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Chapter no 23

A Fate Inked in Blood

I โ€Œawoke to Bodilโ€™s face inches from mine. โ€œHow do you feel, Freya? Are you ready to fight?โ€โ€Œ

โ€œNo.โ€ I rolled over, burying my face in my cloak. Clouded memory of vomiting into the dirt came back to me, and I winced, realizing that Bodil and her maidens must have had to drag my drunk self into the tent. โ€œIs it already dawn?โ€

โ€œDawn came and went hours ago,โ€ Bodil replied.

โ€œWhat?โ€ I sat upright, peering through the open flaps of the tent, which revealed dark gray sky, rain misting down into the mud. โ€œWhy did no one wake me?โ€

โ€œBecause Bjorn has been sitting in front of your tent since he carried you in here last night,โ€ she said. โ€œHe threatened to cut the throat of anyone who disturbed you, saying you needed sleep, or youโ€™d be no good to anyone.โ€

She fished in my cloak pocket and extracted the pot of salve. โ€œIโ€™m supposed to remind you to put this on your hand.โ€

I grimaced as I took the pot from her, and found myself tucking it back into my pocket rather than putting it on. โ€œWe are to begin training now, then?โ€

Bodil laughed. โ€œUnless you need another few hours to sleep off your hangover.โ€

It was already shameful enough that Iโ€™d drunk so much mead, then embarrassed myself puking into the dirt and passing out. As though sensing my thoughts, the jarl said, โ€œNo one noticed, so enraptured were they in Steinunnโ€™s tale.โ€

โ€œBut not you?โ€ I drank deeply from a skin of water I found sitting next to my pallet. โ€œI thought you knew Steinunn. Liked her.โ€

Bodil shook her head. โ€œI only met her a year ago. Iโ€™ve never cared much for skald magic, particularly when I know itโ€™s being deployed as propaganda, which was why she traveled to Brekkur on Snorriโ€™s behalf. I stuffed my ears with wool when she began singing.โ€ Straightening, she added, โ€œIโ€™ll wait for you outside.โ€

Again, I was struck that while Bodil might have an interest in a united Skaland and in seeing what the gods had in store for us, she was only tolerating Snorri and had little desire to see him as king. Which made me wonder what her endgame could be. Made me wonder if Bodil, like all the other jarls, saw herself as the one who would control my fate, but was clever enough to come at it by a circular approach.

I belted my fatherโ€™s sword and a long-bladed seax to my waist, then donned my cloak and left the tent.

Mist immediately coated my face, and I shivered and stomped my feet as I walked, needing my blood to flow so that it might vanquish both the chill and my headache. Most of Snorriโ€™s warriors seemed hard at work fortifying our campโ€™s perimeter with stakes, others forging and fletching weapons, and judging from the absence of women and children, others were out hunting and foraging. Everyone set to a task but me, whoโ€™d slept away the morning. So it was shame that drove away the chill, my cheeks burning

hot as I followed Bodil through the opening in the stakes and down to the beach.

โ€œFreya!โ€

My spine stiffened at Bjornโ€™s voice, and I turned to find him walking toward us with an armload of sticks for stakes. Before he could start in with his teasing, I snapped, โ€œI donโ€™t need to be coddled. I will rise when everyone else rises, and I will pull my own weight. I donโ€™t need you interfering.โ€

Irritation flared in his eyes. โ€œMaybe you shouldโ€™ve considered that before drinking yourself sick.โ€

He wasnโ€™t wrong. โ€œThatโ€™s my problem, not yours.โ€ Crossing my arms, I glared at him. โ€œIf I want your opinion or your assistance, Iโ€™ll ask.โ€ I twisted on my heels and strode down to the ash-streaked beach.

Bodil gave me an approving nod. โ€œMen need to be taught their place.โ€ Then a lopsided smile formed on her face. โ€œBut the boy did clean vomit off your face after you fell nose-first into it.โ€

My cheeks flamed, and I kicked at a rock because I knew Bjorn didnโ€™t deserve harsh words from me. โ€œMy head hurts.โ€

Which wasnโ€™t a lie, but it also wasnโ€™t the reason for my anger. By treating me the way he did, Bjorn was tempting fate in the worst sort of way. Already, Bodil suspected there was something between us, so how long until Ylva did as well?

No matter what sort of trickery Ylva had used to give herself an alibi in Fjalltindr, I knew sheโ€™d been conspiring with Harald to get rid of Bjorn. She wouldnโ€™t need to resort to such desperate measures if she could prove Iโ€™d broken my vow. While myย husbandย might not kill his son for the betrayal, heโ€™d most certainly disinherit him in favor of Leif, which was what the bitch wanted.

And Bjornย knewย that. Knew that Ylva was looking for ways to get rid of him. Yet instead of treating me like his fatherโ€™s wife, he treated me asโ€ฆas hisย own.

My breath caught as the thought registered, visions of every moment that had passed between us flickering through my mindโ€™s eye. A flush of

warmth filled me, but it was swiftly chased away by icy fear. It was as Bodil had said: Bjorn was a notorious risk-taker. So of course he didnโ€™t fear the repercussions of being caught.

But I did.

Feared for him. Feared what Snorri would do to my family. Feared the guilt Iโ€™d have to bear as a result.

It was better that Iโ€™d said what I said, because maybe it would cause him to keep his distance. Would drive him into the arms of another, so that suspicions would fade. Yet even asย thatย thought filled my head, my eyes pricked with tears and my chest tightened so that it hurt to breathe.

Why was I acting this way? Why was I constantly having to remind myself of logic and consequences to the point I wanted to scream at myself?

Why did I keep asking the same questions despite knowing the answers to all of them?

Weโ€™d reached the beach, Bodilโ€™s maidens rising from where they crouched in the rain. Each of them held a shield, and I stared at the circles of painted wood.ย This is your fate, Freya,ย I told myself.ย This is what the seer foresaw for you. What the gods want from you. Nothing else matters.

โ€”

We drilled for hours, Bodil calmly instructing me in how to fight in a shield wall and how to fight against larger opponents in single combat, her maidens gleefully battering me with weapons wrapped with wool. I learned a great deal, but not once did I feel impassioned the way I had when Iโ€™d trained with Bjorn. Which was likely for the best, given I rarely made good decisions when my temper was high. Yet I couldnโ€™t help but sigh with relief when Bodil called for an end to our practice, her maidens wandering off in search of food and drink.

โ€œThat was good fun,โ€ Bodil said, sitting on a log with her weapons discarded at her feet.

โ€œFor you, maybe.โ€ I groaned, muscles protesting as I eased down to the ground. โ€œEvery inch of me will be purple tomorrow.โ€ Crossing my legs, I

examined my hand, which throbbed mercilessly, my scarred palm raw from fighting with a stick all day.

โ€œYouโ€™re supposed to use the salve.โ€ Bodil leaned closer, taking my hand. โ€œThe one Bjorn made for you.โ€

Scuffing my shoe in the sand, I remembered all the moments today that Iโ€™d felt his eyes on me. Iโ€™d refused to meet his gaze, only waited, tense and breathless, until heโ€™d abandoned the beach again. โ€œI donโ€™t know why he cares so much.โ€

Bodil was silent for a long moment, but I could feel her scrutiny, weighing and measuring the question before she finally said, โ€œItโ€™s because he feels guilty that it was his axe that burned you.โ€

An obvious excuse for his behavior. One that I shouldโ€™ve thought of. โ€œWasnโ€™t his fault.โ€

Bodil snorted. โ€œNot having willed something to have occurred doesnโ€™t render a person blameless, woman. You know that as well as anyone.โ€

Given that guilt was a near-constant companion these days, I probably knew it better than most.

โ€œThe real question we need to discuss,โ€ Bodil continued, โ€œis whyย you

donโ€™t tend to your scars.โ€

My spine stiffened. โ€œWhat are you talking about? Of course I do.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve not seen you voluntarily do it once.โ€ The jarl pried my hand free from where Iโ€™d shoved it in my pocket, examining the burn scars, her own hands marked with the countless nicks and cuts that came from being a warrior. โ€œThe salve takes away the pain and makes your hand limber, but you choose over and over not to use it, despite Bjornโ€™s reminders.โ€

Was that true? I wracked my brain, searching for an instance where Iโ€™d done it myself without Bjornโ€™s prodding, but came up empty. โ€œIโ€ฆIโ€™m forgetful.โ€

โ€œI think not.โ€ Bodil straightened my fingers, digging her thumbs into the aching tendons. โ€œAnd while Bjorn has a reputation for having talented hands, I donโ€™t think youโ€™re the sort to suffer for the sake of gaining attention. I thinkโ€โ€”she hesitatedโ€”โ€œthat you believe you deserve the pain.โ€

It suddenly hurt to breathe, and I squeezed my eyes shut.

โ€œWhy, Freya?โ€

Twin tears squeezed out from under my eyelids, running down my cheeks as the answer lurking deep inside me rose to the surface. โ€œMy husband Vragi was a piece of shit,โ€ I finally whispered. โ€œHe ruined my life and would have done his best to ruin Ingrid and Geirโ€™s, butโ€ฆโ€ I tried to swallow but it stuck, making me cough. โ€œI murdered him, Bodil, and he didnโ€™t deserveย that.ย Didnโ€™t deserve an axe in the back of the skull just for being a bastard.โ€

โ€œI disagree,โ€ she replied. โ€œVragiโ€™s reputation was known even in Brekkur. Iโ€™d bet all the silver in my pocket that cheers went up throughout your village when they heard the news.โ€

I gave a tight shake of my head. โ€œHe might have been an arse about it, but no one ever starved. He made sure of that.โ€ And in Skaland, thatย mattered.ย Our world was harsh and cruel, winters taking countless lives as the unprepared or unlucky starved. But not in our village, for weย alwaysย had fish.

Or had.

Now, thanks to my violence, how many would be lost when winter came?

Though that wasnโ€™t the reason I neglected my scars. Wasnโ€™t the reason I embraced the pain. โ€œI feel guilty for the harm Iโ€™ve caused my village,โ€ I choked out. โ€œBut I donโ€™t feel bad about killing Vragi. I donโ€™t feel anything.โ€

โ€œBecause he deserved it, Freya. Thatโ€™s why.โ€

I clenched my eyes shut again, scrubbing away the tears. โ€œItโ€™s not. With the other people Iโ€™ve killed, it was me or them, so it makes sense that I felt little remorse over their deaths. But Vragi wasnโ€™t threatening my life, or even Ingridโ€™s life, only promising misery, and I killed him in cold blood rather than trying to find another solution. If I were anyone other than who I am, Snorri would have punished me as a murderer, but instead I walk free. I should feel terrible guilt, but I donโ€™t. So I need to make myself feel hurt another way, to punish myself, because Iโ€™m afraid if I donโ€™t, Iโ€™ll do it again.โ€

Bodil exhaled a slow breath, then wrapped her arms around me and pulled me close like a mother would a child. โ€œYou donโ€™t deserve to hurt. Hlinโ€™s blood runs in your veins, so itโ€™s your nature to want to protect those you care about. Vragi was a man who destroyed the lives of everyone he touched, and no amount of fish makes up for that. He didnโ€™t need to go after this Ingrid you speak of. He couldโ€™ve taken Snorriโ€™s gold and walked away, but he chose to attack you and yours. Itโ€™s his own bloody fault that he picked a fight with the wrong woman.โ€

There was logic to what Bodil said, yet I remembered the surge of emotion that had filled me when Vragi uttered his intention. Protectiveness, yes. Fear, yes. But above all else,ย rage.ย And that was not something I could cast at Hlinโ€™s feet.

Bodil reached into my pocket to extract the salve. โ€œPut it on.โ€

I rolled the jar between my hands. โ€œI will. But Iโ€™d like a few minutes alone to sit, if thatโ€™s all right.โ€

She hesitated, eyes considering. But she must have heard the truth in my words, for she rose, casting a warning over her shoulder as she departed. โ€œDo not wander, Freya. There are many who seek your death.โ€

Sighing, I opened the jar and smeared some of the salve on my scars, feeling almost instant relief from the stiffness. When Iโ€™d finished, I leaned back in the wet sand, turning my face up to the misting sky and closing my eyes. If only there was a way to clear my head. A way to silence the problems warring for my attention. A way to not constantly beย thinking.

What I needed was not respite from the world but respite from myself. Except short of someone knocking me over the head, there was little chance of that.

โ€œBreathe in,โ€ I murmured, attempting one of Bodilโ€™s exercises for settling the mind that sheโ€™d taught me earlier in the day. โ€œBreathe out.โ€

My heart steadied as I breathed, pushing away every thought that came for me as I hunted stillness.

Breathe.

My mind quieted but the silence was short-lived, for a crackle soon filled my ears.

Along with the stench of charred meat.

Jerking upright, I panned my surroundings and my eyes instantly latched on the source.

Walking down the waterline, embers and ash falling in its wake, was the specter.

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