Authors: Elizabeth Boyce
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Romance, #Historical
Thoughts were lost in his embrace. It was as though she had drunk too much wine and could think of nothing but him. Her lips wanted the deeper caress of his tongue dancing with hers. Warmth spread from her stomach down between her legs. She could not get close enough to him. The touch of his muscled body soothed away the aches in her bones like the bath that Elva had drawn for her before the fire.
His tongue teased hers until they danced, becoming one rhythm. He eased away from her, breathing heavily. “’Tis best saved for our wedding day. No more,
ek elska pik,
my
ástir
.”
She heard the Norse words, but did not understand their meaning. “Best to sate your needs elsewhere, for you will never have any lovemaking with me.” She whispered.
“I’ve had a few mistresses before.”
Her mind tormented her with images of his lips upon a buxom woman. She would not give him the satisfaction of knowing she cared at all.
“Leave me.” She straightened. “I will arrange for father to pay you for your troubles.”
“No.” His tone made her step back. “I will not stray from our bed with another. This I vow upon the Norns.”
She shook her head. “I will not marry you.”
“Aye, you will marry me. You will meet my needs and I, yours. I promise you I will not stray from your bed.”
Curse her. She knew men went through women like pigs rooting for truffles. Regardless if she had love in a marriage or not, she would not allow infidelity. “Pray you do not stray, for if you do I will shoot arrows into you and the wench together.” The words were out of her mouth before she could stop them. She spun on her heel at his laughter.
Chapter Seventeen
Kaireen flipped her auburn hair back and took the narrow steps to the dyeing area.
Candlelight flickered across the stone walls. Though the sun rose and lit most of the keep, this part of the dungeon was devoid of natural light.
As a child, her mother explained the necessity of women dyeing here. If an invading clan tried to breech the walls, or dig underneath, then the liquid in the dye barrels would ripple and alert the women.
Until now, Kaireen had not visited the place again, because Rhiannon spent most of her time here.
Following the stairs round a corner, a stink crawled forward and choked her. Smell of sour milk, rotten swine slop, and urine. Rhiannon must be oblivious to the stench, because this aroma crept around her wherever she went. But here the odors clashed into each other, each fighting for dominance.
Kaireen wrestled with the urge to vomit, and wished she could race upstairs. Any punishment, days in the stocks, years in the kitchens, were better than this.
Now Bram would not want to come near her-which in her mind would be a good thing. Already she had become too used to his presence; she needed distance to strengthen her resolve not to kiss him again. She worried this brief exposure to the dyes may haunt her months to come. No, she was not a quitter. She would take her punishment.
To ease her nausea, she took breaths with her mouth. But she tasted the tingle of stink upon her tongue. She set her resolve and moved forward. Rhiannon would not be kind, especially if she was late.
Inside, barrels were filled with crushed berries, sap, onion skins, and various leaves crammed into every open space.
Wool and linen hung from the ceiling drying. Vats of colored liquid cluttered the floors. Torches lined the walls, sending flickering light across the massive room. Servants scurried about, applying sap to pre-dyed fabric. She watched while others stirred bolts of fabric into the vats. These quarters spread three times the size of her bedchamber.
Kaireen was amazed that none of these ladies appeared bothered by the stench. Many of them nodded their heads in greeting. Younger ones dipped into half a curtsy.
Within seconds Rhiannon snapped her fingers and then everyone jerked back to their duties. She strode forward, her gaze shifting down her nose at Kaireen. Her grey hair was tied into her usual tight bun. She wore a stout black gown which made her pale skin look like a shallow frame hiding bones.
“You are late. I will request your lord father and mother increase your punishment.” She glared at Kaireen. “They have been too lenient on you. Long ago they should have sent you to the convent, or placed under my authority.” Her dark eyes twinkled as if a secret existed somewhere in their depths.
Rhiannon strolled away and whistled for Kaireen to follow as though she called a dog. She pointed to the mordant barrels. These held alum, alder wood, and burnt seaweed. “These are applied to the fabric
before
placing it into the dye vats.” Huge bolts of woven material of wool, linen, and others were piled high in sections.
Kaireen locked her arms to her sides in order not to strangle this woman. How dare she speak to her with an arrogant tone. “Why?” she asked with as much loathing as she dared.
“Why?” Rhiannon looked back at her with an eyebrow raised. “To help the dye stay on the material, of course. Then the fabric is cut and sewn into garments.”
With giggles echoing from some of the women, she then pointed out the dyes of the room: vats of nettle for green and brown colors. Saffron for golds, silver birch for browns, onion skins for oranges or browns, and woad for blues.
Rhiannon stopped between a vat of crushed privet berries and a barrel of alum.
“Take that bolt there.” She pointed to a stack of linen and wool. “Rub every inch of it with this alum and salt. Rachel?”
At her word, a plump girl with yellow braids waddled forward, carrying a cup full of salt. Rhiannon rolled her eyes at the servant’s clumsy curtsy, which nearly toppled the girl on her face.
“Let them set with the mordant for an hour. You may help the others while you wait. Cook will send food by noon. Plunge the bolt in the privet berries, and stir so the color distributes equally.” She stomped away.
Kaireen wrinkled her nose and picked a length of wool. She used her hands to spread the alum mixed with salt. The sticky alum with gritty salt stuck underneath her nails. Soon her palms were raw from scrubbing.
Rachel, who brought the salt, gestured with her chubby hands how to spread the mixture evenly. Red colored her cheeks as she grinned at Kaireen’s words of thanks.
Rhiannon paraded around, shouting orders and insults at the other workers. Never did she insult Kaireen, but she held her assaults on the tip of her tongue. Her tone cutting her words as if slapping. “I do not think you have the skill for this, Kaireen. We will be happy to have passed your last hour with us.”
At noon, Kaireen bit a piece of meat from a chicken leg. After cleaning her hands three times, she felt as though she still had salt underneath her nails.
Through the fabrics scattered across the quarters, she glared at Rhiannon. She smiled at the vision of dunking the woman into the foul smelling vat of woad.
After they finished eating, everyone went back to their chores. Kaireen assisted Rachel to smear burnt seaweed onto a wool mound of wool as preparation for the dye.
Soon, her bolts would be ready to dye. She bent her head to tell the young girl goodbye, when Rhiannon bellowed her name.
She cringed, but then schooled her face. “Aye?” She stopped at the woman’s glare.
“What are you doing?” She looked as if she had eaten an old egg. “’Tis past time you dyed your pile of fabric instead of talking.”
Snickering rose from the corners of the room. But when Rhiannon looked, with a smile, none of the servants gave any clue as to who had laughed. Her smile faltered as she glared back at Kaireen. “No doubt you’re spreading your empty headedness with talk of jewels and spoiled pampering.”
She clenched her fists. Rhiannon watched her, waited for her to err, and humiliate her for it. She bent, gathering the sticky fabric and then dumping them into the vat.
Kaireen grabbed the long handle of a paddle, hitting the sides of the vat as she stirred the liquid.
She forced the fabric down, not allowing them to float to the surface. She would show Rhiannon. Hers would color better than anyone’s.
Half an hour later, women crept by, murmuring to Kaireen that the dye was done. But she refused to listen, her green eyes locked on the grey bun yards in front of her.
Her arms were numb from stirring, but she would not stop. She would not give the woman the satisfaction of her failure. If a few minutes were called for to soak the linen, then more time would make the color better, she reasoned.
Evening approached and Rhiannon examined each of their work. She stopped at her vat and tsked. “My, my.” She held her hand for the oar.
Kaireen handed it to her. Though Rhiannon smiled, her smile sent shivers down Kaireen’s spine.
“This will not do. You need to smear oak galls into this now. I am afraid this will take you into the night until you may go.”
“Wha—why?” Kaireen stuttered. Her face flushed red.
“Oak galls dull the color. No one will want to wear this bright uneven color when this dries.” She held the soaking fabric of a splotching purplish blue and the others laughed. “Looks like dumb peasant work. Now, Rachel will give you directions. Try to follow them correctly this time.” Rhiannon snickered as she sauntered away.
Laughter echoed as she climbed the stairs with the others following after her.
Kaireen grasped the drenched fabric and tried to hurl it across the room. She was aiming at the far wall, but it was too heavy and sloshed on the stone floor instead.
“That will leave a stain.” Rachel twisted one of her blond braids. She bit her lip as if concerned she would take the punishment for it.
“I will tell Rhiannon the truth. The spot was from my hand.” Her fingertip of her clean hand touched the girl’s freckled nose.
Chapter Eighteen
Sunset on Kaireen’s last day with Rhiannon and nothing the woman said or did could affect her mood. Her punishment was nearly done.
The stench did not smell as strong as her first day. However, she begged Elva for herbs to take away the smell upon her skin and hair. It was as if Rhiannon haunted her with the stench of her work sticking to her skin like the vats of dye.
Supper with guests gagging around her proved embarrassing. Kaireen protested she had taken two baths, but nevertheless, was ordered to her quarters to eat her meal.
Rachel, though a young girl, taught Kaireen enough of the important rules to avoid any further major mistakes. The oak galls worked on the first garments she had dyed. Now the color was no longer patchy or blinding. After she wrung out a swath of linen, she hung it across one of the lines for drying. Since the garment was still ill suited for a noble, Kaireen had asked to keep it. Elva could sew the material into something useful and it would be a reminder to Kaireen how hard she had worked.
Rhiannon left for the moment to tend to her mistress’ call.
Everyone relaxed after she had gone. Laughter echoed among the women working with the woad dye.
Kaireen hummed a tune. The song she and Bram had first danced to. When she realized which song it was, she switched to another. With the back of her hand she wiped sweat off her brow. Thankfully Bram would not want to hold her close since she smelled like rotten fruit.
Rachel sat half-way up the stairs, twirling one of her blond braids. She was the lookout for everyone. If Rhiannon opened the creaking wood door, everyone would grow silent, working.
Rachel gasped jumping from the stone steps. “She comes.”
A woman in the middle of a song about a man with rubies on his fingers snapped her mouth shut. Ladies who danced now rushed back to their vats to check the consistency or soak their bolts of fabric in their mordant.
The footsteps on the stairs clanged through the chambers like distant church bells warned of impending disaster.
Across from her, a woman managed a weak smile. Her long face stretched forward as if her ears burned to hear.
On the stairs a man coughed and the women screamed.
“Rachel, see who comes.” Kaireen shifted her weight. Why did a man coming frighten the others?
Whispers rose as Rachel scampered to the stairs. Moments later she came running back. “’Tis Bram. He has come looking for you.”
Women crowded around her.
“You must stop him.” The woman with the elongated face squeezed her arm. “Take him back upstairs.”
Kaireen pried her fingers off and then smoothed her grey skirts.
“Why should I? The stench alone would keep anyone at bay not forced to endure this.”
Rachel spoke wringing her hands. “If a man comes anywhere around the dyes, it ruins them.” Her eyes watered. “Rhiannon will punish all of us for this.”
“Ruin the dyes?” Kaireen glanced around her and the others nodded their heads. “Nonsense.” But she saw fear in their eyes.
They stepped away from her, mumbling.
Kaireen waited with her hands on her hips. The footsteps on the stairs sounded louder.
The throng of women rushed her at once. They whirled her around and then pushed her to the stairs.
“Let me be.” Kaireen struggled against them, but there were too many.
Round the bend, she saw Bram’s shadow. Despite the obscurity of their fears, she would not allow them to humiliate her in front of him. The thought of debasement sent knots into her stomach.
“All right. I will go and make him leave. Let go of me.”
The women obeyed. Some descended back down, but a few remained with their arms crossed.
Kaireen raced the stairs. Finding Bram, she clutched his hand and tugged.
But he stood there with a grin on his face. The dimple in his cheek was so strong she wanted to kiss it. Blast it, she needed more time away from him to rid herself of thoughts of kissing him.
Instead, she brushed a strand of her auburn hair from her face. “Why are you standing there?”
“I missed you.” His blue eyes shimmered.
“Miss someone else. You need to get away from here.” She jerked on his hand, but he would not budge. Then he grasped her around the waist, hauling her to him.
She bit her lip knowing what she must smell like and yet he was still undeterred. One hand held her to him, the other stroked her hair. She felt the heat of him throughout her body.