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  On the One Road

  Green Hills & Smoky Fields, Volume 1

  Fallon Brown

  Published by Fallon Brown, 2022.

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

  ON THE ONE ROAD

  First edition. May 27, 2022.

  Copyright © 2022 Fallon Brown.

  Written by Fallon Brown.

  Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Glossary

  Part One - July 1850

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Part Two - August 1850

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Part Three - September & October 1850

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Part Four - March & April 1851

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Part Five - May 1851

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  Newsletter

  Cover image designed by: RL Sather SelfPubBookCovers.com/ RLSather

  To the characters who just won’t leave you alone, no matter how much time passes.

  Irish Gaelic Words & Phrases

  A Bhean chóir(a ban cor): My dear woman

  Ceallach(Kell-ach): Irish name meaning “warrior maid”

  Deartháir(jrihyaar): brother

  Diabhal(jowl): devil

  Dia fanacht leat(jeeu fanakht lyat): God stay with you

  Éist do béal(asht doe bale) : shut your mouth

  Gaol(jail): not technically Irish, but the more predominant spelling of jail during the 1800s, especially in Britain.

  Lough Derg(loch deirg) - a lake near where Eamonn and Torin grew up

  Máthair(ma-hay): mother, used by Eamonn to Mrs. McKenna as a term of respect

  Scian(shkeeun): knife. Most often, a traditional long, single edged knife

  Téigh abhaile leat(Chey ah-wohl-ya lyat): Take yourself home

  The Nation: an Irish nationalist weekly newspaper that ran from 1842 to 1900, though it was shut down several times in the mid to late 1840s

  Part One

  July 1850

  CHAPTER 1

  COUNTRYSIDE, TIPPERARY, IRELAND

  July 20, 1850

  "I can get the rest of them home. Do not worry so, Da."

  Torin O'Fearell didn't even look over as he said the words. His father worried more and more each day, it seemed. He knew Lord Curran would come to collect the rents due soon or send his man of business. As long as the lord's son was not along, everything should be fine.

  Except they did not have the rents.

  It had not been a good year for the farm. The land was still recovering from the blight that fell over it. Some of their neighbors had it worse than them; Torin’s father hadn't pinned all his faith on potatoes. Having wheat and oats didn't help much, though, when the English took most of their crops and left them with little more than the chaff.

  His father wasn't bitter about that, or at the least, he did not let it show often. The current Lord Curran had made a deal when he first took on his father’s estate. The horses were the O'Fearell's to do with as they pleased. Not all the lords of the lands were as generous. And they were well aware that generosity could easily change. He might go back on the deal if they didn't get the rents turned in on time. There was nothing to stop him and no law to hold him accountable.

  This was their home, had been for longer than the eighteen years Torin had been alive, and they couldn't even feel welcome here. It was the one thing on which Torin and his brother, Eamonn, one year older than him, agreed. Eamonn had been to a few of the orations given by Thomas Francis Meagher and the other Young Irelanders and recited parts of the speeches for Torin. He didn't understand everything that was said, as Eamonn seemed to, but he agreed with the general gist of it.

  Freedom from England was something he could get behind.

  Meagher had been transported to Van Diemen's Land the year before instead of being executed for sedition. So, he hoped Eamonn wouldn't be as vocal as his idol. Torin crossed himself at the thought and then saw his father's departing back as he drove one group of horses out of the pasture. Right. They still had work to do here today. He was not one to dream the day away.

  That was more his brother's way of being.

  Torin stayed leaning against the large rock. There was plenty of time before darkness fell. He would soak in this rare day of sun and peace before he returned to the bustle of the farm and their house.

  Torin woke to drops of water hitting his forehead and someone rummaging through his coat. Not water, rain. And not someone, either. He reached up and rubbed the horse's nose. "Back, Ceallach," he told the mare.

  The mare took two steps back but bent her head to huff out a breath against his cheek. Torin chuckled and rubbed her face again. "I am getting up. Give me a moment."

  He pushed himself up from the ground, brushing his hands over the back of his trousers to clear off dirt and grass. The other horses his father left behind for Torin to return with were milling around, grazing, and not paying him any of their attention.

  It was Ceallach he raised from a foal, though. She never strayed far from him. He gave her neck another rub before rounding up the other horses. They knew the path to the farm and went along it with few problems. Still, there was always one.

  Torin chased the long-legged black colt into the group for the fifth time just before going over the rise of the hill. Ceallach nipped at the young fool's neck, and the little guy kicked out, but he stayed in with the group. Torin chuckled, then swung up onto Ceallach's back as the horses trotted toward home.

  Ceallach danced under him. He felt her muscles bunch and relax with no saddle between them. This wasn't her usual feistiness. Something was wrong. He didn't know what. The barn was right up ahead of them—the house around the next bend. Torin's stomach seized. No.

  Thick dark smoke rose from the thatched roof. He smelled it on the air now but couldn't make himself ride closer. The other horses he drove back were no longer eager to get to that barn. There was no sign of the other horses, though. Or his father.

  "Da!" he called, putting his heels to Ceallach's sides. "Da, where are you?" And his mother. Who would likely have been in the house? She had to have seen the smoke from there, and she would have tried to save the horses if she could. From the smoke pouring out of the roof and the doors at the end, he saw that it was too late.

  "Da!" he screamed when no one came out.

  Ceallach snorted and tossed her head, side-stepping and almost dumping Torin off her back. He gripped her mane, only releasing it when she settled enough for him to slide to the ground safely. His knees nearly gave out when he saw what upset the horse.

  "Da!" he cried one more time as he dropped beside the body.

  His back still rose and fell, even as the dark stain spread over his shirt. "No," Torin said. He turned his father over and pulled him into his lap. His shirtfront was torn and stained. "What did happen, Da? Where's Ma?"

  "In the house," he said, his voice almost too quiet to hear, the words slurring together. He coughed, and blood cov
ered his lips.

  Torin glanced toward the house but didn't see anyone stir. He saw marks in the dirt, though, as if his father dragged himself out this far. "Couldn't save her. Sorry. So, so sorry."

  Another breath shuddered out, and his father's eyes fluttered. "No, Da," Torin said. "Don't go. Who did this? I'll make sure they come to justice."

  "Can't," he muttered. "Lord... Cur... never let it happen."

  "What? Lord Curran did this?"

  "No." There was a long moment of silence, and Torin feared his father had slipped away. Then, he drew in a harsh breath, though his eyes stayed closed, and said, "Lord Owen. Your ma. Couldn't save her. Tor... don't... sorry." More blood bubbled between his lips, and he let out a weak cough.

  "No, Da. Tell me what to do. Tell me...I need to know. Please." His words fell on deaf ears. His father's chest stopped moving; no rattling breaths came from him. "No, no, no," he screamed one final time.

  He heard a crash from the barn, vaguely registering the roof falling in. He hoped none of their horses were in there, but he didn't hear any sounds coming from that direction. He had to hope they were safe wherever they might be.

  He couldn't have the same hope for his father. He was dead. Right there in Torin's arms. He staggered to his feet, his father's limp body weighing him down. He stumbled toward the house.

  He dropped his father's body when he saw what remained of it. No roof, blackened walls, a shell of the home he grew up in. His father's words returned to him, and he ran toward the still-smoking structure. "Ma!" he cried. She'd been dragged out, though. Her eyes stared up at the sky.

  He dropped to his knees, screaming out his pain and grief. Everything was gone. He knew there could only be one person responsible. Lord Owen Curran, the son of their landlord. He'd done this. Torin didn't have any doubts.

  He would make sure he paid for it.

  ***

  COUNTY TIPPERARY, IRELAND

  July 21, 1850

  Eamonn O'Fearell rode straight in the saddle, almost as if he had a fireplace poker shoved up the back of his shirt. At least, he was sure that is what his younger brother would tell him. At the moment, he might just laugh at the usual insult. So, he wouldn't jump on a horse bareback like Torin. There were many more differences between them than that. Didn't mean he didn't have a well full of love for him.

  He missed his brother and their parents after more than a week away from home.

  Eamonn's pockets were full, he'd gotten to hear Speranza speak again and had gotten out of Waterford unmolested. The meeting had been secret, but that didn't mean it couldn't be raided. They had been before, but none he attended. Since tempers were still high after the failed rising two years earlier, he was lucky indeed.

  Eamonn figured he had reason to be in good spirits, and he was ready to share it with his family.

  He'd left Waterford two days earlier, stopping at an inn each night. He filled his pockets with other men's coins they hadn't been wise enough not to gamble away. He'd still managed to get the losing men to buy him a round of ale before retiring for the night.

  Eamonn thought one of them would join him in his room, and it sent a shiver down his spine. He'd bid Eamonn good night and gone the other way. He hadn't reacted to a man like that since the last time he listened to Thomas Francis Meagher speak before he'd been sentenced to transportation and exiled from their home for the rest of his life.

  A dark shadow passed over Eamonn's enjoyment at that thought. He tried to push it back. He couldn't do anything about that. Eamonn could help to expand the movement Meagher helped start. In whatever little ways he could.

  Eamonn urged the horse into a trot, moving with the horse's movements. Anticipation wound through him. He couldn't wait to tell his mother of the things he'd heard. She didn't care too much for the talk of revolution, the threat of violence worried her, but her eyes always shone when he recited the verses they penned. She had a love for words she passed down to him.

  Eamonn made the sign of the cross as he passed the manor house as if to ward off the demon who lived there. His father always scowled when he or Torin made that claim. Even all these years, Lord Ellison Curran may be decent, and Eamonn still reserved his judgment on that, but his son was not.

  Owen Curran had done nothing but torment him and Torin when they were growing up. That torment got worse as the years went on. He had no doubts that if he ever got out of the tether his father kept him on, Eamonn's own family would take their last breaths. Owen would enjoy squeezing that out of them.

  His family's farm lay at the far end of the estate's lands. Once, long before he or even his father was born, this land belonged to their family. Until the crown deemed they weren't allowed to own it any longer. Now they could only work the land and pass almost all its harvest on to their English landlord.

  Eamonn was determined to see it changed, but he had no wish to be sentenced to one of those prison ships heading to the other side of the world. So, he'd bide his time.

  The sun was dipping as he turned onto the lane leading to their house. It took him a moment. He had to look around, wondering if he had turned wrong somewhere.

  No, the house should be standing right over there. Instead, it looked like an old ruin, blackened and crumbling.

  Eamonn kicked his horse forward, racing into the yard, turning his head each way, trying to find one sign of life. There was nothing. He yanked on the reins, the horse snorting and tossing his head. He released the reins and jumped to the ground, staggering to his knees. "Ma!" he called. "Da. Torin? Please, someone, do answer me." The last came out in a sob. He couldn't be the only one left here. He just couldn't.

  If he lost everything else, there wouldn't be anything to keep him from throwing everything into seeing their home free of the English. Then, a figure rose through the mist. Eamonn stumbled back a step, sure he was seeing a ghost of his family.

  It was no ghost he saw. "Torin!" He rushed toward his brother.

  "They're dead," Torin said dully. "They are both dead."

  Eamonn held his brother away from him then, looking over him. Blood soaked through the front of his shirt, and for a moment, he was frightened Torin would soon be dead, too. The blood was dry, and his brother didn't seem hurt, though his eyes were red and glazed over.

  "What happened, Tor?"

  "Lord Owen killed them. And I'm going to make sure he pays for it."

  CHAPTER 2

  SCARRIFF, COUNTY CLARE, Ireland

  July 22, 1850

  "Why do you not head on home now?" Bridgette Muldoon looked up from the embroidery she was working on at her father's words and brushed a few strands of curly, black hair away from her face.

  "Are you sure, Da?" she asked, but she put the work away. "You do not need my help anymore this day?"

  Her father shook his head. They hadn't had a customer in more than an hour's time, and there was little she could do to help other than hand him tools, which was why she'd been finishing up this bit of embroidery. It was to be a surprise for Mother, one of the few gifts she could afford to give. Da paid her for the time she worked here, but she slipped it back into the shop's funds.

  Since their stream of customers had seemed to dry, that money was even more needed here than in her purse. Bridgette knew why it had happened when her father's clock shop had always seen decent business.

  She'd refused Owen Curran's suit of marriage. Again. Bridgette had now lost count of the number of times she turned him away. Still, he wouldn't give up. She did not know how to make it any clearer. She would never tie herself to that man. No matter what he promised or threatened. Her father stood behind her in that decision, so she had no fears of him trying to push her to it, even if it meant finding another way to steady their accounts.

  Bridgette put her needlework in her satchel, securing her needle, so she didn't risk losing it. She wouldn't be able to afford to replace it yet. Maybe if she finished enough embroidery to take to the market, she'd be able to shore up their funds. They'd
be able to afford the treat her father wanted to get for her mother's birthday the following week.

  Bridgette leaned over and brushed a kiss over her father's cheek while he continued to dig around in the gears of the watch open on his work table. "I shall see you at home in an hour's time. Do not let that pass."

  Color stained his cheeks. "Téigh abhaile leat," he said, a laugh rumbling through the words. It matched the twinkle in his green eyes, the same shade as hers.

  "Fine. I shall go." Bridgette headed for the back of the shop, where she grabbed her cloak, and after wrapping it around her shoulders, she stepped through the door into the alley. The wind whipped the cloak against her body, and she hurried down the alley to where their house stood at the other end. She could feel rain in the air, and more than that. There was a charge that told her a storm was coming.

  She almost welcomed it, hoping it would clear away her dark thoughts. Like the fact she could only keep refusing Owen so long before he wouldn't accept it any longer. Owen had more power than any of them. If he had put his mind to it, a simple clock shop owner wouldn't be able to stand against him.

  Bridgette reached out for the doorknob on their little home, but the door wasn't closed all the way. That was odd and sent a skittering sensation down her back. Her mother always made sure it was closed, even when heat baked them inside. She'd open windows to let a breeze through, but this door was closed if they weren't going through it.

  Bridgette took a slow step toward it, pushing it open. "Ma?" she called. No answer. Maybe she stepped out. A neighbor may have needed something. Her mother's net of caring swung wide around their neighborhood. She'd turn no one in need away.

  There was a strange coppery scent in the air. It didn't smell like something her mother would cook. Her mother should just about be ready to put dinner on the table. So, she should be able to smell something else. Something more than that tang that was so out of place, she wasn't sure what to do about it.