CHAPTER 19
THE HIDDEN ROAD

A skilled smith is an honored craftsman, and Brocc’s home was prosperous and comfortable. Roisin’s sisters and aunt plied me with hot food, warm baths and a stream of bright magpie chatter that seemed to flow from their mouths as naturally as breath.

Two days in that busy, cheerful home had done much to restore my strength, but nothing to quiet my mind.

I saw now what a strange and isolated upbringing I’d had. Roisin could scarcely comprehend how alone I was in the world. Though her own mother had died in her last childbirth, Roisin had grown up within a great web of family. Her father’s widowed sister and her son had lived with them since Roisin was a nursling; her mother’s two sisters had each taken a turn at fostering her. There were uncles to share in the working of the lands and the training of unruly boys, young cousins who played and fought and slept together like puppies. It was enough to make me weep.

But the faults of my childhood were beside the point. I had to decide what to do next, and soon. Yet all the paths before me, it seemed, led to a dead end.

Geanann’s patient ear had helped trace the paths, but he had not found me a better one. My choices boiled down to two.

If I moved quickly, I could try to hold Dun Dealgan. It was mine, after all. We would not last long against attack by the combined forces of Ulster, but perhaps Conchobor would not risk an outright assault. He might not want to test his chieftains’ loyalty by setting them against the orphaned child of their greatest champion. Still, what then? Would I reveal his plot? Alone, I had no proof, only wild accusations. Cathbad would not support my claim—he had made it clear he was not willing to overturn the throne of Ulster and risk a further weakening of leadership at this vulnerable time. Without these accusations, I had no grounds for divorce. So I would remain Conchobor’s estranged wife, and my life would remain the sole impediment to his securing of Muirthemne.

“He wants that title free and clear for his grown sons,” Geanann had agreed solemnly. “In the natural course of things, you would outlive him and retain your lands. He will not let that happen.”

So, that was one possible future: locked behind the gates of my own home, watching always for the assassin’s blade, the poisoned drink, the sudden attack, with no real chance of prevailing.

Or I could seek refuge with my uncles in Leinster. My mother’s brothers had been spared by Cuchulainn and they knew it. They had never fought directly against my father. We had not met, but I was their blood relation—surely they would give me sanctuary?

“They will want you to join your lands to their family,” said Geanann. “Will you war against Ulster on their behalf to secure Muirthemne?”

Why not? I thought hotly. It is Ulster has turned its hand against me. There was warrior enough in me to lust after revenge.

Except when I tried to picture the outcome, either victory or defeat, an image rose up in its stead. It was the row of heads Conall Cearnach had laid out at my mother’s feet I saw, taken in vengeance for my father’s death. Buzzing with flies, rank with gore, they filled me with weary disgust. Death for death for death. I had had enough of it.

Would I go, then, to my uncles, without lands or herds? I would not be destitute—there was the buried cache my mother had shown me, a bride’s portion and more, she had said. I could pay for my keep. Live on the edges of the family, a single woman bound to gratitude. Or I could marry. It is not legal, of course, for a woman to have more than one husband—but that would not preclude an informal bond until Conchobor’s death freed me. But what man would want me? My face was ruined—the shocked expressions of Roisin’s family when they first clapped eyes on me had made that clear. Geanann said that in time the scar would tighten together and the angry color fade, but he admitted it would always be a broad dusky track across my face. So: no beauty, no lands and the enmity of the King of Ulster. I was not likely to be beating off the suitors.

Was this what I had struggled back from the edge of death for? It was a chance, I reminded myself. Every peasant in Ireland faced worse prospects and a harder life. But I was no peasant, and the role of refugee repelled me.

How long had it been since I had rambled the countryside with Fintan? My lovely plain swelled and dipped before me, its long vista dotted here and there with farmholdings but the peace of it unbroken. The clang of Brocc’s hammer and the bustle of his household fell away behind me, and for a moment I let myself imagine I was a carefree girl again, a girl confident of her place in the world. A girl with no more pressing task than to slip the lead of her tutors and taskmasters and give herself to sweet daydreams.

I was no longer that girl.

But the anxious useless circling of my own thoughts was driving me mad. I needed to escape them for a while. I needed to be quiet, inside and out. And so I walked, and my legs, weak at first from disuse, soon found their easy stride and strength. I watched the clouds scud across the sky, felt the wind lift my hair, startled and then laughed as a grouse exploded out of a thicket in noisy alarm. Fintan flew before me, lighting down to investigate where he would, but never far away.

Geanann’s astonishing words echoed in my head: “Conchobor seeks your death because he fears you. His first intent may have been to keep you as a powerless bride, but he soon saw you would not submit to his domination for long.”

“I gave him no cause,” I protested. “I was obedient to his will.”

Geanann smiled. “It is nothing that you did,” he said. “You have the mark of power on you. My father saw it when you were but a child.”

Cathbad, apparently, believed I had a worthy future. But all my straining and grasping had failed to reveal it.

So I walked, and let my mind slowly empty, as I had done nearly every day as a child at Dun Dealgan. I let my thoughts reel away into the clouds, leaving the inner turmoil behind, stretching out instead to the vista surrounding me. I walked, and the rhythm of my legs and heart and breath seemed to match some great heartbeat of the earth. Thrumming through grass and rock and tree, through every finch and beetle, I felt the vital energy of a world that does not question its existence but seeks only to live. It hummed in me as well. I was alive and well and part of this green and golden plain. For the moment, it was enough.

When my legs tired and my cheek’s complaints from the jarring of my own tread became insistent, I lay in the turf and closed my eyes. The autumn grass was tall and plumed, no longer bright with summer flowers, but dotted still with flat white yarrow blossoms and the pink stalks of redshank. I breathed in the earth smell, rich and damp, the clean freshness of grass. I allowed myself to be happy.

The answer, when it came, was so obvious that there was no thunderclap of inspiration but only quiet certainty. One moment it was unthought of, the next inevitable, as if all my life had led me to this one place. The longer I held it in my heart, the more right it felt.

I knew now what I wanted for my life. It sang to me with every step as I made my way back to Brocc’s house. It remained only to see if Cathbad would grant it. I thought he would. He had, after all, given me his raven. A druid’s raven.

Geanann did not even wait for me to speak. He took one look at me, and his face lit up in that sunny grin.

“You have found your road, I see.”

I smiled back. I had best get used to such second-guessing.

“And you already know what it is, I suppose.”

“That I do. My father foresaw this end for you long ago, if not the manner of your arriving there. But it was not permitted that I should suggest it to you.”

I thought I understood. The druid’s life is not to be chosen as a refuge from difficulties but rather from heartfelt desire—a calling, if you like. Still, it gave me an uneasy feeling, to think of Cathbad knowing my future all this time. Foretelling. I’d had a taste of it myself, and I did not think I was much enamored of this particular druid gift.

Evidently Geanann felt differently. “Cathbad believes you have the potential to be a seer. He says even as a child you showed signs of the gift.”

Something sounded wrong in his voice. I glanced up quickly, searching his face for the hidden meaning, and was met with sheepish acknowledgment.

“Your perception is true. I cannot quite keep the envy from my voice, though I swear it is without any trace of malice. It is what I myself aspired to—to be one of the farseeing. Alas, it is not my gift.”

“Your gift saved my life, Geanann,” I said. “Do not expect me to value foresight over the skill and knowledge you have.”

He nodded acknowledgment. “I have learned, for the most part, to be content with what I have been given. But you, Luaine—are you not pleased to have such a chance? Many consider the fili to be the highest branch of wisdom.”

Who was I to argue with the sages? I kept silent for a bit, unsure of how to answer and even of my own feelings. But at last, as it nearly always does, my mind insisted on speaking its thoughts.

“What good has it ever done, Geanann?”

He looked startled. “What?”

“Prophecy. Foresight. What is the use of it? I cannot see that it ever saved anyone. My grandfather Forgall was a druid, and in his efforts to escape the prophecy that he would come to harm from my father, he put himself directly in harm’s way. Does it not always end so, even in the old stories? And Deirdriu—Cathbad foresaw the bloodshed that would come to Ulster through her. Conchobor thought to avoid it by claiming her for himself, and look what followed!”

I paused, remembering. Painful memories, they were, and my voice wasn’t more than a whisper as I told him.

“When I knew that my father was after killing his own son, what use was that to me or to him? I could not stop him from loosing the Gae Bolga, nor turn aside the spear.”