For a moment, Beorhtric’s eyes blazed. Then he said slowly: ‘You are playing for time with me, Eadulf. I give you a final chance. Join us now. Tell us where Fidelma of Cashel is. Tell us what is happening at Tara and who is coming against us. If you do, you will live and the world will be yours. Refuse, and you will die a death at the next festival to Crom, a death in flames and so horrible that even you will cry out to Crom for mercy with your last breath.’
Eadulf had sat back. He glanced down at the mug that he still held in his hand. Now, with a quick movement, he threw its contents over the face of the Saxon warrior.
With an oath, Beorhtric sprang up and drew his sword in one swift motion. The blade was raised. Another moment and it would have sliced into Eadulf.
‘Hold!’ snapped a voice.
For a moment everything seemed frozen in time and space. Then slowly Beorhtric lowered his sword and sheathed it. Eadulf, transfixed in his seat in the chair, relaxed and began to breathe again.
The woman known as the ceannard had entered the tent. She looked at Eadulf with a curious smile.
‘I was right about you, Eadulf of Seaxmund’s Ham. For a Christian you display a remarkable courage. I did not think that they would break you and cause you to betray your beliefs or Fidelma of Cashel.’ She glanced at the Saxon warrior. ‘You see, Beorhtric? I know men. I knew he would not accept your offer to join us. No matter. My daughter will soon send us word about what is happening in Tara. Now take him back and ensure that he is confined properly. No harm must come to him before the time is right and we present him to Crom Cróich.’
Sullenly, Beorhtric moved forward and yanked Eadulf roughly from the chair.
The woman smiled almost encouragingly at Eadulf. ‘It is good, my Saxon friend,’ she said softly. ‘If you were a coward, you would not make a fitting sacrifice to Crom.’
Then Beorhtric was hauling him out of the tent back to the stone prison to rejoin Bishop Luachan.
Ardgal found Fidelma pacing in the refectory of the abbey. He paused nervously at the door.
‘Bad news, lady,’ he blurted out.
Fidelma stood, the coldness clutching her heart. ‘Eadulf has been found?’ she asked hoarsely.
‘No, lady. But my men have found the body of Brother Manchán. He had been run through with a sword. There were the tracks of many horses … ’
‘But no sign of Eadulf?’
‘No sign of anyone else but the slain brother.’
‘What did your trackers tell you?’
‘They saw traces of a heavy-laden horse.’
‘Eadulf and Brother Manchán were riding one horse.’
Ardgal nodded and continued: ‘They think a number of riders were lying in wait for them and surrounded them. That was where Brother Manchán was killed. Then the horses moved off. There was no longer any sign of one horse being heavier than the others.’
‘So they took Eadulf captive?’ she asked hopefully.
‘There is nothing to suggest otherwise, lady.’
‘Which way did they go?’
‘My trackers say they went north into the hill country. They followed the trail as far as they could without endangering themselves — up to within sight of Sliabh na Callaigh.’
‘The Hag’s Mountain? What is that?’
‘It is the highest hill in these parts, lady. And one which the old pagans declared as sacred. There are buildings of great antiquity on it and some travellers have said that there have been campfires and bands of riders seen there recently. It accords with what we have heard before — that this is probably where the dibergach are encamped.’
‘Then this is where we shall go to confront them,’ Fidelma said decisively. ‘We must follow and rescue Eadulf.’
‘Lady, I have only twenty warriors,’ protested Ardgal. ‘The raiders might have ten times that number.’
Fidelma stamped her foot angrily. ‘Might?’ she sneered. ‘Eadulf is a prisoner of these evil people. Should I allow a “might” to stop me?’
‘Be reasonable, lady. Let us wait for the arrival of Irél and his Fianna.’
‘By then it could be too late. Give me the help of your local tracker and I’ll go alone with Caol and Gormán.’
Ardgal sighed. ‘If you are determined, then I must go with you,’ he said reluctantly. ‘But my men must be allowed the same choice of whether to go or stay. It is suicide for a few men to attack the Hag’s Mountain.’
‘The choice is yours and theirs. But I will not delay long. Eadulf is in danger.’
‘What did they want of you, my son?’ asked Bishop Luachan, when Eadulf had rejoined him.
‘They wanted me to betray my wife, my son and my religion.’
‘And the alternative?’
‘Death in some weird ritual.’
‘Ah, as I have said. Some sacrifice at the equinox. At least we have a few days of life left.’
‘A few days?’ Eadulf snorted, still angered by Beorhtric. ‘A bit more than that, if I have anything to do with it. I intend to seize the first opportunity for us to escape.’
‘From this place?’
‘No place is the perfect prison,’ pronounced Eadulf optimistically. ‘Though I have to say that this comes near to it.’
‘There is only one way out of here,’ Bishop Luachan pointed out again, ‘and that is the way we came in. Along the tunnel and out of the entrance.’
‘Which means that we need some way of distracting the guards, to get them away from the entrance … ’
‘Moving aside the wicker gate and running off down the hill.’ The old man was cynical. ‘How can we distract the guards from inside the tunnel in order for them to leave the entrance unguarded? You should think again.’
Eadulf pursed his lips. ‘It is not the first time that I have been incarcerated with apparently no means to escape,’ he said. He was thinking of the watery grave to which Uaman the Leper had once sought to consign him.5
‘Then we must pray for divine intervention to rescue you again,’ the old man said sarcastically. ‘Meanwhile, I am going to try to sleep.’
Ardgal and his men were gathered round Fidelma in the refectory of the community of Delbna Mór.
‘My men have all agreed to follow me, if I can assure them that the attack on the Hag’s Mountain will not simply be a futile exercise that has no chance of success.’
Fidelma looked at them all with a smile of gratitude.
‘I do not believe in futility, Ardgal. I have an idea by which we may surprise them and rescue Eadulf.’
Ardgal continued to look serious. ‘Very well. My men will listen to your idea and then I shall ask if they approve it. If they do not, that is their decision.’
Fidelma turned to meet their expectant gaze. ‘My plan calls for hunters, not warriors. It was the farmer who took me prisoner who has inspired this idea … ’
There was a noise at the door of the refectory and one of Ardgal’s sentinels came breathlessly in.
‘Warriors!’ he called urgently. ‘Warriors coming along the road from the east!’
For a moment there was pandemonium as the warriors began to draw their weapons. But Ardgal raised his voice above it.
‘Are they dibergach?’ he demanded.
The sentinel was hesitant. ‘They ride with discipline and they have a banner at their head. There must be a hundred of them.’
Fidelma’s eyes widened. A look of relief and hope spread on her features.
‘The Fianna?’ she gasped. ‘If so, then this is an unexpected blessing. But we must be prepared in case it is a trap. Ardgal, disperse your men to cover. Brother Céin, come with me to greet whoever they may be.’
Within moments, her orders had been carried out and Fidelma and the steward of Delbna Mór took a stand by the gates, almost in the manner that Fidelma and her companions had first been greeted at Delbna Mór. But now there were only the two of them while everyone had taken defensive positions out of sight.
They heard the sound of many horses. It grew louder, and seconds later, the head of the column came into view. Two outriders swept into the courtyard and examined it swiftly. Then a familiar figure rode in at the head of the column.