The Golden Princess: A Novel of the Change (Change Series) (43 page)

BOOK: The Golden Princess: A Novel of the Change (Change Series)
7.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He sighed and closed his mouth, and followed her pointing finger when it swung to indicate the door into the kitchen. Light flooded out as he opened it; the alcohol lanterns on the walls had been lit.

He heard Mathun muttering as he followed, and the dogs padded after them and thumped down heavily in their current favorite spots. Dogs had keen noses for rank and authority. The kitchen—which included what had been the living room or parlor of the original building—
was the core of the household. There was the hearth against one wall, with the altar and the images of the Lord and Lady over it, the cast-iron cookstoves, the icebox, the working counters. And sinks with faucets, since Dun Fairfax had running water.

Net bags of onions, strings of garlic and red dried chilies and burlap-wrapped hams and a flitch of bacon and coils of dried smoked sausage hung from the beams of the ceiling. Around the wall beneath it was a broad band of carved boards, wrought with running designs of vines and faces from myth and story. Below that were bright hangings woven by the household’s own hands; other stretches of wall held tools of the sorts used indoors or that you might want frequently when you went out, and over by the door that led to the exterior vestibule were racks for weapons, conspicuously lacking the share he and Mathun were carrying.

Right now there was also a big mask woven of green fir-boughs hung over the long table where the whole household ate, a face with slanted eyes and a mysterious smile. It would be Litha at the end of the month, the Feast of Midsummer at the solstice, and Jack-in-the-Green presided over that. He sighed a little again, on a different note. The Green Man was master of summer’s abundance, wildness and sweetness. In the berry-time before the shattering labor of getting in the grain, at least: then He became the dying-and-reborn Harvest Lord. Lithia was a fine holiday for a young man in a Dun of the Clan.

Well, maybe I won’t be missing it anyway,
he thought sourly.

His grandmother Melissa was also there, sitting in one of the chairs at the end of the table; she was in her white High Priestess’ robe, with her rowan-wood staff with the silver Triple Moon on its finial leaned against the chair, and he winced slightly at that. She was old now, a bit bent and gnarled of hand from a life that had known its share of hardship and toil; she didn’t stand long if she could help it, but the eyes beneath her white brows were still shrewd. She could simply pronounce what he wanted to do
geasa
, and it would be that-which-is-forbidden under sanctions even a reckless young man wouldn’t dream of breaking.

His mother leaned back into the stairwell. “Down!” she called.

Mathun groaned behind him as the whole household filtered down
the stairs. His aunt Tamar—his father’s elder half-sister—and her man Eochu, a friendly sort and a fine leatherworker though quiet and unambitious, and their children. Except for the three eldest, one of whom was off with the High King’s Archers, another who’d gone south to Dun Barstow, and the third who was a millwright up in Dun Juniper. His uncle Nigel, who was only a few years older than he himself. He and his twin sister Nola had been grandmother’s last, after a long gap; Nola had moved out to a new dun with her man, as had Karl’s aunt Fand and uncle Dick. Nigel’s wife Caiomhe, and their first child, a babe in arms. And Karl’s other siblings; his brother Cathal, who was gangly, sixteen and looking at him and Mathun with bitter envy, his sister Gunnvör, twelve and doing her usual quiet cat imitation, and little Aoife, looking a bit bewildered at it all with her great blue eyes troubled and her stuffed unicorn clutched close, for she was the baby and only six.

“If you grassed us up, Cathal, then by the Threefold Queen and the Lord of the Dance I’ll smack that pimply—” Mathun began.

“Quiet!” his mother said. “Did you think to slink off without a word?”

“And
just
before the harvest,” Nigel added.

Karl winced; that
had
bothered him. “I, um, wrote a note . . .”

Then his grandmother began to laugh. “Oh, stop tormenting the boys, you two, for sweet Brigit’s sake,” she said. “Look at them stammering and flushing the now!”

He exchanged a glance of sudden hope with his brother. His mother snorted.

“They deserved a bit of a scare, for deceiving us. Or trying to.”

“Sit,” she said shortly, and they did. “It was the Princess who called you to her aid, didn’t she?”

Karl and Mathun looked at each other, and their mouths set: they couldn’t speak, not when the first part of the message had been an oath of silence. Asgerd nodded approval.

“Good. You
can
keep your mouths shut.”

“Though they couldn’t
befool
a blind three-legged pig itching with mange,” Aunt Tamar added. “Walking about looking at things and thinking ‘will I see this again.’”

“I didn’t say anything of the kind!” Karl said, and his brother nodded vigorously.

“No,” his aunt said dryly. “But you thought it. You thought it
very loudly
.”

Their mother added: “After a Royal courier I know to be a friend of Órlaith comes, and then you tiptoe around like bears trying to dance, and sneak off into corners to whisper with a few of your friends . . .”

Suddenly she grinned, and for an instant you could see the wild girl of the stories beneath the grave matron who was known to be a bit dour and stern by Mackenzie standards.

“Did I ever tell you
why
I was ready to go off with your father, when he and the King and the others came to Eriksgarth to guest with King Bjarni? Why I was a shield-maid? Which is not so common a thing among my folk as it is here, though we all train to arms.”

They looked at each other again. “No, Ma,” Karl said.

“I’d been betrothed, and not to your father,” she said, shocking them a little. “And my man was killed by the Bekwa when he went a-viking to the dead city of King’s Mountain for goods to start our own garth. I pledged to the High One on the oath-ring of the Bjornings—”

They knew that the High One meant Odhinn, Lord of the Slain and Giver of Victories; she’d told them the tales of her people. The One-Eyed wasn’t much worshipped in the dùthchas, though He was given due respect, and had followers elsewhere in Montival. Among the Bearkillers, particularly, and in Boise where the Thurstons, the ruling kin, were His. That was an unchancy One, from all the stories. You didn’t use His proper name casually, lest the ravens called Thought and Memory fly too near. Even in Norrheim, red-bearded Thor who brought rain and warded the world of men from the giants was more popular with most.

“—that I would send him ten lives for the one taken, and that by my own hand. My kin were unhappy with it, though it was within our customs . . . just barely. But your father, ah, your father just nodded and took it as a thing needing no speech. That was the start of my love for him. He was just the age you are now, Karl, and you favor him in your spirits as well as your faces, you and your brother. You’re men grown now, not
to be taken by the ear and swatted on the backside when you’re naughty. Only hiding what you meant to do angered me. Your grandmother is not in her dotage, and neither am I!”

At that all the adults were laughing, at him but with him as well. The two brothers shed their brigantines—they fastened under the right arm with clasps that could be undone quickly—racked their weapons, and hung the armor on the pegs by the door. They’d resigned themselves to missing breakfast, but that was quickly put right with bowls of porridge from the crock kept warming overnight at the back of the stove, with nuts and berries and thick yellow cream atop it, and a hasty dish of bacon and mushrooms and slabs of toasted bread and yellow summer butter.

Karl looked down as he chewed, thinking of the line he’d just heard from the Blessing:
And blessed be the mortals who toiled with You
.

“Going to be strange,” he said. “Every day eating food I didn’t help grow. About the harvest—”

Eochu shrugged, something he could do quietly, somehow; he was still strong and hale though he was older than Karl’s father and his hands were marked and scarred with the wounds of his trade from knife and awl and waxed thread.

“We have enough for the Aylward croft, what with Breinan and Evora, and Cathal getting tall enough to do most of a grown man’s work, and even if we didn’t the Dun would help,” he said.

That was the rule if a household was short labor due to public duty or sickness or unavoidable necessity, war or other emergency. Mackenzies didn’t have lords; they looked out for each other. The tight bonds of a Dun could chafe, growing up next to someone didn’t always mean your stomach wouldn’t knot at the very sight of them, but it meant safety too, and protection in a world always hard and sometimes merciless.

“And sure, Edain may have stopped screaming and running through the treetops and heaving boulders by then, enough to come home and toss a sheaf or two himself,” Eochu added with another chuckle.

Nigel nodded. “I wish I was going with you,” he sighed, then looked at his daughter as she nursed. “But . . . no. Not until the First Levy’s called out, if all this comes to war. Which it likely will, in the end, with our
High King dead. The wings of the Morrigú will be beating over this, Gwyn ap Nudd will lead the Wild Hunt riding, and many a Woman of the Mounds will keen from the rooftree at night.”

And I’m just as glad you’re not coming,
Karl thought, without saying anything aloud.

His uncle was a first-rate fighting man, clever and hard; but if he’d been along, he would have been the first among them, for all that he was only four years older. When they’d finished they gave hugs and the kiss of farewell all around, then knelt before their mother; she put her hand on their heads, and murmured a blessing in the singsong tongue of her ancestors, the one her far-off Asatruar kindred used for worship. Then:

“Be brave, be cunning, shirk no duty, and hold to loyalty above all things,” she said. Then with a catch in her voice: “And come home to me, my boys.”

More matter-of-factly. “I’ll talk to your father. He’ll rage, but it won’t last, for he’d have done the same thing in his time.”

Their grandmother pushed herself erect. “When your father left on the Quest . . . we didn’t know it would be that, then, of course . . . I blessed him. Shall I bless you?”

Karl and Mathun looked at each other, and nodded. She signed the air above them with the Invoking pentagram—point up first—and her voice rang out, cracked but strong:

“Through darkened wood and shadowed path

Hunter of the Forest, by your side

Lady of the Stars, fold you in Her wings;

So mote it be!”

Once outside the brothers lifted their bicycles down from the pegs on the wall, loaded their supplies into the panniers and pushed the machines along. Three others joined them, outfitted much as they were and around their age. Lean Ruan Chu Mackenzie had dark hair that developed red highlights in summer, and was son to the village healer. He and fair round-faced Feidlimid Benton Mackenzie, whose father was Dun
Fairfax’ master-smith, were lovers who’d sworn the oath of Iolaus together last year. Karl suspected that was the only reason Ruan had decided to come along, though his partner was wildly enthusiastic. Ruan had picked up a good deal of healing skill and herblore, and Feidlimid could do metalwork, and they were both good men of their hands. The rangy black-haired, black-eyed girl was named Boudicca Lopez Mackenzie, and was clever and could skulk quietly with the best; he’d seen her take deer by sneaking up to them and cutting their throats with a knife. The pair and the young woman both had a hound at their heels, of the same huge hairy breed; there was a moment of sniffing and tail-wagging, but the animals were used to each other too, and bouncing-glad to be off with their folk.

Boudicca looked back over her shoulder. Ruan and Feidlimid had a tuft of elk fur in the badge on their Scots bonnets to mark their sept, but Boudicca had a bit of fox tail that swayed as she tossed her head. People of her disposition often saw Sister Fox in their questing dream, and there was something of that One’s sardonic grin in her voice.

“So much for stealing away unseen. Like reiver ghosts in the night, wasn’t that how you put it, Karl?” she said with one strong eyebrow raised. “The stealth of tigers slipping through a thicket we have indeed . . . except that we do not, so.”

“Not so skilled at deceiving our own kindred, eh?” he said with a shrug. “Hopefully we’ll do better with foemen.”

She shot a respectable eighty-pound draw, but carried a glaive as well as sword and bow. The glaive was like a heavy pointed butcher-knife with a cruel hook on its rear, set on a six-foot shaft of strong ashwood with a butt-spike on the other end. The origin of the polearm was as a hedging tool; it could be wickedly effective in a fight and was surprisingly useful in other respects.

“Perhaps we should be tootling a pibroch upon the pipes instead, or beating a Lambeg?” she added. “Ah, well, at least I got a bag of supplies out of it—I thought me ma would load enough into it to rupture a pack-mule, weeping and carrying on the while and dashing back for one more thing I’d die without and that sure and certain.”

“Ours had something to send along too,” Mathun said, and the pair nodded that theirs had done likewise.

Which is convenient, I thought we’d have to stock up at Sutterdown, which would have cost good money and even more precious time.

Boudicca dug into the canvas sack lashed across the panniers on her bicycle and handed around some very nice apple-and-hazelnut-filled pastries, sweet with honey that tasted of fruit-blossoms. Karl had just had a good solid breakfast, but decided there was room, and anyway they wouldn’t keep.

“And two cheeses wrapped in dock leaves,” she said, jerking a thumb at the lumpy beige mass of the sack. “Those will travel a bit, at least.”

Everyone perked up. Boudicca’s mother Una, as all the world or at least all Dun Fairfax knew, was a dab hand as a baker and made a truly fine sweet sheep’s-milk cheese with bits of dried fruit in it that traded five for one with the ordinary sort, and another with flecks of hot peppers that was almost as good. Her daughter went on:

Other books

Still Mine by Mary Wine
Blood and Politics by Leonard Zeskind
A River Sutra by Gita Mehta
Recoil by Andy McNab
Angels by Reba White Williams
Heart of Stone by Noree Kahika
As a Man Thinketh by James Allen
Mourning Cloak by Gale, Rabia