Authors: Morgan Llywelyn
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Historical Fiction, #Fantasy
They were natural enemies with nothing in common but the womb that bore them. Yet the tragedy of Gormlaith was enough to allow them to speak to one another with tense civility.
"Under Brehon Law," Donough told Sitric, "her kindred must care for her. But in truth she has few kindred left alive, only yourself and myself. And I don't suppose you recognize Brehon Law anyway."
"I do not. The same custom pertains among the Vikings, however. We would not put a madwoman out in the snow--at least, not so long as we had enough food for her without starving ourselves."
"And do you?"
"Things have not gone well since Clontarf,"
admitted Sitric, "but I can fill another mouth. I'm still king of the Dublin Danes, and as you no doubt saw down at the quay, trade continues. Trade always continues, no matter who's in power," he added.
Donough cocked his head for a moment, then smiled and said, "It's a trade I have to offer you."
"You brought me riches from Alba?"
"In a manner of speaking. In Alba I acquired some powerful allies, not the least of them being King Malcolm. I now have more supporters across the sea than Malachi Mor could ever call upon. What does that suggest to you, Sitric?"
The Dane folded his arms across his chest. "Go on, I'm listening."
"I can make life very hard for you, or not, as I see fit."
"Malachi's been making life hard enough for me.
He and his followers attack my people on any pretext. He's worse than a rash of nettles. That old man's trying to bash his way back into a kingly reputation."
"There are better ways to win a kingly reputation, Sitric."
"Are you suggesting a truce between us if I'm willing to take Gormlaith off your hands permanently?"
Donough cocked his head again. "Is a truce possible between us, after Clontarf?"
"Malachi would say no."
"I'm not asking Malachi. I'm asking my brother."
Sitric took a long pull of ale from his drinking horn. "Half-brother," he corrected. "That makes a difference. Your father was a Gael, mine a Dane. Born enemies, some might say."
"That doesn't mean we can't come to an accommodation now. The world has moved on.
Ireland has moved on."
"You may think so, but some things don't change," Sitric replied. "My wife hates Gormlaith as water hates fire."
"Emer and I are blood kin too.
If I could persuade her to accept the arrangement, what then?"
Sitric dug into his beard, scratching with blackened fingernails. "Old enmities go deep. You don't like me, I don't like you. And Clontarf is an open wound."
"It is," Donough agreed somberly. "But it's over. No one can bring back the dead, on your side or mine. Here's what I propose, Sitric: Give Gormlaith a home for the rest of her life, and in return, I shall never take up arms against you or your people without first meeting you and making every effort to resolve our differences."
"You're as mad as she is. That isn't the way things are done."
"That's how my father did them."
A muscle jumped in Sitric's jaw.
"Your father. Yes. But he was ..."
"Whatever he was, I mean to be. Have we an agreement or not?"
Sitric eyed Donough with a grudging respect. "You really think you're going to be Ard Ri?"
"Answer my question."
"You don't know what you're asking of me.
Any time spent under the same roof with Emer and Gormlaith together is enough to make a man tear out his hair with both hands. You are requiring a great sacrifice on my part--in return for what?"
"In return for my solemn pledge that, when I am Ard Ri, you shall be undisputed king of the Dublin Danes, and the penalties exacted against you since Clontarf shall be rescinded."
"What about Malachi Mor?"
"I cannot speak for Malachi Mor. As long as he is Ard Ri ..." Donough deliberately left the sentence unfinished.
Sitric took another drink of ale. Then, unexpectedly he laughed. "You're good! I give you that, you're very good. I might almost hear your father talking. I suppose this means you will expect my support when you undertake to claim the high kingship?"
"It would be to your advantage," Donough told him. "But it won't make any substantial difference. I told you, I have Malcolm of Alba. And for that matter," he added casually, "an alliance with the King of England."
Sitric's jaw dropped. "You what?"
At Kill Dalua, Brother Declan was continuing to record the litany of carnage and pillage sweeping the country. No longer was he concentrating on Viking depredations; he wrote of Irish princes renewing old battles for supremacy.
"Malachi Mor endeavors to control the violence with greater violence," he entered in the annals, "but he is not successful. Flaherty, grandson of Eochaid, King of Ulster, has been blinded by Niall, son of Eochaid. The men of Brega have slain a chieftain of Mugorn. The Tanist of Delbhna was brutally murdered in his own home. Ruadri of the Nechach has been killed by a rival from Fernmai."
"No one is safe in Ireland these days,"
complained Cathal Mac Maine grimly. "The land is cursed."
He knew the source of the curse. He reviewed his epistolary bombardment of his superiors, demanding extirpation of the druids.
Once Donough had come to an agreement with Sitric, he had a long and unpleasant conversation with Emer. He could not offer his half-sister the same inducements. Nothing would make her accept Gormlaith gladly. "And if my husband does, or says he does, you should not trust him," she warned Donough.
"Och, I don't trust him. But I understand him; he only respects strength. As long as I have sufficient strength, he will keep his word to me."
"He didn't keep the truce he made with our father," Emer reminded her half-brother.
"He had Gormlaith at his shoulder, urging him on. It would take a stronger man than Sitric Silkbeard to resist Gormlaith at the height of her powers. But those powers are gone now, and it is my duty to do what I can to care for her. I ask you to do the same, in the name of our kinship. Father would want that," he added.
Tears shimmered in Emer's eyes. "You cannot speak for him, and you have no right to invoke his name that way. It isn't fair."
"I can speak for him," said Donough Mac Brian.
He paid his mother one last visit before leaving her in Dublin. He did not think she would recognize him, but when he entered her chamber her Scottish attendant said, "She's having a good day."
Donough looked at the empty-faced woman slumped on a bench. "How can you tell?"
"I'm used to her ways now."
"That's why I want you to stay with her.
Sitric will give her shelter and food, but the only way I can guarantee she will be properly cared for is if her attendant is answerable to me. I shall reward you handsomely, and when ... when you are no longer needed, you may either return to Alba or I shall give you land here; good land, fertile soil."
The Scot did not hesitate. "I'm your man," he said. "I won't go back. It's cold in Alba."
Donough sat down beside his mother. He wanted to take her hand, but such gestures had never been employed between them and would seem unnatural now.
Not knowing what else to do, he spoke of his plans to her for a while, then, when she was unresponsive, he stood up with a sigh. "I'd best be going,"
he told the Scot. "Be good to her."
He was almost out the door when he heard her voice, as thin and insubstantial as that of a ghost.
"Remember your promise to me," said Gormlaith.
Donough whirled around.
Her faded eyes met his. "You made me a promise. The last thing I shall ever ask of you."
"I won't forget," he said hoarsely. "I will keep my vow to you ... Mother."
After he had gone, Gormlaith stared at the empty doorway for a long time. Then her dry, cracked lips shaped a name.
Malachi Mor felt stretched very thin. He had never fully recovered from the deaths of his sons, but as long as he kept busy he could avoid thinking about them. His years were against him, however. Each day he felt wearier, more despondent; each day he fought back with all the fury he could muster.
But he had to admit to himself it was not enough.
Learning that Donough Mac Brian had returned to Ireland and gone straight to Sitric Silkbeard did not improve his humor. "He's a schemer like his father," Malachi told his courtiers. "No doubt he's plotting some evil with the Dublin Danes."
So he was astonished when Donough arrived at Dun na Sciath and offered to put himself and his followers at Malachi's service.
It was the first time the two had met face to face. The Ard Ri expected an impudent youth; he found himself facing a disturbingly familiar man.
"Why would you want to help me?" Malachi asked suspiciously. "What benefit do you seek?"
Donough replied with a disarming smile, "You have lost sons who should be fighting beside you. I have lost a father."
"I can't replace your father."
"Nor can I replace your sons," Donough replied, aware of the irony in the Ard Ri's words even if Malachi was not. "But I have a number of supporters in Thomond, good fighting men all of them. I think an alliance would be to the advantage of both of us."
At Cashel, Carroll could hardly contain himself. Messengers from the northeast had begun reporting a succession of victories on the part of the Ard Ri, and the name of Donough Mac Brian was always prominently mentioned.
"He is acquitting himself in a way that would make his father proud," the historian said.
"Prince Donough is helping the Ard Ri to restore, at last, a modicum of order."
"Why is my brother fighting for the High King?"
Teigue asked peevishly. "Is not his place here in Munster?"
Maeve felt compelled to be fair. "You denied him a place in Munster," she reminded her husband.
"I did no such thing. I just refused to allow him to take over Kincora."
"Yet you no longer live there yourself."
"I shall when it is fully rebuilt."
"All the work is done, they say."
"Are you so anxious to go back there?"
Maeve sighed. "I would really like to go back to our home in the valley west of Kincora," she said wi/lly. "But I suppose ..."
"No," Teigue said. "I am King of Munster now."
In the cabin among the oaks, Cera waited.
She knew Donough was in Ireland; she could feel him. But he was a great distance from her and she could not draw him closer.
Sometimes she felt that he was in great danger.
Then she employed all she knew of druidry to keep him safe.
The Ui Caisin had long been an
exceptionally contentious tribe. Their neighbors feared and hated them, and their incessant cattle raiding had sparked a hundred bitter feuds.
So many had complained to the Ard Ri that at last Malachi, with Donough beside him, led a small army south and west from Kildare to the territory of the Ui Caisin.
The season was high summer. Hedgerows hummed with insect life, and as he sat at ease on his lightly sweating horse, Donough could smell the fragrance of sun-warmed earth. He rode at the head of the warrior band, allowing only Malachi to precede him. Having learned a lesson from the head wound at Annacotty, he now never went on such expeditions without wearing a padded iron helmet and a shirt of iron links in the Viking style. He did not include a Viking axe among his weaponry, however.
Donough preferred the sword.
In the bright sunshine, his helmet was too hot.
He debated with himself about removing it, then decided to keep it on. He would not let the men see him giving in to discomfort. He was stronger than the Ard Ri.
Malachi was finding such campaigns increasingly difficult. In recent years he had been plagued with hemorrhoids, which made riding an agony, but he was too old to walk. Face white with pain, he rode on a saddle thickly padded with fur cushions, and insisted that his mounts either walk or canter, but never trot.
Donough was contemptuous. "That pathetic old man," he said privately to Fergal and Ronan. He did not say it in Cumara's presence, however. Cumara had spent years taking care of an old man, and his sympathies were with Malachi.
As they neared the land of the Ui Caisin, the Ard Ri seemed to shrink in upon himself. He was gathering his energies as best he could for another of those battles he had come to dread.
But he was not prepared for the Ui Caisin when they came exploding out of the undergrowth.
Even Donough was caught by surprise. Almost before he knew what was happening, a warrior had grabbed the bridle of his horse and was wrenching the animal's head around, trying to make it fall and pin its rider.
"Maggot!" screamed Donough. He tore his sword from its sheath and hacked furiously at the man on the ground, driving him back. Meanwhile another of the enemy vaulted onto his horse from behind and tried to strangle him, but Donough twisted around and knocked his attacker off the horse, then slid to the ground himself, ready to fight.
By now Donough was very familiar with battle. It had a rhythm: lunge forward, slash and thrust, fall back, adjust your balance, attack again.
A good sword could weave a shield of metal in the air around you. And there was always a man guarding his back; usually Fergal.
He was young and it was summer, and he thought himself invulnerable.
Catharnach, son of Aedh, chieftain of the Ui Caisin, did not know the identities of any of the warriors who had invaded his homeland under the banner of the Ard Ri. As far as he was concerned they were all The Enemy. But he did want credit for bringing down the most able of them, the champion. And from the way he was fighting, dancing on the balls of his feet, the champion appeared to be the very tall man with the flowing auburn moustache.
Brandishing an axe, Catharnach ran toward Donough.
*
The lightning vanished, and the light with it. Yet the sun was still visible. A strange murky grayness had descended, however, and a chilling cold.