Ice Maiden. Debra Brown Lee

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rest on her funeral pyre, Rika longed to go with her to the next world.

      Then there had been Brodir’s lessons.

      Rika closed her eyes and swallowed against the taste souring her mouth. By rights, she should have told someone and Brodir would have been punished. But she had not. The humiliation had been too great. Too, she feared he would exact some worse revenge. Instead, she’d borne his abuse in silence.

      And she could bear it once more at the hands of a stranger. She must.

      “Leave me now,” she said, and rose from the stool.

      Her pale woolen gown lay strewn across a bench in the small cottage where she and Grant would pass their wedding night. Most of the islanders slept in the four longhouses that ringed the central courtyard, though some couples built cottages of their own after they wed, in the style of the mainlanders—and the Scots, she supposed.

      “Let me help you finish dressing.” Sitryg reached for the gown.

      “Nay, I can manage on my own.”

      “But—”

      “Sitryg, please.” Rika put a hand on the woman’s shoulder. Only then did she realize she was trembling. This was ridiculous. She must compose herself. “Leave me now. I shall see you at the ceremony.”

      “As you wish.” The old woman covered Rika’s hand with her own. “Your mother meant the world to me, you know. I would help her daughter in any small way I could.”

      She smiled, remembering how close the two of them had been. “I know that, and I thank you.”

      Sitryg squeezed her hand, then left.

      Rika collapsed on the freshly made bed and whispered “I must be strong” for the hundredth time that day. As strong as her mother had been. As strong as Gunnar would have to be to stay alive until she could reach him.

      This wedding was only the first of the trials she must endure. Her father’s wrath would come later and, after she returned, she’d have Brodir to face.

      The fire in the room did little to warm her. Rika rose and snatched the gown, pulled it on and smoothed it over her shift. Perhaps she wouldn’t return to Fair Isle at all after Gunnar was freed. She could stay on the mainland and make a new life. Now there was a thought.

      She donned her sealskin boots and secured her hair with a kransen, a plain bronze circlet that rested lightly on her forehead. It would have to do. She was no beauty, and it made no sense to fuss over her appearance.

      Besides, what did she care how she looked? It wasn’t a real marriage, after all. Following the celebration, Grant would do the deed—damn Hannes to hell—and she’d never have to suffer it again.

      An image of the Scot looming over her naked in the sauna shot through her mind like a lightning bolt. It was not the first time that day she’d thought of him so. Last night in the heat and close air Rika had felt something so overpowering, so foreign, it frightened her.

      Desire.

      “It’s time,” a voice called from the other side of the door. “Your bridegroom waits.”

      

      George paced the dirt floor of Lawmaker’s cottage and shook his head. “She must be mad if she thinks I’ll recite such pagan words.”

      Lawmaker arched a brow in what George knew was exasperation. They’d been over the details of the ceremony a dozen times that day. “It’s not up to her. It’s the law. You have your rituals, and we have ours.”

      “But it’s…heathen.” He didn’t want to offend the old man, but there it was.

      “It’s a Christian ceremony for the most part.”

      “Oh, aye? Well where’s the priest then?”

      Lawmaker shrugged. “The only one we had died years ago. Besides, the people like the old ways. There is little left to remind us of our ancestry. The wedding rites are something we all enjoy.”

      “Hmm.” Well he wasn’t enjoying it one bit. He supposed he should be relieved there was no priest. ’Twas not a proper Christian wedding and, therefore, ’twould not be recognized by God or king. That was some consolation. No one would have to know about it once he was home.

      Home.

      Again, he thought of Sommerled.

      “Take this,” Lawmaker said. To George’s astonishment, the old man offered him the hilt of a sword.

      His fingers closed instinctively over the finely crafted weapon. The weight of it felt good in his hand.

      Lawmaker grinned. “It suits you.”

      “Why now? And why a weapon so fair?” He ran his hand along the rune-covered blade.

      “Oh, it’s not for you to keep. The ceremony requires that you bestow on your bride your family’s sword—as a vow of protection.”

      George frowned.

      “You have no family here, so I offer you my weapon.” Lawmaker looked at him, waiting for his acceptance, and George knew from the elder’s expression that the gesture was no small honor.

      He was moved by the man’s trust in him. “Thank ye,” he said.

      “Rika, in turn, will offer you her family’s sword. Her brother’s.”

      “As a sign of…?”

      “Obedience.”

      “Ha!”

      “And loyalty,” Lawmaker said. “Do not scoff. I told Rika this, and I shall tell you—” Lawmaker snatched the sword from him and sheathed it. “This marriage will change you both—for the better, methinks.”

      He snorted. “The only thing ’twill change is my location. For if I do this thing, I expect to see the bonny shores of Scotland posthaste.”

      “Hmm, Latin. You are as I thought—an educated man. It will be a fine match.”

      “Stop saying that.” The old man annoyed him to no end. He’d sent George into that sauna deliberately, knowing Rika was there. George knew it, and Lawmaker knew he knew it. Damn him.

      He’d not been in his right mind when he agreed to the wedding, but by the time he’d come to his senses, the news was all over the village. He’d given his word, and he was not a man to go back on it. Lawmaker knew that, the canny sod.

      “Take this, as well.”

      “Huh?” He hadn’t been listening.

      Lawmaker handed him a small, devilishly heavy tool—a hammer.

      “What’s this for?”

      “Put it in your belt. It’s a symbol of Thor’s hammer. For the ritual.”

      He

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