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Suffer Little Children

Page 16

by Peter Tremayne


  Back in her chamber Fidelma stretched exhausted on her cot. She wished she had told Brocc that she wanted the children from Rae na Scríne to remain at the abbey until she had resolved the mystery. It had not occurred to her that he would have them removed so soon. For every mystery solved there were new ones to be confronted.

  Why had the young boy Cétach pleaded with her not to mention him or his brother, Cosrach, to Salbach? Why had the boys then vanished? Why was Salbach so reluctant to believe her charge against Intat? And had any of these matters a connection with the death of Dacan, which mystery was her main task to solve?

  She gave a snort of frustration as she lay on her back with hands clasps behind her head.

  So far, there was little that made sense in this investigation. Oh, there were a couple of theories that she could develop but the old Brehon Morann had warned against creating theories before all the evidence was in. What was his favourite saying? ‘Do not make the cheese until you have first milked the cows.’ Yet she was acutely aware of the rapid passing of her greatest enemy – time.

  She wondered how her brother, Colgú, must be feeling now that he was king of Muman. She felt anxiety for her elder brother.

  There would be little time to mourn the dead king, Cathal mac Cathail, their cousin. The main thing now was to prevent the impending war. And that great responsibility rested entirely with her.

  She found herself wishing once again that Eadulf of Seaxmund’s Ham was here with her so that she could discuss her ideas and suspicions with him. Then she felt somehow guilty for the thought and did not know why.

  The sound of a door banging abruptly caused her to sit up. She could hear heavy footsteps running across the stone-flagged floor below and then ascending the steps to the second floor of the hostel. Such footsteps did not augur well. By the time the steps reached her door and halted she had swung off her cot and stood facing the door.

  It was Cass who came pushing through the door, after a cursory knocking. He was breathing hard from his exertions.

  He pulled up sharply in the middle of her chamber and stood with heaving shoulders facing her.

  ‘Sister Fidelma!’ He had to pause to recover his breath.

  She stared at him, wondering what had made the young warrior so agitated. She quickly worked out that he would have to run a distance over a difficult path to arrive in such a condition. A warrior, such as he, did not loose breath so easily.

  ‘Well, Cass?’ she asked quietly. ‘What is it?’

  ‘Sister Eisten. She has been found.’

  Fidelma read what was in his eyes.

  ‘Has she been found dead?’ she asked softly.

  ‘She has!’ confirmed Cass grimly.

  Chapter Ten

  The body lay by the water’s edge on the sandy beach below the abbey walls. It was already dusk but a group of fishermen and several members of the religious community had gathered around with morbid curiosity. Several of them were holding brand torches which illuminated the scene. Fidelma followed Cass towards the group. She observed that Brother Midach was already there, bending to examine the body. There was a middle-aged brother with a nervous, consumptive cough, holding a lantern for Midach to work by. Fidelma assumed that this was the apothecary, Brother Martan. The physician had obviously been summoned by those who had found the young anchoress. Fidelma thought he looked visibly shaken in the flickering light.

  ‘Clear some of these people back,’ Fidelma instructed Cass quietly, ‘excepting those who actually found the body.’

  She bent down by Brother Midach and stared over his shoulder.

  Sister Eisten’s clothes were waterlogged. Her hair was plastered to her head by sea-water and across her pale, plump white face. Her features looked twisted in the anguish of a violent death. Her magnificent ornate cross was still fastened firmly around her bruised, fleshy neck.

  ‘Not a pleasant sight,’ Midach grunted, noticing Fidelma at his side for the first time. ‘Keep the lantern high, Martan,’ he added quickly, in an aside to the apothecary.

  ‘Violent death never is,’ murmured Fidelma. ‘Did she commit suicide?’

  Midach stared thoughtfully at Fidelma for a moment and shook his head negatively.

  ‘What makes you ask that question?’

  ‘She had a shock when Rae na Scríne was destroyed. I think she might have blamed herself. She went into a malaise when the young baby she had saved died soon afterwards. I saw her this morning and she did not seem truly recovered. Also, it was clearly no attack made in robbery for she still wears a valuable crucifix.’

  ‘A good logic, but no; no, I do not think that she committed suicide.’

  Fidelma examined the physician’s assured features quickly and asked: ‘What makes you say so?’

  Brother Midach bent forward and turned the dead girl’s head slightly, instructing Brother Martan to bring the lantern closer so that the area could be clearly seen.

  Fidelma could see a gaping wound on the back of the skull. Even an immersion in the sea had not washed the blood from it.

  ‘She was attacked from behind?’

  ‘Someone hit her on the back of the head,’ confirmed Midach. ‘Only after that blow was her body dumped into the sea.’

  ‘Murder then?’

  Brother Midach sighed deeply.

  ‘I can come to no other conclusion. There is not only the evidence of the blow on the back of the head. If you have a strong stomach, sister, look at her hands and arms.’

  Fidelma did so. The wounds and burn marks spoke for themselves.

  They were not self-inflicted.

  ‘No. She was bound and tortured before she was killed. Look at those marks around her wrists. They are the marks of a rope. After she was killed, the killer must have untied the bonds and thrown her into the sea.’

  Stunned, Fidelma stared at the body of the tragic young woman.

  ‘With your permission, brother …’ She bent forward and took the cold hands of the dead woman and examined them, looking carefully at the fingers and nails. Brother Midach regarded her with curiosity. Fidelma grimaced with disenchantment.

  ‘I was hoping that she might have been able to fight her attacker and grasp something which might have given us some clue,’ she explained.

  ‘No. The final blow came probably without her even suspecting it,’ Midach said. ‘She would have been placed with her back to her attacker in order for him to deliver that blow.’

  ‘Him?’ queried Fidelma sharply.

  Midach shrugged diffidently.

  ‘Or her, if you like. Though I would not think it likely that a woman could do such a thing.’

  Fidelma’s lips thinned a moment but she made no comment.

  Brother Midach stood up, dusting the sand from his robe. He motioned Martan and another brother forward from the shadows and instructed them to carry the body to the abbey.

  ‘I’ll have the body taken to the mortuarium and report this matter to the abbot.’

  ‘Tell the abbot that I shall speak with him shortly,’ Fidelma said, also rising and looking towards the small group of people who had been pushed a little further away by Cass.

  ‘Do you think this has some connection with the death of the Venerable Dacan?’ Midach paused and glanced back to her across his shoulder.

  ‘That I hope to discover,’ replied Fidelma.

  Midach grimaced and, with Brother Martan hurrying behind him with the lantern, strode back towards the abbey gates.

  Fidelma moved across to a group, some of whom now seemed reluctant to be involved for several of them began to sidle away. Cass had obtained a lantern to illuminate the proceedings.

  ‘Who found the body?’ Fidelma demanded, looking from one face to another.

  She saw two elderly fishermen exchange glances of alarm by the light of their brand torches.

  ‘There is no need to be fearful, my friends,’ Fidelma reassured them. ‘All I want to know is where and how you found the body.’

  One
of the fishermen, a ruddy-faced, middle-aged man, shuffled forward.

  ‘My brother and I found it, sister.’ He spoke in an uncertain, hesitant tone.

  ‘Tell me how?’ Fidelma invited in as gentle voice as she could.

  ‘We were out in the bay, near the Laigin warship, and decided to give our nets one more cast before the dusk was upon us. As we trawled our nets we thought we had made a great catch but when we dragged the nets into the boat we saw …’ he genuflected fearfully ‘ … we saw the body of the sister there.’

  ‘How close were you to the Laigin ship?’ Fidelma asked.

  ‘The Laigin ship sits at the entrance of the inlet but it’s deep water there and one of the winter feeding grounds of haddock in these parts. Plenty of sea worms and shellfish there for them.’ The fisherman suddenly spat in disgust. ‘Then that warship comes along and sits right over the fishing ground.’

  Fidelma looked sympathetic.

  ‘I understand. So you and your brother moved as close as you could to the warship in order to fish?’

  ‘We did that. We were a few yards off when we netted the poor sister. We brought the body straight back to the shore and raised the alarm.’

  Cass, who was standing by her shoulder holding his lantern high, bent forward.

  ‘Could it be that she was thrown from the Laigin ship?’ he whispered.

  Fidelma ignored him for the moment and turned back to the fishermen, who continued to watch her uneasily.

  ‘What are the currents like in the bay?’ she asked.

  One of them rubbed his chin reflectively.

  ‘At the moment we have an inshore tide. The currents are strong around the rocks though. They sweep all around that headland among the rocks.’

  ‘What you are telling me is that the body could have been cast into the sea at any point along that headland.’

  ‘Or even on the other side of the headland, sister, and swept around into this inlet.’

  ‘And at this time a body would tend to get washed inshore here rather than seaward?’ pressed Fidelma.

  ‘That it would,’ agreed the fisherman readily.

  ‘Very well, you may go now,’ Fidelma said. Then she raised her voice. ‘You may all disperse to your homes now.’

  The small group of morbid onlookers began to break up, almost unwillingly now, in obedience to her command.

  Cass was standing peering suspiciously into the darkness across the bay. Fidelma followed his gaze. There were lights flickering on the warship.

  ‘Can you row a boat, Cass?’ Fidelma demanded abruptly. The warrior swung round. She could not quite see his expression in the shadows.

  ‘Of course,’ he replied. ‘But …’

  ‘I think it is high time that we paid the Laigin warship a visit.’

  ‘Is it wise? If Sister Eisten was murdered and thrown from the ship … ?’

  ‘We have no proof nor any reasonable suspicion to that effect,’ Fidelma replied calmly ‘Come, let us find a boat.’

  The tolling of the bell for vespers caused her to pause.

  Cass, shifted the lantern so that the light fell momentarily on his face. He looked woebegone.

  ‘We shall miss the evening meal,’ he protested.

  Fidelma chuckled grimly.

  ‘I am sure that we will find something later to keep the great starvation at bay. Now let’s find that boat.’

  Fidelma sat in the stern of the small boat holding the lantern aloft as Cass leant into the oars, propelling the small craft across the dark, hissing waters of the inlet towards the great shadow and twinkling lights of the Laigin warship. As they drew nearer, she could see that there were several lanterns illuminating the deck of the sleek-looking vessel. There were signs of men moving here and there.

  They were within a few yards when a voice challenged their approach.

  ‘Respond,’ muttered Fidelma, as Cass hesitated at the oars.

  ‘Laigin ship, ahoy!’ called the warrior. ‘A dálaigh of the court of the Brehons demands to come aboard.’

  There were several seconds of silence before the same voice that had hailed them responded.

  ‘Come aboard and welcome.’

  Cass brought the small craft alongside, under a rope ladder which led up to the side rail. A rope was thrown down for Cass to make the boat secure while Fidelma swung agilely up the ladder and over the rail.

  She found half a dozen tough-looking men waiting on the deck and staring at her in surprise.

  She heard Cass climbing up behind her. A man with indistinguishable features came forward with the rolling gait of a seaman and stared from Fidelma to Cass. Then he fixed his eyes on Cass.

  ‘What do you want, dálaigh?’ he demanded roughly.

  Fidelma hissed in irritation.

  ‘It is me whom you should address,’ she snapped. ‘I am Sister Fidelma of Kildare, dálaigh of the court of the Brehons.’

  The man turned in astonishment which he hastily checked.

  ‘From Kildare, eh? Do you represent Laigin?’

  Fidelma was annoyed by the complication that her foundation of Kildare was actually situated in the kingdom of Laigin.

  ‘No. I am of the community of Kildare but I represent the kingdom of Muman in this business.’

  The sailor shuffled his feet a little.

  ‘Sister, I do not wish to appear inhospitable, but this is a warship of the king of Laigin, acting under his orders. I do not see that you have any business here.’

  ‘Then let me remind you of the Laws of the Sea,’ Fidelma replied slowly, with careful emphasis. She wished she had a greater knowledge but was banking on the sailor having a lesser knowledge than her own. ‘Firstly, I am a dálaigh investigating the crime of murder. Secondly, your ship, even though it is a ship of Laigin, lies at anchor in a bay of Muman. It has not sought the permission or hospitality of Muman.’

  ‘You are wrong sister,’ came the voice of the sailor; his triumphant tones were undisguised. ‘We lie at anchor here with the full permission of Salbach, chieftain of the Corco Loígde.’

  Fidelma was glad that the light of the lanterns did not fall directly on her face. She swallowed in her total astonishment. Was it true that Salbach had given permission to the Laigin ship to intimidate the abbey of Ros Ailithir? What could this mean? She would certainly not discover if she were forced to leave like a whipped cur with its tail between its legs. A bluff was worth trying. What was it the Brehon Morann had once said? ‘Without a degree of deception, no great enterprise can ever be concluded.’

  ‘The chieftain of the Corco Loígde may well have given you permission but that permission is not legal without the approval of the king at Cashel.’

  ‘Cashel is many miles away, sister,’ sneered the sailor. ‘What the king of Cashel does not know, he cannot rule upon.’

  ‘But I am here. I am the sister of Colgú, king of Cashel. And I can speak in my brother’s name.’

  There was a silence as the sailor digested this. She heard him exhale his breath slowly.

  ‘Very well, lady,’ replied the man, with a little more respect in his voice. ‘What do you seek here?’

  ‘I seek to talk to the captain of this vessel in private.’

  ‘I am the captain,’ the man replied. ‘Come aft to my cabin.’

  Fidelma glanced at Cass.

  ‘Wait for me here, Cass. I shall not be long.’

  The warrior looked unhappy in the light of the swinging deck lanterns.

  The sailor led the way to the stern of the vessel and conducted her to a cabin below deck. It was small, crowded and smelt strongly of a man living in a confined space, body odours permeated together with the stench of the oil lamps and other smells which she could not place. For a moment or two she regretted not conducting her business on the deck in the fresh air but she did not want to let the eager ears of the sailors and warriors hear what she had to discuss.

  ‘Lady,’ invited the captain, indicating the only chair in the small crowded cabin w
hile he himself sprawled on the end of a bunk.

  Fidelma lowered herself gently into the cramped wooden seat.

  ‘You have the advantage of me, captain,’ Fidelma began.’ You know my name, yet I do not know your name.’

  The sailor grinned easily.

  ‘Mugrón. A fitting name for a sailor.’

  Fidelma found herself answering his smile. The name meant ‘lad of the seals’. Then she brought her thoughts back to the matter in hand.

  ‘Well, Mugr6n, I would firstly like to know the purpose of your presence in the inlet of Ros Ailithir.’

  Mugrón waved a hand as if to encompass his surroundings.

  ‘I am here at the request of my king, Fianamail of Laigin.’

  ‘That does not explain matters. Do you come in peace or war?’

  ‘I came to deliver a message to Brocc, abbot of Ros Ailithir, telling him that my king holds him responsible for the death of his cousin, the Venerable Dacán.’

  ‘You have delivered the message. What do you seek here now?’

  ‘I am to wait to ensure that, when the time comes, Brocc answers to his responsibility. My king would not like him to vanish from Ros Ailithir until the High King’s assembly meets at Tara. My king’s Brehon has told us that this is within the law of distraint. As I said, we also have the permission of Salbach to anchor here.’

  Fidelma realised, dredging some half-forgotten law from her memory, that under this pretext the ship of Mugr6n was acting legally. In legal terms the ship was anchored outside the abbey in order to force Brocc to concede his responsibility for the death of Dacán, even though his hand did not commit the deed itself, and until proof was offered that he was not responsible the ship could sit there. The law went further and entitled the Abbot Noé, as closest relative to Dacán, to make a ritual fast against Brocc until culpability was admitted.

  ‘You delivered a message to Brocc when you arrived here. Was that the official apad – the notice of this act?’

  ‘It was,’ agreed Mugrón. ‘It was done according to the instruction of the Brehon of my king.’

  Fidelma compressed her lips angrily.

  She should have realised the situation sooner when she saw the bunch of twisted branches of osiers and aspens hanging at the gate of the abbey. This withe, as it was called, was the sign of a distraint against a monastic superior. It was a long time since she had had recourse to the text known as Di Chetharshlicht Athgabála setting out the complex rituals and law on distraint. What she did remember was that she was allowed to make three mistakes in the law without fine because it was so complex. She conceded that her first mistake was in her lapse of memory of the law of distraint.

 

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