From the woods came three boys, running and laughing. They were carrying wooden swords. Seeing Bane they paused. Bane waved at them, then heeled the mare onto the slope. He rode down into the settlement, past Eldest Tree, the colossal oak, and on to the forge, from where he could hear the steady beat of a hammer on iron. Dismounting he tied the mare’s reins to a fence rail and walked into the forge. Nanncumal was watching an apprentice boy thumping his hammer upon a red-hot section of iron. The old man glanced up as Bane entered. Together they walked out into the sunshine. Nanncumal ran a cloth over his bald head, mopping up the sweat. He saw the saddlebags on Bane’s mare. ‘Where are you heading?’ he asked.
‘Across the water.’
‘For what purpose?’
Bane shrugged. ‘Perhaps it is to find a purpose,’ he said.
Nanncumal sat down on a long bench seat. ‘You did well here, boy,’ he said. ‘People won’t forget.’
They will or they won’t,’ said Bane, seating himself beside his grandfather. ‘It doesn’t matter to me.’
Nanncumal looked away. ‘I didn’t do right by you, Bane. It grieves me to say that.’
‘Long ago and far away,’ said Bane. ‘Forget it.’
‘Easy to say. I loved my Arian. She was a good girl – until her sister died. They were children, sharing a bed. Little Baria was five years old. She had a fever, and her heart gave out in the night. Arian awoke and found her dead beside her. She was never the same after that. Terrified of the dark and of being alone. When Conn was savaged by that bear Arian almost went mad. I tried to talk her out of marrying Casta. It was not a good match. But she was convinced Conn would die, and she clung to Casta as if he were life itself.’ The old man sighed.
‘We don’t need to talk about this,’ said Bane. ‘Mother is dead. Nothing can change that.’
‘I’m talking about the living,’ said Nanncumal. ‘I’m talking about you and . . . Connavar.’
‘I don’t need to hear it.’
‘Maybe you don’t, maybe you do. But I need to say it, so humour me, Grandson. I know that you have always believed Connavar took your mother by force. It is not true. Arian told me herself that she seduced him on that day, hoping to win him back. She knew, deep down, he had never stopped loving her. The Seidh had warned Connavar never to break a promise, or great tragedy would result. He had promised to take his new wife riding. Instead he stayed for many hours with Arian. When he returned he found his wife had been murdered while he had been taking his pleasure. Connavar was insane with grief. He destroyed the murderer’s village, slaughtering any who came within sword reach. In his madness he killed women and children that day.
‘When you were born, and Casta saw your eyes, he knew Arian had been unfaithful and cast her out. She came home to me. I went to see Connavar, and told him of his son. We drank uisge long into the night, and he talked of his sorrow, and of his love of my daughter. Much of it I won’t repeat. But he also talked of the people he had killed, and of how no amount of good deeds could wash away his guilt, and no punishment be great enough to ease his pain. I asked him if he would consider taking Arian to wife, and acknowledging you as his son. He said that his heart yearned for exactly that. His love for Arian burned as brightly as ever, and every night since he learned of the birth he had longed to ride to her and lift his son into his arms. But he could not. This was the punishment he had placed upon himself. Never to wed, never to sire children. He told me that he would never set eyes upon Arian again. And he never did. There, it is said. He was not punishing you, Bane. He was punishing himself.’
‘Why are you telling me this, Grandfather?’
The old man shrugged. ‘You are a good boy, with a good heart. But I know you came to hate Connavar. I thought the truth would help lance the boil.’