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Sevenwaters: Seer Of Sevenwaters Part 32

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A subtle change crosses Ciaran's face at this, masked almost as soon as it appears.

"But Sibeal believes there is no third choice, no compromise by which she can honor both her feelings for me and her love of the G.o.ds," I say. "I cannot leave her forever, Master Ciaran. I cannot bear to be parted from her. If we cannot be husband and wife, then let me be close to her, let us live as colleagues." I bow my head. "I will never wed another. She is the other half of me."

"Are you sure Sibeal's feelings are as powerful as your own?"

I would like to strangle him, right now. "Perhaps you dismiss her sorrow as fleeting and insignificant," I say. "Maybe you do not know her as well as you think."

He opens his mouth, and I expect that he will say something like, All things pa.s.s, or You are young. But what he says is, "I respect your sorrow, Felix. Tell me, how old are you?"



"I am in my twentieth year, Master Ciaran. You will tell me, no doubt, that I am too young to know my mind on such matters; too much of a boy, still, to understand true love with its wild joy and its piercing heartache."

He looks at me then, and his eyes are full of a terrible sadness. "At nineteen," he says, "one understands it only too well. We will talk again, Felix." He rises, gives me a nod and leaves.

We will talk again. I could laugh at that if I were not so full of bitterness and rage. This is like one of those cruel tales of lovers parted. The hero can win his lady if he undertakes a mission, and the mission is of such long duration that by the time he returns for her, they are old and gray and beyond the pleasures of the flesh. Or worse, she is dead or wed to another man. After ten years in the nemetons, Sibeal will have become like him, so deep in the study of lore and the love of the G.o.ds that she will have forgotten how it feels to weep and shout and laugh and be alive. If she remembers me, it will be with regret and kindness, not with love and longing.

I run. I cannot stop running. I run until my chest heaves, my breath whistles, my head reels. When I can go no further I stand on the cliff top and hurl stones over the edge. Each missile bears my anger out into the world. I have no words for what is in me; I only know my heart might burst with it. I run out of stones. All around me, gulls are rising in startled, squawking protest. I stand still, breathing. Slowly, piece by piece, Inis Eala comes into focus around me. The waves far below, crashing against the cliff's base. The sea stretching out before me, transformed by the summer sun to a carpet of deep blue-green and glittering gold. The birds. The vast, open s.p.a.ce. Smaller things: a fern-like plant between the rocks at my feet; a juniper some distance away, like a tenacious old woman, clinging on against the westerly wind. There must be something to learn from what has pa.s.sed today. A druid finds learning in everything, success and catastrophe, triumph and bitter defeat. In the destruction of the lovely flowering thing that grew between Sibeal and me, I can find no wisdom at all.

It is some time before I return to the settlement; the sun is high. When I seek out Sibeal, I find she has disregarded Muirrin's advice to rest, and has gone to the seer's cave. She is not expected back until supper time. As I head back toward the men's quarters, Sigurd comes to fetch me-Johnny wants to talk to me.

Sigurd leads me into the practice area, through the iron gate. Pairs of men are locked in intense, expert-looking battles all over the open area. Swords seem to be the weapon of the day. Rat is up on one of the benches, arms folded, eyes narrowed as he watches. Snake stands at the other side in a similar pose.

"The Connacht men are near the end of their training," Sigurd comments. "Final display of battle-craft soon, before they leave the island. Johnny's sending some of the new swords back with them. Not compensation, exactly; Rodan's was an accidental death. But such a gift silences talk of possible negligence. That's what I've heard. This way, Felix."

We enter a small chamber set within the ma.s.sive double wall that rings the enclosure. Johnny, Gareth and Gull are standing around a table on which doc.u.ments and writing materials are spread. I see a map showing the southern coasts of Erin, Britain and part of Gaul. Sigurd closes the door, remaining inside.

"Welcome, Felix," Johnny says. "Be seated, please." He has already congratulated me on the safe return of the three abandoned men; he spoke to each of us in turn last night, before we slept. He gave me his personal thanks for diving in after Gull, though our survival that strange day owed little to me. As a leader, Johnny misses nothing.

"I'll get to the point quickly," he says now. "Gull tells me both Donn and Colm will be fit to return home in about ten days' time, provided an adequate escort can be arranged. I don't know what your plans are for the long term, with your brother gone, but you'll be wanting to report back to the king of Munster about the voyage and the losses, at the very least. The items salvaged from Freyja should be returned to him. Gull says it would be ideal for Colm if you were to accompany him on the journey. I understand he is plagued by nightmares."

"He will need me, yes," I say. "He will recover more quickly at home. His father is one of Muredach's grooms; his mother works at court as a seamstress. He has brothers and sisters." Lucky Colm. But unlucky Colm, to witness such horrors before he is a man. Once safely home, he may never want to leave again.

"I regret the need to act on this so soon after your return, Felix," Johnny says quietly. "But I know you have duties to fulfill elsewhere. What are your plans after you speak to King Muredach? Will you stay on at his court awhile? From the story you told us that night, I understand it could be difficult for you to return to Armorica." He is taking care not to ask me who will bear the news of Paul's death to my mother and father.

"I will not linger at Muredach's court," I say. "I regret greatly that I cannot take the ill news to my parents. Duke Remont is not a just ruler. He is greatly influenced by the local bishops, whom I angered by speaking too freely. My presence would, at the very least, lose my father the position he has held for twenty years. It could cost him even more dearly. I cannot take that risk. I suppose I must dispatch a letter." Such a letter is long overdue for writing. I have not been able to bring myself to do it.

Sigurd clears his throat.

"We have a proposal to put to you, Felix," Johnny says.

I find I do not care very much what his proposal is. After my interview with Ciaran I feel shattered and weary, caring little for the future. "Yes?" I say.

"Sigurd will explain it to you."

"You remember we spoke of my Armorican comrade, Corentin," Sigurd says. "A close member of the Inis Eala team; a valiant, fine man and a great friend to me. Since we had that talk, I've been thinking how good it would be to know how he's getting on and whether he managed to win back his family holdings. I've explained to Johnny what you told me, that the region where your folk live is close enough to the place where Corentin was headed when he went back there. Johnny's given me leave to come with you, Felix. It'll lighten the job of getting Donn and Colm safely back to Munster if there are two of us. I was thinking, if you're not set on staying at the court there, that we might find a ship for Armorica."

I am about to interrupt with my reasons why this cannot happen, but Sigurd holds up a hand to silence me.

"I know why you're reluctant to go, and I respect that, Felix. But the thing is, Corentin's most likely a wealthy landholder now, an influential man in the region. Even if you can't get back to your home, if we find him he'll be well-placed to get a personal messenger to your parents, someone who can break the news kindly. If your father can travel, we can probably arrange a safe meeting. We're Inis Eala men, Corentin and I. We're expert at organizing this kind of thing." After a moment he adds, "I'd like to see him again."

His big, blunt features are softened by a look that disarms me completely. And, after all, I have nowhere else to go. Not now. Ten years of nothing loom ahead.

One thing troubles me. "My brother came with me to Erin," I say, "and on to the north, to watch over me. For his care of me, Paul paid with his life. I would not have the same fate befall another good man."

Sigurd gives me a searching look. "Taking risks is part of being a man," he says. "It's part of living, Felix. You can't wrap up every friend you have and put him away in safe storage, lest he trip and hurt himself. n.o.body would thank you for that. If you're still thinking of those ill luck rumors that once dogged you, forget them. I'm offering to go with you because I want to, and because I think we can help each other. That should be enough for you."

I nod. I cannot argue with this.

"Our man on the mainland will arrange horses and supplies for your trip south to Munster," Johnny says. "There will be resources at your disposal. It'll be up to the two of you how you use them. What do you say, Felix?"

"It is good to have a purpose," I say. "I will do this. I thank you, all of you. I thank you for your faith in me."

Now they are all looking at me, and I see that perhaps my tone has not matched my words. Right now, it is not possible to sound anything but sad.

"Good," Johnny says. "I'll leave you and Sigurd to work out the details in your own time. You may need to make haste if you're to secure a pa.s.sage from the south before the worst of the autumn storms. I've given Sigurd up to a year's leave of absence."

A year. Once, that would have seemed long. Now, it only tells me that there will then be nine more years to wait. Nine years in which I grow older, and Sibeal grows older, and our paths grow steadily further apart.

"Felix." Gareth speaks now, quietly. He is the affable, friendly man he was before the voyage, and yet not quite the same. His eyes are more guarded; his mouth holds something in reserve. "I realize your plans for the long-term future may be somewhat hazy at present. I must tell you that several of us, independently, have suggested to Johnny that he offer you a place on Inis Eala, a permanent place, once you have completed this other business, and that he has agreed. You might return here when Sigurd does. The men hold your courage in high regard. We would welcome you as one of us."

I am astounded. I know what an honor this is, how rarely a place on the island is offered. "I am no warrior," I say, "nor ever will be one."

"You are a young man of exemplary bravery." Gull speaks. His voice is soft and deep. It makes me think of oak wood and shadows. "That is a weapon stronger than the most finely crafted sword, Felix. You are a man of great heart. Besides," he adds with a grin, "we like your songs."

"Thank you," I say to all of them. "I am more honored than I can say. Much in my future is unknown. Much is still to be decided. Whether my path brings me back here or takes me far away, I will never forget that you recognized me thus."

n.o.body says anything. Johnny nods. Gareth smiles. Gull gives me a look that reflects his knowledge of the truth: that my courteous speech and calm demeanor conceal a bitter, wretched, sorrowful man.

"We might row over to the mainland and talk to Biddy's son Clem, Felix," says Sigurd, putting a hand on my shoulder. "He's the one who'll be arranging the first part of the journey for us. If we go now, we can take advantage of the incoming tide. Clem will give us a bed for the night, and we can come back in the morning."

"Why not?" I say.

It is the beginning of the end.

CHAPTER 15.

*Sibeal*

Ciaran is the other part of this, Clodagh had said. The spiritual part; the wise, measured part. I woke from a night of tangled dreams and knew I was not ready to face him. What could I tell him? That I was torn two ways and could not think straight anymore? That I had soaked my pillow with still more tears, and that, when at last I had fallen into an uneasy sleep, my dreams had all been of Felix? How could I explain to my wise kinsman that my body was full of longing for the touch of Felix's hands and the warmth of his lips on mine? How could I say I regretted now that the two of us had not slipped away together on that moonlit night, the night the gray ones spoke to Cathal on the serpent isle? How could I admit that I wished we had found a secluded corner and taken our joy of each other? At least, then, I would have had that memory to carry with me into a future of austerity and seclusion. How could I tell my mentor that the voices of the G.o.ds had fallen deeply, profoundly silent?

I could not face anyone. I needed to be alone. I dressed, then drew aside the curtain to see that Evan was already up and tending to Thorgrim.

"Evan? If anyone asks where I am, please tell them I've gone to the cave for the day. I will be back by supper time."

I withdrew and headed out my door before he could give words to the doubt I saw on his face. No sign of Fang this morning. Perhaps it was too early even for her. But not for everyone. As I walked toward the cliff path I saw two figures down by the water, near the fisherman's cottage, deep in conversation. One wore a druid's robe, the other was clad all in black. One had hair of deepest red, the other was dark as night. Ciaran and Cathal. I shivered. Enmeshed in my own woes, I had lost sight of what was to come for them, and perhaps for us all. Out beyond the safe margin of Inis Eala, Mac Dara still waited. I thought of the tiny tokens around the fragile necks of those two babes. What if a talisman was lost or broken? What if the cord snapped? What if the child was out playing and . . . No, I would not think of that. As soon as I imagined Firinne and her brother at three or four, I saw my own daughter running and climbing and being swung up high by her father, with her own talisman around her neck, and that was simply too hard to bear.

I pa.s.sed the cove where Svala had crouched over her pile of fish bones. I pa.s.sed the place where she had pushed Rodan to his death. I could almost understand that now. She was in thrall to Knut, bound to do his will, bound to share his bed although she shrank from him; that little sliver of skin was enough to let him control her while they were close, at least until we came to the serpent isle and the call of her beloved put new strength in her veins. But Rodan had no such talisman, and when he approached her, she did to him what she had long wished she could do to the man who had called her his wife. The man who had stolen her away, and lied about her, and used her as if she were a possession, not a living, breathing woman. A living, breathing creature. G.o.ds, it was like an ancient epic of heroes and monsters.

Musing on this, I reached the narrow pa.s.sage in the rocky headland and slipped through into Finbar's cave.

So early in the morning, the cavern was dim. Blue shadows haunted the corners, and the water of the pool lay dark amid the stones. I lay down on the flat rocks, suddenly as tired as if I had climbed a mountain. There seemed no point at all in attempting to pray, or to scry, or to meditate. My mind was all Felix-Felix diving off the boat and vanishing beneath the water, Felix challenging me to be honest with myself, Felix using the rune Is to explain that he had lost his memory. Felix looking in wonder at the talisman he had been given to protect our daughter-how had those gray ones known of her, if she was never to be? Felix with his arms around me and his lips on mine. Felix singing as we made our way through the dark, riding on the monster's back. My brave, beautiful man.

I lay there a long time; perhaps I slept. When I opened my eyes the cave was much brighter, and I sat up to see the pool before me filled with a faint gold light. I had not expected visions. I had not expected anything save that perhaps, in the quiet of the cave, I might attempt to get my thoughts in order. But there in the water was the figure of a man. A tall, brown-haired man, a well-built young man with a good-humored mouth and smiling blue eyes. Not Finbar. Paul. Paul who lay beneath the earthen mound in the place of the boat burial.

There was no sound in the cavern, but in my mind I heard his voice. I want him to know that I am content, he said. He should feel no regret for what happened. We always knew, my father, my mother and I, that he was the one who would make his mark, break new ground, find paths. .h.i.therto unexplored. It was in him from the first, when he was only a sc.r.a.p of a boy. It's not his fault that I'm gone. I made my choice, and this is where it led me. He should go forward, speak out, be the brave heart he always was. I don't think he ever knew how proud Father was of him; I don't think my brother ever understood how rare such courage is. Paul looked out of the water and straight into my eyes, and he smiled. With you by his side, he will be happy, he said, making tears well in my eyes. Look after him for me, will you? And with a ripple and a pa.s.sing shadow, he was gone.

"I can't," I whispered into the silence. "I can't do it. I can't honor your wishes. I can't obey the G.o.ds. I can't do anything at all." It seemed I still had not yet wept all my tears, for they flowed now as they had the day before, helpless tears, the tears of a child lost in a maze and running out of choices. I sobbed until my nose ran and my chest hurt. There wasn't a sc.r.a.p of druidic strength to be found in me, and I wasn't sure I wanted it anyway. I buried my head in my hands and let sorrow claim me.

Much later, when the worst of it was over, I lifted my head, wiped my face on my sleeve and became aware that I was no longer alone in the cavern. Ciaran was sitting a short distance away, in his usual cross-legged, straight-backed pose, not looking at me, simply waiting, his eyes calm and clear as he gazed across the water. In a moment he would ask me what was the matter. I had no idea what to say to him.

"Perhaps it will help if I tell you I'm aware that you are struggling with your vocation, Sibeal, and that I know your young Armorican, Felix, is part of the problem. Don't look so surprised; I had only to see him take your hand on the jetty to be aware of the bond between you."

"I'm-I can't-you won't understand. Even I don't understand." If this was what it meant to grow up, I thought I might prefer to stay a child forever. And yet . . .

He gave a little smile. "Try me, Sibeal."

"You won't like it."

"You know better than to antic.i.p.ate my response. I see how unhappy you are. Tell me why."

I drew a deep, unsteady breath. "Ciaran, I love Felix. I love him with my whole heart. He has transformed my life. Up until this summer, I never had the slightest doubt about my vocation. You know how hard I've studied, how much I've applied myself to learning, how I've tried at every turn to be the best druid I could be. Now I'm full of doubt. The voices of the G.o.ds do not come to me readily anymore; they are often silent." I shivered, finding I could not meet his eyes. He would be so disappointed in me. He would be shocked by my weakness. "I love life in the nemetons with its tranquility and purpose. On the voyage to the serpent isle I discovered new ways of using my gifts, ways I had not known were possible. I love the G.o.ds, and I believe they still call me to their service. But I love this man too; I want to be his wife and bear his children. I want the sort of life Clodagh has, full of tenderness and pa.s.sion and surprises. I can't have both. Felix has spoken of other paths, of compromise, but in truth there are no other paths. There is only this choice. This impossible choice."

"Tell me why it is impossible."

"Because-because whatever I choose, I'll live a life of regret. If I marry Felix and walk away from the druid path, I will always think of the vocation I was called to as a child, the peace of the nemetons, the myriad byways of the mind, the companionship of other scholars, the wondrous opportunity to serve the G.o.ds with all that is in me. And if I have to let Felix go, I won't be the druid I should be. Part of me will always be thinking of him, wondering where he is, wondering if he's dreaming of me, weeping for the life we might have had together."

"Felix must be a remarkable young man," Ciaran said quietly, "to have awoken such feelings in you so quickly."

"You will probably dismiss it as young love, a pa.s.sion that burns brightly and is soon over, a candle flame that gutters and dies at the first cold draft," I said. "But it's not like that. Please believe me. Felix and I belong together. I love him as my counterpart, my perfect completion. I love him body and spirit. He is a fine man, an exceptional man, a scholar and thinker, sensitive and wise. And brave; outstandingly brave. There is no other like him."

He put his palms together and brought the tips of his fingers to his mouth. He seemed to be giving my arguments consideration.

"I know what you will say," I went on. "That the love of the G.o.ds must always outweigh the love between man and woman. You'll tell me that in time I will forget; that the pain will go away. But it won't, Ciaran. This love is deep and long-lasting. It's as vibrant as the notes of a harp, and as enduring as the heart of stone. It's as big as the sky and as broad as the ocean. It's as grand as a high mountain; it's as lovely and delicate as a single drop of dew."

Ciaran smiled. "You seem unusually ready to put words in my mouth," he said.

"I'm sorry," I said. "But it seems obvious what advice you would give me. You've devoted years of your life to the G.o.ds. If it weren't for the fact that Conor is your brother and that you'd never challenge his authority, you would have been chief druid long ago. You are respected throughout Erin for your scholarship and your wisdom. You're not going to counsel me to drop it all and run off to get married."

"True, Sibeal, I would not do that. I rarely tell anyone what to do, least of all a fellow druid."

I waited for him to say The answer lies within you, or There is learning even in loss.

"Sibeal," he said, and I saw a look on his face that I had never seen before, a look of the most profound sadness, "I'm going to tell you something I've never told anyone else. Not one day goes by, not one, when I do not mourn Niamh's death. Not one hour pa.s.ses when I do not wish my life had been different, and that I had not lost her a scant three years after I found her again. Every moment of the day she is in my thoughts, tossing her hair, glancing at me over her shoulder, dancing on the sward, cradling our child in her arms. If I could have her back I would quit the brotherhood without a second thought. She was the light of my life. She was the other part of me. We were young when we first saw each other, as you and Felix are, and from the first meeting of our eyes I was changed by her. We loved each other in the way you spoke of, with body and spirit, forever and always. Oh, Sibeal, I know exactly what the two of you are feeling. And I also know what it is to experience a lifetime of regret for a path not taken. Death robbed me of that path. I had no choice. But you are blessed, Sibeal. You do have a choice."

I was so shaken by the pa.s.sion of his words that I could hardly respond. "I'm sorry." My voice was uneven. "And you lost Fainne, too. I saw my own daughter, Ciaran. I saw the three of us together, in a little house in the forest. Felix and me and a lovely child with eyes like mine. It hurt me to see her, and to know that it is my choice that she never be born. That feels so wrong. It goes against everything I know as a druid. It goes against the knowledge that all living things are sacred."

"I believe I have taught you all too well," Ciaran said. He sounded calm now, but his hands were tightly clasped together, the knuckles white. "Yes, I lost Fainne, but that was different. I know that my daughter is alive, and has a companion of the heart, and that she is doing a great work on behalf of the G.o.ds. I see her in visions; she sees me. That is not so cruel. And I have you, Sibeal. You have a wise and loving father of your own, but I have long looked upon you as my second daughter. It hurts me to see you so unhappy. There, now I have said something inappropriate to a druid, so we are even. Let me ask you a question."

"What question?"

"You said Felix had spoken of compromise. It seems to me that there is a possible solution to your problem. It depends on how far you are prepared to compromise. This is not all or nothing, Sibeal. There is at least one other choice available to you."

I could hardly breathe, let alone speak. I did not dare to hope.

"There's a community in the south, in Kerry. They call themselves the Brethren of Brighid. They are stalwart in the old faith, but they are not druids, at least, not in the sense you and I understand the term. They live communally, and there are married couples and children among them. There is far less emphasis on lore and prayer than we are accustomed to in the nemetons. Less rigor, less discipline. More freedom of thought, demonstrated in robust nightly debates; they're as fond of those as they are of their music. But princ.i.p.ally they show their love of the G.o.ds in daily work, either on the land they farm or out in the wider world, where they teach and heal, perform hand fastings and burials, comfort the dying, and conduct the seasonal rites for farm folk and fisher folk. A very different life, Sibeal, and far away from Sevenwaters. I know several of the people who live there, and I have only good to say of them. I am convinced they would welcome you and Felix to their hearths and their hearts. In turn, you would have much to offer them, and so, I believe, would he."

I stared at him, unable to think past the conflicting feelings that rushed through me-joy, horror, hope, shock, disbelief. "You-you-are advising me to give up my vocation?"

He smiled again, but his eyes were sad. "You know, I don't believe I am. Yes, this choice would mean you did not make your final vows at Sevenwaters. It would mean we lost you to our own nemetons, and that would be a great loss indeed, to Conor and myself especially. But, Sibeal, my dear, you are so full of spirit, you are so rich in faith, it matters not at all what path you choose. Whether as wife and mother, or as druid, or as teacher in Kerry, or even at court in Armorica if your path should lead you there, you will live your life fully in the love of the G.o.ds. They laid their hands over you when you were a small child. You have never wavered, Sibeal; and their love for you has never weakened, even when their voices could not reach you. You should go forward in joy and confidence, knowing whatever you choose will be right."

His words sounded in me like a song. They were a precious gift, as precious as Felix's love. They held a wisdom that could keep me strong until the day I died. "But I thought-didn't you send me here because I couldn't cope?"

"Sometimes your ability comes close to overwhelming you, yes, and that concerned me. I weighed that in the balance before telling you of the community in Kerry. Certainly, your gifts would be better guarded if you chose to stay in the safety of the nemetons. But with Felix by your side, I know you would be strong enough to live your life in that more open world. Sibeal, my reasons for sending you to Inis Eala were many. Among them was my wish that you spend time with your sisters. I wanted you to reach a fuller understanding of what you would be giving up to become a druid. I did not send you here to have your heart broken, Sibeal. We can't have that, my dear." He stepped forward and put his arms around me as a father would, and I held on, feeling his deep strength pa.s.s into me, and thinking, not for the first time, how remarkable he was, how selfless and how wise. As was Clodagh. How lucky I was in my family and in my friends.

"Take time to consider this," Ciaran murmured. "But not too long. I've been talking to Johnny. Felix has a great deal of unfinished business to attend to, starting with a trip to accompany the survivors to Munster. Then he should go to Armorica to take the news of his brother's death home. He'll most likely be gone a year, Sibeal, and he and Sigurd are leaving in ten days' time."

"Ten days?" I lifted my head from his chest and looked up into his mulberry eyes. "So soon?"

"It is perhaps not such a bad thing, if you decide you will go to Kerry. A year provides time for you to speak to your father, and for me to speak to Conor, and then for you and me to travel south so I can introduce you to the Brethren of Brighid. By the time Felix returns, you will be fully informed about what this decision means. Of course, I am a.s.suming he will be amenable to the idea. Have you at any stage suggested to him that he might consider a spiritual life?"

"No, I . . . " Oh G.o.ds, let me not be dreaming. Let me not wake to find myself alone by the scrying pool with my heart still weighed down by sorrow.

"You might put it to him. It seems your Felix never shrinks from a challenge. He may have no religious vocation-that rather depends on how you define vocation-but from Gull's accounts and Johnny's, he is a man of good heart and open mind. That, along with his bond with you, would be sufficient to earn him acceptance into the Brethren of Brighid. Sibeal, there's plenty of time for you and Felix to consider this. The final decision could wait until he comes back from Armorica."

"I don't need time," I said as something bloomed within me, a great, warm, beautiful thing made up of sunshine and moonlight and waves splashing and leaves unfurling and birds winging through a cloudless sky. What Clodagh had said was true. I had grown up. I had learned that being a woman was knowing when to stand firm and when to compromise. I had learned to laugh and weep; I had learned that I was weak as well as strong. I had learned to love. I was no longer a rigid, upright tree that would not flex and bow, even though the gale threatened to snap it in two; I was the willow that bends and shivers and sways, and yet remains strong. "If Felix agrees, I will go to Kerry. It is a long way from Sevenwaters; I'll miss the family. And I'll miss you and Conor and the others more than I can tell you. I know I'll feel lost, at first, without the lore and the ritual and everything that makes the nemetons a sanctuary and a haven. But I'm sure this is right." I stood on tiptoe and kissed Ciaran on the cheek, something I had never done before. "You've just given me a wonderful gift," I told him.

"Then why are you crying, Sibeal?" His smile was a little crooked; were those tears I saw in his eyes? "Go then, take this news to Felix. I will be surprised if he does not agree to the proposal. I believe you'll find him close to the place where his brother is buried. At least, he was there when I walked out to find you. We shall speak more of this later."

"I don't know how to thank you," I said as we left the cave. "It's too much to put into words."

"Be happy, Sibeal. That is all the thanks I need."

I saw Felix before he saw me. He was up at the place of the boat burial, sitting on a flat rock with his head bowed onto his drawn-up knees. He looked as I had never seen him before: defeated. And that could not be, not for Felix, who was brave enough for anything. I glanced at Ciaran, who had halted beside me.

"Go on, Sibeal. You don't need me." Ciaran headed off along the path toward the settlement, and I began to climb the rise. Walking. Then, as Felix lifted his head and turned swollen, reddened eyes on me, running. He stood up just in time as I reached him and threw myself into his arms, making him stagger.

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