A beam of light stabbed me in the eyes, and I silently cursed Vragi for leaving the door open when he went outside to piss. Groaning, I rolled away from the light, then froze as my cheek brushed over fur of unfamiliar texture.
Memory slammed into me: Vragiâs laughter as he betrayed me, Geir crawling on the ground, my hand consumed by the fire of a god, and painâ¦pain like nothing Iâd experienced before.
Pain that was nowâ¦
I sat up, the furs covering me falling away. My clothes were my own, marked with blood and bits of ash, stinking of sweat and fish, but that was the least of my concerns as I stared down at my hand.
It was still wrapped with moss, but the plant was now dry and dead. I tentatively touched the moss with my left hand, equal parts desperate and terrified to see what lay beneath.
âI told you the gods favored you,â a voice said, and I straightened to find Jarl Snorri standing next to the hangings separating the space from the rest of the hall. âThey wished for you to be revealed by fire, not to be consumed by it.â
I wasnât convinced that was true, given my circumstances, but I kept my mouth shut as he crossed over to the bed. Without asking, he pulled the moss free, bits of dead plant and ash falling onto the dark furs. My breath caught as I saw what lay beneath.
âMake a fist,â he ordered.
I dutifully did so, muscles and tendons obeying with minimal protest.
âUgly,â he said. âBut strong enough to grip a weapon, and the seer said nothing of you uniting Skaland with your looks.â
I tried and failed not to flinch, hunting for gratitude that I hadnât lost use of my hand and finding it lacking. For I saw what Snorri saw. Scars. The skin was twisted and stretched, in some places pink and in others completely white. Turning it over revealed that Livâs magic had replaced the skin that the fire had melted away, but it was thick and almost devoid of sensation. My eyes burned with tears, and I blinked rapidly, not wanting Snorri to see that his comment had stung. Not wanting to know how vain I truly was.
Snorri retreated from the room and returned with a shield painted bright yellow and red. âGet up.â He held out the heavy wooden circle. âProve that you can call Hlinâs magic when your life isnât on the line.â
The floor was cold beneath my bare feet as I slid off the bed and accepted the shield, the muscles of my left arm straining to support it. âAnd if I canât?â
Snorri eyed me silently. âFailure always has a price, Freya. But it isnât always paid by the one who fails.â
A prickle of fear skittered down my back. With Geir injured, my family was at the mercy of Snorriâs men.
Swallowing hard, I hefted the shield and squared my shoulders.
I silently prayed.
Then I parted my lips and invoked her name, âHlin.â
A familiar silver glow streaked out of the fingertips of my left hand, covering the shield and rendering it nearly weightless. It illuminated the room, casting shadows off Snorriâs smiling face. Tentatively, he reached out to touch the shield, then trailed his fingers over the smooth surface of the magic.
I wished it would fling him back as it had Bjorn. Wished it would launch him with such violence as to shatter his body. But it did not.
âYouâll be a force to be reckoned with on the battlefield,â he breathed. âSteinunn has already begun her composition, and with her song, word of our strength will spread like wildfire. Soon all will swear oaths to me.â
âHow?â I demanded. âHow does my ability to protect in battle make such a huge difference?â
His eyes flared bright. âBecause the seer told me it was so, which means the gods have seen it.â
Had seen me being used like a toolâand that sat poorly with me. âHow can you be certain the seer meant you?â
His face darkened and I instantly regretted running my mouth; I was always saying the first things that came to my mind despite having suffered consequences for doing so time and again.
âBecause the seer spoke the prophecy to Snorri, not anyone else, you idiot girl.â Ylva stepped around a hanging, coming toward us. âDisregard her ignorance, my love. Sheâs the daughter of a farmer. The wife of a fishmonger. This is probably the first time sheâs been more than a few miles from the hovel her mother birthed her in.â
Every one of those things was true, but I still bristled at the implication that they made me ignorant or stupid. My parents had taught me the history of our people and the stories of the gods, but more than that, theyâd taught me what I needed to survive. I opened my mouth to demand if she could claim as much, but before I could, Ylva said, âOnce you are wed, Snorri will control your fate, because he will control Which is why the wedding will be today.â
I swallowed my dismay even as I watched Snorriâs jaw tighten. âWe should wait for Friggâs Day so as to ensure the union is blessed,â he said.
Ylva huffed out a loud breath. âAnd risk someone else stealing her? You claim her, husband. All of Skaland must know that the shield maiden is â
As though I were a cow. Or a pig. Or worse, a brood mare, though given he had Bjorn for an heir, I doubted children were what he sought from me. Even if they were, there were ways other than lemons to prevent such things. But my skin still crawled at the thought of being bedded by this man.
I silently ordered myself.
I had to, because my family depended on it.
Snorri exhaled a long breath, his gaze fixed on his wife. âThis union is a slap to your face, my love. I wish there was another way, but the gods demand this of us.â
The declaration was unexpected, at least for me. I lowered my head, embarrassed to be caught in the midst of this conversation, for I sensed that Snorriâs sentiment was genuine.
Through my eyelashes, I watched Ylvaâs face soften, and my discomfort grew as she drew toward her husband, kissing him passionately. My cheeks burned and I moved my gaze to the floor, fighting the desire to edge past them and escape this moment.
âYou do this as much for me as for yourself.â Ylvaâs voice was velvet soft. âIt is only a matter of time until Harald crosses the strait, and we have not the strength to fight him. Skaland must be united, and it is the will of the gods that they will be united beneath your rule. It is a sacrifice to share your hand with another, but one I will gladly accept to protect our people from our enemies.â
My stomach twisted with unexpected guilt, because Iâd not considered that either of them had a higher purpose.
âYou are the greatest blessing the gods have bestowed upon me, Ylva,â Snorri murmured, and my cheeks heated as they embraced, their roaming hands suggesting that if not for my presence, theyâd be ridding themselves of their clothing. That they might anyway, my presence be damned. So I dropped the shield.
The second it left my grip, the magic disappeared, and it landed with a loud clatter against the floor, the pair jerking apart.
âApologies,â I murmured. âI seem not to have fully recovered my strength.â
Snorri snorted, not fooled by the lie. Yet he stepped back from Ylva even as he said to her, âPrepare for the feast, my love. And prepare Freya to be my bride.â
â
The servants descended like a horde of raiders, stripping me of my clothing and pushing me into a bath so hot, it nearly scalded my skin. Though I was hardly used to being bathed by others, that wasnât what consumed my thoughts as I was scrubbed with soap and polished with sand until my skin was nearly raw. It was that in the space of a day, my entire life had been turned upside down, the gods giving and taking in equal measure.
Seers did not lie.
They had the blood of Odin himself, and they spoke with the knowledge of the gods, though their prophecy was rarely clear until the events they foretold came to pass. So if the seer spoke these words directly to Snorri, they were the truth, in some fashion. It was possible that Snorri was lying, butâ¦my gut told me his fervor was genuine.
Because it explained my father had ordered me to keep my magic secret.
Children of the gods were created when one of the gods gifted a child a drop of their divine blood upon conception. In some instances, the gods were active participants in the sex, but it was not necessaryâthey need only be present for the act of creation. Which meant that while some parents might suspect the third party of their tryst had gifted them a child with divine blood, some were entirely oblivious until the day the childâs magic appeared. The latter had been the case for me.
The truth had been revealed when I was seven and had shouted Hlinâs name while fighting with Geir. It was a game all children played despite it earning smacks from any adult in earshot for disrespecting the gods: Shout the name of one known to grant their blood and see if magic manifested. Geir and I had invoked Tyr and Thor and Freyja and countless other of the gods, but not once had I thought of Hlin. It had only been because the fight had gotten out of hand, my brotherâs stick falling heavy on my tiny shield, that Iâd grown desperate, calling the goddessâs name. The magic that came to my aid hadnât thrown Geir the way it had Bjorn, but it had sent him sprawling.
And my father had witnessed it all.
Never in my life had I seen such a look of panic on his face as I did in that moment; the wideness of his eyes and the slackness of his open mouth were emblazoned on my memory. As was the way he had shaken me so hard my teeth rattled, his breath hot in my face as he shouted, âYou never say her name again! Do you hear me? You never say her name!â Then heâd rounded on Geir, gripping my brother by the arms so hard it had left bruises. âYou never tell anyone what happened this day! Your sisterâs life depends on it!â
His reaction made more of an impact on me than the magic itself, and for a long time, fear of seeing my father angered had kept the goddessâs name from my lips and questions off my tongue. But time tempered my fear and fueled my curiosity. Children of the gods were rare, Vragi the only one Iâd seen with my own eyes, but stories of deeds done by those with magic filled the air at every gathering. Those with godâs blood were fabled and honored, and I wanted to join their ranks. Wanted to fight in battles and have my victories sung about by skalds, but every time I gained the nerve to press my father about my magic was to be hidden, heâd react with fury. Realizing that heâd give me no answers, it wasnât long until I was sneaking out and experimenting, most often with Geir along with me.
Of course we got caught.
My fatherâs wrath had been a thing to behold, a terrible twist of anger and fear that no child wishes to see in their parentâs eyes as heâd again forbidden me to use my magic.
âWhy must I hide it when no one else does?â Iâd demanded. âIn every story about children of the gods, the gift of blood and magic is treated as an honor, but you act as though Iâve been cursed. Tell me why!â
âBecause you are Hlinâs child, Freya. The only one alive,â he said. âAnd you were born under the blood moon. If anyone discovers this truth, you will be used. Used and fought over by men with power until you are dead. Do you understand?â Heâd shouted the last in my face. âIf anyone learns, your life will never be your own!â
Heâd refused further explanation of why Hlinâs blood made me uniquely coveted among the children of the gods, yet Iâd taken him at his word with the blind faith of a child who trusted her father above all others. Yet, also like a child, I hadnât My eyes stung because my father had known of the seerâs prophecy. Heâd once been one of Snorriâs trusted warriors, so heâd either witnessed the foretelling or been told about it, which was why heâd known what Snorri would do if my heritage were ever discovered. If only Iâd listenedâ¦
Iâd still be married to Vragi. Would be facing a lifetime of drudgery and cruelty beneath my husbandâs hand.
The Norns give.
And the Norns take.
âDoes it hurt?â
I jumped at the servantâs question, my thoughts vanquished. Sheâd been buffing the nails on my left hand and was now trimming what remained of the nails on my right hand. âNot like it did. Now it just aches like an injury years old.â
My words must have eased her mind, for her grip firmed on my hand, her brow furrowed as she cut away the blackened nail. âIs it true you wielded the Firehandâs axe to murder your own husband?â
was a strong word. âYes.â
I waited for the admission to trigger something in me. Relief. Guilt. Anything. Yet as before, I felt nothing.
âIâm sure he deserved it.â The servant frowned, then asked, âBut didnât you know that the axe would burn you?â
Had I known?
Logically, I suppose that I had, but that hadnât been my concern. It had been whether Iâd be able to wrest it from Bjornâs grip. It had been whether my aim would be true. âI needed a weapon, and it was the only one available.â
All the women paused to stare at me, but the one bent over my nails only giggled. âWorked out in your favor, I suppose. Iâd suffer a scald to sit on Bjornâs lap for a few hours.â
Anger swelled in my chest at the stupidity of her comment. At the idea that Iâd willingly endured the most traumatic moment of my life for the chance to sit in a manâs lap. âIt melted the skin off my palm. Turned my flesh to ash.â Spotting several flecks of said ash sitting on the edge of the tub, I bent my head and blew them in her face. âIf youâre willing to do so much to rub your arse against a manâs cock, youâre desperate indeed.â
I waited for the jab to land, wanting the petty satisfaction of seeing her embarrassment, but the womanâs dark eyes only met mine with a smile. âOr heâs that good in bed.â
All the other women laughed, and despite knowing the comment was foolish, it was me who flushed. Me who fell silent as they drew me from the bath and set to combing out the long lengths of my hair, trimming the ends so that bits of white gold covered the floor.
I gritted my teeth as the servant woman began to braid, my hair drawn so tight that my head ached. Taking a deep breath, I tried to turn my mind back to more pressing issues. But instead it lingered on Bjorn.
More heat rose to my cheeks as I remembered the things Iâd said to him with Liv present, comparing him to the god of beauty like a girl who hadnât had her first bleed, despite being a grown woman whoâd endured a year of marriage. Visions of my behavior replayed through my mind, my horror growing with each passing moment. Bad enough that weâd had our flirtation on the beach. At least then weâd had no notion of each otherâs identity, but then Iâd gone on to all but declare my lust for him in front of Liv, fully aware that I was intended to wed his father. It was no wonder heâd been mortified. While it was tempting to blame Livâs narcotics for my behavior, all theyâd done was loosen my tongue of the truth.
When I closed my eyes, the vision of him coming out of the water filled my mindâs eye, all tattooed skin and muscle, not a spare ounce of flesh on him. Every bit a warrior, and that faceâ¦Mortals shouldnât be allowed such beauty for it made fools of everyone else, his silver tongue making it all the worse because even if heâd been ugly as a pigâs arse, Bjorn was bloody charming. Yes, heâd very nearly killed me when weâd been forced to fight, but given that Iâd been equally willing to put a sword through his heart, it seemed petty to hold it against him.
I chided myself.
I might as well have told myself to flap my arms and fly for all the good my admonitions did. Bjornâs face, his body, and the ghostly echoes of his touch tormented my thoughts as the servants finished my braids and painted my eyes with kohl, the fantasies only vanquished when they brought me the dress I was to wear. Finer than anything Iâd ever seen, the dress was thin white wool, the shoes butter-soft leather, and the jewelryâ¦Not in all my life had I dreamed of wearing such wealth, my throat and wrists wrapped with silver and gold, one of the women pushing needles through my earlobes so that I might wear the heavy earrings.
Then Ylva appeared carrying a bridal crown.
It was made of twisted wires of gold and silver strung with pieces of polished amber the same color as my eyes. Ylva herself fastened it to my braids with endless tiny pins. She turned me to face a round piece of polished metal so that I might see my appearance, the servants all smiling and laughing, pleased with their efforts.
âFinally,â Ylva breathed. âFinally, you look like a child of the gods.â
I stared at my reflection, feeling as though I stared into the eyes of a stranger.
Ylva placed a mantle of gleaming white fur over my shoulders, my braids almost indistinguishable in color as she smoothed them over the expensive pelt. âSnorri will be pleased.â Then she snapped her fingers. âGloves. She must be perfection.â
All eyes immediately moved to my right hand, and I fought the urge to hide my scarred fingers in the pocket of my dress, not sure what was worse, disgust or pityâonly that I hated both. So I voiced no argument when one of them handed me a pair of white wool gloves, feeling no sensation in my right palm as I pulled them on.
The crack Geirâs leg had made when Snorri had broken it filled my head and I flinched, because I knew so much worse could be done.
I needed to be numb. To do what needed to be done, to say the things that needed to be said, and to what these people wanted me to be, because those I loved most depended on my compliance.
And I refused to fail them, no matter how much it cost me.