"Yes, it is I," came her voice softly, and something warm splashed on his cheek. "Oh, Brian! I so feared that--that you were dead!"
The hand moved away, and he moved uneasily, to feel pain through his body.
"Nay, put back your hand!" he said. He tried to smile. "There, that"s better. Where are we, Nuala? On your ship?"
"No, Brian--at Gorumna. But I forgot. Turlough said you must not talk--"
"Oh, curse Turlough," he cried in irritation. "Gorumna? What has happened? Where is the Dark Master?"
"Lie still or I must leave you!" she cried sharply, and he obeyed. "The Dark Master"s head is over the gate, Brian. It is two days since the fight."
"Take that bandage from my eyes, Nuala," he said. After a minute her hands went to his head, and as he felt the bandage removed, light dazzled him, and he shut his eyes with a groan. Then he opened them again, and gradually he made out the figure of Nuala leaning over him, while a cresset shed light from above.
"Tell me what has happened," said Brian quietly, as he tried again to move and failed. "Why am I helpless here?"
"Because you are wounded," she replied softly. "Please lie quiet, Brian!
I will tell you all that has chanced."
"Where is Cathbarr! Did we win?"
"Yes, we won; but--but Cathbarr--he must have flung away his ax before the ship exploded, for we found it sticking in your boat, and--"
Her voice broke, and a pang of bitterness shot through Brian as he remembered it all now. He groaned.
"And I left him there to die! Oh, coward that I am--coward, and false to my friend--"
A great sob shook his body, but Nuala"s hands fell on his face, and there was fear in her voice when she answered him.
"No, Brian--don"t say that! If any one"s fault, it was Shaun"s for not coming sooner to your aid. Cathbarr died as he would have wished, and indeed as he always thought he would die. But now listen, Brian, for I have news."
So, leaning over him, she swiftly told him of what had pa.s.sed. The O"Donnells had been defeated and slain to the last man; one of their ships was sunk, and the other three captured, and her men held Bertragh.
As she and Shaun O"Malley lay refitting and gathering their wounded that same afternoon, a Parliament ship had come in from the south, bearing an answer to the appeal she had sent to Blake at the Cove of Cork.
He had not only sent her powder and supplies, but had sent her a blank commission from Cromwell, which would be filled in upon her definite allegiance to the Commonwealth. The commission guaranteed her possession of Gorumna and Bertragh and the lands she claimed, and promised that when the royalists were driven from Galway the grant would be confirmed by Parliament.
"I am to answer Captain Peyton to-night, Brian," she finished, her eyes dancing. "And Shaun is going to remain and hold Bertragh for me--"
"What"s that?" cried Brian. "Hold Bertragh? Am I then wounded so sore that I cannot draw sword again?"
"No," and her laugh rippled out. "Turlough says that you will be as well as ever in a month, Brian. But since you withdrew your fealty to me, I had to find another servant!"
"I had forgotten that," answered Brian moodily. He stared up at her face, and as he met her eyes saw the color flow up to her temples.
"You have slain the Dark Master as you promised, Brian," she said quietly. "And have you forgotten also that you meant to claim a reward from me for that deed?"
Brian laughed, and his face softened as happiness laid hold upon his heart.
"I have not forgotten that, Nuala; but now I am not going to ask that reward in the same way I had intended."
"How do you mean, Brian?" she asked gravely, though her eyes widened a trifle as if in quick fear.
"This, dear lady," he smiled. "When you answer Captain Peyton, let the commission be made out in the name of Nuala O"Neill--and take my fealty for what is left to me of life, Nuala."
He looked up steadily, knowing that all things hung on that instant.
"Well, to tell the truth, Brian," and for a moment she seemed to hesitate, so that Brian felt a sudden shock, "I--I delayed answering him in--in that hope!"
And her face came down to his.
[Transcriber"s Note: The following synopsis originally appeared at the beginning of the second installment.]
The scene is laid in Ireland during Cromwell"s time, when the whole country was in arms for or against the various parties. Brian Buidh, or Brian of the Yellow Hair, himself The O"Neill, comes home from Spain, where he had been brought up to fight for his country. After a mysterious warning from the Black Woman, an old hag, he wins forty men from O"Donnell More, the Black Master, by a trick, and wins the friendship of Turlough Wolf and Cathbarr of the Ax. His intention is to gather a storm of men and hold an independent place near Galway. He forms an alliance with Nuala O"Malley, known as the Bird Daughter because of her carrier pigeons, for the purpose of recovering her castle, Bertragh, which O"Donnell had won years before from her parents by black treachery.
[Transcriber"s Note: The following synopsis originally appeared at the beginning of the third installment.]
The scene is laid in Ireland during Cromwell"s time, when the whole country was in arms for or against the various parties. Brian Buidh, or Brian of the Yellow Hair, himself The O"Neill, comes home from Spain, where he had been brought up to fight for his country. After a mysterious warning from the Black Woman, an old hag, he wins forty men from O"Donnell More, the Black Master, by a trick, and wins the friendship of Turlough Wolf and Cathbarr of the Ax. His intention is to gather a storm of men and hold an independent place near Galway. He forms an alliance with Nuala O"Malley, known as the Bird Daughter because of her carrier pigeons, for the purpose of recovering her castle, Bertragh, which O"Donnell had won years before from her parents by black treachery.
By warlock arts O"Donnell More brings Brian and a handful of men through a snowstorm to Bertragh and makes him prisoner. He proceeds to torture him fiendishly, ending by nailing him to the castle door by one hand.
Just then Colonel James Vere, British officer, arrives, and demands Brian in order to hang him comfortably in Galway. Red Murrough, O"Donnell"s lieutenant, agrees, for the promise of ten English pounds, to pretend that Brian is worse off than he is so that he may take longer to recover. Cathbarr comes in, and offers to take Brian"s place if O"Donnell will release Brian; and when the Black Master makes fun of him, he goes berserk and cleans out the hall, escaping with Brian to Nuala. Then they besiege and best O"Donnell, who escapes.
[Transcriber"s Note: The following synopsis originally appeared at the beginning of the fourth and final installment.]
The scene is laid in Ireland during Cromwell"s time, when the whole country was in arms for or against the various parties. Brian Buidh, or Brian of the Yellow Hair, himself The O"Neill, comes home from Spain, where he had been brought up to fight for his country. After a mysterious warning from the Black Woman, an old hag, he wins forty men from O"Donnell More, the Black Master, by a trick, and wins the friendship of Turlough Wolf and Cathbarr of the Ax. His intention is to gather a storm of men and hold an independent place near Galway. He forms an alliance with Nuala O"Malley, known as the Bird Daughter because of her carrier pigeons, for the purpose of recovering her castle, Bertragh, which O"Donnell had won years before from her parents by black treachery.
By warlock arts O"Donnell More brings Brian and a handful of men through a snowstorm to Bertragh and makes him prisoner. He proceeds to torture him fiendishly, ending by nailing him to the castle door by one hand.
Just then Colonel James Vere, British officer, arrives, and demands Brian in order to hang him comfortably in Galway. Red Murrough, O"Donnell"s lieutenant, agrees, for the promise of ten English pounds, to pretend that Brian is worse off than he is so that he may take longer to recover. Cathbarr comes in, and offers to take Brian"s place if O"Donnell will release Brian; and when the Black Master makes fun of him, he goes berserk and cleans out the hall, escaping with Brian to Nuala. Then they besiege and best O"Donnell, who escapes.
Brian goes after O"Donnell with a couple of hundred men, having recovered from his hurts, and all but catches him in a valley, just as he is working some kind of a divination with a bowl of water. Brian gets back his Spanish sword, but O"Donnell escapes with some of his men, and Brian loses all of his in chasing him to keep him from joining with his pirate friends. Brian and Turlough get back to Bertragh exhausted. He goes cruising with Nuala, and they meet a small vessel laden with wine and food for some of O"Donnell"s men. Brian goes back with it to Bertragh, while Nuala goes on to Gorumna Castle, her own home. But the captured wine proves to be poisoned--it is a trick of the Black Master"s.