23- The Seventh Trumpet

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23- The Seventh Trumpet Page 21

by Peter Tremayne


  ‘I remembered where it was from when …’ He saw the frown deepening on Fidelma’s brow and realised that she did not like superfluous information. ‘It is on the ground floor, in the main passageway. I was about to return here when I heard a voice which stopped me. Like you, lady, I have a good ear for voices. This one was familiar and I recognised it immediately. It was that unnatural sibilant speech that brought to mind someone speaking with a mouthful of honey.’

  ‘You recognised Biasta’s voice?’ she asked.

  ‘Not only his voice. Near to the necessarium is a doorway which leads into one of the smaller courtyards. I glanced through the doorway and saw the two men standing under the light of a brand torch. One of them was Biasta. There was no mistaking that cadaverous murderer even if his voice had not betrayed him.’

  ‘Who was Biasta talking to?’ Eadulf asked.

  ‘It was the young steward, Anfudán.’

  ‘I presumed that Biasta was the “friend” who arrived with news of Bran Finn’s death,’ Fidelma said.

  ‘It will be awkward for us if we encounter him face to face,’ muttered Eadulf.

  ‘He already knows we are here,’ Enda said flatly. ‘He was asking why Cronán had not imprisoned us already. Anfudán confirmed what the girl, Ségnat, told you: Cronán is going to try to find out what we know about him first, and whether anyone else knows. But it is clear that we will not be allowed to leave here.’

  ‘Did Biasta say anything further?’ Fidelma asked. ‘Did he say in what manner we would be dealt with?’

  ‘Nothing was mentioned about that. However, Biasta was asking how it was that we had found out about the abbey. Anfudán said that he could only guess that we had followed Sillán. So he confirmed that Sillán was the man who was awaiting the arrival of the abductors at the shed in Durlus.’

  Fidelma let out a soft breath. ‘And he recognised me. I suspected as much.’ She turned to Enda. ‘Best continue with your story.’

  ‘The story is simple. I’ll tell you the sense of the words rather than try to recall the actual words themselves. Biasta told Anfudán that he had gone to Fraigh Dubh to deal with Ailgesach. He had left his horse at a spot called the Little Fortress nearby …’

  ‘There is such a place very near Fraigh Dubh, where Ailgesach’s chapel was,’ intervened Gormán. ‘Just to the east.’

  ‘Biasta then went on foot in search of Ailgesach.’

  ‘So that is why we did not see him on the road,’ Eadulf said. ‘He came over the heath.’

  ‘He told Anfudán the rest of the story as we knew it. How he killed Ailgesach and how he escaped us. He went back to get his own horse, incidentally, and turned my mount loose.’

  ‘Did he say anything about the corpse we found or the man and woman who had stayed with Ailgesach? Biasta has taken a long time to reach here.’

  Enda shrugged. ‘I can only tell you what I overheard. It seems that as soon as Biasta was a distance along the highway from the tavern, he then circled round to the heath. From what was said, I gathered that he then headed east towards Laigin on some errand before coming back here.’

  ‘Nothing else?’ asked Fidelma in disappointment.

  ‘Biasta merely said that he had completed his task. He went on to say something about Laigin being nervous in case the plans had gone awry. I could not clearly hear this exchange as I heard someone coming along the passage and hurried back inside the necessarium until they passed. When I came out again, I could tell that Biasta was not happy. Anfudán was assuring him that the prisoner would be dealt with tomorrow. But he was asking why the prisoner had not been dealt with already.’

  ‘The prisoner? Who else could he have meant but Torna?’ Eadulf interposed.

  ‘So we are no nearer finding out the “why” than before,’ he sighed.

  ‘As friend Eadulf says, it sounds confusing,’ Gormán observed.

  ‘All puzzles are confusing until they are solved,’ Fidelma replied automatically.

  ‘Usually, there are some strands in a tangled rope that can be tweaked out and followed,’ Eadulf said. ‘In this matter, I agree with Gormán: I cannot find anything to untangle or that will lead us to an understanding. The only solution I can see is forcing Biasta to talk. And will he do so?’

  ‘Not without some persuasion,’ answered Gorman grimly. ‘I might be able to persuade him, if we can lay hands on him.’

  ‘At least we are beginning to find out the “how” and “who”,’ Fidelma returned crisply. ‘Did you hear any more, Enda?’

  The warrior shook his head. ‘Only that Biasta wanted to go immediately to question the prisoner. Anfudán said he must not do so until Cronán and Sillán are ready. Then, unfortunately, I heard more footsteps approaching and I came here quickly to tell you.’

  ‘You are sure that you were not seen by anyone?’

  ‘I am positive that I was not.’

  ‘This confirms the necessity of what I was about to tell you. We have until before dawn to find Torna. If we do not, then we will have to leave without him.’

  ‘You trust this young girl, Ségnat?’ asked Gormán.

  ‘There is no one else to trust. Firstly, let us make an attempt to find out where Torna is being held and see if there is a means to free him. I am now certain he is this Uí Duach warrior called Tormeid. I have arranged with Ségnat to meet her here halfway between midnight and dawn.’

  ‘Find and free him? In so short a time? Easily said, lady. But where do we start?’ asked Enda.

  Fidelma leaned forward confidentially. ‘You recall the chambers that they were going to put you and Gormán in earlier – windowless and with locks on the outside? If they are to hold a prisoner anywhere in this fortress, then that is the place to start looking.’

  ‘Enda and I will go and look at those chambers,’ offered Gormán.

  ‘It is best if we all go together so that we can watch out for each other,’ Fidelma demurred. ‘We tread on dangerous ground here. There may be guards and we must be prepared for anything.’

  ‘This is not a job for the sister of the King,’ Enda protested.

  His words provoked a rare mischievous grin from Fidelma. ‘But this is exactly a job for a dálaigh. Anyway, sleep is beyond question, so what could Eadulf and I do here except sit in anxiety awaiting your return. And if you did not return, then what? Better we should all know how we fare.’

  Gormán looked as if he were about to argue and then shrugged. He knew when to accept her authority.

  Enda left the chamber first in order to assess whether anyone was moving outside. It seemed all was quiet. The courtyard below was filled only with shadows caused by the dancing light of the torches that were hung on the walls. For a moment he thought it was deserted, but then something stirred and he stood back into the shadow. A sentinel strolled casually across the courtyard. Enda finally turned to the open door and motioned them forward, holding a finger to his lips and indicating that they should keep close to the wall. Gormán came next, followed by Fidelma and Eadulf. Keeping within the shadows, they crept to the stairs that led down to the passage below. The sputtering lamps still lit the long passage, and by their light Fidelma was able to see that most of the doors were unbolted.

  She whispered: ‘We are looking for a prisoner, so we are looking for a door that is bolted.’

  Almost immediately, Gormán pointed to a door set back in the wall and indicated the bolt, which was firmly secure. He tiptoed towards it and listened carefully. Then he turned and shrugged, mouthing, ‘I hear nothing.’

  Fidelma frowned slightly. There was no grille or any other aperture in the door and it seemed constructed of extremely strong wood. Bending, she carefully eased the bolt back, then gently pulled the door towards her. It seemed that the hinges were well greased, for thankfully it moved without a sound. She peered cautiously into the darkness beyond. She was aware from the dim lights in the passage that she was facing a curved wall. Then she realised that there was a flight of stone steps winding dow
nwards, as if inside a circular tower. Had she taken a step forward, she would have tumbled down them and broken her neck.

  ‘Take the nearest lamp,’ she whispered to Eadulf, who was closest to one of the sputtering lights. He carefully lifted it down from its holder.

  ‘I’ll go first, lady,’ Gormán said, taking the lamp from Eadulf and pushing gently by her on to the stairs.

  There was only room to descend in single file. The stone steps were steep and wound down quite a way.

  After half-a-dozen steps Fidelma called up to Enda, who was the last to enter the stairwell: ‘Draw the door to, so that it does not attract attention.’

  At the bottom of the stairwell they found themselves in an area from which passages led in three directions. The passageways were stone-built. While they were not ancient, the fact that this area had been excavated below ground-level and in a boggy area criss-crossed by streams was obvious. Water seeped through the walls and mosses already covered many of them. It was not the cold that sent uncomfortable shivers through them but the dampness. They could feel it permeating their lungs. It was, Eadulf thought, the unhealthiest place that he had ever been in. Already he felt an urge to cough as the malodorous fumes caught at his chest.

  ‘Where now?’ muttered Gormán. ‘There seem to be no lights along these passageways.’

  ‘Then we shall have to explore them one by one,’ decided Fidelma. ‘We’ll start down this one.’

  ‘Just a moment, lady,’ Gormán said. ‘Let us wait and listen a while.’

  They were speaking in whispers and it was obvious that, had they spoken louder, their voices would have echoed through the curious underground labyrinth. They paused a while but all seemed silent and they were able to relax a little.

  ‘What could this place have been built for?’ asked Enda, breaking the silence. ‘I have never seen the like before …’

  ‘Certainly not for storage,’ Eadulf pointed out. ‘You could not store anything down here unless it was fish.’

  With only the one light between them, they let Gormán lead the way along the first passage to their left. Two chambers led off on either side and both of these had doors that stood wide open and were devoid of any object to fill them. The passage ended in a blank wall. They turned back and immediately entered the second tunnel. This led into a narrow vaulted path, along which drifted an odour of decomposing vegetation, of swampy marsh and animal excreta. The tunnel vanished in darkness in either direction.

  At the side, before they entered this tunnel with its nauseous stench, there was a small passage and Fidelma indicated that they should investigate it. This one seemed to turn and twist, and they quickly learned that if they were not careful, they could lose themselves. Enda took out his dagger and began to make marks on the wall at the end of each section with an arrow-shaped sign to indicate the direction in which they were proceeding.

  They noticed that the passage they had come to was slightly drier and the rooms off it were not as wet and mildewed as others. Then Fidelma gasped and pointed. They had come across a door to which the two bolts had been rammed shut. This time there was a small grille at the bottom of the door. The idea occurred to Fidelma, who had seen such prison doors before, that it was large enough to pass a plate or a jug through. A feeling of excitement gripped them, but Fidelma placed her forefinger against her lips, before motioning Gormán to draw the bolts. He bent and eased them both back. Then he opened the door and stepped inside, holding the lamp high.

  A figure was lying on a stone ledge which seemed to serve as a bed. A thin blanket was covering the huddled form. This was clearly the prison cell they had been looking for. The figure was apparently deeply asleep, for it did not move as Fidelma joined Gormán in the cell.

  ‘Torna,’ she whispered, and reached out to touch the shoulder. But her fingers did not make contact. There was something about the stillness of the form that made her step back hurriedly.

  Gormán stepped forward and drew the blanket aside.

  Cold, dead eyes stared up at them. The movement in them, which caused them to start for a moment, was only caused by the reflected lamplight shining on them.

  Fidelma drew her breath in sharply. ‘It is Biasta!’

  Eadulf pushed by her and bent over the corpse, at the same time asking Gormán to bring the lamp closer.

  It did not take long before Eadulf discovered the cause of Biasta’s death. He said, ‘He has been stabbed twice with a fairly crude knife. It has more or less ripped the flesh to the heart rather than being a clean stab.’

  Gormán bent down and picked something up. It was a metal platter with bits of food still adhering to it. There was no need to explain that this was where the prisoner had acquired his knife.

  Now they could see the cadaver without the blanket drawn over it, they realised that Biasta was without his outer garments.

  ‘What do you think?’ Eadulf asked, drawing himself up.

  ‘I think Torna may have made his own bid to escape,’ she replied grimly.

  ‘So Biasta came down here to question him, in spite of Anfudán’s instructions. Torna still had the knife from his evening meal and so he used it to stab the man twice, then stole his outer clothing as a disguise before escaping.’

  ‘But how was he able to pass himself out of the abbey?’ asked Gormán. ‘You’ve seen the gates and the guards there.’

  ‘Doubtless he escaped in the manner that Ségnat has planned for us,’ replied Fidelma. ‘And now that we know he has escaped, we’d better get back to our chambers and hope Ségnat will be able to help us.’

  ‘But perhaps Torna has been caught,’ Enda suggested.

  ‘If he has been recaptured, surely his captors would have come down here to find out how he escaped, and then they would have discovered Biasta. We are lucky. He has clearly not been missed,’ Eadulf replied.

  ‘Then we should get after him right away for, as you say, he holds the key to this conundrum,’ said Gormán.

  ‘Wait,’ Fidelma called, as the warrior turned to the door of the cell. ‘If we go charging off, we will alert the whole abbey. Leave things as we have found them and we’ll try to get back to our chambers without being seen. Let’s hope the body of Biasta is not found until after we have left the abbey.’

  ‘If Torna is as clever as I suspect, then he will leave no trail that can be followed,’ Eadulf said.

  Gormán replaced the blanket over the body of the man who had called himself Brother Biasta, then they left the cell, with Gormán almost reverently sliding the bolts home. Thanks to the marks that Enda had made with his knife, they had little difficulty retracing their steps to the main chamber at the foot of the circular stairwell. They paused there for a moment, as if by mutual consent to recover themselves. Then Enda climbed the stairway first and checked the passageway at the top. It was still deserted.

  ‘All clear,’ came his whisper. Fidelma, Eadulf and finally Gormán, still carrying the lamp, followed him into the passage. Once there, Gormán replaced the lamp in its holder and Enda pushed back the bolt on the door.

  Without a word, Fidelma led the way back to the upper floor and to their chambers. There was a movement in the shadows near the door of the fothrucad, the bathing room, and the slight figure of Ségnat emerged. She looked agitated.

  ‘I’ve been waiting for you,’ she hissed. ‘I thought they must have taken you away already.’

  Fidelma smiled reassuringly. ‘We went to track down the prisoner,’ she whispered back. ‘We found where he had been kept – somewhere in the vaults. But he has escaped already. In doing so, he killed one of Cronán’s men called Biasta.’

  The girl shivered slightly. ‘Biasta? He was a beast, as his name implies. No one will raise a tear for that pig.’ And then: ‘Are you sure that the prisoner has escaped?’

  ‘Unless he is wandering in the vaults.’ Fidelma felt it unwise to mention that she suspected that Torna was Tormeid.

  ‘We will check, just in case. First we must get you
away. There is even more urgency for you to leave here now. Do you have all your belongings?’

  It was the work of a moment, to fetch their saddle-bags and rejoin her. In silence, she led them down another spiral stair and through a door behind the bathing chamber. A short time later, they had once again descended into the bowels of the fortress. It seemed amazing to Eadulf that no one heard them as they hurried after the nimble young girl. The builders of this fortress had certainly believed in dark vaulted structures. Pausing only to take a lantern, the girl hastened them through a series of dank passageways until they halted before a bolted wooden door.

  It was the smell that Eadulf recognised first before the girl unbolted and opened it.

  ‘This is a special tunnel that leads to a spot under the north walls of the fortress into the bog land. You must follow me closely and in single file.’

  After a while they heard the muffled whinny of a horse.

  ‘Do not worry,’ came Ségnat’s voice ahead of them. ‘My comrades have saddled your horses and brought them to the entrance just behind here.’

  She moved on a short distance, holding the lantern high, and paused before a small aperture in the wall. It was just big enough for one person to squeeze through at a time. She bent and called through: ‘It is I. Is all clear?’ There came a faint sound of something being removed beyond and then a soft male voice answered, ‘All clear.’ She motioned them through, one at a time, and then followed.

  They emerged under the dark shadows of the fortress walls into the blackness of the night beyond. Ségnat had left the lantern in the tunnel and there were no lights here so as not to attract the attention of any watchful eye. It took a short while to adjust their eyes to the darkness. Two men were standing holding their horses, which were already saddled.

  Ségnat said: ‘Remember, this is the north side of the fortress. The land is boggy so make sure that you keep to the well-used tracks. My advice would be that you walk the horses along to that far clump of shrubs and trees. The ground is fairly solid to that point. Then you can mount and ride. Keep carefully to the track there too, and go as quickly as you can. We rely on you to persuade your brother, the King, to return with his warriors and destroy this place.’

 

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