Colgu poured another two glasses of wine and handed one across to his sister with a tired smile.
"These were the very words of Cathal, our cousin, before he succumbed to the fever. It was the reason why he asked me to send for you. The morning after the messenger had been sent to Kildare, he fell a victim to the Yellow Fever. And if the physicians are right, I shall be king before this week is out. If there is war, then it will be on my hands."
"It will not be a good start to your rule, brother," agreed Fidelma as she sipped at her wine and considered the matter carefully. Then she raised her eyes to examine her brother's careworn face. "Are you giving me a commission to investigate the death of Dacán and then present the evidence to you?"
"And to the High King," added Colgu quickly. "You will have the authority of Muman to carry out this investigation. I ask you to be our advocate before the High King's assembly."
Fidelma was silent for a long while.
"Tell me this, my brother; suppose my findings are such as to support the king of Laigin? What if Dacán's death is the responsibility of the Eóganachta? What if the king of Laigin does have the right to demand Osraige as an honor price from Cashel? What if these unpalatable arguments become my findings? Will you accept that judgment under law and meet Laigin's demand?"
Her brother's face worked with complex emotions as he wrestled with the decision.
"If you want me to speak for myself, Fidelma, I shall say 'yes.' A king must live by the law established. But a king must pursue the commonwealth of his people. Do we not have an old saying?—what makes the people higher than a king? It is because the people ordain the king, the king does not ordain the people. A king must obey the will of his people. So do not ask me to speak for all the princes and chieftains of this kingdom nor, indeed, of Osraige. I fear they will not accept liability for such an honor price."
Fidelma regarded him with a level gaze.
"Then it will mean bloody war," she said softly.
Colgu attempted a grim smile.
"Yet we have three weeks before the assembly, Fidelma. And, as you say, seven weeks before the implementation of the law if the decision goes against us. Will you go to Ros Ailithir and investigate Dacán's death?"
"You do not have to ask that, Colgu. I am, above all things, still your sister."
Colgu's shoulders sagged in relief and he gave a long, low sigh.
Fidelma laid a hand on his arm and patted it.
"But do not expect too much of me, brother. Ros Ailithir is a minimum three days' journey from here, and lies through some harsh country. You expect me to travel there, solve a mystery and travel back in time to prepare a case for the assembly at Tara? If so, you are, indeed, asking for a miracle."
Colgu inclined his head in agreement.
"I think that King Cathal and myself both demand a miracle of you, Fidelma, for when men and women use their courage, intelligence and learning, then they are capable of inspiring a true miracle."
"It is still a heavy responsibility you place on me," she admitted with reluctance. She realized that she had no other decision to make. "I will do what I can. I shall rest in Cashel tonight and hope this storm abates by tomorrow. I shall set out at first light for the abbey of Ros Ailithir."
Colgu smiled warmly.
"And you will not set out alone, little sister. The journey to the south-west is, as you say, a harsh one, and who knows what dangers will await you at Ros Ailithir? I shall send one of my warriors with you."
Fidelma shrugged diffidently.
"I am able to defend myself. You forget that I have studied the art of troid-sciathagid, battle through defense."
"How can I forget that?" chuckled Colgu, "for many is the time that you have bested me in our youth with your knowledge of unarmed combat. But combat in friendship is one thing, Fidelma. Combat in earnest is another."
"You do not have to point this out, brother. Many of our religious missionaries going into the kingdoms of the Saxons, or into those of the Franks, are taught this method of self-defense in order to protect their lives. The training has already served me well."
"Nevertheless, I must insist that you be accompanied by one of my trusted warriors."
Fidelma was unconcerned.
"I am instructed by your commission, brother. You are tánaiste here and I am acting according to your wishes."
"Then that is agreed." Colgu was relieved. "I already have instructed a man for the task."
"Do I know this warrior whom you have chosen?"
"You have already met him," her brother replied. "He is the young warrior who earlier threw Forbassach out. His name is Cass of the king's bodyguard."
"Ah, the young, curly-haired warrior?" asked Fidelma.
"The same. He has been a good friend and I would not only trust my life to him but yours as well."
Fidelma gave a mischievous grin.
"That is precisely what you will be doing, brother. How much does Cass know of this problem?"
"As much as I have been able to tell you."
"So you trust him well?" observed Fidelma.
"Do you want to speak with him on this matter?" asked her brother.
She shook her head and stifled a sudden yawn.
"Time enough to talk during the three days of our journey to Ros Ailithir. Now I would prefer a hot bath and sleep."
Chapter Three
It had not been a pleasant journey through the great glens and across the high mountain ranges of Muman. While the storm had abated on the second day, the incessant rains had left the ground soaked with cloying mud which sucked at their horses' hooves and fetlocks like anxious, delaying hands and slowed their pace. The valley bottoms and grassy plains were turned into swampy, and often flooded, lands across which passage was almost impossible, and certainly not made with any speed. The skies continued sulky gray and threatening, with no sign of a bright autumnal sun breaking through, and the moody clouds continued to hang low and dark like hill fog. Even the occasional whining wind, moaning in the tree tops, where the leaves had almost vanished, did not dispel their shroud.
Fidelma felt cold and miserable. It was not the weather for traveling. Indeed, if the matter were not so urgent, she would never have contemplated such a journey. She sat her horse stiffly, her body felt chilled to its very marrow despite the heavy woollen cloak and hood which normally helped her endure the icy fingers of inclement temperatures. In spite of her leather gloves, the hands that gripped her horse's reins were numb.
She had not spoken to her companion for at least an hour or more, not since they had left the wayside tavern where they had eaten their midday meal. Her head was bent forward into the chill air. Her concentration was devoted to keeping her horse on the narrow path as it ascended the steep hill before them.
In front of her, the young warrior, Cass, equally wrapped in a heavy woollen cloak and fur collar, sat his horse with a studied poise. Fidelma smiled grimly to herself, wondering just how much he was attempting to present a good figure to her critical gaze. It would not do for a member of the elite bodyguard of the king of Muman to show any weakness before the sister of the heir-apparent. She felt a reluctant sympathy with the young man and when, every now and then in an unguarded moment, she saw him shiver from the damp chill, she felt herself more compassionately disposed toward him.
The path twisted over the shoulder of the mountain and a blast of cold air from the south-west hit them in the face as they emerged from the sheltering outcrop of rocks. Fidelma became aware of the subtle tang of salt in the air, the unmistakable odor of the nearness of the ocean.
Cass reined in his mount and allowed Fidelma to edge her horse alongside his. Then he pointed across the tree-strewn hills and undulating plain which seemed to disappear in the direction of the southern horizon. Yet the clouds hung above the plain in such a fashion that she could not see where land ended and sky began.