Page 109 of Dark Witch (The Cousins O'Dwyer Trilogy 1)
They walked the path as he told the tale, with his voice rising and falling on the words, the sheep baaing their chorus. Ridiculously happy, Iona took Boyleâs hand to link them, to seal the moments.
âAfter some years, the king saw the old man again, and was scolded for not keeping his word. It seems the church had been built right enough, but in Roscommon.â
Laughing, Iona looked up at him. âOops.â
âSo you could say. But Cathal ordered another church built, and it came to be Ballintubber Abbey.â
âA man of his word.â
; âSo itâs said.â
âI like knowing I have a grateful and honest king in my ancestry.â
âAnd itâs a lasting legacy, as itâs said to be the only church in Ireland founded by an Irish king and still in use.â
âI think thatâs wonderful. People too often knock down the old for the new instead of understanding that legacy.â
âWhat comes before now matters,â he said simply. âPierce Brosnan was married here a few years back, and thatâs been a newer claim to fame. Older itâs the start of Tórchar Phádraig.â
âThe pilgrimage route to Saint Patrickâs mountain. Iâve read about that.â
âItâs also said Seán na Sagart, who was a nefarious priest hunter, is buried in the cemetery here. There.â Boyle lifted his hand to point to a large tree. âSo itâs said.â
âItâs a good place. Clean, powerful. And I feel this recognition somewhere deep, this connection. Is that weird?â
He only shrugged. âYour blood built it.â
âSo you made it our first stop.â Smiling, she leaned her head against his arm. âThanks.â She glanced down at an old, pitted stone and its carving. âThe Crowning?â
âOh well, theyâve more than the abbey, and the graves and such. Thatâs part of the Stations. Theyâve added that, a Rosary Walk, and over there, a little cave thatâs fashioned as a stable, for the Nativity. Itâs a bit odd.â
âItâs wonderful.â Tugging his hand she followed the path, finding other stones and markers among the trim and pretty gardens. âItâs so abstract, so contemporary, and a really creative contrast against the antiquity.â
She paused at a little stream, its bank blanketed with low, spreading bushes as it rose to rough stones. Three crosses topped it to represent the Crucifixion.
âIt should be sad, and I know it should be reverent. It is, but itâs more . . . compelling. And then this.â She stepped into the cave to look over the statues of Mary, Joseph, the Baby Jesus. âItâs wonderful, tooâsweet and a little kitschy. I think Cathal would like whatâs been done.â
âHeâs made no objections that I know of.â
They went inside, and there she found hushed reverence.
âThe Cromwellians set fire to the place,â Boyle told her. âYou can see from the ruins outside the monastery that the quarters and such fell. But the church stood, and still does. The baptismal area there, they say, is a thousand years old.â
âItâs comforting, isnât it, to know the things we build can survive. Itâs beautiful. The stained glass, the stone.â
The way her footsteps echoed in the quiet only added to the atmosphere.
âYou know a lot about it,â she commented. âDid you study up?â
âDidnât have to. I had an uncle worked here on some of the repairs and improvements.â
âSo my blood built it, and yours helped keep it. Thatâs another connection.â
âTrue enough. And Iâve had two cousins and a couple of mates married here, so Iâve been around and about it a few times.â
âItâs a good place for a wedding. The continuity, the care, the respect. And the romanceâtales of kings and priest hunters, Cromwellians and James Bond.â