Authors: Morgan Llywelyn
Tags: #Historical, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Romance, #Adult
Brian stirred, raised his head, let his gaze wander slowly over the firelit faces until he found Ardan. Then he got up with great weariness and beckoned to his former instructor. “Ardan, come and sit with me awhile. This is not a good night to be alone.”
“Aye, surely my lord. Are you all right? That blood ...”
“It isn’t all mine. And what is, is not important. You need not bother about it.”
The two men sat in silence for a time, each absorbed with his own thoughts. At last Ardan began, “That was a dreadful thing, today.”
“Was it?” Brian asked, his voice remote.
“What you did to that Northman . ..”
“What did I do?” The deep, tired voice was incurious.
“Don’t you remember?”
“Not really. No. I recall finding Nessa, and then everything became ... I can’t explain it. Red and roaring.
Was it bad?”
“Sweet Saint Patrick, was it bad! I think that’s one of the few times I’ve seen Northmen genuinely frightened. And they weren’t the only ones, Brian; your own men were afraid of you today.”
Brian sat silent. “The Northmen were frightened?” he asked at last, with surprise. “Of me?”
“They were that, I can tell you!”
“So they can be made fearful, like other men.” Brian’s voice trailed off into a musing. “They can feel terror. Isn’t . . . that ... interesting”
Sitting beside him, forgotten, Ardan shivered in the winter night.
Spring came, grass greening over the low mounded graves and around the unfound bones of winter’s warriors. Hearing exciting tales of the mountain army, young men left their herds and made their way into the hills to join, bringing new weapons with them and clothing that could be shared. The streams and loughs tumbled with fish, the grass rustled with game, and every three and bush seemed heavy with ripening fruit.
In such a season, hope is born.
Brian seemed tireless, in terms both of energy and of imagination. He found a cave of limestone honeycombing the underside of a hill near a well-traveled road, and stationed men inside it. When a sentry alerted them to passers-by they set up such a din of shouting and war cries that the alarmed witnesses fled the area to spread awed tales of the mighty force assembled in the mountains. The echoes turned Brian’s little band into hundreds and the Northmen made themselves scarce in the area.
Finding a muddy flat beyond a pass in the Slieve Aughty mountains, Brian had his men spend days trampling it, until there was clear evidence on the earth of a great army marching westward. At a “campsite,” many small fires’ were built and then extinguished, and around them were left the ruins of a month’s meals, as if all had been eaten in a night.
The Northmen made no more excursions into the Slieve Aughty mountains.
Ardan, devoted to worry, asked Brian, “How long can we fool them with this pretense? Surely the Northmen have scouts; they must realize that there are but a few of us.” Brian grinned. At such rare moments his eyes twinkled with the delicious mischief of a small boy. “The Northmen thought we were only a handful, but now they can’t be sure. It’s not their way to send many solitary scouts; they prefer to go everywhere in a mass. If they receive reports that a small band of Irish has been spotted, they also receive reports that a sizable force exists. It doesn’t matter if we outnumber them or “not—as long as they suspect we might, they will leave the countryside in peace and loose their horror on places where the odds are more in their favor.”
Brian was sitting on a fallen tree trunk at the mouth of the small cave that was his current command post.
His thick hair, uncombed, tumbled in ruddy locks to his shoulders; his sinewy body was clad in the same sort of brief linen tunic most of his men wore. But when he spoke, it was as an educated man. “You see, Ardan, I’ve come to a conclusion about reality. In dealing with other people, it’s not your own perception of reality that is the determining factor, but theirs. As they perceive the situation to be, so will they act.
“If we can convince the Northmen that we outnumber them and they cannot stand against us, they will not stand against us. That’s how small armies win battles over large ones. It isn’t the muscle that must be defeated, but the mind.”
Ardan’s dark face was leaner than ever, with a few teeth missing now from the smile that had been radiant. A permanent furrow was plowed between his brows; it deepened as he considered Brian’s strategy. “We’ll be found out, eventually,” he said again.
“Undoubtedly. But by that time, perhaps we can have the scales weighted in our favor in truth. More men are joining us every day. Before I’m twenty-five, we can have this land free of foreigners from Lough Derg to the Fergus.”
In Dublin, the city of the Black Pool, Olaf Cuaran the Norse king listened to stories of the growing Dalcassian force with some concern. At night, in the bed of the lovely Irish child who was his new bride, he remarked, “I heard more to-‘day about that outlaw band in Thomond. I have a bad feeling about them, for some reason.”
Gormlaith snuggled against him. Her little breasts were scarcely more than buttons on her chest, but her eyes were already older than many a grown woman’s; a deep green, those eyes, and intensely alive. The sensuality she radiated was not childish.
“Forget about them,” she advised her husband. “You have proved in battle that you are the equal of any Irishman.” She flung a lock of her dark red hair across his naked body and dragged it slowly back, watching him. “Play with me a little,” she purred. “I promised my father I would give you pleasure.”
Drowning in her, Olaf Cuaran forgot the Dalcassians.
In Limerick, Ivar heard the latest tales and slammed his drinking horn on the table in disgust. “We have beaten these people into a pulp again and again!” he cried. “How dare they continue to defy us! Send me my jarls and we will draw up new battle plans; we cannot continue to swallow such insults.”
The Norse jarls, who had heard the same stories, came into Ivar’s hall full of their own ideas. Ivar’s son Harold led them. “There is nothing of any value left in Thomond,” they told their king. “We have already taken everything. Why waste more time up there? An expedition is being planned to Alba and the Saxon land, and an attack on the region of York that will surely be more profitable than spending the summer skirmishing in the mountains.
“Our ships are ready and hungry for the sea wind; if we come back in the autumn and find this Dalcassian is still a problem, then we can go up and exterminate him before the first snow.”
Ivar looked from face to face. He did not see any great enthusiasm reflected there for his own proposals.
“Very well,” he agreed at last, “plan your voyages, and we will wait until the turning of the leaves to consider the problem in Thomond.”
After they left he summoned his brother Ilacquin. The younger man’s face was still fair and smooth-cheeked, but his
eyes were smoke reddened and old. He had developed the habit of thrusting his head forward on his neck like a weasel, and the women did not find him as irresistible as once they had. Ilacquin was souring, and unhappy.
“I have a job for you, brother,” Ivar told him. “I think it would be to our advantage to learn the truth of this matter across the Shannon. I want you to take a small squad of men, not as warriors, but to be my eyes and report back to me alone. You have raided in that country before; you know the ground.”
Ilacquin nodded. “There’s one duty I must perform first. Word has just come that old Callachan is finally dead, and Donogh is to succeed him as king of all Munster. I assume, with Harold about to put to sea and you occupied here, you will want me to attend the ceremony as your representative? To reassert the bonds between us, see what more we can get?”
Ivar did not smile; Ivar never smiled, but the light in his eyes changed. “That is your true battlefield, isn’t it, brother? The war of words: negotiations, treaties, arrangements, deceptions. I think this land has corrupted you.”
“I know what my best weapon is, and it is neither ax nor sword.”
“A pity,” Ivar commented. “Go, then, and peacock it around the halls of Cashel. But afterward I expect to hear that you are going to Thomond.”
At Cashel, no one was thinking about Mahon’s renegade brother. Almost no one. Callachan had been given a lavish funeral rite and entombed beneath a carved stone cross as befitted a Christian king, and Donogh sat in his place on the High Seat.
A rumor was afloat that one of the other tribal princes might dispute Donogh’s succession, and additional guards were posted on the access road to the Rock and at the gates and doors of the principal buildings.
Some whispered behind their hands that they knew for a fact Mahon of the Dal Cais would come riding south to press his claim for the kingship once more. Owenachts sharpened their swords, and warriors grinned at one another and sang lusty battle songs.
But Mahon remained content at Boruma, his ambitions limited to increasing his herds. He sent a suitable homage gift to the new king of all Munster, delivered by a deputation of Dalcassian nobles.
Landowners of the highest stratum of tribal society, these men had chosen their costumes for the occasion with care, knowing that if Donogh thought them to be wealthy he might decide to impose a new and heavier tribute on them. But though their cloaks were plain and their brooches unjeweled, the bolts of many-hued silk they brought in honor of the new king were magnificent.
Seeing them as they lay piled on a table with other gifts of homage, Deirdre paused to caress the fabric with her palm. “Is this how Prince Brian dresses in Thomond?” she wondered aloud.
“How would I know?” Fithir answered her. “You spend too much time spinning cobwebs about him in your thoughts, sister; my lord husband is right about that. It would be better to show interest in a real person, someone like King Ivar’s younger brother over there. I have noticed how his eyes follow you, and my lord’s father thought highly of him as an ally. It could be a good match—Olaf of Dublin has taken an Irish bride, I understand.”
Deirdre glanced across the stone and timber hall at the Norseman, richly clad in otter fur and silver, and pursed her lips in distaste. “He makes me uncomfortable. He looks at me as if I were naked, and when he sat next to me yestereven he kept trying to get his hand between my legs.”
Fithir lifted her brows. “Ah. The Northmen have no respect for women. Neither Donogh nor I would want you to consider a suitor you despise. We, bless Christ’s name, have different morals than the foreigners!”
Ilacquin had seen Deirdre’s remarkable violet eyes look in his direction and smiled back at her, trying to get her to leave her glance locked with his. But her eyes darted away and he could not mistake the expression on her face. She loathed him; him, Ilacquin Amlavson! Ivar was right, these degenerate Irish were becoming annoying. It would do them good to be brought to their knees once more. He deliberately caught Deirdre’s eye again, smiled in a very suggestive way, and then managed to look away first.
The girl was outraged. “Why doesn’t he go back to Limerick?” she demanded to know. “He’s not needed here!”
“Just manage to be civil to him until he leaves,” Donogh implored of her. “Nothing more, I promise you.
We can’t afford trouble with the Norsemen right now when I’m just getting established.”
She wrinkled her small nose. “Be civil. Phah I wouldn’t give that man some air if he were stoppered in a jug.”
The rituals completed, the homage from the tribal under-kings to the provincial ruler accepted, and most of the guests seen safely upon their various homeward roads, life at Cashel began returning to its usual style. Donogh, enjoying for the first time the station he had never thought to hold, turned over its smallest details in his mental fingers, examining them as a miser would his hoard.
“We are pledged a good army, Fithir,” he boasted to his wife in their marriage bed. “Every king of every tuath is promised to give me seven hundred men in time of battle, and those kings who control many tuaths have to send more.”
Fithir lay quietly on her back, eyes closed, toying with the ends of her braided hair as she listened to her husband. She was not really paying attention, but then Deirdre’s wistful face flitted across her mind, and she recalled the name so often on her sister’s lips. “My lord, what of the Dal Cais?” she asked. “I know King Mahon sent you a homage gift, but how many warriors did he pledge?”
“Five tuaths,” Donogh replied happily.
“All of Thomond? Can he command that many, now that he and his brother seem to have divided the loyalties of their land?”
“Thomond is a large area, though poor. I dare say if
Mahon promises that many men he will provide them, if I ever make the demand. For all our differences, I have never doubted his honor.”
“And if Thomond sent an army, who would lead them? King Mahon, or this fabled prince my sister chatters about?”
Donogh grew hot beneath his coverlet. “I cannot tell you how tired I am of hearing about the Dalcassians all the time, wife! I have never personally done them any evil; I was not even on the field when their Cennedi was killed, and I have tried to deal with them justly according to the Brehon law. Yet they are constantly dragged into every conversation, even into the privacy of my own .bed, and I resent it. I forbid you to speak to me any more of those people, of any of them, do you understand?”
Startled by his sudden tempter, Fithir fell obediently silent.
At dinner Ilacquin had toyed with his meat and torn his bread into small independent republics, finally consuming nothing but quantities of ale. He retired to his sleeping chamber with scarcely a word to anyone as soon as the servants began putting out the rushlights in the hall, and by the glow of one meager lamp he removed his sandals and belt. Not for Ilacquin of Limerick the over-civilized Irish custom of being dressed and undressed by slaves!
He stood beside his bed, thoughtlessly dabbling his fingers in the basin of scented water provided for ablutions. The feel of the water was pleasant, its perfume enjoyable ... he came to himself with a start.