Brian heard the Dark Master"s voice from somewhere, and with that muskets spat from the gloom and bullets thudded around him. One slapped his steel cap away and another nicked his ear, and a third came so close across his eyes that he felt the hot breath of it; but his men fared in worse case than that, for they were clutching and reeling and fallen, and Brian leaped across the last of them into the hall with bullets driving at his back-piece.
As he ran through the hall he knew that his falcons had punished O"Donnell"s men heavily, and that his twenty men had not fallen without some payment for their lives. None the less, Bertragh Castle was now lost to him and to the Bird Daughter; but he thought it likely that he would yet make a play that might nip O"Donnell in the midst of his success.
In this Brian was a true O"Neill and the true luck of the Red Hand had seemed to dog him, for he had lost all his men without suffering a defeat, and now that he was beaten down, he was planning to strike heaviest.
He gained the tower well enough, and found Turlough there to receive him, with food and wine and loaded pistols. They soon had the door of the lower chamber fast barred and clamped, and Brian flung himself down on his bed, panting, but unwounded to speak of.
"Now sleep, master," said the old man. "They will search elsewhere, and finding this door closed will do naught here until the morning."
Brian laughed a little.
"It is not easy to sleep after fighting, Turlough. I think that now I will send off that last pigeon, so give me that quill yonder."
With great care Brian wrote his message, telling what had pa.s.sed, and saying that he hoped to ride free from the castle next morning. In that case he would be at Cathbarr"s tower before evening came, and he told Nuala to have all her men landed there at once, since she could hope to do nothing by sea against the pirate ships.
When the writing was bound to the pigeon"s wing he loosed the bird through the seaward cas.e.m.e.nt, and bade Turlough blow out their flickering oil-light.
After eating and drinking a little, they lay down to sleep. Men came and pounded at the door, then departed growling; but Turlough had guessed aright. The Dark Master was plainly speeding the search for Brian elsewhere, and since there was no sign of life from the powder-tower, he did not molest this until close to dawn. Then Brian was wakened by a shock at the door, and he heard the Dark Master"s voice outside directing his men. Still he seemed to have no thought that Brian was there, but wanted to get at the powder and into his own chamber again.
Brian took up his pistols and went to a loophole opening on the battlements, while Turlough still crouched on the bed in no little fear.
Finding that the Dark Master stood out of his sight, Brian fired at two of the men under the door, and they fell; then he raised his voice above the shouting that came from outside.
"O"Donnell, are you there?"
The uproar died away, and the other"s voice came to him.
"So you are trapped at last, Brian Buidh! Now yield and I promise you a swift hanging."
"Not I," laughed Brian curtly. "There is no lack of powder here, O"Donnell Dubh, and one of my men holds a pistol ready for it."
At this he glanced at Turlough, who grimaced. But from outside came a sudden yell of alarm, and Brian saw a few fleeing figures, while O"Donnell shouted at his men in furious rage. Brian called out to him again:
"Give me a horse and let me go free with the one man left me, or else I will blow up both tower and castle, and you will have little gain for my death."
"Would you trust my word in this?" cried the Dark Master. Brian smiled.
"Yes, as you must trust mine to leave no fuse in the powder when I am gone."
Then fell silence. Brian hated O"Donnell, as he knew he was hated in return; and so great was the hatred between them that he felt instinctively he could trust the Dark Master to send him out free. It seemed to him that the other would sooner have him go broken and crushed than do him to death, for that would be a greater revenge. Moreover, the Dark Master could know nothing of those men at Gorumna and would have little fear of the Bird Daughter.
And it befell exactly as Brian thought.
"I agree," cried the Dark Master, stepping out in the dawn-light boldly.
"You shall go forth empty as you came, Yellow Brian. What of those two-score men you owe me?"
"The time is not yet up," returned Brian, beginning to unbar the door, and he laughed at the mocking voice.
CHAPTER XIX.
BRIAN MEETS THE BLACK WOMAN.
"The storm is over, master, or will be by this night."
"Too late now, Turlough."
Brian and the old man stood in the courtyard, while the Dark Master was seeing to horses being made ready for them. Drawing his cloak farther about his hunched shoulders, the latter turned to Brian with a mocking sneer.
"Now farewell, Brian Buidh, and forget not to repay that loan, if you can gather enough men together. When you come again, you will find me here. A merry riding to you. _Beannacht leath!_"
Brian looked at him grimly.
"Your curse would make better company than your blessing, O"Donnell," he said, and turned to his horse with no more words.
The Scots who were standing around gave vent to a murmur of approval, and Brian saw the black looks pa.s.sing between them and the wild O"Donnells. The Highlanders had done murdering enough in Ireland since Hamilton brought them over, but they were outspoken men, who had little love for poisoners; and as Brian settled into the saddle with his huge sword slung across his back, he caught more than one word of muttered approval, which the Dark Master was powerless to check.
So Yellow Brian rode out from the castle he had lost, with Turlough Wolf at his heels, and his heart was very sore. Once across the filled-in moat and he saw fifty men at work by the sh.o.r.e, loading the dead into boats to be buried in the bay, for the ground was hard-frozen.
Parties of Scots troopers and the horseless O"Donnells were scattered over the farmlands and country ahead, but these offered no menace as the two hors.e.m.e.n rode slowly through them. For all his bitterness, Brian noted that the four pirate ships had been brought around into the bay before the castle, into which the Scots had moved, while a great number of the O"Donnells had landed and were hastily throwing up brush huts on the height above the sh.o.r.e, evidently intending to camp there for the present.
That was a dark leave-taking for Brian, since he had lost so many men and his castle to boot. Yet more than once he looked back on Bertragh, and when they came to the last rise of ground before the track wound into the hills and woods, he drew rein and pointed back with a curt laugh.
"This night I shall return, Turlough, and I think we shall catch the Dark Master off his guard at last. If we throw part of our men on that camp at dawn and the rest upon the castle, the tables may yet be turned."
"A good rede, Brian O"Neill," nodded the old Wolf approvingly. At thus hearing his name Brian flung Turlough one lightning-swift glance, then pulled out his Spanish sword and threw it high, and caught it again with a great shout.
"Tyr-owen! _Slainte!_"
With that he put spurs to his horse and rode on with better heart, striving to forget his troubles in thinking of the stroke he would deal that night. If those three pigeons had won clear to Gorumna, he would find Nuala and her men waiting at Cathbarr"s tower, and before the dawn they would be back again and over the hills.
So they rode onward, and presently came to a stretch of forest, dark against the snow. Suddenly Turlough drew up with a frightened glance around.
"Master--what is that wail? If I ever heard a banshee, that is the cry!
Beware of the Little People, master--"
"Nonsense!" exclaimed Brian, drawing rein also and listening. He heard a faint, sobbing cry come from ahead, and so mournful was it, so charged with wild grief, that for an instant his heart stood still, and the color fled from his face.
"It is some woman wailing her dead, Turlough," he said at length, although doubtfully. "Yet I have never heard a _caoine_ like it; but onward, and let us see."
"Wait, master!" implored the old man. "Let us cut over the hills and go by another path--"
"Go, if you are afraid," returned Brian, and spurred forward. The other hesitated, but followed unwillingly, and a moment later Brian came upon the cause of that mournful wailing, as the trees closed about them and the road wound into a hollow.
The dingle was so sheltered by the brooding pines that there was little snow, except on the track itself, and no wind. Under the spreading splay-boughs to the right was what seemed to be a heap of rags and tatters, though the wailing cry ceased as the two riders clattered down, with Turlough keeping well behind Brian.