Sister Fidelma inclined her head slowly.
“Having come to this conclusion, what did you do then?”
“I immediately organized a search. Our little church here is attended by Brother Finnlug and Brother Adag. I called upon them to help me. Before entering the order, Finnlug was master huntsman to the Lord of Maine, an excellent tracker and huntsman. We picked up the trail of Ibor and followed it to the woods nearby. We were only a short distance into the woods, we came across his body. He was hanging from the branch of a tree with the cord of his habit as a noose.”
Sister Fidelma was thoughtful.
“And how did you interpret this sight?” she asked quietly.
Father Febal was puzzled.
“How should I interpret this sight?” he demanded.
Fidelma’s expression did not change. “You tell me that you believed that Father Ibor had stolen the crucifix and chalice from the church and ran off.”
“That is so.”
“Then you say that you came across him hanging on a tree.”
“True again.”
“Having stolen these valued items and ran off, why would he hang himself? There seems some illogic in this action.”
Father Febal did not even attempt to suppress a sneer.
“It should be as obvious to you as it was to me.”
“I would like to hear what you thought.” Fidelma did not rise to his derisive tone.
Father Febal smiled thinly.
“Why, Father Ibor was overcome with remorse. Knowing that we would track him down, realizing how heinous his crime against the Church was, he gave up to despair and pronounced his own punishment. He therefore hanged himself. In fact, so great was his fear that we would find him still alive, he even stabbed himself as he was suffocating in the noose, the knife entering his heart.”
“He must have bled a lot from such a wound. Was there much blood on the ground?”
“Not as I recall.” There was distaste in the priest’s voice as if he felt the religieuse was unduly occupied with gory detail. “Anyway, the knife lay on the ground below the body where it had fallen from his hand.”
Fidelma did not say anything for a long while. She remained gazing thoughtfully at the priest. Father Febal glared back defi-antly but it was he who dropped his eyes first.
“Was Father Ibor such a weak young man?” Fidelma mused softly.
“Of course. What else but weakness would have caused him to act in this manner?” demanded the priest.
“So? And you recovered both the crucifix and chalice from his person, then?”
A frown crossed Father Febal’s features as he hesitated a moment. He made a curiously negative gesture with one hand.
Fidelma’s eyes widened and she bent forward.
“You mean that you did not recover the missing items?” she pressed sharply.
“No,” admitted the priest.
“Then this matter is not at all clear,” she observed grimly.
“Surely, you cannot expect the Abbot to rest easy in his mind when these items have not been recovered? How can you be so sure that it was Father Ibor who stole them?”
Fidelma waited for an explanation but none was forthcoming.
“Perhaps you had better tell me how you deem this matter is clear then?” Her voice was acerbic. “If I am to explain this clarity to the Abbot, I must also be clear in my own mind. If Father Ibor felt that his apprehension was inevitable and he felt constrained to inflict the punishment of death on himself when he realized the nearness of your approach, what did he do with the items he had apparently stolen?”
“There is one logical answer,” muttered Father Febal without conviction.
“Which is?”
“Having hanged himself, some wandering thief happened by and took the items with him before we arrived.”
“And there is evidence of that occurrence?”
The priest shook his head reluctantly.
“So that is just your supposition?” Now there was just a hint of derision in Fidelma’s voice.
“What other explanation is there?” demanded Father Febal in annoyance.
Fidelma cast a scornful glance at him.
“Would you have me report this to the Abbot and inform him that he need not worry?; that a valuable crucifix and a chalice have been stolen from one of his churches and a priest has been found hanged but there is no need to worry?”
Father Febal’s features grew tight.
“I am satisfied that Father Ibor stole the items and took his own life in a fit of remorse. I am satisfied that someone then stole the items after Ibor committed suicide.”
“But I am not,” replied Fidelma bitingly. “Send Brother Finnlug to me.”
Father Febal had risen automatically in response to the commanding tone in her voice. Now he hesitated at the vestry door.
“I am not used-” he began harshly.
“I am not used to being kept waiting,” Fidelma’s tone was icy as she cut in, turning her head away from him in dismissal. Father Febal blinked and then banged the door shut behind him in anger.
Brother Finnlug was a wiry looking individual; his sinewy body, tanned by sun and wind, proclaimed him to be more a man used to being out in all sorts of weather than sheltering in the cloisters of some abbey. Fidelma greeted him as he entered the vestry.
“I am Fidelma of-”
Brother Finnlug interrupted her with a quick, friendly grin.
“I know well who you are, lady,” he replied. “I saw you and your brother, Colgú the King, many times hunting in the company of my Lord of Maine.”
“Then you know that I am also an advocate of the courts and that you are duty bound to tell me the truth?”
“I know that much. You are here to inquire about the tragic death of Father Ibor.” Brother Finnlug was straightforward and friendly in contrast to his superior.
“Why do you call it a tragic death?”
“Is not all death tragic?”
“Did you know Father Ibor well?”
The former huntsman shook his head.
“I knew little of him. He was a young man, newly ordained and very unsure of himself. He was only here about a month.”
“I see. Was he the newest member of the community then? For example, how long has Father Febal been here?”
“Father Febal has been priest here for seven years. I came here a year ago and Brother Adag has been here a little more than that.”
“I presume that your little community were on good terms with one another?”
Brother Finnlug frowned slightly and did not reply.
“I mean, I presume that there was no animosity between the four of you?” explained Fidelma.
Finnlug’s features wrinkled in an expression which Fidelma was not able to interpret.
“To be truthful, Father Febal liked to emphasize his seniority over us. I believe he entered the Church from some noble family and does not forget it.”
“Was that attitude resented?”
“Not by me. I was in service to the Lord of Maine. I am used to being given orders and to obeying them. I know my place.”
Was there a slight note of bitterness there? Fidelma wondered.
“If I recall rightly, the Lord of Maine was a generous man and those in his service were well looked after. It must have been a wrench for you to leave such a employer to enter religious life?”
Brother Finnlug grimaced.
“Spiritual rewards are often richer than temporal ones. But, as I say, I have been used to service. The same may be said for Brother Adag, who was once a servant to another lord. But he is somewhat of a simpleton.” The monk touched his forehead. “They say such people are blessed of God.”
“Did Father Ibor get on well with Father Febal?”
“Ah, that I can’t say. He was a quiet young man. Kept himself to himself. I do not think he liked Father Febal. I have seen resentment in his eyes.”