‘The gate!’ cried Fidelma determinedly to the cowering religious. ‘Your Brother’s dying command must be accomplished!’
‘Move and this one dies,’ snapped the warrior, pricking Eadulf s shoulder with his sword.
‘Do it!’ cried Eadulf loudly, anger overcoming his personal fear.
The warrior’s gaze was distracted momentarily as he glanced to the religious to see if they were obeying Eadulf. It was a moment that Eadulf had hoped would come. He suddenly rolled away from the reach of the warrior’s sword point, diving towards the gate.
The warrior turned back to him, sword raised, but it was too late.
With a scream of rage he hurled himself forward as Eadulf began to push against the gate. Suddenly Fidelma was in his way. He turned his sword to strike her. Then he was flying through the air, he knew not how.
Only Eadulf, out of the corner of his eye, saw Fidelma spring forward. His heart lurched as he saw her but somewhere, dim in his memory, he recognised the stance she had taken with her body. He had seen her perform the feat a few times now. The first time had been in Rome. She was poised as if to take the blow from the descending sword on her unprotected head. Then it seemed as if she merely reached forward, caught the arm of the man and heaved her assailant into the air, over her hip, and sent him cannoning into the stone wall of the abbey wall. There was a strange thudding sound and, without even a grunt, the warrior fell to the ground, unconscious.
Fidelma had once told Eadulf that in ancient Ireland there had been a class of learned men who taught the time-honoured philosophies of her people. They journeyed far and wide and did not believe in carrying arms to defend themselves because they did not believe in killing people. But they had to protect themselves from attacks by thieves and bandits on the highways. Thus they were forced to develop a technique called troid-sciathaigid — battle through defence. Defence without the use of weapons. It was a method taught to many religious missionaries before they left Eireann and went into strange lands to preach the word of the new Faith.
‘Come on! Help Brother Eadulf!’ cried Fidelma. ‘Get those gates closed.’
She rushed forward herself to help but suddenly seemed to change her mind and ran on through the gates. Brother Madagan’s body lay only ten feet beyond.
‘Help me Eadulf, quickly!’ she called.
Realising what she intended, he went after her. They grabbed Brother Madagan unceremoniously between them, lifting him by the shoulders of his clothes and dragged him back within the gates just as the Brothers had recovered sufficiently to help swing the gates closed. They paused inside as the bolts were pushed home.
Fidelma was soon active again.
‘Bind that warrior!’ she cried to the Brothers who now stood about in shameful consternation that they had not acted before. ‘Disarm and bind him so he does no further harm.’
She glanced down at Brother Madagan. Eadulf was by his side, examining him.
‘He’s still alive,’ he announced with satisfaction. ‘The wound is not bad at all. So far as I can see, he only received the flat of the sword on his skull. The blood on his forehead is from a slight nick from the sword’s edge. He should recover consciousness soon.’
Fidelma glanced anxiously at Eadulf for there was blood on his habit where the warrior had pricked him with his sword point. ‘And yourself?’ she asked quickly.
Eadulf grinned and automatically raised a hand to his shoulder. ‘I have survived worse things. It was no more than a needle prick. The weight of the man was far worse when he fell on me. I might be stiff for a while.’
Fidelma was already moving to the crumpled body of the woman who was still stretched on the cobbles.
‘It is the innkeeper!’ Fidelma had recognised Cred under the bloodstained mask of her face. ‘By the Faith!’ she cried, ‘I think she still breathes.’
She bent and held up the woman’s head.
Eadulf looked quickly at the wound and then at Fidelma. He shook his head slowly. The injury placed the woman beyond any temporal help.
At that moment, Cred’s eyes opened. There was fear in them.
‘Hush!’ Fidelma spoke gently. ‘You are among friends.’
Cred groaned and rolled her eyes. She had difficulty in speaking. ‘I … I know … more …’ she gasped.
Eadulf turned to where one of the Brothers was waiting. ‘Fetch water!’ he snapped.
The man hurried off immediately.
‘Rest,’ Fidelma told Cred. ‘We will take care of you. Lie still.’
‘Enemies …’ gasped Cred. ‘I heard the archer speak. Enemies … the enemy is in Cashel. The Prince …’
Her head lolled back, though her eyes remained wide open.
Eadulf genuflected. He had seen enough death to know that there was an end to the tavern keeper’s life.
Fidelma stayed still a moment, frowning.
The monk who had been sent for the water returned with it and so Eadulf rose and set about reviving Brother Madagan. The steward of the abbey came round slowly.
Eadulf turned to the group of young brethren now standing like sheep awaiting someone’s orders.
‘Does Brother Madagan have an assistant?’ he demanded. ‘Is there an assistant steward of the abbey?’
There was a muttering and shuffling of feet.
‘It would have been Brother Mochta,’ offered one young man. ‘I wouldn’t know now.’
‘Well, until we find out, I shall take charge,’ Eadulf announced. ‘I want one of you to assist Brother Madagan to his chamber. He has had a nasty blow on the head. Get the apothecary. I want volunteers to take the bodies of Cred and Brother Daig to the mortuary and have this blood cleansed from the flagstones.’
‘Leave it to me, Brother Saxon,’ said one of the monks. ‘But what shall I do with the warrior?’
Eadulf turned towards the raider.
The man was now securely trussed up but had recovered consciousness. He was lying with his back against the wall secured by his feet, his hands tied behind his back. He was testing his bonds but ceased as Eadulf approached him.
‘You will wish that you had killed me, Brother,’ he snarled between clenched teeth.
‘You might wish that I had, my vicious friend,’ returned Eadulf grimly. ‘I would think your murderous friends out there will not think much of you, allowing yourself to be disarmed and captured by a woman. Indeed, an unarmed woman of the Faith who knocked you unconscious. What an epitaph for a warrior such as yourself. Aut viam inveniam aut faciam, eh? Victory or death is the warrior’s motto. But you managed to achieve neither.’
The warrior screwed up his mouth and tried to spit at Eadulf.
Eadulf smiled broadly and turned back to the helpful young monk who was waiting his orders.
‘Leave our valiant warrior where he has fallen, Brother …?’
‘Brother Tomar.’
‘Well, Brother Tomar, leave him there and get on with the other tasks first.’
Eadulf went across to Fidelma, who was still standing by Cred’s s body, looking down thoughtfully.
‘Do you know, I believe that Cred was not running to the abbey to seek shelter,’ she said, raising her eyes to his. ‘I think she might have been running here to see me.’ She sighed, then said: ‘Did the warrior tell you anything?’
‘Nothing. He has not identified himself.’
‘Well, plenty of time to question him later.’
Fidelma turned for the watch-tower. ‘Let us see what is happening out there first. If these warriors are going to attack the abbey, they appear to be delaying it. I find that puzzling. It is nearly dawn now.’
They returned to the roof of the tower and gazed out across the square towards the town. The buildings were still on fire but the blaze was not so intense as it had been earlier. Columns of black smoke were arising. What caught Fidelma’s attention immediately was the sight of the remains of the great yew-tree. Part of the trunk had been cut through and then ropes had obviously been fastened to it for it had been pulled over, causing a splintering. The severed tree had then been set alight.