Chapter 9: The Convent
September 1797 (Eight months previously)
Aoife fled the ancient stone monument where the young man lay asleep. In the dark, she swerved around sheep and scrambled over low stone walls. For nigh a half hour she continued so, holding aloft the hems of the coat and nightgown as she ran from one rain-soaked field to another and splashed across shallow streams.
At last, she slowed to a stumbling walk, panting heavily. Behind her in the darkness, she heard no trace of a pursuer. Her bandaged ankle was hurting, but she dared not halt. Onward she pressed, generally north...walking, walking...some two hours till the night sky began to lighten and she eventually found herself limping through damp, misty pastures in the morning light.
By God, she had done it! She had escaped him --- escaped her strange kidnapper "Quickfist" --- erstwhile guardsman of Kilmaedan Castle. She had escaped the young man's oppressive...disconcerting attentions.
"Declan Muldowney" was his proper name, she reminded herself...she would not forget it.
Damn it all! In consequence of her infuriatingly divided emotions, she had let him elude her vengeful blade. She dared not find her way back to the stone cromleach now to remedy her lapse of will but vowed that justice would be served! So long as she lived and breathed, justice would be served...no matter how long it took...she would again not capitulate to her disgraceful weakness.
Aoife trudged on as the mist dissolved into a somber grey morning. By and by, she came upon a road where a muddy junction was marked with a signpost. She studied the faded letters on the wooden planks: to the right lay Kilcoole, to the left Dublin. Her mind in turmoil, she stared nigh unseeing at the sign.
Just over a month ago, she had been faced with the same dilemma of where to go when she had fled the lecherous advances of young Lord Walter Beresford at Drumlevy Manor. She had made the fateful decision to leave County Armagh and go south to find Clodagh --- a decision that had brought horror to the door of her sister's peaceful home. The conclusion was inescapable: had she not come to Kilmaedan, Clodagh, Paddy, and Eoin would yet be alive today. 'Twas her fault they were dead.
A knot twisted in her throat, and Aoife squeezed her eyes shut. She felt the tears burning as if choked off behind her lids and could only stand and helplessly simmer. The grief was tangled and battling with disjointed sensations of fury and...and...
NO!
She refused to let any such word form in her thoughts! Never would she allow that the disquiet she had felt in Declan's company...felt at his searching, green-eyed gaze and strong body...was anything but the product of a mind disturbed by grief and bitterness. The betrayal of her earlier wayward thoughts enraged her.
She swallowed hard and her eyes refocused on the signpost.
Her choices of where to go were more limited now than a month ago and were guided by additional considerations. She could head north to try to find her mother's relations whom she had never met, or her father's brother whom she hadn't seen now for over three years. But even if she had the slightest notion where to begin such a search, she decried ever again laying her troubles at a family member's door, lest bad luck follow. Henceforth, she would fend for herself.
Aoife wrapped her arms tightly round her torso; through the young man's oversized coat she could feel her body trembling and her heart beating. How had her life come to this pass? Just three years ago, the four O'Farrell children had been contentedly living on their farm in County Armagh --- Colm, Patrick, Clodagh, and herself. Then two years ago this month, Colm and Patrick had been killed in the Battle of the Diamond between the Defenders and the Peep O'Day Boys. And now Clodagh was gone too.
Aye, she was alone in the world...alone and could scarce manage a logical thought, so beset with confusion and distress was she. All the numb determination that had propelled her onward these past three days since Blaylock's squadron had attacked the cottage seemed to have dissolved.
In considering her destination, her worries were not limited to such practical matters as how she would secure bed and board, but even more profoundly ---- how to survive undetected by Blaylock and his henchmen...and undetected by the young man Quickfist. God let them find another source of diversion and let her be!
The choice seemed clear: in a city so large and populous --- and further away from Kilmaedan --- as Dublin, she might lose her pursuers...and make a life for herself.
Aoife turned left towards Dublin. For hours she trod through the fields, keeping the road in sight for guidance. Several times men on horseback passed by, obliging her to hide, but none were her pursuers...or Declan, for that matter. Mid-day, she ate some hard, sour apples picked from a gnarled tree and sat for a time with her throbbing ankle submerged in a cold stream. Not knowing what the next hours and days would bring, she pocketed a few of the unripe fruits before setting on her way again.
Night fell and weariness overtook her with miles yet to go. In a misting rain, she limped into a village. Keeping the coat carefully closed lest her torn, dirty nightgown show, she roamed the dark streets in search of food. Behind houses she found rubbish heaps, but the rotten stench warned her away from digging for food. At last she ate a couple of the small apples from her pocket...but this only made her belly feel worse.
She needed a place to lie down --- she could walk no further. Recalling her flight from County Armagh, she found the village inn, and behind it a stable. Not a soul was in sight as she crept in. Inside, by the moonlight coming in through the windows, she discovered three horses and, as she had hoped, a ladder ascending to a hay loft. 'Twas here that she curled up inside the voluminous coat and fell into an exhausted sleep.
Not long had the lass slept when she was startled awake by a strident voice. "Here now! Who are ye? Ye canna be sleeping here!"
Aoife bolted upright in panic. Where was she? A glimpse of the ghostly hay bales in the moonlight streaming through the small window revived her memory. Before her stood a shadowy figure. Scrambling to her feet, her eyes darted to find the hatch with the ladder.
"Who are ye?!" the figure demanded, the voice not immediately recognizable as male or female. In the dim light she realized 'twas a young lad, perhaps fourteen or fifteen years old, a little taller than her.
Aoife edged towards the ladder. "No one," she murmured. "I'll be going now."
"Wait! What do ye think yer doing ---." As Aoife moved, the beam of moonlight illumined her face, and the lad's words were cut short. He stepped closer and held out his hand towards her. "Wait," he said in a softer voice. For several moments he peered at her curiously. "Are ye in trouble? Do ye need help?"
Aoife stole a glance at the ladder again, then looked back at the lad. His eyes were searching her face with an expression of concern. "Are ye running away from someone?"
She nodded, her eyes watchful as she gripped the edges of the coat together.