reputation among women was such that he had many lovers. He picked them up as one might pick up flowers, kept them until the affair withered and them threw them away. Am I not right?”
Fáelán was pale and he glanced surreptitiously at Muadnat.
“That is no crime, Fidelma. In our society, many still take second wives, husbands or lovers.”
“True enough. But one of the flowers which Illan had picked was not ready to be discarded. She went to his tent this morning and argued with him. And when he spurned her, when he said he would have no more to do with her, she, in a fit of rage, stabbed him to death. All it needed was one swift dagger blow under the rib cage.”
“If this is so,” said Énna, quietly, “why would she go to such lengths to put the blame on Bressal? Why poison Aonbharr? The laws of our society allow leniency to those who perpetrate such crimes of passion.”
Fidelma inclined her head. “A case could be made that any nonfatal injury inflicted by the woman in such circumstances does not incur liability. Our laws recognize the stirring of uncontrollable passion in such circumstances. In the matter of death she would be fined her victim’s honor price only. No other punishment would be necessary.”
“Then why, if this were so, did the woman conceal her crime, for the concealment brings forth greater punishment?” repeated Énna.
“Because there were two separate villainies at work here and one fed off the initial deed of the other,” replied Fidelma.
“I don’t understand. Who killed Illan?” Fáelán again glanced uneasily at his wife. “You say it was a woman. By attempting to conceal the crime such a woman, no matter her rank, if found guilty, would be placed into a boat with one paddle and a vessel of gruel and the mercy of God. Sister Fidelma,” his voice suddenly broke with passion, “is it Muadnat of whom you speak?”
Fáelán wife sat as if turned to stone.
Fidelma did not reply immediately but drew out of her
“Does the dagger belong to you, my lady?”
“It is mine,” Muadnat replied grimly.
Fáelán gasped in horror, as if his worst fears were confirmed.
“Then …?” he began.
Fidelma was shaking her head. “No, Dagháin killed Illan.”
There was a gasp of astonishment from the company and all eyes turned on the flushed face of Énna’s wife. Dagháin sat stunned for a moment by the revelation. Then, as if in a dream, she slowly rose to her feet and looked about her, as if searching out someone. “Liar! Betrayer!” she hissed venomously. Fidelma glanced quickly in the direction the woman was gazing and felt satisfied.
Dagháin now turned toward her and cursed her in a way which left no one in doubt as to her guilt. Énna had simply collapsed into a chair, immobile with shock.
After Dagháin had been removed to a place of confinement, Fidelma had to raise her hands to quell the questions that were thrown at her.
“Dagháin was seen coming to the Curragh early this morning. The apothecary, Sister Eblenn, saw her soon after she had been robbed which was just after breakfast. Dagháin therefore lied when she said that she had come later in the morning to the course. That lie alerted my suspicions. A suspicion which was increased when I realized that the arrow was not the murder weapon but the wound had been made by a dagger. When I first came before Fáelán, Muadnat had been wearing a ceremonial dagger sheath yet there was no dagger in it.”
“This I don’t understand,” Fáelán said. “Surely this would lay the suspicion on Muadnat?”
“Indeed, I was suspicious for a while, that I admit. But it was obvious to my eye that the dagger in Dagháin’s sheath was too small to fit comfortably in it. That I had to work out. Then I realized that she, at some stage, put Muadnat’s dagger in her sheath, is that not so?”
Muadnat spoke softly.
“She wanted an apple to calm her nerves and asked me for the loan of my dagger, saying she had mislaid her own. It was only a moment ago that I realized Dagháin had not returned it.”
“Dagháin,” Fidelma went on, “in her description of the finding of Illan, said that she had run straight to tell Énna. Yet she was seen running from his tent directly to her own tent. I searched her tent a moment ago. Thankfully, she had discarded her ceremonial belt and sheath. I was confirmed in my suspicion that the dagger did not belong to her but was that of Muadnat.”
“Then where was Dagháin’s own dagger?” demanded Laisran, intrigued.
“I found it where I suspected it would be, the blade is still covered with Illan’s blood. It was in Angaire’s saddle bag.”
Angaire, with a cry of rage, made to jump to the tent door but one of the Baoisgne, the king’s guards, stayed him with a drawn sword to his chest. Fidelma continued on without taking any notice of the drama.
“While Angaire did not kill Illan, he did poison Aonbharr, and then tried to place the guilt for both deeds on Bressal by planting the arrow and
“Angaire had, I believe, already devised a plan to hurt Bressal. I believe his original intention was to poison Ochain. For that end, he stole some poisonous plants from the tent of Sister Eblenn early this morning. Then the mysteries of Fate itself took over. Angaire overheard Bressal arguing with Illan. But the plot did not occur to him then.
“It was only when he was with Murchad and Sílán a little while later, that he saw Dagháin fleeing from Alan’s tent. Her dress was disheveled and the ceremonial dagger missing. She fled to her own tent. He had made a lewd remark, an automatic remark. His companions, Sílán and Murchad, were leaving. Perhaps even before then the thought had struck him that his unthinking remark might be true and what if… his mind was thinking about the missing dagger.
“He went to Illan’s tent. There was Dagháin’s knife buried in Illan’s chest. His suspicion was right. He took out the knife with the idea growing in his mind. Here was his chance to get even with Bressal and to secure a future lucrative role for himself in the service of Dagháin. He hurried to her tent, showed her the knife, which he kept as a hold over her. He told her to wait a while before she should find her husband and tell him the story which she has subsequently told us. The reason for her to be in Illan’s tent was that she had noticed that Aonbharr was ill. This was Angaire’s addition providing a perfect excuse and an essential part of his intrigue.
“Then he hurried to Bressal’s tent, furtively took an arrow from Sílán’s quiver, broke it in two, and left one half in the quiver. The other he took, together with his
“Thus two separate villainies were at work, coming together over the one great crime. And who is the greater villain-Dagháin, a pitiful, rejected woman, or Angaire, petty and vengeful, whose spite might have led to an even greater crime? I tell you this, Fáe-lán, when the time comes for Dagháin to be tried before the courts, I would like to be retained as her advocate.”
“But what made you connect Dagháin with Illan?” demanded Fáelán.
“Énna himself indicated that his wife had had an affair with Illan by a chance remark. You knew of the affair, didn’t you, Énna?”
Énna glanced up from his chair, red-eyed with emotional exhaustion. He nodded slowly.
“I knew. I did not know that she was so besotted with Illan that she would resort to such means to keep him when he finally rejected her,” he whispered. “Fáelán, I will stand down as your Tan-ist. I am not worthy now.”
The King of the Laighin grimaced.
“We will talk of this, Énna,” he said, with considerable discomfit, studiously ignoring his wife,