Wild Viking Princess (13 page)

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Authors: Anna Markland

Tags: #Historical Romance, #Medieval Romance, #Vikings, #Love Story, #Romance, #Historical

BOOK: Wild Viking Princess
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He shrugged and kissed her forehead. “Be truthful, Ragna, my opinion would have made no difference. But for what it’s worth, I approve. And you won’t be too far away from Wolfenberg here in Strand. No treacherous sea crossing; just a short cruise to Hamburg, and then overland.”

She hugged him. “Thank you, Dieter. No wonder Blythe loves you. And thank you for coming to my rescue. Just one more favour.”

He arched his brows. “Of course.”

“I’ll be writing to Aidan, to explain. Perhaps a letter from you would help reassure him?”

Dieter chuckled. “It would be my pleasure. He’ll have a difficult time believing the story.”

Ragna laughed. “But he’ll be excited to hear of our Danish ancestors. I plan to learn of Kjartan’s family’s history.”

Reider joined them and put his arm possessively around Ragna’s shoulders. “I apologise, Count Dieter, that I have not welcomed you properly to our lands, and thanked you for saving Ragna’s life. I hope you will stay for our wedding.”

Ragna clapped her hands together. “Yes, please stay, Dieter, then you can tell Blythe.”

Dieter shook Reider’s hand. “Of course I will stay, and let’s dispense with my title. We will soon be brothers-by-marriage.”

Ragna liked the sound of that. Pride in her future husband filled her heart.

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

 

Reider took Ragna’s hand. How to explain what must be done before they could be married? “Ragna, if I had my way, you and I would marry today. But Kjartan has discovered that my father was hastily buried in an ordinary grave, like a mere thrall. He will not find peace in the afterlife until he is honoured with the proper burial rites. He will wander as a
draugr
.”

Ragna frowned and looked to Dieter who explained, “A revenant.”

She shivered and nodded her understanding.

Reider continued. “I cannot be recognised as the rightful heir until my father’s spirit is laid to rest. I must drink the
sjaund
.”

Ragna again looked to Dieter for help. “The funeral ale.”

She squeezed Reider’s hands in reassurance. “Of course, I understand. My parents’ bodies were never found after they drowned. It was my father’s wish to be buried in the crypt at Montbryce Castle in Normandie alongside his father. I have often worried that their souls wander somewhere, searching—”

He embraced her, relieved she understood. “Thank you for understanding.”

But he worried about other traditions he must follow that she might not be willing to accept. She had strong opinions concerning thralls, but he owned many, as befitted his rank. He had lain with more than one of the female slaves to alleviate his male needs. It was their purpose, but he had never spilled his seed inside any of them. He did not want to sire bastards who would be born into slavery. He dreaded telling Ragna about his slaves. Better sooner than later.

He looked Dieter in the eyes and gave him an unmistakable signal. The Saxon nodded and took his leave.

~~~

Reider drew Ragna over to a bench in a quiet corner and pulled her onto his lap. “Ragna, you and I are from different places. I have been to your country, but you know little of mine. We have different ways of doing things, different beliefs. I hope those differences will not come between us. You are a woman of strong opinions.”

Ragna clutched his hand and gazed at it, brushing her thumb over his knuckles. “I share your fears, Reider. I have never been known for my tolerance of things I disagree with.”

Reider moved his legs to change her position. The pressure of her bottom on his
pik
had produced the inevitable result. She must be aware of it. “Your strong-mindedness is one of the things that draws me to you. But there are some things about being a Dane I cannot change.”

She turned in his lap and put her hands around his neck. “Such as?”

The ache in his loins intensified each time she moved. “Ragna, in England and Normandie, your great lords have
coloni
. What is their role in life?”

She looked at him curiously. “To serve their master. They are bondservants.”

He took a deep breath. “You did not hesitate to answer, yet are they not the same as the thralls who serve us? Your
coloni
are not free to come and go anywhere they please, are they? Neither are our thralls.”

He felt her tense. “But a
colonus
is given land to work, protection, and access to justice.”

He tightened his grip on her waist. “But whose land, whose justice? He is bound to his lord, is he not? And he must work his lord’s land before his own.”

She squirmed in his lap, obviously uncomfortable, as was he. “But a bondservant works for all, his master fights for all, and priests pray for all. Each man has his role. A lord cannot sell his bondservants.”

Reider glanced around the Hall as the sounds of jovial voices reached his ears. Dieter appeared engrossed in a conversation with Ivar, but his eyes kept drifting in their direction. Reider could not blame the Saxon for his concern for his sister-by-marriage, and he feared this discussion might turn into an argument, but had to persist. “Does Kirkthwaite Hall have bondservants?”

Ragna shook her head vigorously. “No, Aidan is not a great baron, just a knight. We have tenant farmers who farm our land.”

“We too have freedmen who tend farms, but we have thralls who are not free. Some are born into thralldom, others captured—”

“Or rescued,” she interrupted angrily.

Reider took a deep breath. “You say bondservants cannot be sold, but if an English lord sells some land, the bondservants must go to a new master,
ja
?”

She got off his lap and sat beside him, tapping her foot. Not a good sign. “If one of your bondservants in England has a child, is the child free?”

She pouted and shook her head.

Dare he go further? “Ragna, if you were a bondservant, would you be free to marry any man of your choosing?”

She looked at her feet. “No.”

He held her hand tenderly. “The same is true of our thralls.”

Suddenly, she glared up at him. “Do you have thralls?”

This was the moment he had dreaded. “It is my right as the Prince of Strand to own thralls.”

Ragna jumped to her feet. He held on to her hand. Dieter had turned to face them, no longer hiding his interest. “Do not judge me, Ragna. You either love me for what I am, or not.”

She sat back down, but did not look at him. “What do these thralls of yours do for you?”

Reider touched his fingers to her chin. “Look at me, Ragna. My thralls see to my needs. They feed me, clothe me, bathe me, labour in my fields, my forests. In return I feed them, clothe them, protect them. Most of my thralls were born into slavery, second and third generation descendants of prisoners of war plundered ages ago. They have known no other life. I treat them well. They serve me in whatever way I need them.”

Understanding dawned in her eyes and her mouth fell open. “You are trying to tell me you have lain with some of your thralls?”

He clenched his jaw and prayed for her trust. “I am a man, Ragna, with a man’s needs. But I have never sired bastards with any of my thralls. I have made sure of it.”

A tear trickled down her cheek. “But how can I live with these women you have bedded?”

He took a deep breath. “Ragna, they will be honoured to be your slaves. I am fond of them, but it is you I love. They take great pride in having bedded the son of the king, but they will not think less of you because of it. Did you think I come to our marriage a virgin? Was Aidan a virgin when he wed, or Dieter when he married Blythe? It does not mean I love you less. It means I’ve learned how to please a woman. Is it not what you want?”

She came to her feet slowly, still not willing to look at him. “I need time to consider what you have told me, Reider.”

He stood with her. Dread had settled in the pit of his stomach. Had he lost her? He struggled to keep his voice steady. “We have time. It will take a few days to prepare for my father’s funeral.”

He hesitated, afraid that what he must tell her next might alienate her forever. “My father will take his favourite thrall with him into the afterlife.”

She frowned. “I do not understand.”

He cradled her head in his hands, brushing his thumbs along her headband, willing her to look at him. “When my father was murdered, Gorm took his thralls. They resented serving a man who was not their rightful lord. One in particular, my father’s favourite, Sigrun, was bereft, and tried to take her life. She loved my father and does not wish to serve another. She wants her life to end. It is a great honour to accompany a chieftain on his death voyage.”

Ragna frowned and finally raised her eyes to look at him. The colour drained from her face. “She will be killed?”

“It’s what she wants.”

Ragna gasped and tore away, a hand clamped over her mouth. “I am going to be sick.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

 

Elaborate preparations for the funeral progressed, but Ragna stewed in a fog. She saw little of Reider and Kjartan and spent most of her time wandering along the beach, glad of Thor’s company. Often Dieter joined her.

They watched the construction of the stone ship on a headland overlooking the sea. Reider had explained it was his father’s favourite place in all his lands. Thralls used shovels to cut the outline of a ship into the earth, then embedded large chunks of rock into the ground. At either end of the ship they erected a stone as tall as a man. It took ten thralls to wrestle each one into place.

In the centre of the ship they built a square wooden shelter. Ragna asked Dieter about it.

“The central structure is the death house, the bier where they will place Reider’s father. It will be his funeral pyre.”

She shivered. “They will burn his body?”


Ja
! The Danes believe the smoke carries the soul to Valhalla. The more smoke, the better the chances Torfinn will reach the end of his journey quickly.”

A heavy certainty crept into Ragna’s thoughts. “But what of Sigrun?”

Dieter took her hand. “She will lie on the funeral pyre and journey with him.”

Bile rose in Ragna’s throat again. She dreaded the question she must ask. “Surely they will not burn her alive?”

Dieter’s face was solemn, but he kept a firm grip on her hand. “Such used to be the tradition, but it is more likely Reider will make sure she is dead before they light the pyre.”

Revulsion shuddered through her and she shook her head. “I cannot live among these people, Dieter. They are barbaric.”

Dieter remained silent for a long while as they walked hand in hand. He stooped to pick up a stick and threw it into the water for Thor to retrieve. They watched the dog plunge into the waves then paddle towards the floating stick. Dieter turned to look at her, his expression serious. “Ragna, you forget that you are part of this heritage. Vikings have held these beliefs for hundreds of years. Your grandfather four generations ago, the man who carved your beloved dagger, would have accepted these traditions without question. He probably took several thralls with him when he was cremated. Because customs are different from the ones you have grown up with does not make them barbaric. Is it not true that William the Conqueror inflicted acts of great barbarity on the Saxon people of England, yet your own grandfather, Ram de Montbryce, fought for him, would have willingly given his life for his Conqueror?”

Ragna nodded mutely. Dieter spoke the truth, but could she live with a man whose customs repelled her?

Thor returned with the stick grasped firmly in his teeth, then dropped it and shook vigorously, showering them with water. She squealed and they both laughed as Dieter picked up the stick to throw it again. “He will probably expect me to do this all day long!”

Ragna took a deep breath. “He will.” It felt good to laugh, if only for a moment. She was supposed to be preparing for her wedding. Why did she feel unhappy? Perhaps she was too stubborn and opinionated to change her ideas for a man, even one she loved. Could she have been too hasty in accepting his proposal?

~~~

Torfinn’s weapons were gathered, along with his clothing and symbols of kingship. Thralls sewed fine funeral robes for Torfinn and Sigrun. Dry wood was stacked against the sides of the death house.

Reider arranged for Torfinn’s grave to be opened, and he returned to the Ringhouse grim-faced after witnessing the task. He said nothing when she took his hand and pressed it to her lips. He strode away quickly, leaving her feeling bereft and useless.

The next day she wandered out to sit on a log on the beach, transfixed by the gaunt sight of the stone ship. She heard footsteps behind her and knew when she turned she would see Reider. His face was grim, his jaw clenched. “All is in readiness. The funeral will be this afternoon, before the sun goes down.”

She bit her bottom lip and turned away. Anguish was written in every line of his face and in the stiffness of his body. She wanted to comfort him, but still struggled with what was to happen. His hoarse voice broke into her thoughts. “You must prepare, Ragna. It is expected for you to attend. You are my betrothed.”

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