Read Cross of Vengeance Online
Authors: Cora Harrison
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective
‘Thank you, Blad, that would be very helpful. I’m sorry to be taking up your time. I know what a busy man you are.’
‘Not at all, Brehon, I’m just sorry that I couldn’t have been of more help to you.’ Blad got to his feet with a relieved expression.
‘You’ve been very helpful, Blad,’ said Mara with sincerity, noting with approbation that Cormac was the one who got to his feet and went to open the door for the innkeeper. She gave her son a nod. Yes, she thought, Blad has been most helpful. There had been, it seemed, quite a few people out in the rain that night: Blad himself, Ardal and his steward, Father Miguel, Brother Cosimo, Nechtan and his steward frantically getting as much turf under cover as possible, and then there was Sorley ringing the bell in the round tower only about fifty yards from the church itself.
But ten minutes later, as the rain continued to lash down, in all probability only the murderer was left in the vicinity of the church. And within that church, relying on the ancient laws of sanctuary, was the pilgrim who had desecrated the relic of the true cross; the relic which was of great importance to the Church of Rome, as well as to the esteem, the wealth and the future prosperity of the small community of Kilnaboy.
Brother Cosimo was tight-lipped, arrogant and unwilling to say anything. Mutely he challenged Mara to find any facts against him, and she, with memory of his stolen treasure, stared back at him with a blank face and allowed him to wonder what evidence she might have garnered to convict him of the murder of the man who not only attacked his church, but who had threatened to expose him as a liar, a thief and a man who had desecrated sacred shrines.
‘Fetch Father Miguel,’ said Mara to Fachtnan. Brother Cosimo could, if necessary, be interrogated further and forced into saying more. But somehow she did not feel that he was guilty. It was very true what her scholars had said. A man who wished only for the death of his blackmailer would not have gone to the trouble and danger of setting up this elaborate simulacrum of a crucified Christ, would not have bothered stripping the live man, knifing him, conveying him to the ancient tomb, marking the stigmata on his hands and feet, hiding his clothes in a place that was unlikely to be discovered and, all in all, going to great trouble to give the impression that the death of Hans Kaufmann was the work of the vengeful God. This, she thought, was a crime of passion.
‘
God is not mocked
’ had said the script on the tiny scroll inserted into the crown of thorns.
And Father Miguel was the most likely person within the boundaries of Kilnaboy Church to have taken this statement seriously.
How many kinds of social connections are there?
F
ather Miguel, to her surprise, came in eagerly, eyes wide, burning face full of impatience, hands outstretched.
‘Madam,’ he said, and then quickly amended it to ‘Brehon. I do need your help,’ he said eagerly. ‘I’m sure that all is not right within that round tower – they have done their best, those maids with their buckets, their brooms and their cakes of soap, but I know that it is still not right. Something is wrong, but I cannot be sure. I need a young person, someone whose senses are still untainted by the world, someone who can smell …’ and then he stopped, but after a moment said earnestly, ‘The devil is still within the round tower. I know it deep down within my being, but I cannot smell him myself. I need a young person with young organs.’
His glance swept along the row of scholars, passed with indifference over Cormac’s eager,
please-choose-me
face, went on to the end of the line, looked deep into Domhnall’s earnest dark eyes and crooked a finger at him. Mara gave a sigh of relief. Cormac would have been unable to stop playing the fool, especially with Finbar’s admiring eyes on him. Finbar himself was too unsure and might look to Cormac for a lead. Slevin was blunt and matter-of-fact and quite liable to ask awkward questions about the exact way that a devil should smell, but Domhnall was a diplomat and could be trusted to behave with discretion. His mouth was solemn, slightly compressed, and his eyes non-committal as he got to his feet.
Mara took one look at the three eager faces of the remaining scholars and melted to the appeal in their eyes. Once Father Miguel had ushered Domhnall out of the room, she beckoned to them, making sure to keep her own face very solemn and indicating to them that they should walk ahead of her where she could keep an eye on them. After all, she told herself, all of this is probably very good training for them, though she guessed that they would get a lot of fun out of it later on. So far, the west of Ireland was free of religious fanaticism; there was an easy tolerance of married priests and monks, and the weekly Mass was more of a social occasion than a time of heart-searching for sins committed during the week. But it was a rapidly changing world – the power of England over Ireland had waned during the last hundred years or so, but now it was waxing again. Who knew what these scholars of hers would have to face when they took office.
How would Domhnall handle this, she wondered, as she walked closely behind Cormac and Finbar, keeping her own face very serious? It was a tricky situation for a fourteen-year-old boy. Father Miguel, though a fanatic, was not a fool. He hesitated for a moment beside the ladder leading up to the door and then said to the boy: ‘You go up on your own. That will be the best.’
Domhnall climbed the ladder instantly and was through the door without pausing. They heard his feet climbing up to the second floor and glimpsed his dark head through the narrow slit of the eastern window. He waited a few minutes and they all stood in silence looking up, waiting for his verdict. There was a strong smell of new thatch, thought Mara, but that was a wholesome smell – what was the devil supposed to smell like?
Domhnall reappeared eventually. He stood at the top of the steps for a moment, looking down at his friends, then reversed and came neatly backwards down the ladder. Without hesitation he turned and looked seriously into the face of Father Miguel.
‘Well?’ The Spanish priest’s face was a dark red and his prominent eyes seemed about to burst from their sockets.
‘There’s a strange, bitter smell,’ said Domhnall without hesitation.
Lye soap, thought Mara.
‘Bitter!’ The priest took a moment to think. ‘Like wormwood?’ he enquired.
‘It could be,’ said Domhnall cautiously, though his eyes, to Mara, seemed to say:
What does wormwood smell like?
The priest’s eyes glinted. ‘And the Bible says: “
And the name of the star is called wormwood: and the third part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the waters, because they were made bitter
.” So you smelled wormwood, young man. Is that correct? It is as I thought: the devil may still be within. But why wormwood? Why not the fires of hell?’
He was addressing the two queries to himself, but Domhnall, trained to politeness, said helpfully, ‘Perhaps the devil fears fire, Sir.’
‘Because of the flaming sword,’ put in Slevin.
‘You may be right; I’ll have to think about this.’ Father Miguel was wide-eyed, full of thought. His gaze, fixed on the middle distance, was speculative.
‘Perhaps in the meantime you would be willing to answer a few questions,’ said Mara, falling into step beside him and firmly guiding him back towards the inn. ‘You see, I, as the king’s representative here, must determine what happened to Herr Hans Kaufmann. It is important to decide whether,’ she said with a sudden flash of inspiration, ‘he was taken from this world by divine or by human means – the truth must be established.’
‘Indeed!’ He turned to her eagerly, stopping so abruptly that Fachtnan, walking behind them, almost bumped into him. Mara heard a stifled giggle from the back of the line, but Father Miguel was deep in theological affairs.
‘You are right!’ He nodded his grey head. ‘It will be of the utmost importance to make sure there was no human agency involved in this death and that it was God himself, as I do truly believe, who struck down the sinner and laid him out in all his nakedness.’
‘Exactly,’ said Mara emphatically. She opened the door to the parlour and urged him gently in. ‘You, of course, can be of great use to us, as I understand that you were around the churchyard during the rainstorm. You remember, don’t you, how wet you got? Did you see anyone near to the church – apart from Brother Cosimo, of course? I understand that he was with you.’
‘No, Brother Cosimo had gone back to his room. But I did see someone; I saw the man who lives in that castle.’
‘Yes.’ Mara noticed that Fachtnan was making a note and that the boys had quietly resumed their seats. Their faces were excited and she was conscious of how keyed up she was herself. Perhaps they were coming near to the truth.
‘Let me picture the scene,’ she said thoughtfully. ‘You were standing by the round tower, is that right?’ She waited for his nod before continuing. ‘And you saw Nechtan – your host of the other evening. I understand that Nechtan was anxious about his turf which had not yet been thatched.’
‘I heard a lot of shouting. They were pushing those strange two-wheeled barrows into the barn. I’m not sure whether this man, Nechtan, was amongst them. I saw his wife, though. She was standing at the far side of the church. She had a basket in her hand.’
‘Did Narait, Nechtan’s wife, go into the church?’
Father Miguel shook his head. ‘No, she went back towards the castle. I’m not surprised. The rain was getting heavier so that I decided to go back to the inn myself.’
‘You must have been very wet by then; did Blad offer to dry your cloak?’ asked Mara innocently.
‘No, Brehon,’ he said curtly. ‘I did not see Blad. I went around the back and then straight up to my bedroom. There was a good fire there and my cloak was not too wet.’
That’s not the story that Blad’s serving boy told; he said that it was soaking, thought Mara, but she held her peace.
Her mind went to the picture of the pilgrims lined up in the courtyard, ready for their departure to Aran. She would check with the boys later on, but her impression was that all of them were wearing black cloaks. Black cloaks, she thought with irritation, not only hid the signs of a rain-soaking pretty well, but also hid the signs of blood. If the murderer had worn a black cloak, perhaps already wet, and then got thoroughly soaked in the downpour, there would be little or no evidence left on the cloaks.
‘How do you think that Hans Kaufmann was killed, Father Miguel?’ she asked.
His answer came rapidly, almost before she had finished speaking.
‘He was struck down by God,’ said the priest with great solemnity. ‘There can be no other explanation. You are wasting your time, Brehon, if you are looking for a human agent. God is the God of Mercy, but he is also the God of Wrath; He will work His will with no help from man. Now, if there is nothing else that you wish to ask me, then I will leave you. I need to go and think about the purification of the tower where the sacred relic once lay.’
‘Yes,’ said Mara in as judicial a manner as she could muster. ‘I think I have finished with you now, Father Miguel. I shall send my assistant with you up to your room to examine your cloak for bloodstains. This will be done for the eleven people who were present and who may have had reason to kill Hans Kaufmann, whether inspired by God or by the devil. As we agreed earlier, it is important to be able to assure the world that no human hand was involved in this murder – if that is the truth of the matter. Fachtnan, perhaps you will also examine the cloak belonging to Brother Cosimo.’
Mara waited until the footsteps of Fachtnan and the Spanish priest were heard going up the outside steps to the bedrooms and then she nodded to Domhnall.
‘You did well,’ she said. ‘That was a difficult situation and you behaved with judgement and courtesy. I’m proud of you.’
And that, she thought, as she glimpsed a quick look of annoyance on Cormac’s face, had to be said; Domhnall deserved the praise and she could not allow her son’s feelings of jealousy to stop her from giving it. It’s odd, she thought, but when Domhnall came to my law school six years ago I worried in case there might be problems with the other boys, since he was my grandson, and especially with Slevin who started the same day as Domhnall, but somehow it was never an issue for them, or for either of us. Perhaps, because of that, I hadn’t expected so much trouble with Cormac. Yet it seems to be getting worse, not better.
‘Cormac,’ she said impulsively, ‘would you go up to the prioress’s room and ask her, very politely, could she come down and talk to me. Oh, and Cormac, ask her to bring her cloak, too. Don’t give any reasons. Offer to carry it for her if she asks why.’
It was time, perhaps, to stop remembering all of the time that he was the youngest boy and to give him some responsibility and chances to use his judgement.
Fachtnan was back before Cormac and the prioress, and she knew from his face that nothing had appeared on the cloaks of Brother Cosimo and Father Miguel. He shook his head as soon as he closed the parlour door behind him.
‘Nothing that I could see, or feel, on either cloak,’ he said. ‘You know what travellers’ cloaks are like. These are the usual very thick wool, double cloaks – both of them are woven from the wool of black sheep, not dyed, so there are traces of grey here and there, but not a sign of a bloodstain on either of them.’
Mara nodded. The travellers’ cloaks would have been made from unwashed sheep’s wool, rich in lanolin and apt to shed water very easily. Even if some blood had splashed on them, a walk under the torrential rainstorm of the evening of the murder would have washed them clean. She sighed and wondered whether this case would ever be solved. There was still the huge problem of how the man, a big, strong man, probably the biggest and strongest man in the vicinity of Kilnaboy Church that night, had been murdered in that very strange way.