Part 29 (1/2)

”Oh, there's the making of a man in him. If he gets age he'll be a champion,” said the Gruagach.

Next day the Gruagach left Fin's castle and went to his own place and family.

Gilla na Grakin's time was now up, for he had served a year and a day.

Fin went out to wash himself in a spring near the castle, and when he looked into the spring a spirit spoke up out of the water to him and said:

”You must give back his cup to the king of the Flood, or you must give him battle in its place.”

Fin went back to the castle, lamenting the state he was in.

Conan Maol said, ”You look like a sorrowful man.”

”Why shouldn't I be?” said Fin. ”A spirit spoke to me from the spring outside, and told me I must give back the cup to the king of the Flood, or give him battle in place of it. Now Gilla's time is up, and I don't know what to do.”

”Well,” said Conan Maol, ”do you go now and speak to him, and maybe he'll do you a good turn.”

Fin went to Gilla na Grakin, and told him what happened at the spring.

”My time is up, as you know,” said Gilla, ”and I cannot serve on time that is past; but if you want me to go, you must watch my wife Scehide ni Wananan on Friday night; and in the middle of the night, when she is combing her hair, any request you'll make of her she can't refuse. The request you'll make is that she'll let me go with you to the king of the Flood, to take the cup to his castle and bring it back again.”

Fin watched the time closely, and when the middle of Friday night came, he looked through a hole in the door and saw Scehide combing her hair.

Then he asked his request of her.

”Well,” answered she, ”I can't refuse, but you must promise me to bring back Gilla, dead or alive.”

Fin promised her that.

Next morning Fin Macc.u.mhail and Gilla na Grakin set out for the castle of the king of the Flood, taking the cup with them.

They walked over Erin till they came to the sh.o.r.e of the sea. There Gilla caught up two pieces of wood, and putting one across the other, struck them a tip of his fingers, and out of them rose a fine s.h.i.+p. He and Fin went on board, sailed away, and never stopped till they cast anchor outside all the s.h.i.+ps, under the castle of the king of the Flood.

The two walked on from deck to deck till they stood on sh.o.r.e.

They went a short distance from the castle of the king and pitched a tent.

Said Gilla to Fin, ”Now we are hungry, and I must find food for you and myself.”

So Gilla na Grakin went to the castle and asked food of the king of the Flood.

”You'll get nothing to eat from me. I have no food in this place to give you or the like of you; but there is a wild bull in the wood outside.

Find him: if you kill him, you'll have something to eat; if not you'll go fasting,” said the king of the Flood to Gilla na Grakin.

Gilla went out to the wood, and when the wild bull saw a man coming towards him he drove his horns into the ground, and put an acre of land over his own back. Then he threw up an oak-tree, roots and all, till it nearly reached the sky, and made at Gilla na Grakin. But if he did, Gilla was ready for him and faced him, and when the bull came up, he caught him by the horns and threw him to the ground; then putting a foot on one horn, he took the other in his two hands, split the bull from muzzle to tail, and made two halves of him.

Gilla carried the carca.s.s to the tent, and when he had taken off the skin he said to Fin, ”We have no pot to boil the meat in. Well, I'll go to the king again.”

So off he went and knocked at the castle door.

”What do you want now?” asked the king.