The Helmet

In the Annals of Ulster you may read the tale of Cath Chluain Tarbh, when Máel Sechnaill and Brian Boru rode together to the conquest of Dublintown and fought on those royal banks Sigtrygg Silkbeard, King of Dublin, Sigurd the Stout, Earl of Orkney, and the fleet their ally Brodir brought from the Isle of Mann.

From the walls of Dublin Lady Sláine ingen Briain watched the battle. Her sympathies had worn too thin over the years of conflict to be strong on either side and it was little she cared, at this distance of time, for the fulfillment of her father’s ambition or even the extension of his old age. Nor had she any concern for her husband’s life, for Sigtrygg paced the wall beside her all day, wisely living to fight another day.

Thus from dawn to dusk, a grim smile on her face, she tracked the swaying armies as they grappled each other on the moss. When, at length, twilight fell and she knew that the omens had come true and Brian was victorious at the cost of his life, she could still laugh at the flight of the Vikings as they splashed into the receding tide, desperate to reach their ships. “The foreigners have gotten their inheritance!” she sneered. “I wonder, is it warm that they are? But they tarry not to be milked, whatever.”

On both sides nigh all the leaders lay slain upon the field. Brian Boru, killed in his tent as he prayed for victory, had been avenged by Ulf the Quarrelsome who found Brodir with Brian’s blood still warm on his sword. Sigurd the Stout died at the hands of Murchad mac Briain, but that heir apparent to the High Kingship of Ireland had not survived the fight either. Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill alone stood whole and hearty as he led the last charge. Water, churned by a thousand boots, swirled between foemen as the Viking longships drifted away from the shore before the straining flight of their owners.

Foremost in the Irish charge, fifteen-year-old Toirdelbach mac Murchada Ua Briain screamed the O’Brian warcry—lamh-laidir abu! From her post on the walls Lady Sláine caught the glint of his helmet—vain boy, he decorated it with tufts of reddish fur—and recognized her nephew. Fearless he threw himself into the waves; spun around, flung, he emerged again clutching at a Viking warrior who was scrambling over his ship’s side. She strained her eyes as Toir wrestled, striking the Viking’s jerkin with his dagger what time the warrior swung his fists wildly at him. Another wave roared; she lost him in the mist, and when it settled, the boy was gone.

But his helmet rolled in on the morrow’s tide, and amid the aftermath Lady Sláine paused long enough to send it to her niece. —Lamh-laidir abu!

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Book Review: The Long Roll (by Mary Johnston)

Richard Cleave and Maury Stafford each suspect Judith Cary of a preference for the other—but while that makes Richard resolve to keep Maury alive as they both fight for their native Virginia, Maury decides to do his best to ruin Richard’s army career. Who will come out alive and more importantly, who does Judith want to come out alive?

The Long Roll is, well, long. I suppose it’s about as long as Dickens’ Bleak House or Martin Chuzzlewit and that, my friends, is long.

It’s pretty blood-and-gutsy and also has a significant amount of profanity, besides being long—and potentially a little confusing, I would think, for someone not fairly familiar with the outlines of the War Between the States. I rate it 17+, though a younger teen who loves long slow wartime stories (if there be such a person) might also enjoy it.

Jump straight to the end for a brief summary and ebook link, or read on through for the details.

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58-12

So far every trail had led to a dead end.

Take the newspaper he had saved for eighty years, covered in faded ink and antiquated headlines.  Which was the critical clue—Browder Opens 8th Communist Party Convention, Detroit Auto Men Furious at Betrayal, Workers Urged to Pack Bronx Court This Noon?  Or, just as likely, none of the above?  Tiana felt ready to go for a hike, take a shower, and leave the problem for a future generation.

But wait, it got better.  For instance, there were the only highlighted words in his entire Bible: “An evil man seeketh only rebellion: therefore a cruel messenger shall be sent against him.”  The four digits tattooed on his arm: 58-12.  Or the quote scribbled on his desk: “Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive!”  It might be a tangled web somewhere in the middle, but just now all she had was loose ends.

And of course, she had to cope with his own solemn charge, ringing out to her from that bewildering will:

I bequeath and devote to my daughter, Tiana Emily Morton (Smith): justice for Katia Kuznet, or her heirs and relations yet living.  To her I also bequeath all my personal effects. To Katia Kuznet, or her living heirs and relations, I bequeath my personal estate and property (including, but not limited to, all intangibles and all tangible personal property including land, stocks, securities, cash, savings, and other realty).

Tiana thought she was the most long-suffering daughter on the planet.  It was bad enough to be randomly deprived of a fortune, but to be assigned as private detective to boot, and left with a batch of clues as cryptic as a 1934 Daily Worker, a quote from Marmion, and a name she’d never heard before, Katia Kuznet…

“Yeah, I loved you too, Dad,” she muttered, glancing at the picture on her desk.  George with baby Emily in his arms, herself, dad on the right.  Plain old dad, with those ordinary gray eyes and the unremarkable persona you’d expect of a John Smith.  For crying out loud, if he were gonna leave a mystery like this behind, why hadn’t he at least had a name she could look up?

Perhaps worst of all, George was all in.  Whenever George went all in on something, rash decisions would probably be made.  So far, though, he’d only made the questionably helpful discovery that Kuznet was the Russian equivalent of Smith.

Tiana slapped a final post-it note on her evidence board.

58-12. Failure to denounce a counterrevolutionary crime,
reliably known to be in preparation or carried out, shall be punishable by—
deprivation of liberty for a term not less than six months.
[6 June 1927 (SU no 49, art. 330)]

Another tid-bit courtesy of George—and the Criminal Code of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.

She stepped back, pushing strands of rebellious hair off her forehead in a gesture of profound thought.  The evidence board looked businesslike and professional, satisfactory as far as it went.

The door flew open and George’s messy iron-gray hair flopped excitedly into the room.

“Ready to go to Russia?”

“Russia?”

George glanced appreciatively at the evidence board.  “I just booked our flights.  So far, every trail has led to Russia.”

Tiana looked blankly at the family photo.  George followed her glance, humming softly.

“The spider bid the mouse, sleep, sleep,
Spider in the house, sleep deep
Don’t wake up or you might find a spider in your mouth…”

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