Avelynn: The Edge of Faith (41 page)

Read Avelynn: The Edge of Faith Online

Authors: Marissa Campbell

BOOK: Avelynn: The Edge of Faith
10.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Alrik,” Gil pressed. “I choose mercy. Do you hear me?”

“I hear you. I will honor your choice, provided you speak the truth.”

Gil nodded and hung his head.

Alrik motioned to Hyffaid and Llewelyn. They stood in front of Gil, who struggled to stay upright. Pain etched in the hard lines of his face, sweat dripping into his eyes, his skin washed of color.

Leaning on his sword, Gil pulled himself up until he sat before them. “The charges are true. I conspired—” Gil had started in English.

“In Welsh—and speak these words loud and clear.” Alrik interrupted. “I would have your people hear this from your own lips, so there is no confusion or doubt.”

Gil started over, his words translated in Norse and English for the remainder to hear. “The charges are true. I conspired with Rhodri to kill Gwgon. We provided Seisyllwg in exchange for a peace treaty promising me unmolested control of Dyfed once Hyffaid perished. Avelynn was taken and shipped to Aberffraw, where she would await the English. Rhodri would receive the bounty of gold on her head.”

Gil spat at Hyffaid’s feet. “I would have been king of Dyfed. You would be dead, and my mother would have seen her efforts come to pass. It is through my mother’s line that the rightful king of Dyfed should have ruled. It is through her that the line of kings should have prospered. Not you.” He strained for breath, his eyes bloodshot from pain.

Silence enveloped Gil’s confession.

Alrik held his hand out to Tollak. “Give me Widow Maker.” Tollak placed the long-handled axe in his grip. Alrik stepped in front of Sigy. “You do not deserve mercy.”

Cormac released his grip on Sigy’s neck and stepped away. Sigy’s face pulsed with a purple tinge from lack of air, her voice hoarse. “I should have let my daughter kill your little kunte when she had the chance.”

Her eyes burned bright with hatred. Alrik swung, and the flames died. Sigy’s head rolled to a stop at Gil’s feet.

Gil struggled to control his emotions. “Thank you.”

Alrik grabbed the box Llewelyn had stood on and dropped it in the mud in front of Gil. “Kneel.”

Gill hobbled forward and closed his eyes, as if in benediction. He stretched his neck over the wood.

Despite his desire to see Gil suffer, Alrik was not a cruel man. With the axe raised high in the air, mercy at last swooped down.

No one moved. I suspected everyone needed a moment to absorb what had transpired. The confession couldn’t have gone better if we’d planted Gil’s words ourselves. Alrik was absolved of murder, and for now, I’d managed to skirt the haunting spectre of witchcraft.

In time, Bleddyn’s men marched away, presumably to head back to Gwynedd or to await Rhodri’s arrival with his new wife, ready to assume control of Seisyllwg. Hyffaid’s men retreated behind the gate, and Gil’s followers regrouped, most likely trying to determine their best chances of survival. They had after all gone against their rightful king.

Hyffaid promised to honor our agreement. To that end, no sooner had the gate closed than it reopened, and two men rolled out a cart burdened with chests. The cart stopped in front of Alrik, and the men beat a hasty retreat back to Hyffaid’s ranks. Alrik lifted the lids and inspected their contents. I peered around him. Gold and silver filled the deep boxes to their rims. Alrik nodded to his men, and the Vikings left the field. Each Northman took an opportunity to pat Alrik on the back or share a look of solidarity.

Back on Raven’s Blood, I stood at Alrik’s side. I’d bandaged his shoulder. It was a deep wound, but I’d cleaned it and threaded five lengths of thorn through the skin, as I’d seen Sigy do when tending to Cormac’s wound. I admitted with petulance that not everything the witch had done was evil.

One of his hands gripped the steering board; the other drew me close. We would head north, skirting the land of the Picts, and then travel southeast to the land of the Rus. We both needed rest and time to reassess our plans for the future. I understood his longing for the familiarity of home. I would have given anything to return to mine, and perhaps in time, I would. I thought of Plegmund’s letters and the promise they held. But after all we’d been through, I hoped to find a place where we wouldn’t have to run—where, for a short while, we could be safe.

He kissed the top of my forehead, his free hand playing with the short curls at the ridge of my neck. “This will take some getting used to.”

I reached up and patted my hair self-consciously.

He clasped my hand. “It will grow back.”

We were both silent, listening to the lap of the sea, the call of the gulls, and the whistle of the wind. Tollak gave a great shout, and Raven’s Blood shot forward. Powerful bodies rowed us out to sea, the bow trained to the horizon. Devastation, despair, treason, and treachery wafted behind us like a foul odor, the fresh sea breeze cleansing the whole. I didn’t know what awaited us in this new chapter. There were wounds to heal between us, but I was confident that, together, we could overcome anything. No matter what happened, no matter where we went, in his arms I was home.

The end
Avelynn

One extraordinary Saxon noblewoman and one fearless Viking warrior find passion and danger in this dazzling and sensuous debut.

It was the year 869. For eighteen years, Avelynn, the beautiful and secretly pagan daughter of the Ealdorman of Somerset, has lived in an environment of love, acceptance, and equality. Somerset has flourished under twenty years of peace. But with whispers of war threatening their security, Avelynn's father makes an uncompromising decision that changes her life forever.

Forced into a betrothal with Demas, a man who only covets her wealth and status, Avelynn's perception of independence is shattered. With marriage looming, she turns to her faith, searching for answers in an ancient ritual along the coast, only to find that Alrik the Blood-Axe and sixty Viking berserkers have landed.

In a year of uncertainty that sees Avelynn discover hidden powers, stumble into a passionate love affair with Alrik, and lead men into battle, she must walk a fine line as her deceptions mount and Demas’s tactics to possess her become more desperate and increasingly brutal.

Avelynn and Alrik are caught in the throes of fate as they struggle to find the way back to themselves and onwards to each other.

Marissa Campbell is the author of the Avelynn series and coauthor of the award-winning self-help book,
Life: Living in Fulfillment Every Day
. She is a proud member of the Historical Novel Society and Romance Writers of America. An E-RYT hatha yoga instructor and studio owner, Campbell lives in Ontario, Canada, with her three amazing sons, dashingly handsome hubby, and adorable golden retriever, Razz.

Contact

Facebook
www.facebook.com/AuthorMarissaCampbell
Google+
plus.google.com/u/0/107733414564782650407/posts
Twitter
twitter.com/marissa_author
tumblr
marissacampbellauthor.tumblr.com
Instagram
www.instagram.com/marissacampbell_author
Pinterest
www.pinterest.com/marissaauthor
LinkedIn
ca.linkedin.com/in/marissacampbellauthor
YouTube
www.youtube.com/channel/UC4Ca4KNGTVJlVIZ73pT1GjQ

Thanks for purchasing and reading this ebook. Authors love it when readers review their work on Amazon, Goodreads, Barnes and Noble, blogs, or wherever else they think of. When you talk about something you’ve read, not only does it make authors ridiculously happy, it also lets other readers know it’s a great read and they should run out and buy it. So if you enjoy something you’ve read (like this book), please review it! Authors will love you forever if you do.

Ebook conversion by
EBookBuilders

Other books

Ancient Echoes by Joanne Pence
Feathered Serpent by Colin Falconer
The Ghost Hunter by Lori Brighton
Life in Shadows by Elliott Kay
It's Always Been You by Victoria Dahl
Still Thinking of You by Adele Parks
The Nesting Dolls by Gail Bowen