‘Have you farmed long here, Mul?’ Fidelma asked, causing Eadulf to look at her in surprise at what seemed an abrupt change of topic.
‘All my life. Ask your companion, the young gerefa here.’ He motioned humorously to Eadulf. ‘My father and his father once went on a hosting together.’
‘So you have seen many changes at the abbey?’ asked Fidelma.
‘Not that many,’ replied Mul. ‘I was a boy when the Irish missionaries came to this land, converting people to the new faith. I saw the building of the abbey rise on the walls of the old fortress that was there.’
‘And you knew the religious that were there before Cild came along, men like Botulf?’
Mul blinked for a moment.
‘Most people in the area knew Botulf.’ He looked at Eadulf. ‘You knew him better than most. I remember that you were boys together, though you probably don’t remember me from those days.’
Fidelma leaned forward.
‘You see, Mul, I would like to know a little more about this man Cild and his brother, Aldhere, as well. I want to know what the evil is that permeates this area.’
Mul grimaced in disgust.
‘Each is doubtless as evil as the other. One is an outlaw, murdering and thieving outside the law. The other is a tyrant, murdering and thieving within the law. A curse on them both.’
Eadulf was about to open his mouth when he was stayed by a glance from Fidelma.
‘I think that you should tell us your story, Mul, for I feel that you have one to tell.’
Mul regarded her keenly for a moment, then he shrugged.
‘You are discerning, as I said before. I inherited this farm from my father. When he died a few years ago, I was married with two fine sons. It was a good farm and life was good even though the elements were often harsh. Then it all changed.’
‘How did it change?’ asked Fidelma when he paused.
‘How? Cild arrived. I had never heard of Cild before, but when I visited the market in Seaxmund’s Ham, not long afterwards, someone told me that he had once been a warlord on the borders with Mercia. They told me that his father had disinherited him and so he had gone to a land called Connacht beyond the western sea. He had returned with a wife, a woman of your race.’ He nodded towards Fidelma.
‘You refer to Gélgeis?’
‘That was her name. Cild and Gélgeis came to the abbey when Cild became its abbot. Then I heard that Cild’s brother, a thane, had been disgraced. It was said that King Ealdwulf had refused to return Cild’s father’s titles and lands to the abbot.’
‘Go on.’
‘For a few months all was quiet and then I heard that Gélgeis had perished in the marshes near the abbey …’
‘Did you find out how?’
‘How?’ Mul was bemused for a moment. Then he shook his head. ‘I heard that Cild had become like a man possessed, driving out the religious who believed in the original rules of their Order and welcoming these new ideas from the Roman Rule of Canterbury. He slaughtered many who would not change theirways. He separated married clergy and sold the women into slavery. The abbey became closed to all women.’
‘You could have warned us about that,’ intervened Eadulf. ‘The night you drove us to the abbey, you could have warned us.’
‘You were religious intent on going to the abbey,’ replied Mul. ‘Why should I warn you? I am not a Christian nor have I any desire to become one if all you do is fight and argue among yourselves. Anyway, as I was saying, Cild showed that he was still a warlord. A few months ago he enticed into the abbey a band of young warriors who, dressed in the holy robes which you Christians adopt, would scour the countryside in search of loot. They raided this farm and it was then that I knew evil stalked the abbey.’
He fell silent for a moment or two as if contemplating the memory.
‘What happened?’ encouraged Fidelma softly.
Mul resumed his story, speaking in a studied voice as if to control his emotions.
‘I was away at market when they came. They came to loot. My wife and two young boys were here. In trying to protect what little I had, my wife was slain and the two children with her. I found their bodies outside when I returned. They are buried just beyond the barn.’
Eadulf coughed awkwardly. ‘How did you know that they were slain by the abbot’s men?’
Mul rose and turned to a cupboard. He opened it and took something from it, then returned to the table. He hesitated a moment and set it down on the board. It was a piece of bloodstained woollen cloth and a small metal crucifix on a silver chain.
‘That was clutched in my wife’s hand where she had ripped it from her assailant,’ Mul said quietly. ‘I knew then that it was the religious from Aldred’s Abbey who had paid me a visit that day. I will have my revenge on Cild, even if I have to wait ten years or ten times ten years. I have sworn this by the sword of Woden.’
‘When did this happen?’ Eadulf demanded.
‘Less than six months ago. Just at the time the young men appeared in the abbey, young fighting men.’
Fidelma had picked up the small crucifix, turning it over in her hands with her brows drawn together.
‘This is of Irish workmanship, not Saxon,’ she said softly after a moment or two.
Mul shrugged. ‘Many of the Christians are trained by your race, woman. Cild had been in this kingdom of Connacht. The provenance of the cross merely confirms what I say.’
She handed the cross to Eadulf without making further comment. It was a small, richly enamelled ornament on silver. It was, he observed, the type of rich jewel affected by the female laity rather than any member of the religious.
‘You say that this happened about six months ago?’ Fidelma was asking.
‘At the time of the summer solstice feasting,’ Mul muttered.
‘Tell me,’ Fidelma continued and again it seemed that she was changing the subject, ‘did you ever see Gélgeis, the abbot’s wife?’
He shook his head. ‘Not so far as I remember. I might have seen her from afar. I would not have known her to see, face to face. I was told once that she was pretty, with fair hair and features.’
‘Did you ever hear what manner of woman she was?’
‘What manner …?’ He paused and then grimaced dismissively. ‘She was married to Cild. Isn’t that enough? You are known by the company you keep and that goes for the partner you marry.’
‘You are a man of hard judgment, Mul,’ Eadulf sighed. ‘Sometimes it is only after marriage that you get to know a person.’
‘Did you ever hear a rumour that Cild murdered his wife?’ asked Fidelma.
Mul’s eyes widened a little and then he shook his head.
‘I only heard that she had wandered into Hob’s Mire. Many animals and several people have strayed into that bog and never returned. Perhaps her fate was a blessing for her.’
‘You said that you knew Brother Botulf?’ Fidelma pressed, ignoring his comment.
‘I did.’
‘Did you ever speak to him about Cild?’
‘After he was sent back to the abbey in disgrace, I hardlyever saw him. He was not allowed to go far from the abbey walls.’
‘What was this disgrace?’ asked Eadulf.
‘He supported Aldhere against the King.’
‘Why was that?’
‘I don’t know. Aldhere was of the same poisonous root as his brother. I heard that he sacrificed the King’s cousin during a battle when the Mercians invaded. Through his cowardice, King Ealdwulf’s cousin died. Botulf defended Aldhere for which stand the King ordered that he should return to Aldred’s Abbey, where he had been one of the brethren in the early days, and remain there, not leaving on pain of death.’
‘You imply that Aldhere was guilty. Does that mean that you thought Botulf was a liar?’ demanded Eadulf sullenly.
‘I would not know his reasons for defending Aldhere. Botulf was a good man, so far as I knew. Perhaps he was simply misguided. But I never had time to speak to him about the matter.’