will do?â
âNo telling. But if the Dubliners leave the cityâwhich is likelyâto look for food or to take what they needâwe need to be ready.â
âIs that necessary? They canât find us here.â
âWe need a place we can defend. A fortress.â
âNot this castle idea of yours again.â Sarah rolled her eyes.
âAye, thatâs it exactly. A castle. With the ocean behind us and high on a bluff where we can see whatâs coming. Nobody will be able to scale the walls or burn us out.â
âEver hear of a siege?â
âNot when thereâs grazing and crops and a water source inside the castle.â
Sarah looked uncertainly around her. He knew she felt safe here. The blackbirds sang and flew over the little garden plot that had comfortably fed the entire conventânearly seventy peopleâall summer long.
âLikely Dublin and the other main cities will react at first by looting themselves,â Mike said, âbut theyâll soon get hungry enough to come into the countryside.â
Her face was screwed into a mask of confusion. â Who are you talking about?â
âThe opportunists, the provisional government, the army. And itâs people like us theyâll look to take from. Weâll need to move quickly.â
Sarah put a hand on Mikeâs arm as if to prevent him from entering the front door. Siobhan began to fuss in her arms and he took the baby from her.
âYou just got through telling me the only way to find John again is to wait for him to come back here .â
âListen, Sarahâ¦â
â No .â Her face was flushed. âHeâs coming back here . You know he is. Ifâ¦if he can.â
âSarah, lass, listen to meâ¦â
âNo! Iâm not leaving without him. You can do what you want.â She pulled Siobhan out of his arms, causing the child to give a startled shriek, and stomped into the convent.
----
T he dining room was the biggest room in the nunnery. Since Sarah and Mike and the people of the compound had come, everyone took their meals together in this room.
Fiona thought she would never get tired of seeing their whole community around the table like one big happy family. Her two little girls sat to her left on a long wooden bench. They were inseparable and Fiona was glad for that. Both of them had seen some terrible things in their young lives. It was good that they had each other.
Declan sat on her right. Solemn, silent and still. Nothing like the man sheâd once known and loved. The man who had led his gypsy family with humor and bravery. Now his hands shook and there were times when he looked at her with uncertainty.
Breakfast had been over for an hour but the air buzzed with anticipation. She hoped Mike wasnât planning on breaking the news to everyone about the EMP as some sort of surprise since she was pretty sure everyone already knew.
When Sarah came into the roomâa squirming, fighting Siobhan in her armsâher face was dark with frustration. A few steps later, Mike entered to cheers and applause from the gathered men and women. He went to the head of the table and held out his arms for quiet. Fiona noticed he did not look in Sarahâs direction. Sophiaâso big she looked like sheâd deliver any momentâlumbered over to Sarah to relieve her of Siobhan. The child settled down quickly.
Fiona knew that everyone here had cause to trust and respect her brother. From the men heâd rescued from the work camp in Dublin last spring to the women heâd brought home safely from the rape campâherself included. She felt a movement on her right and placed a calming hand on Declanâs knee. Heâd even found her dear Declan and brought him back from the grave. Almost literally.
âWell, sure youâll have all heard the big news by now,â Mike said in a loud voice. Instantly, the talking ceased and all eyes