Read The Legend of the Corrib King Online
Authors: Tom McCaughren
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #General, #Europe, #Ireland, #History
âFour pence,' said Dan. âI wonder how much that is in today's money?'
âI saw in the paper,' said Big Jim, âthat somebody in the bank worked it out. And taking inflation into account, they reckoned it would be less than two euro.'
What inflation meant, the young people didn't know, but they thought it wasn't much for a day's work.
âAnyway,' added Big Jim, looking at Mary, âthere's no water in it worth talking about, so there's no need to worry.'
* * *
Jamesie was like his father in many ways. He had black hair and was bronzed from the wind and sun of a summer spent on the lake. His Uncle Dan's description of him as being like a string of pump water was very apt, for he had that awkward, lanky look of a young man who had suddenly shot up into his teens. While his mother packed a picnic lunch, he collected the fishing rods and a net from the closet. Jamesie hadn't said much since they arrived, and his young visitors were looking forward to getting to know him again. They helped him carry the gear down the stone steps and watched as he placed it carefully in a blue boat with an outboard engine. They could see that this sort of thing was part of his everyday routine and they marvelled at how different it was from their own way of life back in Antrim.
âAre we ready to go now?' asked Tapser.
Jamesie smiled. âNot quite. This is where the riddle starts.' He went back into the house and brought out two jam jars with screw-on lids. Puzzled they followed him around to the field at the back. There he gave one jar to Cowlick to hold, took the lid off the other and asked, âListen now, what do you hear?'
âGrasshoppers,' said Rachel.
âRight,' said Jamesie. Spotting one of them on a blade of grass, he reached down and scooped it into the jar with the lid. âThey chirp like that when the sun comes out, and Pakie says they do it by rubbing their legs against their wings.'
âWings that whistle,' said Cowlick. âSo that's what he meant.'
Jamesie smiled and nodded, and Tapser asked him, âWhat do you think has happened to him?'
âIt's hard to say. He's never been away as long as this before.' He clamped the lid on another grasshopper before Prince could disturb it. âAnd then there was his house â¦'
âWhat about it?' asked RóisÃn.
âIt had been broken into and everything thrown about.'
âSo that's why you're so worried about him,' said Rachel.
Jamesie nodded and, reaching into a clump of ferns, clamped the lid on the second jar. âThere you are,' he said, â
legs that fly
.'
âDaddy-long-legs,' the others exclaimed. âOf course.'
Having added a few more to his collection, Jamesie took his cousins back to the boat. There he helped them put on life jackets, and seated them in such a way that their weight was evenly distributed. When they were all in position, and Prince was wedged safely between Tapser's knees, he started the engine, took a firm grip of the tiller and steered them out onto the Corrib.
No one said anything. There was no need. It was all so new and exciting. As well as that, they were trying to solve the next part of Pakie's rhyme. â
Fairies on the island, fish in the sky
?' They looked up and around them. All they could see were swallows skimming the water and a distant flock of cormorants soaring low across the lake in search of fish. As for the islands, there seemed to be dozens of them.
Almost as if he could read their thoughts, Jamesie throttled back on the engine and let the boat bob quietly on the waves. âPakie says there's an island for every day of the year.'
âYou don't think he could have had an accident?' asked Rachel.
âMaybe marooned on one of the islands or something,' suggested RóisÃn.
Jamesie shook his head. âHis boat was still on the slipway beside his house. That's why they've been concentrating the search along the shore.'
âWhat do
you
think has happened to him?' asked Tapser.
âWell, he was having a lot of trouble with poachers. Unless he's had a run-in with them.'
âYou don't think he's dead?' exclaimed Rachel in horror. âI mean, they wouldn't, would they?'
âSome of them are capable of it all right,' Jamesie told her. âBut I think his body would have turned up if they had.'
Starting up the engine again, he took them further out onto the lake, and after some time pulled in near one of the islands. âThat's Illaun na Shee,' he told them.
âWhat's that?' asked Cowlick.
âIllaun na Shee â island of the fairies.'
â
Fairies on the island
!' said RóisÃn and Rachel together.
âThat's it,' said Jamesie.
âAnd what about
fish in the sky
?' asked Tapser.
âMaybe he meant birds carrying fish up into the sky in their beaks,' suggested RóisÃn.
Jamesie shook his head. âLook over the side.'
They all looked into the clear waters of the lake.
âOf course,' said RóisÃn. âThe sky. It's mirrored in the lake.'
Jamesie baited each of the rods with a grasshopper and a âdaddy' as he called the daddy-long-legs. The boat was drifting sideways past the island, and he showed them how to hold the rods so that the insects just touched the top of the small waves. âNow,' he told them, âthat's dapping.'
âWill the fish go for them?' asked Tapser.
Jamesie nodded. âIn May it's the Mayfly. But at this time of year it's the daddies and grasshoppers. They blow off the islands and the trout love them.'
Sure enough, it wasn't long before there was a strong pull on Rachel's line. Quickly she let it out just as Jamesie told her to do, and as it sliced through the water he took in the other rods, started up the engine and nosed the boat gently in towards the stony shore.
âCareful now, wind him carefully,' he advised her, and when the boat came to a halt he hopped out into about a foot of water and scooped the trout into the net.
It was a big fish, but not as big as the one they spotted a few minutes later. It was lying on its side in a few inches of water near the shore, and was obviously dead.
âIt's a salmon,' Jamesie told them. He waded over and brought it back to the boat. âStrange, no sign of disease, and there's no pollution around here.'
âMaybe it's one a fisherman thought had got away,' suggested Tapser.
Jamesie was examining the salmon's mouth. âNo sign of any hooks. But wait a minute, what's this? It looks as if it choked on something.'
The others watched as he extracted a crumpled ball of paper from the salmon's gaping jaws. He smoothed it out and they saw the colour draining from his face.
âIt's a poem!' he exclaimed.
Big Jim spread the piece of paper on the table before him, read it again to himself, and handed it to Martin, saying, âWell, what do you think?' They were all hoping that Martin, being a garda, might be able to give them an expert opinion.
Martin pushed back his blue peaked cap and read the poem aloud:
âBeyond the Cross there lies the king,
Struck down by spears of man unseen.
In his drink a trap wine redd,
Too many wish that he was dead.
Seek not the pike that struck him down,
But the hand that seeks to take the crown â¦'
âThere's more of it on the other side,' Big Jim told him.
Turning the paper over, Martin continued:
âFairies and witches, foxes in ditches,
Deadly the fingers that point to life's riches.
Beneath tall spires of gold the Story is told,
Nymphs dance in the moonlight and secrets unfold â¦'
âWell?' asked Mag anxiously.
âSounds like him all right,' Martin agreed.
âAnd it looks like his writing too,' added Jamesie.
âWell, it's very scribbled,' said Martin.
âBut what does it mean?' asked Tapser.
âAnd how did it come to be in the salmon?' wondered Cowlick.
âWell, if it was Pakie who wrote it,' said Martin, âand there are no other poets around here that I know of, it might be something he just threw away and was picked up by the salmon.'
âBut sure it's hard enough to get them to take a piece of bait, let alone a ball of paper,' argued Jamesie.
Big Jim studied the poem again. âJamesie thinks it might be some sort of mysterious message from Pakie. And you must admit, it's very strange.'
Martin smiled in a way that clearly showed he thought the idea was a bit far-fetched. âI suppose it is strange all right. But what would be the point in sending a message nobody can understand?'
âAnd in a dead fish,' added RóisÃn. âI think the poor thing probably choked on it.'
Martin winked. âThat's what it gets for going too near Illaun na Shee.'
âHow do you mean?' asked Cowlick.
âIllaun na Shee,' repeated Martin. âDidn't Jamesie tell you that it's an enchanted island? Sure maybe the little people put a spell on it.'
âNow, Martin,' said Mag, âthat's enough of that talk. Your brother's bad enough without you making him worse.'
âWhat sort of talk?' asked her sister.
âOh, it's all you ever hear about in this house, Mary. If Jamesie's not talking about fishing, he's talking about fairies and all that nonsense. Dear knows what visitors must think of us.'
âAnd where did he get it from,' said Big Jim, âbut your own brother Pakie. Isn't he ten times worse?'
Mag nodded with an air of resignation, and judging it was time to talk about something else, Dan asked, âAnyway, Martin, what's new in the world of crime?'
âAh, divil the thing, except for the salmon poaching.'
âAnd there's not much new in that,' remarked Big Jim.
âIs it much of a problem?' asked Dan.
âUsually the poachers don't bother us much up around here,' Martin told him. âIt's more of a problem in the lower part of the lake, near Annaghdown. But after the waterkeepers went on strike a while back there's been poaching everywhere. Several boats have been stolen. Even the nets the Inland Fisheries put down to catch pike.'
âAnd do you think the poachers took them too?' asked RóisÃn.
âI don't think it, I know it,' said Martin. âIt's just like stealing a car to commit a robbery.'
âAnd was Pakie on strike?' asked Dan.
Martin shook his head and got up to go. âSure you know Pakie. He does his own thing. Always did.' He folded the piece of paper containing the poem, put it into the breast pocket of his tunic and told his mother, âIf I hear any news of Pakie, I'll let you know.'
âDo that,' said his father. âAnd you might keep an eye out for Jamesie and the lads. They'll be pottering around the lake in the caravan with Nuadha.'
âNo problem,' Martin assured him, âand doesn't Jamesie know where to find me if he wants anything.'
Nuadha, as Jamesie showed his cousins a short time later, was a small grey horse that had been acquired since their last visit. Willing hands helped him to back her in between the shafts of the caravan and fasten the harness. Big Jim and Mag checked that they had everything they needed â a tent for the boys, their sleeping bags, bedclothes for the girls who would sleep in the caravan, and fuel for the lamp. Yes, everything was in order, and they all climbed aboard. Prince barked loudly as if to say they were ready, and to a great send off of waving and good wishes and warnings to be careful, they moved off down the lane.
Jamesie, they soon found, knew every inch of the Corrib countryside, and sometimes it seemed that Nuadha knew it almost as well. She turned into side roads and country lanes almost without bidding, until they arrived at a grassy clearing on the lake shore. When they had unharnessed her so that she could graze for an hour, they built a circle of stones and lit a fire to boil the kettle.
As they sat down to a meal of tea and sandwiches, a gentle breeze swayed the heads of purple loosestrife that grew in great abundance everywhere, and rippled the water on the stony shore. The lake itself was deserted except for a family of what Jamesie said were âtufty' ducks swimming contentedly not far out.
âIt's really lovely, isn't it?' RóisÃn remarked, and the others munched and nodded in agreement.
Tapser gave the remains of a sandwich to Prince and asked Jamesie, âDo you really think that poem was a message from Uncle Pakie?'
Jamesie nodded.
âYou think he deliberately put it into the fish then,' said RóisÃn. âBut why a fish of all things?'
âBecause it would be just like putting a message in a bottle,' Jamesie told them. âYou see, if anybody finds a dead fish in the lake they're bound to take it out and have it examined in case it's been killed by disease or pollution. Especially anybody out fishing.'
âBut you heard what Martin said,' Rachel reminded them. âHe would never write a message no one can understand.'
âHe would,' said Jamesie, âif he's being held prisoner and didn't want his captors to know that what he was writing was really a message.'
âBut who would want to hold him prisoner?' asked Cowlick.
âThe salmon poachers would,' said Jamesie. âI know what they're like. They can be very vicious when anyone tries to stop them.'
âAnd you think that's what happened to Pakie?' asked RóisÃn.
Jamesie looked out across the lake and nodded.
âBut the others don't seem to think that,' said Rachel.
âThey think it all right,' Jamesie asserted. âBut they're not saying it in front of us. Anyway, I know Uncle Pakie. He practically reared me.'
âRight then,' said Tapser. âThat settles it. Let's assume that Pakie
has
been kidnapped by the salmon poachers. Maybe he was getting too close to them, you know, making life too difficult for them.'
âSo he gets a message out in a dead salmon,' said Cowlick.
âA poem,' said RóisÃn. âA clue maybe to where he's being held.'
âSo all we have to do,' said Rachel, âis figure it out.'
âJamesie,' said Tapser, âyou know this area. What do you think it means?'
Jamesie took out a piece of paper on which he had made a copy of the poem and read it again. âWell, it says
Beyond the Cross there lies the king
⦠There's the village of Cross on the Galway Road, but I think it's more likely to mean the stone cross in the main street of Cong.'
âIs that the famous Cross of Cong?' asked RóisÃn.
Jamesie shook his head. âIt's the Market Cross. The Cross of Cong is a processional cross that was kept in the abbey for centuries. It's decorated with silver and bronze and precious stones, and is really beautiful. It used to have a large crystal in the centre that was said to contain a piece of the true Cross. But it's in the National Museum in Dublin now, so the poem could hardly refer to it. No, I'd say it means the Market Cross all right.'
âAnd the king?' asked RóisÃn.
âThe lake is beyond the Market Cross, and there's Illaun na RÃ, King's Island. But that's too overgrown and anyway it's too near Ashford Castle to be used by a gang of poachers.'
âIs there anything else it might mean?' urged Tapser.
âThere's the abbey. It lies beyond the Cross I suppose. It's called a royal abbey because it was built by one of the High Kings of Ireland, Turlogh Mór O'Conor, for the Augustinians. The last High King, Turlogh's son, Ruairi, spent the last years of his life there. He died in 1198, but I don't think he was murdered or struck down as the poem says.'
âStill,' said RóisÃn, âit's worth a try. There just might be a clue there. And we have to start somewhere.'
There were few villagers around and only the jackdaws crouching close to the slated roofs watched as Jamesie took his cousins into the ruins of Cong Abbey. New slabs of stone and even freshly cut flowers showed that some people still buried their dead there. But there was no clue to the whereabouts of Pakie.
Following a path, they came to a bridge over the Cong River. Just below the bridge was a little stone house which, said Jamesie, was called the Monk's Fishing House. It was built out on the river and the water flowed underneath. Originally, he told them, there was a hole in the floor where the monks would put down a net. The net was tied to a bell in the abbey so that when a trout or salmon was netted, the bell would ring and the cook would know he had a fish for dinner!
âI wish something in Pakie's poem would ring a bell with us,' sighed Rachel. âIt doesn't make sense.'
Looking over Jamesie's shoulder, Tapser read part of the poem again.
âBeyond the Cross there lies the king, Struck down by spears of man unseen
. What other king could he have meant, Jamesie? One that was struck down by a spear or a sword.'
âUnless it's something to do with King Nuadha of the Silver Hand,' said Jamesie getting to his feet. âWhat does it say about a hand again?
Seek not the pike that struck him down, But the hand that seeks to take the crown
.'
âWho was this king what's-his-name?' asked Cowlick.
âKing Nuadha,' replied Jamesie. âHe was King of the Little People.'
âThat's silly,' said RóisÃn. âThere's no such thing.'
âThat's what you think,' said Jamesie. âThey fought a famous battle here long ago. Come on, I'll show you.'
A short distance outside the village, Jamesie pulled Nuadha in to the side of the road. âNow,' he told them, âthat's where the battle took place â the Plain of Southern Moytura.'
âIt doesn't look much like a plain to me,' observed Rachel. âIt's all stone walls.'
âStone walls or not,' asserted Jamesie, âthat's where it happened. You can see the stone monuments in there for yourself.'
âWas there really such a battle?' asked Cowlick, pulling a handful of grass and giving it to Nuadha.
âOf course there was. It was between a race of magicians called the Dé Danann, and a race of small dark people called the Fir Bolg.'
âThe Fir Bolg,' said RóisÃn. âI read about them all right. Their name means the men of the bags.'
âThat's right,' said Jamesie. âThey're supposed to have carried soil in their leather bags when they were slaves. There was them and the Dé Danann and they fought each other here. It was a long battle, and during it King Nuadha of the Dé Danann had his hand cut off by a Fir Bolg warrior. So he had it replaced by a silver hand.'
âAnd is that why you called your horse Nuadha?'
Jamesie nodded. âWe thought it suited her, seeing how she's small and silvery. Anyway, the Dé Danann won, but the king was killed in another battle. Then, in spite of their magic powers they were beaten by the Celts. So they fled to the caves and became known as the little people.' Jamesie paused. âPakie says the banshee of the Fir Bolg can still be heard crying in the woods towards Cornamona. And he says the Dé Danann still celebrate their victory by the light of the moon in Nymphsfield ⦠over there, on the other side of the road.'
âNymphsfield!' said Rachel. âIsn't there something in the poem about nymphs?'
Jamesie consulted the piece of paper again and exclaimed, âThat's right.
Nymphs dance in the moonlight and secrets unfold
.'
Hopeful now that they were on to something, they set out to explore the fields and their strange monuments. In one field they found a huge cairn, a mountain of stones which Jamesie said was built at the end of the first day of fighting when each Fir Bolg warrior brought a stone and the head of an enemy warrior to his king. They even found stone steps leading down to small underground doorways. And an ancient circle of stones. But search as they did, no secrets unfolded on the Plain of Southern Moytura. Not even in Nymphsfield.