โWโe need to hurry.โ I rode at a swift canter down the narrow trail circling the fjord, knowing that for all my bravado, I had a decision to make. โWe donโt have muchโ
time to get back.โ
Instead of answering, Bjorn drew his gelding to a rough halt, the horse tossing its head in annoyance. โWhy return at all? This is your chance to escape. We can head down the coast and find a merchant ship heading south, where weโll be out of reach of all of this.โ
โSo that Snorri can execute my idiot brother and my negligent mother?โ I snorted. โAs tempting as that is at this particular moment, no.โ
Reaching out, Bjorn caught hold of my mareโs reins, preventing me from heeling her into a trot and away from this conversation. โFreya, thereโs something I need to tell you.โ
โIf itโs your opinions on my family, I donโt want to hear it.โ
โItโs not about your family. Itโs about mine.โ He dragged his eyes up to meet mine. โMy motherโs foretellingโฆit wasnโt the only one she had about you.โ
My heart skipped, unease pooling in my stomach as I ceased trying to extract my mare from his hold. โWhat did she say? And when?โ
Why didnโt you tell me?
โIโฆโ His throat moved as he swallowed. โIt was a long time ago, when I was still a boy, but I remember it clearly.โ
โYou seem to remember everything about her very clearly and yet communicate none of it,โ I snapped. โWhat did she say?โ
Bjorn was silent, and nausea twisted my guts. For what he might say.
And the fact that he kept it from me at all.
โShe went into these strange trances when she was being told something by Odin,โ he finally answered. โI was alone with her when she was suddenly seized by one. She told me that the shield maiden would unite Skaland, but that tens of thousands would be left dead in your wake. That youโd walk upon the ground like a plague, pitting friend against friend, brother against brother, and that all would fear you.โ
His words settled into my core, and I struggled to breathe.
โWhatever she saw terrified her,โ he continued. โI was young, and it sank into my mind that the shield maiden would be more monster than woman. Even as a grown man, IโฆI had this vision of what youโd be like.โ He looked away. โIt couldnโt have been further from the truth. Not a monster, but a beautiful and brave woman who rescues fish and walks through fire to protect others.โ
My eyes burned and I blinked rapidly to keep tears from forming.
โI didnโt tell you, because you werenโt what my mother described,โ Bjorn said. โI was certain that Iโd remembered wrong. Or that youโd altered fate and that the future Odin had shown my mother no longer existed, not just the darkness and death, but all of it. Except then the tests began, the gods stepping onto the mortal plane to acknowledge you, and I could not deny that you were destined to lead.โ He took a deep breath. โI watched you make choices to protect Halsar and it didnโt seem possible that you would
become a monster whoโd bring death and destruction. But after the siege of Grindillโฆโ
โYou decided that maybe I was a monster after all.โ I choked out the words, horror strangling me.
Bjorn shook his head. โNo. But that Snorri would turn you into one if you allowed him to control your fate. I thought hearing Steinunnโs song, seeing yourself like that, would drive you to walk a different path, but you just couldnโt escape the need to protect the pieces of shit you call family.โ
I flinched. โDonโt speak about them that way.โ
โWhy not?โ he snapped. โDespite all you do, all youโveย doneย for them, your brother called you a mad bitch. Your mother called you a whore. They arenโt worth allowing Snorri to turn you into a monster to make himself king.โ
He wasnโt wrong. But neither was he right.
โI thought when you saw how your mother is living, youโd turn your back on them,โ he said. โYet though I watched you realize she profited from your pain, it changed nothing. I watched you listen to her tell you how time and again sheโs chosen your brother and herself over you, and again, it changedย nothing.ย You refuse to change your fate.โ
โSo you thought to do it for me?โ My skin flushed with anger. โBecause Iโm not the only one with a godโs blood in my veins, with the power to make the Norns alter their plans. You can do it too.โ
โI would tear their plans to shreds if it meant sparing you the fate my mother foresaw,โ he said. โBut I want you to choose to leave, Freya. All Iโve done is given you the opportunity.โ
Though I wished heโd told me the whole truth sooner, I still found my anger fading. โI want to say yes, Bjorn. What I saw in Steinunnโs magic terrifies me. But if I go, Iโm condemning my family to die.โ
โThey condemned themselves.โ
Turning my mare, I walked a short distance away to stand on the cliffs overlooking the sea. Gulls sailed over the whitecaps, a north wind tugging my hair loose from its braid. It would be so easy to ride down to the shore. To find a merchant vessel from one of the lands far south of here and sail
away, never looking back. Never even knowing if Snorri followed through on his threats.
Not knowing would be worse. To have the uncertainty of whether those I loved lived or died. Would happiness even be possible, or would the guilt poison whatever life I built?
โHlin told my mother that if I possessed only avarice, my words would be curses, but if I possessed altruism, what divine power I might make my own was a fate yet unwoven.โ I hesitated. โI know there is no way to know what she meant by that, but to me, it means that choosing others before myself will be how I achieve a destiny different from what your mother saw.โ Turning my head to look at him, my breath caught, because I knew that making this choice meant giving him up. โI have to go back. I canโt leave knowing that they will die, because that would mean conceding to the avarice that Hlin warned of.โ
I held my breath, waiting for Bjorn to react. Waiting for anger and condemnation for my choice. Instead, he exhaled softly. โHow is it that the part of you that I hate the most is also the reason I love you?โ
Love.
Emotion drowned me, threatening to double me over, and I wanted desperately to tell him that I loved him as well. That I loved him more than Iโd ever dreamed was possible.
Except what did that even mean, given that I hadnโt chosen him? So instead I said, โIf you want nothing more to do with me, Iโd understand that. I wouldnโt fault you.โ
Even if it breaks my heart.
โYouโre mine, Born-in-Fire,โ he answered, reaching out to take my hand. โAnd Iโm yours, even if only the two of us know it.โ
I clung to his hand, barely able to breathe. Knowing that if I looked at him Iโd crack; instead I stared out at the fjord. In time to see a large drakkar with a blue-striped sail appear around the bend. โBjornโฆโ
โI see it,โ he answered, lifting his hand to shield his eyes. โFuck.โ Unease filtered into my chest. โWhat is it?โ
Or who?
โSkade.โ Bjorn spat in the dirt. โWe need to go.โ
Snorri had mentioned the name Skade while we were in Fjalltindr, but I had no idea who she was. โIs she one of Haraldโs warriors?โ
โHis hunter. Who he sends to find those who donโt wish to be found.โ His throat moved as he swallowed. โSheโs a child of Ullr.โ
My stomach tightened, for I knew Ullrโs children had bows with magical arrows that never missed their target. โWho is she hunting?โ
Bjorn turned his head to meet my gaze, the muscles in his jaw so tight they strained against his suntanned skin.
โNo,โ I breathed. โThat makes no sense. Everyone thinks that Iโm in Grindill.โ
โThere is no other reason for her to be here, Freya. We need to go. Get a head start before she finds our trail.โ
The fear singing in my blood told me that he was right, except there was only one place to dock a drakkar of that size on this fjord. Selvegr. My home.
Ignoring Bjornโs protests, I dug my heels into my horseโs sides, urging the mare into a fast canter. Too fast for the narrow trail, but I didnโt care. Every man and woman in Selvegr who could fight had been called to join Snorri at Grindill, which meant the village was undefended. Full of women with children, the elderly, and the infirm. Entirely unaware that a drakkar bristling with Haraldโs warriors sailed toward them.
โFreya!โ
I risked a backward glance at Bjorn, his horse on my heels. โI have to warn them!โ
โYou wonโt make it in time!โ
He was right. As fast as I was riding, the drakkar had a strong wind at its back. But I had to try. Had to do something.
Through the trees, I watched the drakkar lower its sail, the rowers maneuvering it to the single, empty dock. Theyโd have been spotted by now, and everyone would be racing to find their children. To grab weapons.
To hide. โFreya! Stop!โ
In my periphery, Bjornโs bigger horse gained ground. I urged my mount for more speed but the mare was spent, and as the trail widened, Bjorn moved alongside me. I tried to widen the distance, but he leaned recklessly far off the side of his horse and caught my reins, pulling both mounts up.
Hissing, I leapt off my horse and broke into a run. Boots hammered the ground as he gave chase, easily catching me by the arm. I fought against him, but Bjorn swept my legs out from underneath me, both of us falling hard.
โQuit hissing like an angry cat and look,โ he snapped, pinning me to the ground. โThey arenโt attacking!โ
โI canโt see anything!โ I squirmed, trying to get loose, but Bjorn was infinitely stronger than I was, his hips holding mine against the dirt.
โListen!โ
Instinct demanded that I struggle, for my people needed me, but I forced myself to stillness. The only sound was Bjornโs ragged breathing, the wind, and the waters of the fjord lapping against the shores. No clash of steel. No screams.
Easing off me, Bjorn led me on hands and knees to the edge of a ridge overlooking the water, from which I could clearly see Selvegr and Skadeโs drakkar tied up to its dock. Some of the warriors had exited the drakkar, but most sat idle, waiting.
โThatโs Skade.โ Bjorn pointed, and I made out a woman with crimson hair standing and speaking in earnest to a villager, no weapon in sight. โSheโs looking for you, not a fight.โ
โThen why does she have a full raiding party of warriors on her drakkar?โ
Bjorn didnโt answer for a long moment, then said, โThatโs a good question.โ
There was an edge to his voice that made my skin prickle, but when I tore my eyes from Skade to look at him, Bjornโs face was unreadable. โA better question is how do they know we are here at all?โ
His brow furrowed.
โTheย onlyย person who knew where we were going was Ylva.โ My guts twisted. โI was a fool to trust her.โ
Bjorn gave a sharp shake of his head. โIt doesnโt make sense. When you accused her of leaving the message with the runes, she denied it and Bodil confirmed she was telling the truth.โ
โWhat if Bodil was lying?โ The thought hollowed out my core because Iโd trusted Bodil. Put my faith in her. To discover that sheโd lied to me, conspired with Ylva, with Haraldโฆ
โThat doesnโt make any sense,โ Bjorn argued. โWhat could Bodil have possibly had to gain from such an alliance? And why would Ylva give you up when sheโs sacrificed so much to achieve my fatherโs destiny?โ
โBecause sheโs lost her nerve for it! You saw her face when your father wished to abandon Halsar in favor of ambushing Harald when he left Fjalltindr. Her distress when we returned to find it burned and herย angerย when your father refused to rebuild. Herย fearย when she listened to Steinunnโs song. Ylva wants no more of this, and what better way to put an end to it than to give us both over to Harald?โ
โYou must have hit your head when I knocked you down,โ Bjorn snapped. โIt makes no sense to hand you over to her enemy. A better answer would be poison in both our cups. Ylva is no ally of Haraldโs.โ
โThen who? Because we know there is someone in our midst who is a traitor!โ
Before Bjorn could answer, a flurry of motion on Selvegrโs docks caught our attention. Skade had returned to her drakkar, and my stomach sank as half the warriors climbed out onto the dock, following the man Skade had been speaking to into the village.
And exiting out the other side.
My skin turned to ice as I realized the direction they were walking, where the man was leading them. โMy mother.โ
Bjorn grimaced. โShe might just question her, Freya. Itโs you Harald has sent her to find, else Selvegr and all its people would be dead or dying.โ
โAre you certain?โ I demanded, my pulse roaring. โYou clearly know Skade from your time in Nordeland. If my mother wonโt help her, are you
certain that Skade wonโt kill her out of spite?โ
Bjorn stood, pulling me up with him and then drawing me back to the horses. โDo you honestly think your mother wonโt tell her everything she wishes to know?โ
I bit my lip, tears threatening. โThatโs not what I asked.โ
โSkadeโs a killer,โ Bjorn answered. โBut sheโs loyal to Harald and wonโt go against his orders.โ
โBjornโฆโ Tears trickled down my cheeks because I was the reason Skade was here. I was the reason my mother was in danger. โWill Skade hurt her?โ
โI donโt know.โ Bjorn kicked a rock. โThisโฆI donโt know what he intends, only that if we go after them, weโll be giving him exactly what he wants.โ
Iโd told my mother that I was through with her.ย Itโs time you made your own way in the world.
A lie, because I refused to abandon her.
Catching my horseโs reins, I swung onto the mareโs back. โAre you coming with me, or do I need to do this alone?โ
Bjorn swung into his own saddle. โWhere you go, I go, Born-in-Fire.
Even if itโs to the gates of Valhalla.โ
I dug in my heels, taking the lead, for I knew this ground by memory. We swung wide of Selvegr so that those left with the drakkar wouldnโt catch sight of us, then down the narrow tracks and game trails that would take us to the rear of my motherโs farm. We dismounted, leaving the horses and hurrying through the trees, the hunting skills my father had taught me serving well and Bjorn making almost no sound, despite his size.
โSkade does not miss,โ he said softly. โHer arrow is no more made of wood than my axe is of steel. The only way to kill her is to catch her unaware, but her instincts are second to none.โ
โBut my magic can block her arrow,โ I said, tightening my grip on my shield. โJust as it blocks your axe and Thorโs lightning.โ
โHer arrow doesnโt travel as a mortalโs does,โ Bjorn answered. โSkade might appear to aim at your face but be aiming at your back. Kill her before
she shoots or die where you stand.โ
Reaching the edge of the tree line, we dropped low, keeping behind brush and scrub as we pressed closer to my family home. My mother stood in the field, grazing goats around her. Birger was on the roof, likely repairing the leak my mother had complained about. I opened my mouth to shout a warning when he abruptly stiffened, and I gasped at the sight of a glowing green brand jutting out the back of his head. It disappeared almost immediately, and Birger fell backward, rolling off the roof to land with a heavy thud.
My mother heard the sound and started, eyes searching, but Birger had fallen out of her line of sight. I moved to rise, to defend her, but Bjorn pulled me down a heartbeat before Skade appeared from the trees on the other side of the clearing.
โWho are you?โ my mother demanded, pulling out the seax she wore, the short blade glittering. โBirger! Birger!โ
โI am known as Skade,โ she answered, her voice carrying the accent of Nordeland. The same accent as Bjornโs did. โI am King Harald of Nordelandโs warlord.โ
My mother took a step back, but Skadeโs warriors were encircling the clearing, leaving nowhere to run. I held my breath as two passed only a few paces from the brush behind which we hid. Which meant there was no chance of us getting close enough to attack Skade before she killed one of us.
Sweat poured down my back, my fingers icy cold where they gripped the handle of my shield and the hilt of my sword.ย Please,ย I prayed to Hlin,ย protect her.
โYou are Kelda. The mother of Freya, Erikโs daughter, yes? Also known as Freya Born-in-Fire, child of Hlin?โ
My mother didnโt answer.
โWe know it is so,โ Skade said. โYour clansman brought us to you.โ
Traitorous bastard,ย I wanted to scream, but at the same time, I understood why heโd chosen to help her. Heโd smelled the danger and chosen to protect himself and his own.
โHas your daughter come to see you?โ Skade asked. โIt was her intent.โ โWhy do you want to know?โ
โI donโt,โ Skade answered. โKing Harald does. So youโd be well to give me the answers he seeks, else meet the fate of Snorriโs man.โ She smirked. โHe died with a fist full of thatch, so I think he is not on his way to Valhalla.โ
Tell her the truth,ย I willed my mother.ย Tell her what she wants to know so that she leaves you alive.
My mother hesitated, then said, โShe came. Left an hour past.โ
Next to me, Bjornโs grip tightened on a handful of dirt, his knuckles whitening.
Skade offered no reply, merely tilting her head.
โOn horseback,โ my mother quickly added. โThe jarlโs son, Bjorn, known as the Firehand, was with her.โ
โJust the two of them?โ
โOnly those I saw,โ my mother answered. โThere might have been others waiting elsewhere. She didnโt say where she was headed, but I expect back to Grindill. If you hurry, you might catch them.โ
Good, I thought silently to my mother, even as Bjorn seethed beside me.
Clever thinking.
Skade nodded slowly, then glanced sideways. โThe house is searched, yes?โ
โThereโs no one inside,โ a manโs voice responded. โThe hoof prints in the mud tell the same story. Two horses came and went, heading toward the fjord. Should we take horses from the village and pursue them?โ
Skade tilted her head, her eyes distant as if seeing beyond the present. โNo. I believe we have the answers we need.โ She inclined her head to my mother. โYou have been most helpful.โ
Turning, she and her warriors moved away. I slumped with relief, knowing there could be no better outcome. My mother was safe. Skade had no intention to pursue. And we knew with certainty that Harald intended to try to capture me again.
But when Skade reached the tree line on the far side of the clearing, she paused. Her voice rang out clear and loud, โOnly a cowardly bitch betrays her child.โ A glowing golden bow appeared in her hand, accompanied by an arrow, green from fletching to tip. Before I could react, before I could call on Hlin for protection, the arrow was released.
It flew through the air, piercing my motherโs heart.
Bjorn covered my mouth to silence my scream as she fell slowly to the ground, the arrow vanishing from her chest.
โReturn to the drakkar,โ Skade ordered, and she and her men vanished over the rise, their footfalls fading away, leaving only the wind rustling through the trees and my muffled sobs.
โTheyโre gone,โ Bjorn said, and I pulled from his embrace. Dropping shield and sword, I raced to my mother. My foot caught on a rock, and I stumbled, sprawling on the ground. Sobbing, I crawled to her.
She was still breathing.
Gasping, I pressed my hands to the wound in her chest, leaning over her. Her eyes fixed on me. โFreya?โ
โIโm here.โ Blood flowed around my fingers, soaking the front of her new dress, her cane lying beside her in the grass. โIโm so sorry. That this happened. For the things I said.โ
But the light was fading from her eyes, her chest stilling beneath my hands. โNo!โ I screamed. โThis wasnโt supposed to happen!โ
Bjorn was behind me, pulling me into his arms. โIโm sorry, Freya,โ he said, and I buried my face in his neck, my sobs wracking my body.
โThe things I said to her.โ I gasped for breath, struggling to speak. โI didnโt mean them. I didnโt. She died thinking I didnโt love her.โ
โTo nearly her dying breath, she betrayed her own daughter,โ he said. โShe earned her fate.โ
โJust because she was a coward doesnโt mean she deserved to be murdered!โ My fingers dug into his arms, hard enough to leave marks, but I didnโt care. โI brought this fate upon her. I chose to come here. My decisions led to her death. Everything I do, it always means death.โ
โThis is why you need to go,โ he said, his breath warm against my ear. โNot because you are a bringer of death but because those who are seek to use you for their own ends.โ
Like Ylva.
โIโm going to kill her,โ I hissed, my grief turning to rage. โIโm going to fucking kill that traitorous bitch.โ
โYou have no proof it was Ylva.โ
โMy proof is that it could be no one else! Ylva was at Fjalltindr. She witnessed Snorri declaring his intention to take Grindill. She has the skills to use rune magic. She was the only one who knew where we were going.โ
โNone of which is proof! If you kill her on speculation and hearsay, my father will punish you,โ Bjorn retorted. โRegardless of what she did or didnโt do, killing Ylva changes nothing. What you need to do is run, Freya. Get yourself out of this mess before you lose any more of yourself!โ
โAnd lose the chance to avenge my mother?โ I pulled away from him. โNot just on Ylva, but on Skade? On Harald himself? You of all people should understand that the need for vengeance is worth any sacrifice.โ
โItโs different.โ He grasped my arms again. โI know exactly who came into my motherโs cabin that night with murder in his heart. I saw it with my own eyes. And still, I will give it up for your sake.โ
Heโs not going to let you go back, my rage whispered. Heโs going to deny you your vengeance.
โJust as I know exactly who knew we were coming here.โ I stared into his green eyes, and he recoiled at whatever he saw in mine. โIt can be no one but Ylva. Why wonโt you believe me? Why are you protecting her?โ
โIโm protecting you!โ His fingers tightened. โIโm not letting you do this. Not while youโre consumed by thisโฆthis rage. You need to be yourself to make this decision.โ
โI am myself.โ
โYour eyes are red again! Your rage is controlling you!โ
Youโll need to elude him, the voice whispered. Be clever.
โFine,โ I said. โLet us see to my mother, and when Iโve calmed down to your satisfaction, Iโll prove to you that my choice is the same.โ
Unease flashed across Bjornโs face, but he nodded. Following my directions, he carried my motherโs body inside the home my father had built and placed her on the bed where my lifeโs story had begun, then muttered, โIโll retrieve the horses.โ
I stared at my motherโs body. There were words that needed to be spoken, sentiments from deep within, but my fury kept them from surfacing. Everything seemed tinted red, a pulse throbbing in my temples that urged only for vengeance. My focus sharpened as I heard hooves approaching when Bjorn returned, and I abandoned the house to go outside.
Taking my mareโs reins from him, I said, โPlease burn it.โ
Bjorn didnโt reply, only handed me the reins to his own horse before muttering Tyrโs name, his axe blazing bright. My mare recoiled, and I allowed the animal to draw me back several paces, Bjornโs horse following.
Youโll need to be quick.
My heart raced, sweat dampening my palms as I secured my shield to my saddle and threw the reins over my horseโs head. Bjorn cast a glance at me, and I nodded, waiting until he pressed his axe to the side of the house, the wood instantly blackening.
I flung myself into the saddle and spurred my horse into motion.
Bjornโs gelding snorted as I pulled on its reins, dragging it along with me.
โFreya!โ
My anger wavered at Bjornโs shout, but the dark voice whispered, Heโll stop you if given the chance. The voice was right. I kicked my horse into a gallop, leading his horse away from my familyโs farm.
I refused to look back.