Difficult to put down
The story, which is divided into 4 books, starts with a recitation that sounds like a man being indicted into a lodge of some sort. Every book starts out with a brief recounting of this sort, date 1899.
The story follows a young main named Murdo, youngest son of an Orkney lord. His father and 3 older brothers decide to join the first crusades. A little over half of the lords agree to put their lands under the protection of the Roman Catholic bishop & the abbot; the rest, like Murdo's father, put their estates into the hands of those left behind. Murdo works side by side with the vassals, having the responsibility to bring the harvest in safely. He succeeds. Over Easter, they visit a neighboring isle, where the girl Murdo loves (and who returns his affections) lives with her mother. When they return, spme9ne jas taken their estate from them for beingnin rebeliion against someone whom they don't lnow exists, and they don't know that while they were gone, spmeone conquered the overlords to whom they were loyal. All they can do is return to seek sanctuary with the friends they just left. It is determined that Murdo will seek passage to the Holy Land to find his father and get the mess straightened out. The young couple handfasts and consummates their union. Once Murdo leaves, his wofe learns she is pregnant; her mother dies; she has the baby near Christmas; the baby is only 3 days old when the new lords of the area come, at the insistance of the Roman Catholic ckerics, to evict them in the dead of winter. He alows them to pack a trunk as there are things the new mother and baby will need, and the cleric rages that nothing is to be taken from the house. Fed up, the lord grasps the cleric by the front of the robe, bebrates him for throwing 2 women and a newborn out of the house on the dead of winter, and says that is bad enough without letting them take things they need, and the cleric is silenced.
Murdo's travels to the Holy Land take at least a year. They have to winter ships in various harbors. In the one choaen by his shipmates, Murdo befriends a blacksmith. Murdo is eager and quick to learn and ends up being taught the rudiments of making a Roman spear. He isn't done when the ship leaves, so the blacksmith invites him back to finish it and gives hi a hollowed out oak shaft to put the shaft of the spear. He hides it in the ship and resumes his voyage. On board are 3 monks/priests of the Cele De, the original order of the missionaries who converted the British Isles but are now held in contempt as "heretics" by the Roman Catholic church, which hunts them down and demands they either leave their beliefs or else. But in Scotland and Ireland, they are still preferred by many. Murdo soon discovers these monks are different. Eventually, they find Murdo's father, when he is dying from rampant wound infection. Murdo arrives 8n Jerusalem in time to see the wholesale slaughter of all inhab8tants, 2 groups of which are Christian. Sickened, he leaves the cuty, where blood is flowong through the streets, takes off his blood caked garments (simply from falling on blood slick stones), and a few days later, they find him naked, scratched by thorns, badly sunburned, feet torn open by rocks, in a daze. It os after they find him that they locate his father...who shows him a horde of treasure under his mat. They figure out a way to disguise it as bidies & hide it in the catacombs. Murdo fonds his brothers, who alugh at him for wanting to regain the family estate, saying they can be rich landed nobility there & telling him he can have that "pathetic" piece of land. They retrieve the treasure, but while they are putting it in hiding, Murdo has a vision where he is told he has those riches for a reason - to build a safe haven. A kingdom, where God's people will be safe. When they exit the catacombs, all his wounds are healed.
As they go to leave, there is contention between Western lords & between the Emporer Alexius and the man claiming to be king of Jerusalem. They found the lance that pierced the side of Christ and they started winning battles. This too becomes an area of contention. Murdo very cunningly gets better lands in mainland Scotland from the King of the area himself, and once a few odds and ends are tied up, they return home and take Murdo to where he left his mother & wife, but they're not there and all the people are scared because of Norse raids. Murod confronts the bishop and abbott, finds his wife and mother, but has bad news for his wife: his dad saw her dad and brothers die as well - plus the bews of his father's death and his brothers' scron for the family homestead. He learns of the death of his mother-in-law of feevr. Sonce the king who gave him the landgrant is also k8ng over the Orkneys now, Murdo brings the Roman Catholic bishop and abbott of the Orkneys to the king for judgment, wjich, despite the oily bishop's attempts tp prove himself in the right, goes against him. Murdo has a gift for the Cele De