They could hear Iorwerth at work before they reached the forge. He was rekindling his fire and they could hear the rasping of his bellows as he tried to get the wood to catch. He looked up with a scowl as they hitched their horses to the fence and entered the forge.
‘What now?’ he demanded ungraciously. ‘Are your Saxon friends going to attack us?’
‘There are just a few points that we need clarification on.’ Fidelma responded to his brusque manner with a pleasant smile.
Iorwerth set down the bellows and folded his arms, glaring defiantly from one to the other. ‘Gwnda claims that you have no right to ask questions about the death of my daughter. I shall not answer those questions.’
‘That is fair enough,’ agreed Fidelma easily.
Iorwerth started in surprise at her ready agreement. ‘If not my daughter’s death, then what do you want to speak to me about?’
‘Yesterday you had a visitor to your forge.’
Iorwerth’s jaw clenched. ‘I have many come to the forge. It is my business.’
‘This man was a warrior and, I am told, a stranger to this district.’
The smith was frowning. ‘I do not usually have warriors. .’ He paused, and his expression told them that he had recalled the man. ‘Why do you inquire after that man?’
‘What do you know about him?’
‘As you say, he was a stranger, a warrior. His horse had loosed a shoe. I fixed it.’
‘You had never seen him before?’
‘Never. He spent a short time here. He asked for mead to drink, for which he paid, and spent a pleasant time exchanging some gossip while I fixed his horse’s shoe. That was all.’
‘Tell me,’ Fidelma pressed, ‘did Elen, Gwnda’s daughter, pass by at that time?’
‘How did you know that?’ demanded Iorwerth, slightly surprised at the recollection. ‘She did. I remember that because the warrior asked me who she was.’
‘You told him, of course?’
‘I said that she was the daughter of Gwnda, lord of Pen Caer.’
‘Did he tell you why he wanted to know?’
‘I think he said something like, “There’s a fine-looking girl, who is she?” ’
‘Nothing else passed between you?’
Iorwerth shook his head. ‘Nothing, as I recall. He passed the time of day while I fixed his horse’s shoe. We exchanged a few jokes and gossiped. That is all.’
‘Did he mention his name by any chance?’
Again, Iorwerth made a negative gesture.
‘Nor where he came from?’
‘No, although I could guess.’
‘Really? And what was your guess?’
‘He was either from Ceredigion or somewhere along its borders.’
‘Why do you say that?’
‘Smiths are a close-knit community. It is easy to recognise types of work. From what I saw of his horse and his weapons, I could swear that the work was done in Ceredigion.’
‘Very well.’
‘Why do you ask about this man?’
‘A matter of curiosity,’ smiled Fidelma. ‘Let me ask you something else. Were you ever a warrior?’
Iorwerth looked startled. ‘Never. I have always been a smith.’
‘I understand that you learnt your craft in Dinas?’
The bolt went home. Iorwerth blinked rapidly. He did not reply for a moment or two. Then he said, slowly: ‘It is many years since I was last in Dinas.’
‘Twenty years ago?’
‘That is about right. How did you know this?’
Fidelma had taken something from her marsupium. She suddenly held it before his eyes. It was the red gold chain with the bejewelled image of the hare hanging from it.
‘Have you ever seen that before?’ she demanded.
A paleness crept over Iorwerth’s features as he stared at the pendant.
‘Where did you get that?’ he asked slowly.
‘Do you recognise it?’ she insisted.
‘I last saw that twenty years ago. Where did you get it?’
‘Iolo the shepherd, before he died, gave it to Idwal. Iolo told the boy that it belonged to his mother.’
Iorwerth stepped back as if he had received a body blow. His eyes widened and his mouth had opened slightly. He was looking at them but not seeing them. Then his features seemed to dissolve.
‘Oh, my God!’ he cried.
Then, before either of them could react, he had turned, grabbed the mane of an unsaddled horse, swung himself up and gone racing away over the bridge and into the woods.
Chapter Nineteen
Eadulf turned with grim humour. ‘Well, he certainly recognised the necklet. But what does that tell us? Indeed, what can we deduce from anything?’
Fidelma was smiling with a dreamy satisfied air. ‘The deduction is simple, Eadulf. I believe that we have now all the pieces to set up the picture of what has happened in this place.’
Eadulf’s surprise was only slightly less than that displayed by Iorwerth. ‘Surely you cannot mean that?’
‘Surely I can,’ replied Fidelma with dry mischief. ‘Let us hope our young friend Dewi returns from the abbey of Dewi Sant soon.’
‘What then?’
‘Then we can explain this puzzle, apportion the blame, and return to Porth Clais in search of a ship. I am sure that you urgently want to continue the journey to Canterbury?’
Eadulf did not reply.
‘Good,’ went on Fidelma as if he had spoken. ‘Tonight is a chance to enjoy ourselves. The eve of All Hallows Day. The ancient pagan festival of the dead. We can join in the feasting and bonfires.’
‘Are you sure that you have a solution to this riddle?’ Eadulf seemed unconvinced.
‘I would not have said so otherwise,’ replied Fidelma quietly.
The evening meal, served by the taciturn Buddog, was eaten in a gloomy atmosphere. Gwnda sat moodily at the head of the table, drumming his fingers occasionally on the table top. He seemed preoccupied with his thoughts. The main savoury dishes had been cleared away when Buddog brought in a plate of small cakes speckled with currants from the gooseberry bushes.
‘These are good,’ Eadulf said desperately, trying to ease the brooding ambience.
‘Have you not seen them before?’ asked Fidelma, feeling sorry for him. ‘We call them speckled bread at home and also serve them at this time of year-’
Eadulf had bitten deeply and a spasm of agony distorted his face. He put his hand to his mouth and drew out a small metal finger ring which he held up, staring at it in surprise.
‘What in the name. .?’
Fidelma was chuckling. ‘Don’t worry, you are not being poisoned. It is merely a tradition.’
Eadulf turned the ring over curiously. ‘What does it mean?’ he demanded.
He did not notice Fidelma colour a little.
‘I’ll explain later,’ she said. ‘It is a tradition of the feast at this time of year.’
From outside came the sound of music and voices, especially children’s, raised in singing. Eadulf’s expression clearly asked a question.
‘It is for the eve of All Hallows,’ Gwnda replied morosely.
‘Oh, the new celebration.’ Eadulf remembered that Fidelma had explained the bonfire to him.
‘New?’ said Fidelma sharply. ‘Come, Eadulf, surely you know of the antiquity of the feast? You have been in the five kingdoms long enough, even if you did not realise that the Britons also celebrated it.’
‘I know that it was Boniface, the fourth of his name to be Bishop of Rome, who introduced the celebration of All Saints’ Day fifty years ago,’ Eadulf replied stubbornly.
‘Because he could not stop the Gauls, Britons and Irish from celebrating the ancient festival of the New Year, the feast of Samhain. So he merely gave it a Christian guise. Isn’t that so, Gwnda?’
The lord of Pen Caer was still moody. ‘What’s that? Oh, yes. Our people have celebrated the Calan Gaeaf since the days beyond time.’
‘We still call it Samhain,’ Fidelma said. ‘Many still believe it is the true start of the new year, for the old ones believed that darkness must come before rebirth and so we enter the period of darkness in these winter months before the rebirth of life. In fact,’ she smiled briefly, ‘the old ones used to say that this was the best time for women to conceive so that the baby could be born within the period of light.’