Aine was kneeling beside one of her patients in the infirmary tent, checking his stitches for signs of infection, when she heard a commotion of hooves and shouts outside.
Lorcan poked his head inside. “It’s Gainor. He’s hurt. Badly.”
Aine jumped to her feet and followed Lorcan to where four guards lifted her unconscious brother from his horse. Fear pierced her midsection. Wounded badly was an understatement.
“Put him in his tent,” she said. “I’ll be right there.”
She paused long enough in the infirmary to collect two large sacks filled with supplies and followed the men to her brother’s tent. Dozens more had already gathered, and she had to push a path to his bedside.
“Everyone but Lorcan, out now.”
All but the guard immediately beat a hasty retreat. Aine knelt beside her brother’s pallet to survey his condition. Bruises and filth mottled his pasty skin, and blood-soaked bandages bound him from head to toe. She inhaled deeply, closed her eyes, and placed a hand on his chest.
Gainor’s pain assailed her, and it took a moment to distinguish the injuries from one another. She sorted through the sensations, cataloging each injury with as much detachment as she could manage. Broken bones everywhere: hand, leg, ribs, collarbone, nose. Wounds from spear and sword in his shoulder, beneath his collarbone, in his side, in his leg. Part of his right ear was missing, and his left eye was swollen shut, hiding damage that could mean permanent blindness. Yet none of the wounds had been mortal.
Aine swallowed her horror. She could not think of him as her brother now. He was simply another patient. “Lorcan, I’ll need your help.”
With Lorcan’s assistance and some creative use of wood and linen, Aine managed to set the broken bones and tend the worst of the flesh wounds. Still, it would be a miracle if Gainor walked again, and the anesthetics at her disposal would do only so much to dull the pain.
“A physician could have done a better job,” she said, pushing her damp hair from her face. “He can’t make the journey back to Lisdara, though. If he survives the next day and night, we’ll write Calhoun and have him send someone.”
“You underestimate your abilities, my lady,” Lorcan said. “I’ll go fetch a servant to sit with him so you can rest.”
Aine pushed herself to her feet, despair stealing the strength from her limbs as she wandered outside into the rapidly fading light. The wind had picked up, and the air smelled of rain. Were there others like Gainor, left for dead on the battlefield, without guardsmen to carry them to safety? She pressed her fists to her eyes and willed back tears. She couldn’t break now. Of the thousand warriors in camp, nearly a third of them were injured, half of those seriously. Without her attention, they would likely die. No, she had far too much responsibility to let herself fall apart.
Ruarc appeared beside her. “You look exhausted.”
“I am exhausted. Did you learn what actually happened?”
“Each man has a different story. Best I can tell, they saw him fall but stayed with the retreat. Mac Eirhinin and his men went back for him.”
The mention of Lord Keondric usually summoned uneasiness, but now she felt only gratitude. “Has he returned?”
“They were pursued from the battlefield. Mac Eirhinin stayed behind to fight while the others fled with Gainor.”
Aine understood what he left unsaid. It was the guards’ responsibility to bring the king’s tanist back safely, but it didn’t sit well to leave a man behind. She rubbed her temples. “Maybe I will go lie down. Lorcan should be back in a minute with someone to tend to Gainor.”
Ruarc delivered her to her tent on the other side of the command pavilion, but she had no sooner stepped inside than she heard more shouts from the perimeter. Her heart leapt into her throat. She darted out as someone shouted, “Mac Eirhinin’s back!”
“Blessed Comdiu. He’s alive?”
Five men rode up the wide center aisle, Lord Keondric in the lead. The chieftain’s clothing was tattered and stained, and the bandage around his thigh barely staunched the flow of blood from a new wound. Still, he looked a far sight stronger than Gainor. She owed him a sincere word of thanks.
Then Aine noticed the stranger in the party. He dismounted lightly and handed his reins to a servant. He was not one of Abban’s or Gainor’s men, but he seemed familiar nonetheless. His lean, muscular build said he was a warrior, and he wore old-fashioned clothing with his hair in a single braid. Fíréin?
Then he turned and met her gaze, and her knees nearly buckled. He may have changed in three years, but she knew him all the same. A shock of recognition passed between them.
Keondric was making some sort of introduction to the assemblage, but Aine barely heard him over the drumming of her heart. She took a halting step forward, and her shock turned to fierce joy that felt more like pain than pleasure.
“I can’t believe it,” she whispered. “Conor.”
Conor hardly expected to see Aine in the group that greeted them at the center of camp. His brief glimpse in the forest had only hinted at the stunning woman she had become. When she stepped forward, he stood immobilized, his heart rising into his throat. Hope swelled within him at her expression, a mixture of amazement, joy, and something he feared to name.
Conor started toward her, but before he could take more than a few steps, a bulky warrior with silver-blond hair positioned himself between them. “The lady may know you, friend, but we don’t.”
The threat in the man’s voice was clear, as was the challenge in his eyes. Aine stepped forward and placed a hand on the man’s arm. “Conor is an old friend, Lorcan. It’s all right.”
Lorcan bowed his head in acknowledgement and stepped away with obvious displeasure. Conor realized the entire group was watching the exchange with open interest. Apparently, so did Aine, because she stiffened and said formally, “This is such a surprise. How exactly did you come across Lord Mac Eirhinin?”
“I’d like to know that as well,” came a booming voice. A bearded giant pushed to the front. “We feared the worst when you didn’t return, Mac Eirhinin.”
“It would have been, if not for Conor. He warned us of the ambush. Conor, this is Abban Ó Sedna.”
Conor bowed slightly. “Lord Mac Eirhinin exaggerates.”
“I’m sure,” Abban said wryly. “Come, let’s discuss this in private.”
Conor dared not glance at Aine as he followed Abban into the large canvas tent. Despite their polite phrasing, the words were an order, not an invitation. Mac Eirhinin may have accepted Conor as a friend, but this mountain of a battle commander might not be so easily convinced.
Inside, Abban gestured to a chair near a large table spread with maps. The topmost one caught Conor’s attention, a fine rendering of Siomar and Faolán overlaid with a web of red lines. He read the legends on several—Callindor, Northglenn, Eavenwood—before the commander swept it out of view.
The tent flap opened, admitting Mac Eirhinin with Aine and Ruarc steps behind. Abban gestured for them to approach, but only the young lord joined Conor at the table.
“You are not under guard here because Mac Eirhinin calls you a friend,” Abban said. “Your Timhaigh accent, however, immediately puts your motives under suspicion. So that leaves two questions: who are you and how did you happen upon Lord Gainor’s party?”
Conor briefly considered lying, but too many people had witnessed Aine’s reaction. It was only a matter of time before they puzzled out the truth. Too bad the truth would put no one at ease.
“My name is Conor. Once, my clan name was Mac Nir.”
Abban seemed surprised, but whether by his identity or his transparency, Conor couldn’t guess. “It was Mac Nir? You claim it no longer?”
“My forebears have hardly done it honor.”
Abban glanced at Aine. “Is this true? Is he who he claims?”
Aine cleared her throat, but she didn’t look at him when she said, “It’s true.”
“You’re in remarkably good health for a man who has been dead three years. Care to explain?”
Conor surveyed the commander. Lord Abban would continue to press as long as he answered his questions. “Suffice it to say I had my reasons for disappearing as I did. I’ve spent the last three years at Ard Dhaimhin, and now I’ve come back to offer assistance.”
“The Fíréin deign to send one man to help in our war?” Abban flashed a sardonic smile. “How kind.”
“I come of my own accord. The brotherhood stays out of the kingdoms’ affairs, even in these dire times.” Conor kept his sudden pang of concern from surfacing on his face. The commander would be within his authority to have him summarily executed as a spy. “Are you so confident in your victory that you would turn down another skilled fighter?”
Mac Eirhinin spoke up. “We were ambushed. Conor alerted us and took down eight men himself with only a staff and a sling. Had it not been for his intervention, we would all be dead, including Lord Gainor. I’d say he’s proved his intentions rather thoroughly.”
Abban turned back to him. Before the chieftain could speak, Conor said quietly, “The simple fact is this: I am a Balian. Fergus and his druid seek to destroy all that is good in Seare. I could not stand by in Ard Dhaimhin and watch it happen. I have some information that can be of use if you will allow me to join you.”
Abban nodded slowly, still wary, but the worst of the suspicion had disappeared from his expression. “We can discuss the matter over supper. I expect you’ll want to wash first. Mac Eirhinin, have Lady Aine look at that leg before you lose any more blood.”
The dark-haired lord struggled to his feet.
“Come to the infirmary,” Aine said. “You’ll need stitches. If you’ll excuse us, my lords.” Her eyes settled on Conor and flitted away again. She followed the young chieftain from the tent, Ruarc a step behind them.
Abban watched them go. “She’s something, isn’t she? I would have said a lady in this camp would be a disaster, but the men regard her as a lucky charm. She’s saved us all more than once.”
“The lady healer of Lisdara,” Conor said. “She’s something of a patron saint.”
“Indeed.” Abban fixed his eyes on Conor. “Son, you might as well be honest with me. You’re here because of her. I know the two of you became close when you were at Lisdara.”
“She is part of the reason I’m here,” Conor said. “But that won’t keep me from my duty, should it come to it.”
“I believe you.” Almost to himself, Abban added, “I just hope it makes a difference.”