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The steward unlocked one of the thick wooden doors with an iron key and pushed the still bound Olcan into a cell.

Fidelma glanced in by the light of a lantern. There was a wooden cot, a table and a chair but, being below ground, no window, and no entrance or exit except by the single door.

‘I think he can have the freedom of his hands and arms,’ she decided, speaking to Conri. ‘He can have food and drink later and I shall question him then.’

Conri was indifferent.

‘I doubt if you will get anything out of him, lady. I tried to question him and he has remained as silent as if he were mute.’

Nevertheless, the warlord severed the dark man’s bonds in accordance with her instructions. They left him alone in the cell and Brother Cu Mara locked the door and hung the key on a nearby hook.

Fidelma was looking around at the musty smelling cellars.

‘To what use are such rooms put?’ she asked with curiosity.

The steward seemed to have overcome his animosity of the previous evening. He was polite, even helpful.

‘Originally, they were storage rooms,’ he explained. ‘When it became the custom for a visiting Brehon to hold court in the abbey, we used a couple of these chambers to detain those who were due to face serious charges before the Brehon.’

Fidelma made no comment but led the way back up into the light and the fresher air. She noticed that the onlookers had dispersed.

She glanced at Eadulf with a satisfied smile.

‘And now our course is set,’ she said mysteriously. ‘We will soon have our prey in the snare.’

It was after the main meal when Fidelma, Eadulf, Conri and Brother Cu Mara returned to the subterranean cell of Olcan. The steward had brought a tray of food. He handed this to Eadulf while he took down the key and opened the door. He did it warily but the lamp beyond showed the big warrior sitting immobile on the bed staring as if at some distant object before him.

The steward put down the tray of food and, at Fidelma’s signal, withdrew, while Fidelma sat in the only chair and Eadulf and Conri. took up positions just inside the door.

Fidelma examined the man carefully. She summed him up as a man without feeling. A killer who obeyed orders without question. His cruel features were not possessed of sensitivity or much intelligence.

‘Do you know who I am?’

Olcan made a slight movement with one shoulder which expressed either affirmation or disinterest.

‘That your name is Olcan I know. Of what clan are you?’

The man continued in silence.

‘You have a choice of two paths before you, Olcan. You may make things hard on yourself or easy. It is up to you.’

Olcan glanced quickly at her.

‘I have nothing to say.’

‘Then things will go hard with you. You are already facing charges of heinous crimes. There are witnesses to them. The wrecking of a Gaulish ship. The murder of Abbess Faife. The raids and destruction of settlements among the Corco Duibhne. The imprisonment of six young religieuse from this abbey as well as the hermit community on Seanach’s Island, one of whom you slew or had slain.’

Her voice was remorseless as she recited the litany.

Olcan eyed her with hate simmering in his eyes.

‘And do you expect me to admit to all this, sister of Colgu the usurper?’ he sneered.

Fidelma smiled faintly.

‘At least you admit that you know who I am?’

He was silent again.

‘And since you describe my brother as a usurper I presume that you felt you owed allegiance to Eoganan of the Ui Fidgente?’

Once more only silence met her.

‘Let me put it this way, Olcan. You may well be responsible for all these evil deeds. You may well have been in command of the war band that carried them out. Yet I do not believe that it was your own design. The command was given by another — your so-called “master”? Is that not so?’

Olcan laughed harshly.

‘Then you will have to capture this “master” and ask him. That you will never do.’

Fidelma forced herself to remain relaxed.

‘What I am trying to tell you, Olcan, is that if you tell me who gave you those orders, then things may not go as harshly with you.’

‘The chief of the wolf tribe does not betray his lord,’ snapped Olcan.

Fidelma frowned as a chord of memory suddenly struck. She was about to say something when Conri. exclaimed: ‘Olcan! Olcan the wolf! I have heard of you.’ In spite of Fidelma’s warning glance, he turned to her excitedly.

‘This man was head of a band of raiders when Eoganan ruled the Ui Fidgente. They called themselves the wolf tribe.’

He paused when he saw Fidelma’s angry look at the interruption to her interrogation.

Olcan had missed the silent warning and was smiling viciously. He seemed proud of his reputation.

‘Is that why you continue to take your orders from Uaman the Leper?’ Fidelma asked quietly.

Olcan turned to her with a brief look of puzzlement that was gone before she had time to register it. Then he burst out with a short laugh.

‘You must have heard, woman of Cashel, that Uaman is dead. He died in the month of Cet Gaimred.’

‘And so we must assume that it is his troubled wraith that rides through the Sliabh Mis valleys with you?’

‘It would be hard to take orders from a shade from the Otherworld, woman. Oh, but have no fear. The seed of Eoganan will lead the Ui Fidgente against Cashel once more and that very soon.’

‘That will be difficult,’ interjected Conri. with a sneer. ‘The true Ui Fidgente do not follow ghosts or voices from the Otherworld.’

Olcan smiled knowingly for a moment.

‘They will hear a voice shortly. A voice crying vengeance for our people. And, indeed, it will not be a voice from the Otherworld.’

‘You are in no position to be truculent, Olcan,’ Fidelma warned him.

The man, however, relapsed into a pugnacious silence.

Fidelma uttered a deep sigh of disgust and rose to her feet.

‘Very well, Olcan, chief of the wolf tribe. We can be patient also but not too patient. You have much to answer for. Your crimes are many in the counting. As I have said, the path you choose may be hard or easy and that is your choice. Your future is black-’

Olcan glanced up belligerently. ‘And your future, the future of all the

Fidgente will find their backbone again and come against you — even in spite of your lapdog’ — he gestured to Conr

– ‘or a thousand treacherous U

Fidgente like him. They will not alter the course of the river we have set in flood. That river will lead the U

Fidgente not only to recover their lost lands but to claim Cashel, and beyond Cashel they will claim Tara, the seat of the High Kings. The master has prophesised it and so it will come to pass.’

He suddenly seemed to realise that he might have said too much and returned his sullen gaze to some distant point before him.

There was a silence after his outburst.

‘Very well, Olcan,’ Fidelma finally replied. ‘We will leave you to think on this during the forthcoming night. If you continue to take the hard path, then I can assure you that it will be harder than you can ever imagine. I will come to speak to you in the morning when you have contemplated your future more carefully because, whatever your prognostication about my future, and the future of Cashel, your future is a certainty and you will never live to see your master’s prediction come to fruition.’

They left the man still staring into space.