Chapter 18
CLEVE STARED DOWN at Utta’s porridge. For the first time since he’d tasted his first blissful spoonful, he didn’t even like the looks of it. He set his bowl aside. He heard a laugh and looked up to see Chessa grinning and shaking her head at something Laren had said.
How could she laugh after what he’d done to her?
She was strong, this wife of his. She wasn’t one to complain or cry.
But still, did she have to act so very contented?
So happy? Didn’t she realize what he’d not done to her?
And she’d smiled at him and wanted to have him hurt her again after Kiri had left at dawn.
At least he’d been civilized enough to be firm about it. He didn’t begin to understand her.
He rose from the bench only to be pounded on his back, in turn, by Hafter, Rorik, and Gunleik.
“She looks pleased,” Hafter said. “Not as pleased as Entti after our first married night together, but still, she’s smiling and laughing.”
“Aye, it appears you didn’t exhaust her with your lust,” Gunleik said. “It’s always uncertain what will happen with an innocent girl like Chessa.”
“I’m just pleased she can still walk,” Merrik said, walking up to them. “You’d been a long time without a woman, Cleve. Truth be told I was a bit worried you’d be too enthusiastic.”
Rorik said. “Mirana told me Kiri ended up between the two of you.”
Cleve nodded. “She kicked me off the edge of the bed, then called Kerzog, thinking it all a great jest.”
Gunleik said, frowning at Cleve, “You don’t look like a man who’s enjoyed himself all through a long dark night with a new wife who worships you.”
“Gunleik’s right,” Hafter said, adding his frowning to Gunleik’s. “You look like you’ve got a cramp in your bowels, that, hmmm, or you’ve done something incredibly stupid with your new bride.”
It was too much, damn their interfering eyes. He shouted, “Damn all of you. My bowels are just fine. You want the truth, you damned meddlesome sods? Very well, I failed her. I fell asleep like a stuporous goat.”
Rorik groaned and struck his fist against Cleve’s arm. “You didn’t. Truly, you fell asleep? Quickly? Aye, I see by the guilt in your eyes you did. By all the gods, Cleve, you give us all a bad name.”
“I’m going to the bathing hut,” Cleve said and left them to stare after him.
He rubbed his arm as he walked out of the longhouse.
He didn’t look at his new wife, the wife who’d hounded him since he’d met her, the wife who’d stood firmly against a marriage to either the future king of the Danelaw or to the future Duke of Normandy.
It made no sense that she’d always wanted him.
Now she had to regret her choice, surely now she didn’t want to see him again.
Then why was she laughing with Laren? Why did she look so happy?
Chessa was very aware of every movement he’d made since he’d picked up a bowl of Utta’s porridge, then quickly set it down again as if it were a bowl of snakes to bite him.
She saw the men jest with him, doubtless questioning him about what he’d done the previous night.
She smiled. She couldn’t wait to kiss him, to touch him again.
Then he turned from them and walked out of the longhouse, never looking back, not even at her. What was wrong with him?
Rorik came up, kissed his wife, then turned to Chessa, a big grin on his handsome face. “So Cleve finally confessed that he’d failed you. The men have berated him unmercifully. Tell me, Chessa, did he truly fall asleep?”
Ah, so that’s what it was all about. Chessa looked shyly down at her shoes.
In a voice so soft Rorik had to lean down to hear her, she said, “He did finally, just before dawn. I have to admit I was relieved. It was more than I expected. No one told me about how it would be.” She gave Laren and Mirana a reproachful look.
“Relieved he fell asleep?” Rorik said, looking at her closely. “That makes no sense at all. Why the devil would you be relieved?”
“I was so very tired, Rorik,” she said, eyes still on her shoes, her voice very faint now, a thin thread of a sound.
“Ah, it’s not that I didn’t enjoy it, for Cleve is a man who demands passion and knows how to call it forth from a woman.
” She shuddered delicately in memory. “But truly, isn’t mating five times sufficient for a man?
Must he continually want more? Does he never tire? ”
Rorik just stared at her. “Five times?”
She nodded, shy as the shyest maiden, eyes still down, mute as the babe in Entti’s arms.
Rorik frowned. “Chessa, are you certain you counted correctly? That is, to be five times, it’s not just that he comes into, well, never mind that.
It’s separate times with time in between so that, well, it means—” Mirana poked his arm.
Rorik shook his head. “By all the gods, you’ll be pregnant by the end of the day if he continues as he’s begun.
Five times? You’re sure it was five separate times? ”
She never looked up, just nodded. Her voice was tiny now in embarrassment.
“Very separate. The fifth time was difficult for I was very tired, but Cleve just laughed and kissed me and wouldn’t stop.
The pleasure he forced upon me, well, it nearly sent me into oblivion.
But even then I fell asleep before he did.
I have to admit it. I was glad he was kind enough to let me sleep.
He said he fell asleep then? I wondered for he never slowed, never stopped touching me and giving me pleasure. ”
Rorik strode off, shaking his head. Mirana looked at Chessa, saw the wicked gleam in her eyes, and began to laugh.
“Ah, that was very well done of you. You rival Laren as a skald. My poor husband will now believe he’s failed me, Chessa.
Actually, I can’t wait until tonight. He’ll believe he must prove himself.
By the gods, all the men will feel as if their manhood has been called into question.
Ah, the women will love this. Well done, well done. ”
“I thought it was,” Chessa said, grinning like one of Mirana’s sons when he’d managed to fool his father. “I believe I’ll go to the bathing hut.” She turned. “Is five times more than a man can accomplish in one night?”
“I honestly don’t know. I hope to find out tonight. Rorik will do his best now that he knows the new standard. A standard that every man on Hawkfell Island will know before the day is out. Separate times. Ah, that was well done.”
When Chessa entered the outer room in the bathing hut Cleve was already dressed.
She walked up to him, took his face between her hands and brought his head down to kiss him.
“Hello, husband,” she said, and kissed him again.
His hair was wet, the thick golden strands brushing his shoulders.
He looked so barbaric, so wonderfully alive she never wanted to let him out of her sight.
“I’m going hunting with Merrik and Oleg and the Malverne men,” he said, clasping her wrists and pulling her arms down. “You will help the women dry meat and fish. We will need a lot of food when we leave for Scotland. I wish to leave in four days. I’ve already spoken to Kiri.”
“All right. I don’t know anything about drying meat or fish, but Mirana will show me. Do you have time for another bath, Cleve?”
He felt the hunger in her, felt her absolute acceptance of him, and he felt like garbage tossed in a refuse mound.
He’d failed her, left her wanting and not understanding what it was she’d missed because he’d been such a frantic pig.
He had to gather himself together. Even now, after she’d just kissed him, he wanted to fling her down to the pounded earth floor, rip up her gown and come into her.
He wouldn’t. He couldn’t begin to imagine what Merrik would think of him if he knew how he’d treated his virgin bride the previous night.
She wanted him to bathe with her? He shuddered at the thought, seeing her naked and wet, his hands slick with soap, stroking over her, seeing himself lifting her and coming up into her.
By the gods, it was too much. He’d kill himself before he shamed her again.
“Nay, I can’t now, Chessa. I will see you later.
” He kissed her quickly and strode to the outer door.
He turned and said, “I’m sorry about last night.
I don’t know what happened to me, but I just had to have you and that’s never happened to me before, but—” He looked furious with himself and embarrassed and desperate.
She said, looking at him straightly, “I want to touch you again, Cleve, wrap my fingers around you, listen to you moan, feel you shudder. The feel of you makes me very happy. Don’t you like it when I touch you there?”
He looked as if she’d just shot him with an arrow. He was gone in an instant.
Chessa looked down at her toes and smiled. Men were strange. They were also fascinating. She couldn’t wait to get him alone tonight.
What to do about Kiri? She grinned, remembering how the little girl had called in Kerzog and told the damned mongrel that he’d been right.
She’d thought it all a game, the two of them in the same box bed, both of them naked, laughing, tugging at Kerzog, racing out of the small sleeping chamber.
She’d lifted Kiri that morning after she’d finished her porridge, tossed her into the air and told her she was going to tie her to Kerzog’s tail so she couldn’t come in and attack her poor papa before he was even awake.
“Which Papa?” Kiri had said, laughed at her own cleverness, and wriggled out of Chessa’s arms.
She hadn’t known what to expect that morning, but she’d been hopeful. Her hope hadn’t lasted long. He’d acted ashamed, embarrassed. He’d quickly left the chamber, saying little to her. Now she understood. She wondered what the men had said, what he’d said to the men.