The Second Death (Sister Fidelma Mysteries)

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The Second Death (Sister Fidelma Mysteries) Page 12

by Peter Tremayne

‘Is there no one there now?’

  ‘It has remained deserted ever since.’

  ‘Does anyone ever go there at all?’

  ‘Only the wild beasts have reclaimed it. You’ll get no hospitality there – but there is still plenty of time before nightfall, so you could join the western track when you get there. It will eventually take you to woodland on the borders of this marshland. Beyond that is another farm. That one is inhabited but it is a long way from here.’

  ‘And do you farm near here?’

  The man shook his head. ‘I am a shepherd and tend my flocks on the low hills south of the great highway. My dog and I were chasing a wandering ewe but I have seen no sign of her. I fear she belongs to the mire now.’

  ‘I hope you are wrong and that she comes back safely to you,’ Eadulf said encouragingly. ‘God bless your work.’

  ‘May the road rise with you, Brother.’

  Eadulf raised his hand, half in acknowledgement and half in blessing before he turned and continued his journey along the dirt track.

  Fidelma stood before the log fire of the tavern gazing at the flickering flames which were enveloping the logs. Behind her, in a corner, Aidan and Enda were chattering and chuckling softly about something that had caught their attention. They were the only guests in the tavern. Out of the corner of her eye she noticed the tavern-keeper polishing some lestar or drinking vessels. He seemed typical of his calling, a short, rotund man with sloping shoulders, muscular arms and thinning fair hair; a fresh-complexioned fellow with inquisitive grey eyes.

  She became aware that he was examining her nervously while trying to give the appearance of polishing the drinking vessels. She realised that she must present a forbidding exterior when she was angry, and she was angry now – angry with herself more than anyone. She should not have behaved to Eadulf as she had in front of Aidan and Enda. She should not have implied criticism of Aidan. In fact, she should probably not have embarked on this journey at all without giving it more thought. True, there were strange coincidences that had to be checked out and which might lead somewhere, but nothing really fitted together. Nothing at all. She acknowledged that it was her own ego which had made her dismiss Eadulf’s more sensible suggestion to stay in town.

  She turned to the tavern-keeper who almost flinched as she took a step towards him.

  ‘Have you kept a tavern here long?’ she enquired, trying to soften her tone.

  The man put down his cloth and bobbed his head in a jerky fashion.

  ‘I took over this tavern when your cousin, Máenach mac Fíngin, was King, lady.’

  For some reason the remark increased Fidelma’s irritation. She had never liked her cousin, who had been the son of her father’s brother Fíngin. He had ruled at Cashel for twenty years after the death of her father and, if the truth were known, it was because of him and his arrogant wife that she had sought the security of the religious. Once she had qualified in law, to the level of anruth – the second highest qualification given by the secular and ecclesiastical colleges of the Five Kingdoms – she knew it was no use returning to Cashel and throwing herself on the tender mercies of Máenach, so when her distant cousin, Abbot Laisran of Darú, had suggested that the mixed house of Cill Dara needed someone well versed in law, she had joined them willingly.

  Ironically, Máenach had died two years after she had entered the abbey. He was unmourned, even by the bards, although he had been twenty years as King. Like his wife he was self-centred and more concerned about gathering tributes than ensuring the welfare of the kingdom. The choice of Cathal Cú-cen-máthair as King instead of Máenach’s son, Ailill, who had been fostered outside of the kingdom, was met with relief and celebration. Fidelma’s brother, Colgú, had then been named as tánaiste, heir-apparent. Ailill had returned to Cashel during the previous year but only to conspire and plot to overthrow Colgú, who had become King after Cathal had died of the Yellow Plague. It was Fidelma who had eventually thwarted the plot, but not before many had paid with their lives, including Ailill himself. Certainly the name of Máenach was no balm to her ears.

  ‘Is something wrong, lady?’

  ‘Wrong?’ she frowned, then realised she was being addressed. ‘Sorry – what were you saying?’

  ‘You asked me how long I had run this tavern, lady.’

  ‘Oh, yes,’ she said a trifle sheepishly. ‘You must notice all the traffic that passes up and down this highway.’

  The man answered with a shrug. ‘I cannot vouch that I know all that pass here, lady. I have to sleep sometimes.’ This was said without humour, as a matter of fact. ‘I will say that most wagons passing from Durlus will take the opportunity to pause here for refreshment or for a night’s rest before moving on to join the main road, which is not far south of here, as you know. But this is only a minor road. It runs parallel to a wider and better maintained road to the west, and that is the usual route taken by those travelling from Durlus to Cashel … that is, apart from the river.’

  ‘But people still travel this road?’ she asked. ‘There are enough passers-by to maintain the inn?’

  ‘Enough to keep my wife and children alive, lady,’ replied the man. ‘I will not grow rich but I am well content.’

  ‘It seems a somewhat lonely place,’ she commented.

  ‘When there are guests, we have our full share of news and gossip. Also, we have horses and a good cart so we can regularly visit our relatives in Durlus Éile.’

  ‘Are you of the clan Éile?’

  ‘And proud of it. Descendants of Cian, brother of Eoghan Mór.’ There was pride in his voice.

  ‘Then tell me this, my distant kinsman,’ Fidelma said, trying to adopt a more friendly tone, ‘sometime during the last few days, do you recall a foreign-looking wagon passing by here? Perhaps even stopping here? It was drawn by a team of two oxen and driven by a young boy or a girl.’

  She added the two possibilities as she was not sure at what point the girl had assumed the identity of a boy.

  The man shook his head without hesitation.

  ‘No foreign-looking wagon, certainly not a wagon driven by either a young boy or girl, sought my hospitality nor passed by here.’

  ‘Are you sure?’

  ‘On the heads of my children, lady. You have given a description that is hardly confusing. That would not be a sight seen often along this road.’

  Fidelma sighed softly. ‘Is there no other way of passing by your tavern?’

  ‘If the wagon came down this road, it would have to pass here. Perhaps it came on the parallel, broader road that I mentioned?’

  ‘There are no other direct roads across the marshlands? Any that would link up with this one and from this road onto the Slíge Dála at the southern end? That would mean it came by here or joined the road at some point from the marshes.’

  The tavern-keeper said sceptically, ‘There are a few narrow tracks across the marshes, I suppose. None that I would like to traverse with a heavy wagon.’

  ‘Most of the area around here is marshland, isn’t it?’

  ‘There are patches where sheep and cattle are grazed by some local farmers,’ admitted the man. ‘But it is mainly marshland between here and the Osraige territory to the east, and then after that is the barrier of the great river An Fheoir that runs north to south through Osraige.’

  ‘There are no other hard-surfaced roads across the area?’

  ‘Not unless you come through the territory of the Loígis and cross into Osraige. I have heard that the Abbot of Liath Mór had a new road built crossing Osraige, all the way into the Kingdom of Laigin.’

  Fidelma could not help but smile grimly for she knew well the reason why Abbot Cronan had built that road. The intention had been to use it for an invasion of warriors from Laigin to cross the plains of Osraige and enter the territory of the Éile in order to launch an attack on Cashel itself.

  ‘But what if somewhat wanted to avoid Durlus? I mean, if you were travelling from the north?’

  The tave
rn-keeper scratched the back of his head. ‘From the north? The Slíge Cualann comes from Tara into Laigin and from it you could still cross through the territory of the Loígis and keep east of the River An Fheoir and reach the cross point into Cill Cainnech.’

  Fidelma tried to repress her excitement. Wasn’t that the very route Baodain said he had taken?

  ‘There is a ferry, so travellers tell me, which connects with the east and west banks,’ continued the innkeeper. ‘By all accounts the ferry connection has been well developed since the expansions by the new Abbot.’

  Fidelma had travelled several times along that route because it was a short distance up the river from Cill Cainnech that An Fheoir turned into a smaller river. Here, the great Abbey of Darú was situated, where her cousin Laisran was Abbot.

  Fidelma stared thoughtfully at the innkeeper for a moment. She was not thinking of the ferry crossing but of the fact that the river itself actually provided a quicker route from the north. An Fheoir started its journey to the north of Muman and ran between the mountains and hills through several little ferry points. Cill Cainnech stood right on the river and there was certainly a landing stage there where transports from the north could bring cargoes.

  ‘Is something wrong, lady?’ repeated the tavern-keeper wondering why she had fallen silent again.

  ‘There are big barges that ply their trade up and down An Fheoir, aren’t there?’

  ‘Of course, lady; big enough to take large wagons on them, if that is what is on your mind. It is now one of the great trading routes eventually linking what they call the Three Sister Rivers – the Suir, An Fheoir and An Bhearú. They all join at the sea port of Laigre.’

  ‘Once across the Sliabh Bladhma Mountains, which border the north of the kingdom, one could get a barge all the way down to Cill Cainnech and join the Slíge Dála there.’ Fidelma spoke to herself, but aloud.

  ‘Many barges and boats use the great river, as I have said. In former times, Cainnech was just a small river port, but the ancient settlement has grown quite large since the abbey was built there.’

  Fidelma was smiling with satisfaction. Here was a better theory of how this wagon could have reached Muman from the north, than with oxen pulling it for weeks across mountains in inaccessible wild country. She should have thought of it before. After all, the rivers were still the main highways of the Five Kingdoms. She ought to have known from the careful regulations laid down by the laws relating to the artrach iomchair or ‘carrying ships’ which transported cargoes up and down the rivers. Even so, it would be quite a task for a young girl to negotiate with river-men to bring a wagon and a team of oxen from across the northern mountains. Unless, of course, the girl’s male companion had still been alive at that time … Perhaps the strange wagon had left the river at Cill Cainnech and began its journey from there.

  With these thoughts, her mind returned to Eadulf and she stirred uneasily. Perhaps he had been right to check out that abandoned house. She moved across to the window and peered anxiously up at the darkening sky. Nightfall would not be long now.

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  Eadulf finally reached the large hill-like rise in the verdant marsh. It was larger than he had thought, and it rose to a flat top. In the centre was a rectangular wooden structure that had clearly been the farmhouse itself, but it was clear that the place had been abandoned many years before. The wood was rotting and there was evidence of overgrowth everywhere as Nature struggled to reclaim it. The shepherd had told him no more than the truth.

  He identified the main building as once having been a brugh or more prosperous house than many of the round tech-fithi or wickerwork houses with reed roofs that he expected to find in the marshlands. The roof on this rectangular building was called slinn – sloping thin boards of wood that were coated with black picc or pitch. He also noticed that the main wood in the construction was yew, which he knew was the hardest and most difficult timber to work. The ailtire, the builder in wood, had undoubtedly been an expert at his craft.

  The entire broad plateau on which the buildings were constructed was surrounded by a little stone wall, and around the farmhouse were several outbuildings, a few of them of the round wickerwork type that perhaps the farmworkers might have lived in, as well as barns that had once contained animals. These seemed in a more advanced state of decay.

  He slid from his horse and hitched the reins to a nearby wooden pole. As he was doing so he glanced at the soft earth nearby and caught his breath. There were indentations in it that showed the recent marks of a wheeled vehicle – a vehicle that had carried some weight, he could tell. The tracks were deep and he estimated that the width between the indentations could easily have been that of the wagon in question. He smiled to himself. If he could find evidence to prove that the girl and her wagon had been here, then Fidelma would have to eat her words and apologise to him, while admitting that her irritated outburst had been uncalled-for.

  He went to the door of the main house. Close to, he could see that the place had been built with a mixture of woods; the yew had just been employed to anchor deal, which was the main timber used in the building. The door was closed but the latch was easily lifted and he pushed it open. A scampering sound started up as he entered, and some flapping of wings. It was light inside, due to a large hole in the roof where the wooden boards had rotted away and fallen inwards. Obviously, a host of animal life was now reclaiming the place as its shelter.

  Whether the house had once been as prosperously furnished as it should have been, judging by the detail of the building, he could not be sure, for the place was empty and covered with dust and dirt. The smell of animals and their excrement caused him to wrinkle his nose in disgust. This was clearly the main room of the house and there were the stone remains of what would have been the central fireplace. The aperture in the roof through which its smoke would have been sucked up was where the rot in the roof had started.

  Eadulf was disappointed that he could see nothing that would present a clue as to whether the place had been used. Then he noticed that there were several wooden doors leading off this central room which presumably led to the imada or bedrooms. He might as well check everywhere, he decided. There was still plenty of light left. He walked across to the nearest door and pushed it open – it was only half-closed anyway. Once again the room was bare and his entrance caused various scuffling noises and squeaks. He tried another room, with similar results. A third door led off to an area whose wall had crumbled away, and he saw from the stonework in the corner that it had served the function of a kitchen.

  Then he uttered a low exclamation as a thought occurred to him. If the girl had stayed here, she would not have slept inside the deserted house with its wildlife inhabitants. She would have stayed in the wagon! Almost as soon as that thought occurred to him, he countered it by reminding himself that there had been a dead body in the wagon. But what if the man had still been alive at that stage? Perhaps this was where he had died … How could he tell? Eadulf sighed in frustration and decided to go back to the wheel ruts and see if he could find out more.

  He came out of the house and went over to the tracks. They led, he saw, to one of the barns. It was a large open affair, little more than a reed roof supported on a frame of oak posts. Certainly the wagon seemed to have rested here for a while, judging by the deep indentations and signs of cloven hooves as well as animal excreta. But the knowledge didn’t really help to answer any questions. He stood hesitantly and then decided, since he was here and the girl and her wagon had been here, that he should make a quick inspection of all the other outhouses.

  As he suspected, there was nothing to catch his attention in the first two buildings, and he wondered whether to bother with the others. However, Eadulf was nothing if not thorough. He opened the door of a small round wicker construction, finding he had to bend down to look beyond. There was a movement inside – and before he could react, he felt something touch the back of his head. He had not even registered it as a blow before
he was swimming in a dark, bottomless pool.

  Fidelma went to the door of the tavern and breathed in the night air. She was too restless to think of sleep. A moment later she was joined by Aidan, who said quietly: ‘I suppose you are thinking what I am thinking, lady?’

  Fidelma’s mouth tightened. For a moment she was not sure whether she had forgiven him yet for wasting precious hours of the day by leading them up the wrong road. Her annoyance had caused her to allow Eadulf to go wandering off in these dangerous marshlands all by himself. She silently rebuked herself again for her behaviour. Then she turned to the warrior, saying, ‘You are right, Aidan. Dusk is fast approaching and Eadulf has been gone far too long. I am thinking that he might be in trouble.’

  ‘Perhaps I should ride back to that building and take a look,’ the warrior volunteered. ‘The marshland can be treacherous.’

  ‘I shall come with you,’ she decided, turning back into the interior of the tavern. ‘Enda, you will stay here while Aidan and I go back to find Eadulf. If we miss him on the road and he turns up here, tell him where we have gone and ask him to stay here with you until we return. We should be back before long.’

  Enda was not happy at having to remain behind, but he accepted Fidelma’s logic.

  Fidelma then turned to the tavern-keeper ‘Do you have a lantern – perhaps two lanterns – in case we are caught abroad by the coming nightfall?’

  The man replied that he would fetch the lanterns and was back a short while later. ‘I’ve asked my boy to bring your horses round from the stable,’ he said.

  The horses arrived quickly and they mounted and set off at a canter to retrace their route back down the road. Night was approaching faster than they had estimated, the darkness increasing with the flood of black rainclouds spreading across the sky. A cold wind began whipping at their faces and they were hard-pressed to watch the landscape with the same ease of earlier. In fact, they almost missed the turning onto the marshland along which the wooden building was situated.

 

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