The Mermaid Cave
Uaimh Na Maighdine Farraige
By Greg Patrick
“Let us go
forth, the tellers of tales, and seize whatever prey the heart long for, and
have no fear. Everything exists, everything is true,
and the earth
is only a little dust under our feet."- (A Teller of Tales)”
― W.B. Yeats, The
Celtic Twilight: Faerie and Folklore
North of Ireland 1316 a.d.
With the sigh of the ever-restless sea in the background Sir Cormac
of Dunluce
composed songs for his muse far below the bannered ramparts paced by
archers The Mermaid
Cave the dark heart of the Castle of Dunluce. Cormac's red albino eyes blinked open his
hands
ceasing at the strings at his harp before sighing deeply and
beginning anew.
In that sequestered haven he played with a conjuring hand, his words
incantation
peopling the cave’s dark chamber with visions of a regal court
crowded with jesters, mummers, bannermen, courtiers, knights,
damsels,
and troubadours. And at the centre of his conjured world was the
very
essence of a Celtic bard’s inspiration Lady Aoife daughter of the
Lord of Dunluce.
He envisioned her then a vision of beauty behind impossibly green
eyes
and impossibly beyond his station. And every serenade he uttered for
his muse in that dark sanctuary was
a rebel song and heresy so that he seemed a rebel angel at the harp.
He wrote and sang in solitude with distant eyes immersed in a world
of chivalry and courtly
love. Yet that was not his world. Cormac was gifted or cursed with
the bard's way with
Words and that cursed blessing betrayed him. Cormac found himself bullied by an
ambitious young chieftain Niall of Tyrone into writing song to woo Lady
Aoife.
Lady Aoife beamed as she approached the chieftain on a night when
rumours
of battle were on every man and woman’s lips in the lordly castle
from scullery
maid to knight.
“I have another song for you “Niall smiled.
Cormac could bear it no longer and paid a scribe to write a
confession to the lady
including details of the songs only the author would know and a lady
in waiting to deliver
it to her on the morrow.
She spoke to Niall, yet she met Cormac’s eyes as he stood aloof
torches between them and their gaze lingered. Flames dancing with
the wind
blocked him from her sight and when they shifted again, he vanished.
His breath steamed as he mouthed the words of the poem in the air.
Cormac was observed by two green eyes pacing the flagstones of the
battlements as
sentries received urgent tidings.
His breath steamed in the chill air as he sighed deeply.
That night the lord of the keep hosted a feast for his fighting men.
Cormac remained
brooding, silent, and aloof as the men at arms and knights boasted
of the feat
of arms and the vanquishing defeat they would inflict on the enemy.
The old bard sang a tribute to Lady Aoife then bowed graciously to
the drumming of
flagons on the oaken table. Cormac looked into the red depths of the
hearth flames
his lips moving. His words were like incantation as flames swayed
like charmed
serpents morphing into visions of battle and hunt before dissolving
amorphously
into the smoldering embers. Cormac suddenly blinked and realised
that the hall was
Silent. The assembly was listening spellbound to his song. He met
Aoife’s eyes
before turning red and bowing out, stammering apologies. The court
bar
cast him a scathing look.
Later the monks heard confessions one eve of battle blessed their
weapons absolving
of the blood they would spill. Aoife suddenly appeared before him.
Cormac stood transfixed and painfully awkward before she spoke.
He doffed his helm.
"My Lady..."
His eyes betrayed his passion.
“Your songs...” Aoife began.
“Alas did not begin to do you justice...” Cormac replied.
He met her eyes without shame captivated by the way they cast their
spell
intoxicatingly.
“I know he did not write the songs himself, but the words were so
fair I imagined them
to have been composed by a bard of many summers of a lordly court”
“You flatter me your grace,” the Cormac replied.
“And you flatter yourself churl! “Niall snarled as he stood between
them.
Cormac's hand began to hover at his sword hilt when both froze
jarred by a shrill horn
sounding in alarm from the battlements.
“Men of Dunluce to arms!” a herald proclaimed.
“You flatter yourself if you would ever begin to think...” Niall
began.
“Our lord has called us to arms! Squires attend to your knights we
march with the last
light! “the herald declared.
The chieftain spat before stalking away while Cormac offered her a
courtly bow in
parting before donning his helm as his squire girded on his honed
and
varnished sword. Monks heard confessions one eve of battle blessed
their weapons
absolving them for the blood they would shed with the swords and
axes brought from
the castle arsenal. The horns of war sounded rallying the garrison. Cormac
bowed low
to Lady Aoife as his squire hastened to him.
"My Lady,” Cormac whispered.
His eyes betrayed his passion as Aoife offered her sash as a lady's
favour.
He lifted the perfumed fabric to his lips, inhaling its fragrance. He
mounted his horse
and took up shield and pennoned lance. Children cast flower petals
in their wake and
from the battlements as women keened and sang a lament.
Knights and men at arms reinforced by a company of kerns and
gallowglass massed by
the gate. Horns sounded shrilly and the portcullis groaned open
before them into
the blood red twilight. The force marched from the castle gates
blinking into the crimson
twilight.
The procession to war was outlined as they marched across the rope
bridge spanning
the chasm from the cliffs to
the castle overlooking the Celtic Sea against the vermillion
dusk like an inferno against the darkening sky.
As the company marched under the banner of the lord of Dunluce into
the
night the men at arms sang bawdy tavern songs to bolster their
spirits as they
advanced under glowering skies threatening rain. Then his rival sang
crude verses
about Lady Aoife.
“Hold! Halt!” Cormac cried.
There was an expectant hush at the clang of a thrown gauntlet. Cormac
and Niall
dismounted and began to draw swords. Suddenly a scout galloped into
their midst.
“The enemy is nigh upon us! To arms!”
Rain fell then but first spears and arrows.
“Shields! Hold formation!” Cormac cried.
Yet their ranks were thrown into wild disarray as the enemy charged
their flanks.
Redshank mercenaries erupted from the thick of trees with wild
battle cries
slashing down men blinded by torrential rain with swords and
daggers.
The men of Dunluce were hopelessly outnumbered by the enemy.
Niall’s horse snorted blood and reared and fell speared down by an
onslaught
of attackers.
“I yield!” Niall pleaded desperately offering a ransom and to turn
traitor to help then take
the castle. His blubbering ceased when a sword thrust into his face.
The mercenary
raised Niall’s severed head as a grisly trophy.
“Fall back! Retreat!” a man at arms cried.
A herald sounded the retreat. The throaty bray of the horn echoed
amid the trees
as the enemy cheered, raising their red swords triumphantly.
The enemy pursued relentlessly cutting stragglers down and spearing
the wounded, their battle cries mingling with the thunder.
Cormac’s story almost ended there slain and left to the wolves and
ravens
with corpse stripped of armour yet he was quietly a master of
swordplay
“Hold the retreat!” a herald begged.
Cormac answered the call and stepped forward to defy them till he
was red to the
shoulder in blood if not for the rain till he too reeled back and
fled from the onslaught.
The castle was beautiful and tragic to behold as the broken army
fled in
anticipation of the inevitable siege. Meanwhile a black gyr falcon
glided unseen over the helms of the besiegers bearing urgent tidings.
Torches of the massing horde coloured the mist crimson in a
hellscape.
The bridge shuddered as shook as the defenders retreated to the
castle under
cover of a flight of arrows from the ramparts and crossbow bolts
from murder
Holes. The enemy raised a crimson banner of no quarter.
“Havok! Havok!” the besiegers chanted brandishing their swords and
axes
and pumping pikes mounted with the heads of their enemies in time
with the chant. Soon trebuchets would be drawn into range to
obliterate
the castle walls. Doom seemed inevitable.
One of the broken army halted and pivoted drawing his sword ignoring
urgent cries
before the drawbridge and portcullis groaned shut with grim
finality. Cormac seemed
to glide rather than stride through the mist rising from the chasm before
halting in the
centre of the bridge, drawing his sword in grim lone defiance. Below
the tide rose, the
cold sea roared cauldrenously, waves smiting the jagged stone
formations far below. The tides
receded rumbling across the dark fathoms of Celtic Sea unseen for
the hovering shroud of
mist. The great lordly castle loomed brooding in the background.
The massed array of enemy warriors suddenly made way as a towering
ogre of a man lumbered
through their ranks gripping a massive meat cleaver of a sword.
Chainmail
jangled with each stride as the infamous “Butcher of Armagh” Sir
Fergus made his entrance. His tabard was red like a butcher's apron
with the blood of
slaughtered men.
Fergus raised a flagon in a mocking toast to Sir Cormac before
belching.
“Is this some insolent jest? This lackey is not fit to die by my
sword.
Does this lowly hedge knight truly believe himself worthy to die by
my sword?
The blade that laid great kings and their champions low. Yield and
stand down,”
he bellowed brandishing a great executioner axe. The rusted notched
blade was
discoloured from the blood of his past victims. Flies buzzed around
it. Fergus flushed with mead
and arrogance closed on Sir Cormac.
“Hold! Stand down lads. Sieges are dull. I need a bit of fun. Watch
me swat this puny fly
and on to sack the castle lads!” Fergus grinned.
The enemy horde answered with gusto a chorus of huzzahs and jeers at
Cormac as he
drew into fighting stance that was jolted as the giant lumbered
across the
planks. Cormac strode to meet him. Fergus flexed his muscular chain-mail-clad
arms in
anticipation of casually hacking Cormac down before the eyes of the
aghast
defenders.
Cormac stood impassive with arms akimbo before he drew the sword
with a flourish
kissing the hilt. The bridge swayed in a blast of window like a
disembodied kiss by
the shriveled lips of death himself. Cormac saw himself mirrored in
his assailant's helm as
dark as an executioner's mask. Fergus boasted that he would ravish
Aoife here before
allowing others to have their way with her. Cormac gripped his sword
so tightly blood
may have oozed between his gauntleted fingers.
Sir Cormac looked on with distant haunted eyes tormented by a vision
of the castle aflame.
The sea reflecting the inferno like a volcanic eruption. He heard
cries of abused women
and anguished cries of slaughtered men as the castle walls were
breached and overrun with fire
and sword. In that fiery abattoir Aoife lay with torn gown as Fergus
stood over her.
Cormac remembered when his father gifted him the sword on his
deathbed.
“This is a knight's sword it will take a knight to wield it “his
father rasped.
Cormac saw himself mirrored in the varnished blade. His eyes flared
with a sudden
intensity.
"I will make short work of him," Fergus crowed.
The giant expected to casually swat Cormac aside dismissively, yet
his adversary
defied expectations parrying the axe strokes deftly and inflicting a
slash
across his enemy’s torso like a mocking smile.
“Small as a midge and you sting like one. No matter. This ends now, “Fergus
sneered.
Fergus raised the axe in two hands and brought it down obliterating
his shield
emblazoned with the sigil of a red wolf rampant. Cormac shrugged off
the supportive
hands of his anxious squire as he staggered back staunching bleeding
with his fist
yet he felt Lady Aoife’s eyes on him and rallied.
Cormac put all his dormant rage at God and man jibes and jeers at
his lowly birth.
Blades crossed sparkingly as the two opponents were silhouetted
against the
splendour of the aurora borealis illuminating the sky in lavish
flourishes of pastel
colour.
Fergus’ eyes betrayed a
flicker of uncertainty as they met Cormac’s over cross
blades. What he anticipated to be a simple execution became a duel.
He expected
to have dispatched Cormac with one blow sending him down with cleft
skull
over the bridge before leading a charge on the walls.
Fergus did not heed any swordplay but as a brawler in a tavern. The
cheers and jeers of
the besiegers ceased followed by an expectant hush as the crossing
of blades resounded.
Then Fergus raised his brawny arms too high exposing a fatal gap in
his armour to Cormac's
blade. Cormac promptly thrust a dagger between the grooves of the
armour.
A collective gasp rose from the enemy horde as Fergus staggered
back.
In the lull Cormac gave final orders to his squire. The boy gave him
a terrified look.
“A squire obeys his knight,” Cormac urged.
Cormac insulted Fergus to keep the eyes of his opponent locked on
him. Fergus was
so intent on his enemy to notice the squire frantically cutting the
ropes suspending the
bridge. The bridge shuddered at the like a beheaded serpent’s coils.
He could see Lady
Aoife on the battlements she blew a kiss to him that steamed in the
chill air as he
turned he could feel her eyes on him. Fergus finally had the
presence of mind to look up.
"Archers! Bring him down!" Fergus bellowed.
Before they could Cormac gripped his sword and slashed through the
final ropes
in succession. Cormac caught
the last strand of rope entwining it in his hand.
“I cannot bear thee,” the squire cried as he grasped Sir Cormac’s
hand.
Cormac felt the hand of his adversary groping trying to dislodge or
tear him loose.
The boy began to slide down with him.
“Let me go. You have to let me go boy... “
Cormac winked at his squire and pulled his hand free.
He met Aoife's eyes a final time. As he slid off the cliff, he
stabbed Fergus
with his dirk and they fell together. Fergus shrieked in
anticipation as they hurtled down
to the jagged rocks like the bared fangs of a sea monster. Below
them the jagged
stones were exposed then submerged by intervals of the waves rushing
in.
Cormac envisioned himself falling alone rush of wind arms splayed
savouring the
sensation of falling. Moments before impact waves roared back in
submerging the
stones just before they struck the water. The giant body of Fergus
shielded Cormac
from most of the impact. Cormac knew that if he blacked out, he
would die as he was
immersed in the cold rush of sea like a cauldrenous torrent. He
floated, dazed and
stunned by the impact and swept like living debris by the tide.
Imminent to death memories came to haunt him like dark ghosts. He
remembered when
he was bestowed with an accolade by his lord as an anointed knight
of a red field of
terrible carnage. The feathers of ravens seemed to hail him in
darkness like
tears of midnight. He remembered kissing a willing scullery maid
against the wall closing his
eyes imagining it was Aoife...Aoife...His sigh exhaled bubbles as he
sank deeper.
From submerged perspective Cormac looked up to see the undulant glow
of the
aurora borealis. Moonbeams illuminated him, suspended floating
listlessly.
He could hear an eerie song haunting the waves caressing and
shuddering
his soul. Wavering shadows morphed into graceful womanly form. Bioluminescent
particles shimmered like constellations around him like a hoard of
sunken gold.
He pulled himself free kicked to the surface. His muse and her
ladies in
waiting singing in choir beckoning to him.
Cormac could see dark silhouettes in seductive revel as if merwomen
tempting
him with their song and cold caresses to linger and sink deeper into
the dark
fathoms.
Cormac looked transfixed into eye impossibly green like tidepools
of Celtic Sea. Red hair sweeping like a fire burning under the sea.
Suddenly saw gill slits on her pale throat betraying her true nature.
As if unmasked her face reverted to its natural form contorted with
rage a frilled
scaled face baring serrated fangs. Clawed fingers from membraned
webbed
Hands reached for him. Then he saw the sea floor littered by the
skulls of mariners that the
syrens seduced with their eerie song. Their skeletal hands seemed to
gesture to him.
Cormac awoke to the rush of sea tossing him like a plaything of
the gods ashore. Waves cast Cormac against the rocks gasping
hoarsely and coughing
before being drawn back again thrice, and then finally gripping the
rock and pulling
himself beyond the reach of the sea like a plaything of the gods.
Cormac pulled himself higher painfully over the jagged stones. The
water rose
flowing over him, submerging him again. Waves slammed Cormac against
the rocks as he clenched his teeth to endure not wasting cries to cold
aloof gods.
Then he saw it barely visible through the mist. The dark heart of
Dunluce. The mermaid
cave. Its entrance was tantalisingly within reach. It seemed a
threshold to the
Netherworld awaiting him. He grasped a familiar pillar of rock like
a monolith, a
misshapen rock formation sculpted by the hands of time and tides
over eons.
Cormac gasped vomiting sea
water and coughing before laying dazed
bruised and panting. The waves sizzled between the rocks just behind
him like the hiss
of a cat at a mouse hole after its quarry eluded its reach and
claws. Cormac lay
listening to the sigh of the waves lapping at the rocks as the tide
rose and fell. It hurt to
utter so much as a whisper let alone compose a song.
The gods felt distant as he was when his mother died of the plague
alone.
He was kept back from being by her side and the cottage set aflame.
Masked men with a cart came to collect her and dump her in a mass
grave
in a remote place.
"Why would God allow this father?"
The haggard priest only looked at him blankly as he was paid to give
her a
blessing from afar.
With sudden recognition Cormac saw half the face of a fellow man at
arms.
He nudged him and saw crabs scuttle away from the partly defleshed
skull they
were scavenging ravenously. Crabs plucked out his eye in his claw
before scuttling
away into the crevices. Emboldened by his vulnerability the crabs
ventured closer to
him. If they swarmed him, it would be like being butchered by
hundreds of little
daggers.
Sensing a supernatural presence, the crabs abruptly scuttled away
and shrank back into
the crevices. Scavenging sea birds took flight as if restless
shadows were granted
form and face. A regal apparition graced the darkness. A gowned
figure materilaised in
frills and sumptuous black gossamer. The rock formation morphed into
a throne and
there reposed the Morrigan flanked by great pale wolfhounds. Albino
ravens perched on
her graceful shoulders.
“The Morrigan,” Cormac gasped.
“Well met Cormac son of Maeve of Antrim. It has been centuries as
mortals measure
time since one of your blood called upon me,” the dark goddess
began.
“The castle must not fall. I humbly offer myself as sacrifice,”
Cormac groaned.
“I am no lowly scavenger a slab of carrion will not serve my divine
craving
Rise for your enemy draws nigh. I am a goddess of war. I require you
to slay your
enemy as an offering,” the dark goddess said.
As if conjuring the dead, the Morrigan beckoned in a forbidden
tongue.
Impossibly the Fergus the giant opened his eyes as fishes began to
nibble at his flesh.
He rose explosively from the chill water, lurching for his enemy
grunting with pain and
Rage. Cormac scrambled to respond.
The cave echoed with harsh booming laughter as Fergus retrieved his
axe.
The weapon struck sparks on the stone as Fergus struck at his
elusive quarry.
Fergus gripped Cormac by the throat and raised him to the level of
his eyes
As he looked into the soulless glare of the revenant Cormac gripped
a rusted and
barnacled fragment of spear amid the flotsam and jetsam wrenching it
from the skeletal
hand of a long-drowned mariner. He stabbed again and again. Blood
slithered out
between the dark crevices forming red tidepools.
Like a cold-blooded thing still trying to slay its assailant in its
thrashing death throes
Fergus crawled after him only for Cormac to rally on his last
reserves of
strength to finally slay his adversary. Fergus shuddered and
shrieked like a boar under
a butcher's knife abattoir.
Fergus tried to rise only to be completely enveloped in voracious
crabs eating him alive.
Cormac’s last sight of his nemesis was a writhing pile of crabs rose
to his feet lurching a few
steps enveloped in crabs before falling face forward at last on the
stone slab like a
sacrificial offering. The screams ended when the crabs began to
crawl into his throat and
clamping their claws on his tongue. In the silence Cormac could hear
the crabs insatiably
gorging and sea birds hovering and harrying the grisly banquet
trying to win a morsel.
The screams were replaced by the grisly sounds of the crabs
voraciously gorging.
Screeching sea birds also joined in the feast plucking out the eyes
as a delicacy.
“I accept your sacrifice...” the Morrigan smiled.
Meanwhile huzzahs rose from the castle’s battlements as a summoned
relief army
caught the besiegers completely off-guard driving them off the
cliffs at lancepoint
by knights astride warhorses reinforced by gallowglass mercenaries
wielding claymores
and lochaber axes. Horns resounded with a throaty bray to signal
victory.
Suddenly Cormac screamed at the nightmarish sight of his enemy
rising
enveloped by crabs. Fergus grasped his nemesis again.
A sword flashed in the firelight swung in a shimmering arc severing the
giant’s head.
The knight doffed their helm. Red hair cascaded out spilling like
wine from a chalice.
“Aoife,” Cormac sighed.
Retainers of the Lord of Dunluce found him scowering the confines of
the sea cave by torchlight. One man gasped and drew his sword as the
torchlight illuminated Cormac’s pale face.
“Hold. Revenants don't breathe fool. Take him,” a man at arms
commanded.
Men at arms draped Cormac’s arms over their shoulders and lifted him
on their shields to carry him inside the castle.
A Moorish doctor shipwrecked on their shores tended to his wounds.
Cormac’s eyes opened as he heard Aoife singing next to him. He
closed his eyes and
reopened them. He was still wounded and broken on the rocks too weak
to move as the
tide rose again. He shifted between two worlds not knowing where he
truly was
a bard strummed his harp softly. She rose and kissed his forehead
enfolding his cold
hands on the sword. The water rushed in with a roar.
“Your father would never approve...” Cormac groaned.
“If you were elevated to a lord or we could elope “
Cormac reopened his eyes.
“Where am I?”
Was he still floating in the sway of the tides or writhing throes of
infected feverish sleep
Tended top by the lord's personal doctor a Moorish physician between
dream and
death frail yet clutching to life with a fierce tenacity.
Cormac heard Aoife singing next to him. His lips moved soundlessly
in duet. He closed
his eyes and reopened them. Was he still wounded and broken on the
rocks too
weak to move as the tide rose again? He shifted between two worlds
not knowing
where he truly was a bard strummed his harp softly. Aoife rose and
kissed his forehead
enfolding his cold hands on the sword as the water rushed in with a
roar.
Cormac envisioned himself dancing across a dreamscape of stars
With Aoife. He felt himself uplifted as he fought the fever his lips
soundlessly singing a song to
his muse.
Greg Patrick - A dual citizen of Ireland and the states, Greg Patrick is an Irish/Armenian traveller poet and the son of a Navy enlisted man. He is also a former Humanitarian aid worker who worked with great horses for years and loves the wilds of Connemara and Galway in the rain where he's written many stories. Greg spent his youth in the South Pacific and Europe and currently resides in Galway, Ireland and sometimes the states.