since.’
Bleidbara was looking around with a frown.
‘Where is the lady Trifina?’ he asked.
Hoel looked blank.
‘A female,’ Eadulf said rather impatiently. ‘A woman of this country. Was she not in the hold with you?’
Hoel shook his head. ‘Since we were forced to enter this creek we have been battened down below decks and have lost count of the day or night. We know of no other prisoners.’
Bleidbara was making for the stern cabin and Eadulf, seeing the expression on his face, went quickly after him.
The door of the cabin that had once been used by Murchad, the captain of the
Bleidbara started back with a curse. Then, recovering himself, he pushed inside with Eadulf at his shoulder. Trifina was pressed back in a corner with an expression of fear on her face. This dissolved into one of incredulity and then of joy, and she came rushing across the cabin and threw herself into Bleidbara’s arms.
‘At last! At last! I thought rescue would never come.’
Bleidbara remained stiff and unresponsive. After a few moments, Trifina felt his coldness and drew back with a puzzled frown.
‘What…what is it?’ she asked uncertainly.
‘Why aren’t you a prisoner on this ship like the others?’
She did not understand the implication. ‘But I am. I
‘The cabin door was unlocked.’
She smiled uncertainly, still not understanding his point.
‘What matters? I could not leave the cabin and there were always guards outside to watch me.’
‘Yet all the other prisoners were confined in the hold.’
‘I could not help them. I was well treated, provided I kept to the cabin.’
‘Lady Trifina.’ It was Eadulf who spoke. ‘The circumstances look suspicious, especially when these cut- throats fight under the flag of your family.’
‘But I explained that to Fidelma. These people are out to destroy my family,’ protested the girl.
‘They will destroy nothing now,’ Bleidbara told her icily. ‘The
When Trifina turned her gaze to Bleidbara, Eadulf thought he saw in it an expression of sadness, before her features hardened.
‘Where is Fidelma?’ she demanded. ‘Am I now to be accused of being the leader of these raiders?’
It was Eadulf who answered.
‘Fidelma is at Brilhag, so far as I know. That is where we are heading now, before…’He hesitated and then turned to the stone-faced Bleidbara.
‘Then I demand to see her,’ Trifina said. ‘I was abducted and have been held a prisoner here.’
‘And Iuna?’ Bleidbara asked, his voice steady.
‘Iuna?
‘It was she who woke me and, with one of these ruffians, bound and gagged me and took me down to a boat. They killed one of the guards who saw us before he could raise the alarm. Iuna was in league with them all along.’ Trifina sounded bitter.
‘You ask us to believe that?’ replied Bleidbara. ‘How do you explain that Iuna was left poisoned in her chamber when you disappeared, while Ceingar was murdered? Yet you were abducted and put on this ship in comparative freedom.’
‘Iuna poisoned? Dead?’ Trifina cried, aghast.
‘Pray God that she is not.’
‘I do not know why you disbelieve me. I have spoken the truth. I
‘Who do you claim is this
‘I met only with a thuggish man called Taran. He was the captain of the ship, the
Eadulf turned to Bleidbara. He realised it was no use pressuring the girl any further. Fidelma would surely know what to do.
‘We will leave things to Fidelma,’ he told Bleidbara. ‘Meanwhile, we’d best put one of your seamen on The
Bleidbara turned without making any further acknowledgement of Trifina.
‘I’ll give the orders,’ he said shortly, over his shoulder.
Alone for a moment, Trifina regarded Eadulf angrily, and then her expression softened.
‘I am not the
Eadulf had an instinct to believe, but then his instincts were sometimes wrong.
‘I saw this person once, this Dove of Death,’ he told her, ‘dressed all in white and masked. He or she was of a slight build and had a high-pitched voice — a man trying to sound like a woman…or a woman trying to sound like a man. I do not know.’
‘So you think it was me?’ Her voice was resigned. ‘Then the sooner we can get to Brilhag the better. Is it permitted that I go up on deck?’
Eadulf stood aside. ‘Of course.’
On deck he met with Wenbrit again. The boy was physically none the worse for his experience, but he was clearly unhappy.
‘What’s the matter?’ asked Eadulf, as he found the boy sitting disconsolately on a step by the stern deck.
‘They killed Luchtigern.’
‘Luchtigern? The cat?’ Eadulf’s memory stirred. ‘No, they didn’t. We saw him at the Abbey of Gildas. Or rather, Fidelma did. He obviously came ashore. Did the boat put in near there?’
‘You saw him alive?’ The boy looked incredulous.
‘A lady called Aourken has been looking after him in the village near the Abbey of Gildas. The
‘I do not know the abbey,’ the boy said. ‘One of the men who held us captive threw him overboard. He must have swum to shore.’
‘How was this? I thought cats didn’t swim.’
‘Luchtigern can. He’s a ship’s cat. But I didn’t think he made it to the shore.’
‘What happened exactly? Tell me from the moment the ship was captured.’
‘After you and the lady Fidelma jumped in the sea?’
‘Exactly so.’
‘They sent a skiff out after you but we saw you picked up by a sailing boat, which took you quickly out of reach. The wind turned and that man in the white clothing recalled the skiff. He told us to work the ship, with his men watching us to make sure we obeyed. We were ordered to dump the bodies overboard…Murchad, Gurvan, Menma, Lord Bressal. The one in white remained on board with his men, while his own ship followed us closely.’
‘Go on,’ encouraged Eadulf, when the boy hesitated.
‘The helmsman who took over headed for the coast. At least I thought so, but there was a wide gap between two headlands and suddenly we were in a strong current that propelled us at a fast speed between these two points of land. We were all surprised to find ourselves in a large inland sea dotted with islands. The