So instead of building a shelter, Cormac must build an altar and a chapel. The bad news is that Artt is a jerk, to put it bluntly, continually overruling reasonable proposals made by his two disciples in favor of holy activities. Artt has chosen well, since each of these men has skills that will prove essential, and they take vows of obedience which put these skills at his disposal. The other is Cormac, one of the oldest monks, a garrulous storyteller who found his religious calling late in life after losing his wife and daughters to the plague. So when Artt has a dream that he must take two monks with him on a journey to an uninhabited place, Trian is pleased to hear that one of them is him. To the youngest monk, Trian, Artt is the most interesting person he's seen in the six years since he was given to the abbot by his parents at age 13 - for reasons which are withheld until the dramatic final chapters. He has "the bearing of a warrior king but he behaves like a scrupulous monk working out a long penance." The leader of the trio is a man called Artt, a wandering scholar and priest who shows up at Cluain Mhic Nois, a monastery on the River Shannon.
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