‘Then you will provide the information to me,’ Fidelma said quietly.
The woman’s eyes narrowed as they swung round on her.
Fidelma and Eadulf were aware that the two men had stopped their muttered conversation over their drinks and had turned to examine them without disguising the curiosity on their faces.
‘Perhaps I do not want to provide any information, even if I have it.’ The woman was implacable.
‘Perhaps,’ smiled Fidelma gently. ‘But withholding evidence from a dálaigh can be a serious matter.’
The woman’s eyes narrowed further. The corners of her mouth turned down. There was a tension in the room and the two men returned to their drinks but from their attitudes they remained acutely aware of the conversation of their hostess.
‘Where is the dálaigh who demands evidence of me?’ sneered the buxom woman.
‘I am here,’ Fidelma announced softly. ‘And I presume that you are Cred, the owner of this unlicensed inn?’
The woman let her arms drop to her side. Various expressions chased one another across her face as if she couldn’t make up her mind whether Fidelma was in earnest or not.
The woman flushed in annoyance. ‘I am the tavern keeper, Cred. I keep a good, respectable inn, licensed or not.’
‘That is a matter between you and your bó-aire. I need information. About a week ago there was a man passing through this township. He had the appearance of a professional archer and could not be mistakenfor anything else. He rode a chestnut mare with a loose shoe and so had business at the smith’s forge.’
Fidelma was aware that the two men had not resumed their conversation and were listening intently to what she was saying. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw a third man enter the room from the back of the inn. She did not turn to examine him closely because she was too intent on gazing directly into the face of the hostess of the inn so that she could gauge her reactions. Yet she was aware that the third man had halted and was staring across the room towards them.
The woman, Cred, still stared defiantly back at Fidelma. ‘How do I know that you are a dálaigh?’ she countered. ‘I do not have to answer questions from any slip of a girl — religieuse or not.’
Fidelma reached under her habit and took out a cross on a golden chain. Its symbolism was well known throughout Muman. The Order of the Golden Chain was a venerable Muman nobiliary fraternity that had sprung from membership of the ancient elite warrior guards of the Kings of Cashel. The honour was in the personal presentation of the Eóghanacht kings. Fidelma’s brother had bestowed the honour on her because of her services to the kingdom. Cred’s eyes bulged a little as she recognised it.
‘Who are you?’ she asked, but in gentler, more complaisant tones.
‘I am …’ she began.
‘Fidelma of Cashel!’ The words came from the third man in a hushed breath.
The fat woman’s jaw sagged.
Fidelma allowed herself to glance at the man. He was dressed as the other two men, in rough working clothes. His weatherbeaten features spoke of an outdoor life. He jerked his head in a curious obeisance towards her.
‘I am from Cashel, too, lady. I work for …’
Fidelma’s thoughts had moved rapidly. ‘For Samradan the merchant? You three men are his drivers?’
The man was nodding eagerly. ‘That is so, lady.’ He turned to the hostess and added quickly: ‘Fidelma of Cashel is not only a dálaigh but sister of the King.’
Cred reluctantly bowed her head. ‘Forgive me, lady. I thought …’
‘You thought that you would help me by answering my questions,’ Fidelma cut in sharply, with a dismissive nod towards the man who had identified her. He moved to join his companions in their hurried, whispered conversation, casting surreptitious glances in her direction.
‘I … yes … Yes. The Saigteóir, we called him. He stayed two orthree nights a week ago. A tall man with fair hair. He spoke with a terse accent and invited no questions. He carried a long bow and no other weapon.’
The woman’s words came out in a rush.
‘I see. Did you gather anything else about him?’
Cred shook her head almost violently. ‘As I say, he was a man not given to talk,’ she said. ‘His words were chosen with care and no more than would convey his wants which were as few as his words.’
‘He had business at the smith’s?’
‘Even as you said. His horse had a loose shoe and I think he bought arrows from the smith as well, for when he arrived he had few arrows in his quiver but when he left here his quiver was full.’
‘You have a keen eye, Cred,’ Fidelma commented.
‘One has to have a keen eye in this business, lady. Guests can come and go leaving the innkeeper without payment. One has to be careful.’
‘He paid his dues?’
‘Oh yes. He seemed to have enough money. In fact, he had plenty of gold and silver coins with him.’
‘Did he visit anywhere else? The abbey for example?’ queried Eadulf.
The woman grunted wheezily. It was meant as a chuckle. ‘He was not the type to haunt abbeys or churches. No. He had the look of death on him.’
‘What do you mean?’ demanded Eadulf. ‘The look of death? Was he ill?’
Cred looked at him as if he were a simpleton. ‘Some go to battle because there is no other choice,’ she deigned to explain. ‘Others go and find they have an affinity for death and destruction and so roam the country selling their warrior skills to whoever will pay them to pursue the one thing they have grown to like — the inflicting of death and destruction on others. They become death itself. The Saigteóir had the pale hue of death on him. He was without emotion, without a soul.’
To their surprise the fat innkeeper genuflected.
‘I feel that in such men, their souls are already dead and they follow the blood and carnage merely waiting for their time to come.’
‘So he did not spend any time at the abbey?’ insisted Eadulf. ‘If not there, where else? If he were here two or three days, where else? This town is not so large that he would not be noticed.’
‘He did not spend much time in the town,’ the woman replied.
‘You sound certain,’ Fidelma observed.
‘Certain for the very reason that you have already stated. He atehere in the evening and slept here at night. But he left just after dawn and did not come back until the late afternoon. One of my neighbours saw him riding in the hills just to the south after his horse had been re-shod.’
‘What’s there? A farm? A tavern?’
The woman shrugged. ‘Nothing. Perhaps he was merely hunting.’
‘And in the days he was here he never spoke his name or mentioned anything about himself?’
‘And none dared asked him,’ confirmed the woman.
Fidelma suppressed a sigh of frustration that she had learnt so little. ‘I am obliged to you, Cred.’
‘Has he broken the law? What has he done?’ she asked eagerly. ‘Innkeepers like a fine tale to tell of those who have slept under their roofs.’
Fidelma regarded her for a moment and then said quietly: ‘He has achieved what you thought he was waiting to achieve.’
The innkeeper looked puzzled.
It was Eadulf who explained in a quiet tone. ‘He has achieved the death which you said that he was waiting for.’
Fidelma turned to the three drivers who were now trying to avoid her gaze. ‘A pleasant journey to you on the road to the land of the Arada Cliach.’
The man who had identified her frowned. ‘What makes you think we are going there, lady?’
‘Samradan told me.’
The three exchanged glances and then their spokesman forced a nervous smile. ‘Just so, lady. A pleasant journey to you.’
They left the inn of the ‘artificer of the gods’ and walked slowly back down the street in the direction of the abbey.