Then Steven seemed to calm himself. He looked Eirik levelly in the eyes, momentarily sane, and whispered brokenly, “Brother…” At the same time, he jerked his head forward, deliberately cutting his own throat. Blood spurted everywhere, but still a horrified Eirik held Steven upright by the arms.
And Eirik could not see for the tears which misted his eyes for his most hated enemy.
Chapter Twenty
Eadyth looked at the parchment in her hands and read it again, trying to understand:
Eadyth,
It is over
Eirik
What did it mean? Wilfrid had returned with the men that evening, bringing Godric home safely, thank the Lord. But Eirik had gone to Jorvik with Tykir, leaving no word for her when he might return to Ravenshire.
It is over. Did it mean the struggle with Steven of Gravely was finally over? Or did it mean he considered their marriage over?
Eadyth quizzed Wilfrid repeatedly and got no answers. Oh, Wilfrid had told Eadyth about Steven’s last words, and her heart went out to her husband and to Tykir, who must suffer greatly knowing they shared blood with such a demon. Or mayhap they grieved as well because they had never been able to help Steven as a boy before his mind became twisted from abuse.
Eadyth replayed the events of the past few days in her mind. Should she have gone to Eirik and told him all, even at the risk of Godric’s life and his own, as well? Eirik apparently thought so.
Would she have done things differently if she had a chance to do them over? Probably not, Eadyth admitted to herself. She was headstrong in her ways, just as Eirik had said.
Perhaps she could change. Maybe if she were able to remove all the objectionable characteristics Eirik had pointed out, Eirik would be pleased and grow to love her again. For the next few days, as Eirik stayed in Jorvik and sent no word to her, Eadyth deferred to Wilfrid in many matters regarding the estate, even when he looked at her oddly. Even when he performed his duties in a manner she considered less than satisfactory or in a way she could do better.
She did not raise her voice shrewishly, not once, even when Bertha belched loudly in the hall.
She spent more time with the children, tutoring them and telling them tales. Did that not make her more womanly, less mannish? Would that impress her husband?
If only Eirik would return, somehow she would make it up to him for all the ways in which she had wronged him. She ached for the return of her husband, for the love she had apparently lost.
And she ached for other reasons, as well. For throughout all those days that Eirik stayed away, Eadyth retched every morning, ate ravenously the remainder of the day, and wept spontaneously at the least provocation.
She was carrying Eirik’s child. She was gloriously happy. And she was extremely unhappy that she could not share the good news with her husband. Would he even consider it good news now?
“Send a message to the lackwit in Jorvik and tell him of the babe,” Girta advised. “He will come when he learns of your condition.”
“Nay. I want him to come because he loves me, not because of my child.”
“And if he does not return?”
“Oh, Girta,” Eadyth cried, throwing herself into her old nurse’s arms. “I could not bear it if he never came back to me.”
Then an insidious thought began to creep into Eadyth’s mind as a sennight went by and she still had no word from her errant husband.
Could he be with Asa?
Nay, he would not go to her. He told me he had given her up, that he preferred me, the other side of her mind countered.
But that was afore I lied to him.
Well, if the bastard prefers another woman, let him go.
Eadyth thought about that last possibility for only one moment. Nay! Bloody Hell, nay! I will not allow another woman to have my husband.
And Eadyth reverted back to her old ways. With brisk efficiency, she ordered Wilfrid to bring her horse, along with two guards to accompany her. She was going to Jorvik.
And then, being the ever-practical business woman that she was, she decided there was no sense wasting a trip to the market town without bringing some of her honey and candles to her agent. And mayhap she could sell some wool, as well. Therefore, she told Wilfrid to get the cart and a driver.
“And there might be a buyer for those extra cherries and the embroidered cloths Girta has been working on,” she told Wilfrid. Soon the seneschal was rolling his eyes heavenward, but he muttered, “’Tis good to see you back to your old self, my lady.”
When she got to Jorvik toward evening, Eadyth headed directly for her agent’s home, where she usually stayed on her trips to the city. She discussed her business affairs with Bertrand that night, and the next day she headed to the orphanage outside the city where Eirik’s “Uncle” Selik and his second wife Rain, Eirik and Tykir’s half sister, lived.
The happy pair greeted Eadyth warmly after she introduced herself amidst the din of dozens of children screaming and crying and laughing. Eadyth could only gape at the striking couple. Rain was almost as tall as her Viking husband. Both were blond-haired and beautiful. They continually touched each other as they passed in their everyday duties, the love between them apparent to all.
Amazingly, Rain was a healer, an unusual occupation for a woman, and she ran her own small hospitium on the orphanage grounds. Selik owned trading vessels which traveled around the world to market towns. Eadyth soon realized she might strike an advantageous arrangement with him for carrying some of her bee products.
“I am sorry we could not come to your wedding,” Rain said. “I was not feeling well at the time, and Selik was concerned about my traveling this late in my pregnancy.” She patted her stomach, and Eadyth could not stop looking at Rain’s huge belly. Eadyth’s eyes welled with tears when Selik came up behind his wife and placed his hands lovingly over their unborn child, kissing Rain’s neck. Eadyth had never seen a married couple demonstrate their love so publicly before, and she found herself filled with envy.
Seeing Eadyth’s dismay, Rain asked Eadyth to sit with them. “What is wrong, Eadyth? How can we help you?”
“Have you seen Eirik?” Eadyth blurted out.
“About five days ago,” Selik said with a nod. “He came looking for helpers to refurbish his ship.”
“His ship?” Eadyth stiffened with annoyance. So, not only did her husband have a treasure room at home, but he owned a ship in Jorvik. And all the time she was jabbering away about her business ventures, he had his own trading ship. By the saints! If she did not want the lackwit so much, she might consider tossing him out on his ear.
Then another unsettling thought occurred to her. “Does he intend to sail himself?”
Selik looked uncertain. “He did not say.” Then he looked Eadyth over appraisingly. “Tell us why you are looking for your husband.”
Eadyth felt her face redden, but it was no time for pride now. She started at the beginning with her foolish charade and ended with Steven of Gravely’s disclosure.
Selik and Rain looked at each other oddly, then embraced tightly. Rain explained, with tear-filled eyes, “Selik and I—like so many others—have reasons to exult in Steven’s death.”
“Hmmm. Now I understand why Eirik seemed so upset,” Selik said. “He always was such a sensitive, somber boy. He takes things very seriously. And, no doubt, he hoped to spare our feelings.”
“Eirik? Somber?” Eadyth laughed. “Nay, you must refer to Tykir. Except for when he is angry, Eirik is ever teasing, or grinning, or winking.”
Rain and Selik both stared at her, gape-mouthed with amazement. Then Rain turned to Selik. “Have you ever heard Eirik tease anyone?”
“Never,” Selik said unequivocally. “And I have known the boy since he was in swaddling cloths.”
“And winking!” Rain laughed aloud. Then she took both of Eadyth’s hands in hers and squeezed warmly. “He must love you, dear, if you bring out that side of his character.”
Eadyth’s heart was warmed with h
ope, but it still brought her no closer to Eirik and a reconciliation. Selik and Rain invited Eadyth to stay with them, but she declined, wanting to be inside the city, closer to Eirik.
It was only midday when she returned to Jorvik, so she decided to look for Eirik at the harbor. She had gone but a short distance when she saw Tykir talking to a group of sailors who were loading a ship. With regret, she realized that he was preparing for a trading voyage. Would Eirik be going with him? she wondered miserably.
When Tykir saw her, his eyes brightened and he ended his conversation, sending the sailors off on some errand. “Eadyth! How wonderful to see you!” Opening his arms, he pulled Eadyth into his embrace. Then Tykir held her at his side with an arm looped over her shoulder and took her onto his ship.
“Where is he?” she asked immediately. “Have you seen Eirik?”
“Yea, of course I have seen him. He works on his ship near here. But Eirik went to Wessex yestereve to see King Edred and has not returned yet.”
“Will he be back today?”
He shrugged. “Eirik is not himself, Eadyth. He tells me naught.”
“I worry about him. My lies and the things Steven told him…” She broke off, unable to continue.
Tykir brushed some wisps of hair off her forehead with brotherly care. “He was shocked by Gravely’s disclosure. I will not deny that. We both were. But he has come to accept that he could have done naught to change the course of Steven’s life. We did not know of Steven’s existence when we were boys, and Eirik would have been only five when Steven was orphaned.”
She nodded. “And my lies? Will he forgive those?”
“Eadyth, really, just give Eirik time. He is a somber fellow, but—”
“Somber! Somber! Why dost everyone refer to Eirik as somber? The man is a rascal and you know it.”
“A rascal? Eirik?” He studied her for one long moment, then declared, “He must love you if he shows a rascally side to you and no other.”
It was much the same thing Selik and Rain had told her. But then Eadyth alarmed Tykir and surprised even herself by bursting into tears. Well, she told herself on a snuffling hic-cough, she had already retched up her stomach’s contents this morning. Now she was crying her eyes out. And soon, while she sat on a wine cask on Tykir’s deck, spilling her heart’s contents regarding her missing husband, she ate three apples, four honey cakes and twelve dried figs.
He gawked at her, astounded at her appetite. “Does the loathsome lout know?”
“Know what?”
“That you carry his ‘loathsome lout of a son’?”
She looked up quickly in surprise at Tykir’s insightful remark. “Nay, and do not tell him. I will not have him return to me out of obligation.”
An hour later, Tykir walked her back to her agent’s home. On the way, Tykir stopped suddenly at an eastern merchant’s stall, his eyes twinkling mischievously.
“I think I know the very thing to lure your husband home.”
“What?” she asked suspiciously.
When Omar, the trader, showed her the product that Tykir requested, Eadyth’s mouth formed a small “o” of wonder. “Do you think…nay, I could not…never…well, if you really think so.”
Eirik did not return to Jorvik that night, nor the next morning, and Eadyth began to panic. Tykir had told her that he would make sure Eirik came to her the minute he arrived, even if he had to truss him up and carry him. Eadyth was growing quite fond of her endearing brother-by-marriage.
Was it possible that Eirik had returned to Jorvik and refused to see her? After all, Tykir could not really force Eirik to do something he did not want to do. Or perchance he had come back to the city and had never gone to his ship. What if…
Eadyth reeled with pain at the possibility that Eirik might be with Asa, his former mistress. She could not sit and wait any longer. Eadyth dressed carefully in a pale lavender gunna over a cream-colored chemise. She left off the wimple, but wore the sheer violet head-rail she had worn for her wedding. A thin gold circlet held her head-rail in place, matching the gold-linked belt cinching her waist. She thought she looked quite well, considering her inner turmoil…until she got to Coppergate and found Asa’s jewelry stall, that is.
The petite, raven-haired beauty was a jewel. Eadyth felt like a lump of granite next to her. Wallowing in misery, Eadyth knew she could not compete with such a beautiful creature.
When Eadyth introduced herself, Asa’s eyes widened and she invited Eadyth to step into her home in the rear of the market stall. Eadyth looked around quickly at the small but immaculate home, decorated with several finely carved chairs and tables—probably from Eirik’s treasure room, she thought meanly. She tried to picture Eirik here with Asa, sitting before that fireplace, eating her food, going up to that cozy second-floor bedloft. Oh, Lord.
To her mortification, she burst into tears.
Eirik was thoroughly disgusted. He had just returned from Winchester where he had spent a day arguing with Edred and his advisors about their plans to invade Northumbria and all the shires who conspired against him with Archbishop Wulfstan and his uncle Eric Bloodaxe. His arguments had fallen on deaf ears. Edred would be waging a bloody war, and Northumbria would be the loser. Although Ravenshire would not be one of the targets, many of Eirik’s neighbors would be hit, and Eirik found himself in the unenviable position of having to choose sides amongst friends.
He had to return to Ravenshire as soon as possible, and not just because of the threats posed by Edred. Eirik was beginning to feel guilty over his treatment of Eadyth.
Hell’s flames, the woman was driving him mad. He hated her meddling, shrewish, managing ways. And he especially hated her lying to him about Steven of Gravely. But, Lord, he loved the woman to distraction. They would have to find a way to work out their problems.
He approached the harbor and saw Tykir loading his ship. He remembered that his brother would be leaving for Hedeby on the morrow. He would miss him sorely.
Tykir barely glanced up when he called out to him. Tykir’s stiff demeanor bespoke a coiled anger.
“Now what?”
“Your wife is in Jorvik looking for you,” Tykir informed him flatly when he finished handing some barrels to his crew members.
Eirik raised a brow quizzically. “Eadyth? In Jorvik? Looking for me?”
“Taking lessons from your parrot now, are you, Eirik?”
“Yea, and I need no lessons in sarcasm from you, my brother. Why is my wife looking for me?”
Tykir put his hands on his hips and glared at him. “You are a lackwit. Why the hell do you think she seeks you out? To tend her bees?”
“I do not care for the tone of your voice.”
“And what do you intend to do about it?”
Eirik clenched his fists angrily and could not believe he was about to strike his own brother. Breathing deeply, in and out, he calmed his temper and asked with forced politeness, “Brother dear, why is my wife in Jorvik?”
“Because the mindless maid misses her loathsome lout of a husband, brother dear,” Tykir retorted with equal sweetness. “And because she is worried sick about you.” Tykir exhaled loudly with disgust and advised, “Go home, Eirik. Go home and make a family with Eadyth. I do not know why, but the lady loves you.”
Eirik grinned. “Yea, I am a lovable lout, am I not?”
“It runs in the family,” Tykir agreed, punching Eirik playfully on the arm. “Oh, by the by,” he added casually, “do you have any idea why Eadyth has been practicing standing on her head?”
Eirik choked on a surprised swallow of air, and it took three harsh thumps on the back from Tykir before he could breathe again. “You lie, Tykir. I know you made that up.”
“Did I?” Tykir said, examining his fingernails in a bored fashion. “Well, mayhap I misheard her.”
The two brothers laughed, wrapping their arms around each other’s shoulders. They went onto Tykir’s ship and drank some of the excellent mead Eadyth had brought for Tykir’s vo
yage. After they talked for a short time, Eirik informed Tykir of Edred’s plans and expressed thanks that Tykir would be leaving Britain and the upcoming fray. Tykir told him he would be sailing at dawn, so he would not see his brother again before departing.
Tykir exclaimed with a snap of his fingers, “Oh, I forgot something.” He went over to a chest and came back carrying a package.
“What is it?” Eirik asked suspiciously.
Tykir jiggled his eyebrows. “’Tis my wedding gift to you. I purchased it, with Eadyth’s permission, in one of the market stalls yesterday.”
“For me? Why would you need her permission to buy me something? Besides, you already gave us that damn parrot for a wedding gift.”
“Nay,” Tykir corrected Eirik with a laugh. “I gave the parrot to Eadyth. This is a special treat for you.”
“Will I like it?”
“Eirik, you will thank me to your dying days for this gift.”
The brothers embraced again near the dock. Eirik was just about to leave and go to the home of Eadyth’s agent when Tykir snapped his fingers again. “Oh, there is something else I forgot.”
“What? Another secret purchase?”
“Nay. I just thought you would like to know where Eadyth is right now.” Tykir was leaning jauntily against a tall coil of ropes, and Eirik briefly considered picking him up and tossing him into the river. He just knew he was not going to like what Tykir had to tell him.
“Well?”
“She has gone to visit Asa.”
Asa’s jewelry stall was closed when Eirik arrived at Coppergate, and, at first, there was no answer when he knocked on her door. Finally, a servant answered. Recognizing him, she motioned him into the large hall. Eirik approached the small solar off the hall where the maid directed him, and then Eirik stopped mid-stride with horror.
Eadyth and Asa were sitting side by side on a bench at the window seat. Eadyth was weeping, and Asa had her arm around her shoulder, whispering words of comfort.
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