thinking such a thing. Not that she had a choice. Enemy or nay, she couldn’t let him freeze to death, now, could she? She was a healer. He didn’t wear the O’Byrne colors. And he was God’s child as much as she.
Father, he and I are in Your capable hands. If he is my enemy, let me conquer him with Your love.
Only in faith could Brenna bat down the doubts that curled like serpents about her resolve as she returned to her patient’s side, ready to work. Fear was a lack of faith, Ealga said. And Brenna had faith. She was weaned on it by her nurse and Brother Martin, the hermit priest in the glen. Never mind that she’d led the life of a fugitive. Never mind that this man might be sworn to take her life. This was her duty. God would protect her for serving Him so. He would not fail her.
Healer Page 4