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Faramund turned as if to protest.

“Cara! So you are here?” Fallach greeted her in astonishment.

The young woman laughed. There was bitterness in her tone.

“That is obvious.” She turned to stare at Fidelma. “But I don’t know how you knew.”

Fidelma sighed softly.

“When did you think of this crazy scheme Cara? Was it before or after you married Febrat?”

The young woman looked defiant.

“I have nothing to say. You can prove nothing. Is it a crime to have a lover? My husband could not fulfill all my wants.”

Faramund nodded eagerly at her words.

“Cara’s right. We are simply lovers. What else are you accusing us of?”

Fidelma regarded them patiently.

“I was not aware that I had accused you of anything. But, since you have raised the matter, it’s quite simple. You want Febrat out of the way so that you could take over the silver mine at Cnoc Cerb.”

Faramund gave an angry hiss as he exhaled sharply but Cara’s shoulders suddenly drooped in resignation.

“You will have to prove it,” she said quietly but submissively.

“If Febrat could be pronounced without legal responsibility, as a mer, one who is confused or deranged, then you would be in control of his land at Cnoc Cerb.”

“I don’t understand what you are talking about,” Cara said suddenly.

“I know nothing of law.”

“But you do, don’t you, Faramund. What level of law did you achieve in your studies?”

Faramund flushed.

“Who says that I. .?”

“Do not waste my time!” she snapped.

“There has been no secret that you once studied law before you became a farmer,” Fallach pointed out. “I know it and so does Díomsach.”

The young man hesitated and then shrugged.

“I studied to the level of freisneidhed.

“So you reached your third year of study?” mused Fidelma. “And thus you have read the text Do Drúithaib agus Meraib agus Dásachtaib which deals with the use of land belonging to an insane person.” It was a statement not a question. “So it was you who suggested a way by which Cara might take over her husband’s land at Cnoc Cerb without killing poor Febrat? Have him declared a mer and, being guardian, she would gain control of the riches that he had discovered there.”

Cara was defiant.

“So what? No harm would have come to Febrat. The law says that I would have to look after Febrat for so long as he lives and if I did not I would have to pay five séds and suffer forfeiture of the land. He would not have suffered. .”

Faramund frowned at her.

“You are talking too much, Cara,” he warned sharply. “She cannot prove. .”

“I expect,” Fidelma wheeled ’round on him, “that was not your plan, was it? An accident, perhaps, some months in the future? Or perhaps something more subtle? An insane person attacking his wife? The insane person can be killed in self-defense or by someone else acting to defend the person being attacked.” She turned back to Cara who was sobbing quietly. “What I would like to know is when did this plan first materialize in your mind-before or after you married Febrat?”

“Faramund and I were lovers before Febrat started paying me court. My mother was a princess of Áine and so was I but we had no wealth, no backing. You don’t know what that means. It was then we found out that there was silver on the hill which Febrat owned. It was Faramund who suggested the idea of obtaining ownership without even hurting Febrat by having him declared insane. I married him and waited for a while before we put the plan into operation.”

“And you really think that Faramund would remain your secret lover while Febrat lived? Once you had your hands on the silver mine, Faramund would have wanted to own it by seeking marriage with you and becoming your heir. How long before not only Febrat perished but you as well?”

Faramund’s eyes narrowed. His look was murderous.

“You don’t think that you will be able to get back to Díomsach and tell him this, do you?” he asked quietly.

Fidelma smiled softly.

“Are you proposing to start your killing spree already? First Fallach and myself and then. . who? Cara next, I suppose.”

Faramund drew out a vicious-looking long-bladed knife but before anyone could move he suddenly gave a grunt and went down senseless to the ground.

Cara was standing behind him looking at the wooden mallet in her hand.

“I presume that you used the same method to knock out your husband, Febrat? Faramund and his farmhands came last night and rode around the farmstead hooting and yelling to convince your husband the farm was under attack. They carried alder branches to disguise the passage of their horses.”

Cara gestured helplessly.

“I could not stand to kill anyone. I told Faramund that. He made his plan seem so plausible. No one would get hurt. Febrat would be taken care of and we would have the silver. But I could not bear to kill anyone.”

Fallach, who had been bending by the slumped form of Faramund, glanced up and grimaced.

“I am afraid that you will have to come to terms with that, Cara. You have hit him too hard.”

SCATTERED THORNS

The boy is innocent.”

The chief magistrate of Droim Sorn, Brehon Tuama, seemed adamant.

Sister Fidelma sat back in her chair and gazed thoughtfully at the tall man who was seated on the other side of the hearth. She had received an urgent request from Brehon Tuama to come to the small township of Droim Sorn in her capacity as dálaigh, advocate of the law courts. A sixteen-year-old lad named Braon had been accused of murder and theft. Brehon Tuama had suggested that Fidelma should undertake the boy’s defense.

In accordance with protocol, Fidelma had first made her presence in the township known to the chieftain, Odar, in whose house the boy was being held. Odar seemed to display a mixed reaction to her arrival but had offered her a few formal words of welcome before suggesting that she seek out Brehon Tuama to discuss the details of the case. She had decided, on this brief acquaintance, that Odar was not a man particularly concerned with details. She had noticed that the chieftain had an impressive array of hunting weapons on his walls and two sleek wolfhounds basking in front of his hearth. She deduced that Odar’s concerns were more of the hunt than pursuit of justice.

Brehon Tuama had invited her inside his house and offered her refreshment before making his opening remark about the accused’s guilt.

“Are you saying that the boy is not to be tried?” asked Fidelma. “If you have already dismissed the case against him, why was I summoned. .?”

Brehon Tuama quickly shook his head.

“I cannot dismiss the matter yet. Odar is adamant that the boy has to go through due process. In fact. .” The Brehon hesitated. “The victim’s husband is his cousin.”

Fidelma sighed softly. She disliked nepotism.

“Perhaps you should explain to me the basic facts as you know them.”

Brehon Tuama stretched uneasily in his chair.

“Findach the Smith is reputed to be one of the most able craftsmen in this township. His work is apparently widely admired and has graced abbeys, chieftains’ raths, and kings’ fortresses. He has been able to refuse such mundane tasks as shoeing horses, making harnesses, plows, and weapons, to pursue more artistic work.”

“It sounds as though you do not share others’ appreciation of his work?” interposed Fidelma, catching the inflection in his tone.

“I don’t,” agreed the Brehon. “But that is by the way. Findach was commissioned to make a silver cross for the high altar of the Abbey of Cluain. He had completed the commission only a few days ago.

“The cross was extremely valuable. Findach had polished it and taken it to his house ready for collection by one of the religious from the abbey. Yesterday morning, Findach had gone to his workshop, which is a hundred yards beyond his house, to commence work. The silver cross was left in his house. His wife, Muirenn, was there.