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Authors: Kim Wilkins

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BOOK: Daughters Of The Storm
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‘Rose,' Nyll said with due gravity, rising to his feet, ‘I am told your father is dying.'

No matter how often she thought it, Rose could barely credit it. Æthlric of Ælmesse's fate surely was not to die of a sickness in his bower, but on the battlefield with a gutful of iron. ‘They say he is sick, yes,' she said.

Nyll licked his lips, as though tasting the sorrow. Lord knew he tasted everything else. He had grown as fat as a pig and as overconfident as a kitchen rat. He had once been deferential, even kind. But he and Wengest were close; they feasted and drank together. Now, Rose suspected, he thought himself well above her. And yet, he wasn't brave enough to tell her to unwind the hawthorn from her daughter's hair. Her family was too powerful.

‘We should pray for him.'

Rose set her teeth. ‘If it is your will.' She endured the prayer with good grace, taking particular delight in Rowan excavating
her nose while Nyll tried not to notice. Her knees grew sore. Wengest had already given up kneeling and sat back with his legs stretched out in front of him.

Finally, the prayer was over. Wengest, still sour with her, gave Nyll a meaningful nod and strode off. Wengest was often sour with her, so it was of no moment. He would forget they'd exchanged heated words by bedtime, especially if he wanted to fumble against her body in the dark. Rose collected Rowan and attempted to exit. Rowan, deeply involved in picking candle wax drips from the floorboards, squealed indignantly. As Rose scooped her up, her little legs wriggled like fishes.

‘Let her play a moment,' Nyll said. ‘Wengest asked that I speak to you about something.'

Rose set Rowan down, and the child immediately lay herself flat on the floor to cry a little more in protest.

‘What is it?' Rose asked over the din.

Nyll folded his hands in front of him. ‘It's about the problem of Wengest's heir.'

Rose's heartbeat doubled. ‘The problem of ...?'

‘Yes. You've not given him a son yet.'

‘Oh.' Now Rowan had started to beat an angry rhythm with her skull on the floor. Rose was distracted, caring little for what Nyll was saying. ‘Rowan, stop that, you'll hurt yourself.'

‘Your little girl is three. Many months have passed without your belly swelling again.'

Rose bit her lip so she didn't mention the way
his
belly had swelled.

‘Are you seeking help from someone to avoid having a child?' he continued. Rose was confused out of her ability to speak clearly by his accusation. ‘What? No.' She pushed Rowan gently with her foot. ‘Get up.'

‘Those of the common faith know how to prevent the quickening. It's an evil in Maava's eyes, though. Have you sinned?'

In truth, Rose hadn't spared many thoughts for her inability to fall pregnant these last three years. She had hoped for another baby and, yes, a boy. Wengest would be satisfied and he might thereafter leave her be. But Wengest couldn't father children, that much was clear. He only thought he could, because it was beyond imagining for him that she had presented him with another man's child. With his nephew's child.

‘Your silence speaks to me,' Nyll said.

‘And what does it say?' she replied, too quickly for kindness.

Nyll forced a smile. ‘It would be much better for everyone if you accepted you are a trimartyr queen, Rose. Not a heathen like your sisters. You oughtn't wander off to the village witch every time you need something.' His eyes wandered to Rowan, to the small white flowers in her hair. ‘That is all I shall say.'

Rose hid her amusement. How it must stick in his throat that one of her sisters was a common faith counsellor and that another was a famous soldier. Then her mouth turned bitter. It stuck in her own throat. She was nothing more than a peace-weaver, a way for Ælmesse and Netelchester to stop fighting long enough to secure the south of Thyrsland from raiders. A settlement so promised could not be unpromised without bloodshed. And so she was doomed to return to this chapel every day for Æfenthenken and watch Nyll grow fatter and more officious.

‘Mama? I'm still hungry.'

Rose turned to Rowan. The child's face was awash in tears and snot. ‘You mean you're hungry again,' she said.

‘Yes,' she said with a solemn nod, ‘I'm hungry again.'

Rose glanced over her shoulder at Nyll. ‘I shan't need any of your trimartyr help to get pregnant yet, though I thank you
for thinking of me. I travel tomorrow to Blicstowe with Heath.' The words were round and full of promise on her tongue, like cool grapes in summer. ‘Perhaps when I get back you can pray to Maava that my husband's arrow finds its target more fruitfully.'

Nyll blushed.

She grabbed Rowan's hand and headed out into the twilit evening. At the door to the hall, she caught herself: here she was looking forward to travelling to Blicstowe, and yet it was a journey to say goodbye to her father. But to be away from the dark tedium of life as King Wengest's wife was to breathe again. To breathe so at Heath's side was happiness, no matter through what sorrow it was won.

By nightfall, the hall tables had been erected and a deer spitted over the hearthpit. Wengest's thanes arrived with their wives, who crowded together at the lower table so the children could run about in the empty space at the far end of the hall. The smell of roasting meat made Rose's stomach grumble. A small feast, but a feast nonetheless, to celebrate the return of the king's nephew.

Only the king's nephew didn't arrive.

Rose kept her eyes on the entrance to the hall, her mind only a tenth on the mundane conversation of the other wives. Rowan played with another little girl. They plucked hairs out each other's scalps, then pretended to spin them on sticks: laughter and tears in equal measure. The mead was sweet and spicy across her tongue, but failed to relax her. Travelling tale-tellers had arrived a week before, and Wengest invited them to perform. One played the harp, the other recited a story about brave deeds and shining treasures. Then the music became soft and sad, and they began a song about a faithless wife and her cuckolded husband. Rose's skin prickled.

Guilt, yes. She was always guilty. Wengest was a good man. She didn't love him, but that was not his fault and he did deserve love. But it was fear that truly haunted her: fear she would be found out. She glanced at Rowan, firelight in her hair. The little girl loved Wengest so much. For Rose to be with Heath, Wengest would have to be out of their lives. Such an unhappiness to wish upon a child.

The song continued. Faithless wives were a common theme for tale-tellers and balladeers. And yet Rose didn't recognise herself in the description. She didn't have a wandering gaze, nor a sick yearning for young men, nor a sexual appetite that couldn't be fulfilled. She was simply a woman who had unexpectedly fallen in love with the wrong man, and love was lord of everyone. The affair, experienced from the inside, was honest and beautiful and completely real. Not a dark stain on a pure man's story.

The meal was served. Still Heath didn't come. Rose ate without appetite, throwing food on top of hunger for reasons that were only practical. Her eyes travelled again and again to the entrance, her heart jumped at shadows. Finally, she excused herself and went up to Wengest's table. He was deep in conversation with one of his thanes, but looked up with a smile when he saw Rose approach.

‘What is it, my dear?'

‘Our honourable guest? Heath?'

‘Ah, he caught me outside at sunset. He's too tired to join us.'

All bright colours bled out of the world. ‘Oh.'

‘So don't worry about him.' He took her hand. ‘Look you. Rowan is having a lovely time.'

Rose glanced over her shoulder. Rowan was playing a hiding game behind the carved wooden pillars with some of the smaller children. She squealed with laughter, and her face was shiny with excitement.

‘I'll never get her to sleep tonight,' Rose muttered. But then, she wouldn't have to deal with Rowan's tired tantrums tomorrow, would she? And it mattered little that Heath hadn't come tonight, because soon they would be alone together for a long time.

Wengest didn't demand she come to his bower that night and for that she was glad. She would not have to endure his rough beard on her cheek while holding the image of clean-shaven Heath in her imagination. Rowan was curled against her side, sleeping fast. Rose would miss her; already she ached with thoughts of the separation. But she would be gone a few weeks at most, and she would have Heath's presence to comfort her. Certainly, at her father's hall there would be little chance for them to meet unseen, and so all her hopes were pinned on their journey. They would avoid the inns where spies lurked everywhere; they would sleep under the more forgiving stars. She closed her eyes tightly and imagined Heath's arms around her, the warm, male scent of him. Then other thoughts intruded. Her father, illness, death, sorrow. Sleep was a long time coming.

The sun did not smile on them. Drizzle oozed through the clouds as Rose and Heath stood in the courtyard waiting for the stable hands to bring them their horses. The leaden sky was in perfect tune with the blanket of gravity under which Rose had woken.
Father is dying.
This morning the fact was blunt and real.

Wengest stood under the eaves. Rowan stood next to him, clinging to her nurse's leg and whining loudly. The goodbye had already been said and Rose wished the nurse would take the child away and distract her somehow. She helped the stable hand adjust the saddle and was about to mount up when she saw the nurse
picking her way across the mud with Rowan wriggling in her arms.

‘I've already said farewell to the child,' Rose said irritably.

‘King Wengest said you're to take her with you.'

‘What?' She looked sharply at Wengest, who made a dismissive gesture.

‘He said the child belongs with her mother.'

All Rose's fantasies fell away, leaving behind the ordinary truth: she was a mother before she was a lover. ‘I see. Well, will you pass her up?' Rose mounted the horse, pointedly not looking at Heath. She didn't want to see her disappointment echoed in his eyes. Rowan was her daughter, after all. The separation would have been hard.

But the freedom would have been sweet.

Now Rowan wriggled and started crying about wanting to say goodbye to Papa. Rose wrangled her onto the saddle between her legs, pressing her close. ‘Don't fidget so, Rowan. You'll fall.'

‘Papa?' she said, mournfully, reaching chubby hands towards him.

‘Hush, Rowan.'

‘But I want Papa.'

Rose caught Wengest's gaze and subtly indicated with a tilt of her head that he should come to give his daughter some kind of affection in parting. He shook his head. Rose was used to this: Wengest believed it wasn't wise for a king to show affection in public, that people would think him weak. Rose didn't mind for herself, but Rowan was working up into a fit, her voice growing more desolate. ‘Papa, Papa!'

‘Let's make this quick,' Rose said to Heath.

BOOK: Daughters Of The Storm
5.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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