To Find a Viking Treasure (Norse Series Book 2)

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Authors: Gina Conkle

Tags: #Romance, #Viking, #Ancient World, #Historical, #Historical Romance

BOOK: To Find a Viking Treasure (Norse Series Book 2)
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To Find a Viking Treasure

Norse Series Book 2

Gina Conkle

 

Copyright

This ebook is licensed to you for your personal enjoyment only.

This ebook may not be sold, shared, or given away.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the writer’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

To Find a Viking Treasure

Copyright © 2016 by Gina Conkle

Ebook ISBN: 9781943772582

 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

 

No part of this work may be used, reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without prior permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

 

NYLA Publishing

350 7
th
Avenue, Suite 2003, NY 10001, New York.

http://www.nyliterary.com

 

Chapter One

AD 1022

Uppsala, the throne seat in the Viking kingdom of Svea

 

“You’ve been sold.”

“What?” Sestra’s pitcher plopped into a barrel of ale.

“To a man of Uppsala.” Lady Mardred raised her voice above the din and rescued the bobbing vessel. “Or Gotland. I’m not sure.”

The matron set the pitcher on a table where leeks awaited slicing. Lady Mardred cleaned her hands with quick, efficient swipes. Thralls came and went in her life. It was the Viking way.

Raw-boned men crammed into the longhouse, their coarse voices booming off smoke-hazed rafters. Warriors, farmers, fishermen. The kind of men to charge first into a fight and last to leave. All had gathered to have their say and argue who should be king. Ill-winds had come to Uppsala, the throne seat of the Viking kingdom of Svea. King Olof was freshly exiled by his son Anund Jakob, but a Dane called Gorm had come, claiming he was better fit to rule.

Two men vied for the empty throne. Who would win it?

But, Sestra was a lesser mortal with a simpler question.
Who bought her?

She stared numbly at a craggy-faced man pounding his fist on a table. One hand touched the hidden scar on her neck. The ridged skin oddly soothed her.

“You don’t know his name?”

“Your mistress didn’t say.” The Viking matron plucked a copper-banded bucket off a high peg where eight more buckets lined the wall.

“Will I meet him soon?”

“You will,” Lady Mardred said, counting earthen pitchers waiting to be filled. “Tonight, I think. But you labor for me first until all these men are fed. This is all I know.”

All these men.
The sea of masculine faces blurred in the cavernous longhouse. One of the men would take her. Tonight.

 Lady Mardred’s blunt news crushed her secret wish for freedom, so did the kingdom’s troubles, but a rusted war hammer hung near the door, a heart-warming sight, and clear proof not all Vikings were blood-thirsty. Lady Mardred’s husband had an aversion for war. It was his purpose in calling Uppsala’s men together, a bid to peacefully choose one king.

“Sestra.” Lady Mardred gentled her voice. “I need you to fill these pitchers. Can you do that?”

She forced a cheery smile. “Yes.”

Hiding emotions was a skill she’d mastered long ago. Thralls, especially the women, couldn’t afford the luxury of honest feelings. Those who fought didn’t live long, survival had taught her as much.

“Good. The meat is almost done, and I fear if we don’t feed these men soon, they won’t have the patience to hear what my Halsten has to say.” The tall matron walked to her cooking fire, a long gold braid swinging from the crown of her head.

Sestra dunked a new pitcher in ale, the grainy sweet aroma filling her nose. With tempers on edge, she’d have to tread with care. The turmoil could make it easier to move unnoticed, except for the red-bearded stranger from Aland. His lustful glint cut across the longhouse. The leering visitor had pawed her bottom when she’d poured his drink earlier. His breath’s slimy feel still lingered on her neck when he’d whispered how he’d use her later. Thralls made easy prey for lust-addled warriors and could never refuse them.

Her grip on the pitcher’s handle tightened. She was done lifting her skirts for men.

Eyes narrowed on the roomful of noisy Vikings, she hefted the vessel with too much fervor, splashing cold ale on her chest.

“Uhhh,” she gasped. Gold droplets splattered her freckled cleavage. Her skin would be sticky all night.

Sturdy brown wool barely covered ample curves from an error when her mistress sized her. The poorly cut tunic brought her much unwanted attention.

“May my new lord prove generous in dressing me.” She pinched the sopping bodice. If she could move the neckline a finger’s breadth or two higher, she’d be decently clothed.

She crouched behind the barrel and yanked up her neckline. A stitch snapped. The strained fabric hardly budged. Chin to chest, she exhaled and tugged again with both hands, jostling her breasts for room that wasn’t there. If she could tie her apron higher and shield them…

The fine hairs on her neck stood on end as a pair of familiar black leather boots cross-gartered with frayed leather stepped into view.

Brandr.

Cheeks flushing hotly, a groan caught in her throat. There was no graceful way out of this.

She released the awkward grip on her bodice and raised her head, meeting the Viking’s mocking grin with a tight-lipped smile. Tarnished silver eyes pierced her from the shadows where the savage warrior stood, a thumb hooked in his belt.

“Sestra.”

Her skin prickled. Brandr’s deep voice marked her when he said her name, the same way a wild beast’s growl did when stalking prey in a midnight forest. Strength rippled under his black tunic stretched across shoulders broad enough to block out the light. By Viking standards, he was barely tame, preferring the woods to Uppsala’s people. His edge, born of a near-feral nature or simply hard man, weakened her knees. The warrior rattled her, and he knew it.

 And tonight he’d sought her.

“What are you looking at?” she snapped, rocking back on her heels. It was a good effort to restore faltering confidence.

“You.” His graveled voice rumbled with humor.

“At least we know your eyes work.”

Brandr’s grin split wider. “The rest of me does too, but you won’t get
your
work done hiding back here.”

She itched to slap the smirk off his face. Of all men,
he
had to be the one to witness her, ducking behind a barrel, ale-splashed breasts jiggling as she struggled with ill-fitting clothes.  

The Viking leaned against a post, holding a drinking horn casually against his thigh.  “Got a problem with your clothes?”

“I’m sure you have better things to do than worry about my tunic.”

“Looked like you needed help. You usually do.” He took a drink, eyeing the table full of empty pitchers and uncut vegetables.

Her knees hurt, a reminder she hunkered down on the floor. Bellows rose from the crowd and through a crack between two barrels, she witnessed two red-faced men. One banged a fist on the table, sending wooden bowls clattering against empty drinking horns in their stands. Someone needed to fill the drinking horns of angry men.

“You could be the last man standing,” she said, pushing to full height. “And I’d not ask for your help.”

She snatched her apron to her chest. Dabbing the excess ale bothered already sensitive skin. How was it her ears found his voice in all the noise? The Viking was never friendly.

Brandr taunted her most nights in his unhurried way, but she got him back. Spilling mead on his boots at feasts. Serving food to others first, giving his portion last. Or not at all. His self-assured gaze would follow her before the warrior got off his seat, giving her a slight nod as he ambled off to fetch his food.

Besting him thrilled her, made her blood race at their strange game of cat and mouse. Drying off her skin, she had an inkling Brandr fed on it too. Yet, he’d never groped her and never demanded she lay with him. He’d not touched her at all.

Her hands slowed on her breasts. Was that why he sought her now?

“Missed a spot,” he said, eyeing her low neckline.

Her nipples pinched to hard, pebbled points as a slow trickle of wetness disappeared in her cleavage. Brandr’s grin was a slash of white against black whiskers as if he knew what her body would do and wasn’t disappointed. Her mouth opened with a ready retort, but she froze.

Was he the one who’d take her?

Brandr was a House Karl, a humble fighter of Uppsala. He excelled at scouting for the chieftain Lord Hakan. The role fit. Nothing escaped his keen eyes, including a wayward droplet of ale. When others bragged of their exploits, the silver-eyed Viking stayed silent. Warriors young and old nodded respectfully when he walked through Uppsala. At feasts, people always made room for Brandr on crowded benches. The rough-souled Viking kept to himself most nights, gambling with one or two others to improve his meager fortune, which gave her pause.

He couldn’t be the one. He lacked adequate coin.

Brandr tapped his chin, chuckling. “Might want to close your mouth.”

Her fingertips touched her lips. He didn’t goad her the way he did most nights. His teasing was mild at best, but a black-eyed warrior hailed Brandr, interrupting a moment that went on too long. Dropping her apron, she exhaled slowly.

She escaped…something.

Brandr straddled the bench, a secret smile on his lips as though he read her thoughts. She leaned a hip against the barrel and smoothed her apron’s pleats.
Get through this night.
She didn’t have time to trade barbs with Brandr. The matter of who bought her hung over her head.

Ella, a fragile-framed thrall, balanced pitchers in both hands, wending her way around tables and men. She plunked down the empty vessels on Sestra’s table. “My feet ache already and the evening’s not half done.”

“Then why don’t we take a much deserved rest? The men aren’t drinking much tonight.”

“Because their tongues wag of war.” Ella’s blue eyes dimmed. “I’ve lived here all my life and never has there been fighting in Uppsala.”

“I miss the old king.” He at least kept the peace.

King Olof had tried to abolish the old ways of worship, but the people of Uppsala would have none of it. They wanted sacrifices of animals and men every nine years as was their pagan custom. The king’s young son, Anund Jakob, swore to keep the custom the day he forced his father to leave. All of Uppsala marveled at the bloodless exile until another caused trouble. Gorm. The Dane had lurked all summer, a predator sniffing weakness, waiting for the right moment to claim to the throne.

All for the love of power and their Norse gods.

Sestra stared at the fire pit’s dancing flames, remembering the day the king left Uppsala.

 

Water numbed her feet. Hot tears rolled down her cheeks. Throngs milled about the shore, the silence uncanny. Wood creaked from King Olof stepping aboard his ship. He gripped the vessel’s dragon
head, his penannular ring gleaming on broad shoulders.

Grim-faced men churned oars in water. The king faced Uppsala, watching his people with stoic eyes until morning mist swallowed him whole. One by one and two by two everyone left, their footsteps whispers on the sand until she stood alone.

King Olof, the only man to ever show her fatherly kindness, was gone.

 

Ella nudged her. “See how they finger their weapons.”

Sestra blinked and focused on the raucous longhouse. “Because they itch to use them.”

“If chaos comes, what will you do?”

“Hope my new lord takes me far from here.”

Ella’s smooth brow furrowed. “I heard you were sold.”

Sestra gripped the barrel’s edge. Laboring for Lady Henrikkson had been a gift for both thralls. The older woman was more mother hen than exacting mistress.

“You don’t seem vexed by the news,” Ella went on.

“There’s nothing I can do about it,” she said, eyeing a group of men snarling at each other. 

“You could ask for your freedom.”

A farmer stumbled into Red Beard, and the stranger from Aland shoved the man all the while watching Sestra the way a serpent eyes a mouse. She turned away, but his eyes burned holes in her back.

“Freedom?” Sestra’s voice notched higher. “Better to serve a
wealthy
master. That means security.”

One she thought she’d found serving the Lady Henrikkson and her warrior son, Sven. Lady Henrikkson was a reasonable soul, the kind of woman Sestra believed would listen when she raised the subject of her freedom.

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