you have never managed to get right with all your dyes.â
Naturally, the trading vessels also carried household goodsâclothing, chests, fishing nets, seeds for plantingâfor none of them knew what they would find when they reached Scotland and sailed into the trading town of Inverness that sat at the end of the Moray Firth. Cleve had willingly given Kiri over to Laren, who grudgingly accepted being in charge of one of the trading vessels and his daughter.
âI want to stay with you and Merrik,â Laren had said, eyes narrowed on his face.
Merrik said easily, âThe men would welcome your presence and your skaldâs tales, but Oleg has begged me to allow you to oversee the second trading vessel. We havenât enough leaders, he told me.â
âYou lie with the ease of a dying man who swears he will sin no more.â
âIt is why you adore me.â
She laughed, she couldnât help it, swooped down, and swung Kiri up into her arms. âCome, love, you will see your papa tonight.â
Later, as the men rowed into the Channel, Merrik said, âIt worries me that Kiri is with us. You should have left her at Malverne with the boys, or even here with Rollo.â
âNay,â Cleve said. âWe are going home, Merrik. I will protect her. Besides, you know that she doesnât like to be apart from me.â
âThatâs not the half of it and you know it. She doesnât eat, she wonât play with the other children. She does the chores Laren gives to her but there is no joy in her. She looks like a pinched little ghost. It scares everyone to see this little girl waste away when her papa isnât there.â
Cleve said, âYou see, I am right to bring her with me, despite any risks. Choosing the correct number of days Iâll be gone is beyond difficult. Iâd rather worry having her with me than worry having her waste away if I didnât return in the time I promised her.â
âI doubt not we will manage to get Chessa back, but there will be problems, Cleve. We will have to take her to Rouen before we can voyage up to Scotland.â
âAye, I know it, and I dislike the delay, but this girl Chessa is a good sort, as women go. She is bright. She is really quite beautiful. Her eyes are greener than the hills behind Oslo after a heavy rain.â
Merrik eyed his friend thoughtfully. âYou like her?â
âAye, I like her. She was open and friendly.â
âBut you didnât trust her.â
âI would have to be an ass to give my trust to another woman.â
âCleve, you must forget Sarla.â
âIt isnât to the point, Merrik. It makes no difference if I believed her a crone or a Christianâs angel. Sheâs a princess. She is to wed William. It is good for William that she is open and friendly, or at least pretends to it.â
âIf Ragnor of York has raped her, no man of high rank will wed her and you know it.â
Cleve just looked at his friend, his hand unconsciously going to the beautifully worked knife at his belt.
This was interesting, Merrik thought. He made his way to where Eller sat, tapped him on the shoulder, and took over his oar. Soon he was stripped to his loincloth, his back glistening with sweat.
6
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T HE SKY WAS darker than the bottom of a witchâs caldron. The storm was close now. There was no wind, no movement of any kind. The huge wadmal square sail was hanging loosely as the flesh on an old manâs neck. It was hard to breathe, the air was so thick and still. It seemed that the earth had simply stopped.
The storm was closer now. It had to be because surely they couldnât continue like this, the warship like a ghost, eerie and silent in the water, no sound, no squawking of gulls overhead, no lapping of waves against the overlapping oak plank sides of the ship. Even the sea serpentâs head that stretched up above the prow looked strangely