Chapter Two #3
A half hour later, he spied firelight in the near distance.
He stopped. Finally, the gods interceded on his behalf.
The landscape had started to change dramatically over an hour ago.
Woods and a small lake were ahead. He’d survived sipping on mead for two days.
If there was a camp, he’d find food and maybe a horse.
Fresh water to drink, too. He’d kill a man for a loaf of bread.
Rachelle stopped beside him and gazed ahead. The empty look in her eyes sent a shiver down his spine. He’d not addressed her since the argument. “Thirsty?” he asked calmly.
“Not for that poison you offered me before.”
Strong spirits weren’t meant for women. “We’ll rest here.”
Nodding, she glided down the footpath ahead of him.
Convinced the girl had lost her bloody mind, her latest reaction confirmed it.
One minute she was in tears, the next, as joyful as a child on a casual walk.
Everything felt strange here. Plodding after her, he approached the water, yards down shore from her.
Through the thin moonlight, he could see her washing her face and hands.
Dragging his feet in the shallows, he crouched, scooped up a handful of water, then drank.
Laughter echoed across the lake. He shot up—looking left, then right. Nothing. Perhaps the local residents were celebrating their victory. Surely, her countrymen would take care of her. Now would be the perfect time to leave. He gave her a last look, then silently slipped into the woods.
It didn’t take her long to notice his absence. “Tyr.”
His heart quickened. Too loud, she nearly screamed his name. Be quiet. Do anything but cling to me …
Rachelle tried to stay calm. She nibbled on her bottom lip.
Given the dreadful events of the day, why should his disappearance bother her?
Fantasizing about a new life was hopeless.
Whatever awaited her back home, she’d face it.
Did she have a choice? She needed to prepare for whatever life God intended her to live.
With or without the love of a family. People suffered far worse fates every day.
She was just another girl in a great wide world full of heartache and death.
The elders in her village often debated about predestination and freewill.
Today, she sided with the supporters of predestination.
No matter what she did, she couldn’t change the future.
God blessed and cursed humankind as he saw fit.
Thinking on the tribulations of God’s most faithful servant, Job, made her more appreciative of her circumstances.
Nothing would make her regret meeting Tyr Sigurdsson.
In the time she’d spent with him, she’d learned so much.
Heard his incantations and witnessed pagan funeral rites.
She’d carry that knowledge with her and would always be grateful he’d spared her life.
It was time to let go of childish imaginings and accept that part of her had perished with her parents.
She couldn’t resurrect that piece of her soul.
But if Uncle Henry was alive, she swore to try harder.
Feeling better, she turned west. Thanks to Tyr’s exceptional navigational skills, her sense of direction had been restored.
All she needed to do was walk through the night and she’d get back to where she’d started.
And closer to her uncle, she hoped. Before she’d gone too far, a pack of men approached.
Their discordant greetings between gulps of wine were followed by a string of garbled praises to King Harold for slaying the barbarians.
Not wishing to appear frightened, she greeted them.
“A great day for England,” she chimed in.
They raised their bottles in salute. “To the king!”
The largest gave her a lopsided grin. “Lost?”
Thankful for the silvery bright moonlight, she searched their faces. Besides being intoxicated, they seemed friendly. “No,” she lied. “I’m on my way home.” That sounded idiotic. Women didn’t travel across the moors in the middle of the night.
The man who offered the first smile shrugged. “Rare to find such a pretty bird out here,” he observed. “Didn’t you give your own safety any thought?”
Her eyes locked on his. Panic slowly chilled her blood. Five of them … she tried to think of an appropriate response.
“Come.” The lout offered his hand. “We’ve a warm fire and food to share.”
“Don’t waste your time.” One of his companions slapped him on the back. “Look at ’er. She’s no lady. Coin is the only thing that will change her mind.”
That snide comment deserved a slap. Before she had a chance to retort, all five encircled her. She struggled to stay calm. Showing fear would only encourage more intimidation and bad behavior.
The big one snared her hands and tried to coax her to go with them. “I’ll keep you warm.”
The smell of male sweat, mixed with his rancid breath, made her stomach churn. Yanking her hands free, for a split second, she scanned the trees. Tyr had vanished. No other alternative existed.
She ran.
The sound of pursuing footsteps made her legs buckle.
Tackled from behind, she tumbled and smacked her head on the ground.
Rolling onto her back, she struggled to take a full breath as she crab crawled away.
The beast with bad breath stumbled closer, taking a last drink from his bottle.
He tossed it over her head. It hit the water with a splash.
Loosening his breeches as he advanced, she was trapped between the water and her assailant.
“I wish I had a hot little piece of arse like you at home. I’d never leave.”
She burrowed her fingers into the muddy earth.
Two more steps and he’d be standing at her feet.
If he were closer, she’d spit in his eye.
Tempted to slither into the water like a snake, she guessed what would happen.
She’d drown because of her fear. Better take her chance fighting on solid ground.
Her mouth dropped open when he pulled his breeches off.
Having never seen a man naked below the hips, her eyes were naturally drawn south.
Choking back her alarm, she tried to forget the grotesque appendage covered with dark coarse hair.
She knew what he wanted. God designed men and women to fit together.
And her dear uncle, who considered knowledge more deadly than weapons, had told her what to do if a man ever tried to rape her.
The chance to test her kinsman’s advice never came.
A bloodcurdling scream fragmented the silence.
Out of nowhere, Tyr appeared and swept his sword horizontally.
The rapist didn’t see it coming. With one stroke, Tyr separated the man’s head from his body.
The gruesomeness of his act forced her into silence.
Turning away, she heard a cry of dire warning.
“Norse!”
Looking up, the Viking, who stood only a few feet to the right of her, jammed his elbow downward, smashing the nose of the man who came at him first. That one crashed to the ground.
Another challenged Tyr. His blade stopped him short.
The ruffian grabbed ahold of his left side and sank to his knees, howling in pain.
Rachelle saw blood gushing from the wound.
Stunned by Tyr’s raw courage and speed, Rachelle stared unblinking at her rescuer.
He’d only confronted three. Where were the other two? Worried, she started to call to him.
But he dropped his sword and shot left before she could make a sound.
Squinting, she watched as he caught the fourth derelict by the nape as he started to run.
Lifting him off the ground, Tyr snaked his arm around his neck.
The unmistakable sound of snapping bones made her body clench.
Before the corpse slid to the ground, the last man fell on his knees and begged for his miserable life.
Stepping close, the corners of Tyr’s lips curled upward into a ruthless grin as he backhanded the drunkard so hard his head rolled back.
After observing such brutality, she didn’t know what she thought or felt anymore. That Viking—half man, half beast—had single-handedly eliminated four lives. Fearing for Tyr’s mortal soul, she shoved forward, intent on saving the last man’s life. “Leave him to God’s justice.”
“If the White Christ’s idea of justice is allowing a defenseless woman to get raped by five men—to Hel with your faith,” Tyr snarled.
The sot opened and closed his bloodied mouth, then clamped onto Tyr’s feet. Kicking him off, Tyr pulled his war axe. He rested the edge of his weapon on the coward’s left shoulder. Murder sucked the goodness from men, the more they killed, the more inhumane they became.
As if he read her mind, he said, “Rape is punishable by death. By your own words—eye for eye, tooth for tooth …”
“Shouldn’t I have a say in his punishment?”
Their gazes wrestled for dominance. Tyr straightened with indignation. “He’s a threat to my survival. I cannot risk it. He’ll run to the local magistrate and tell them I’m alive. You have nothing to do with that.”
The size of a mule and more stubborn … She owed him everything for saving her life and honor. But the man at his feet had already suffered and been stripped of his dignity. By the light of the moon and stars she could see the large wet stain on the front of his breeches after he sat up.
Drawing a deep breath, she said, “Go ahead. And after you kill him, you better execute me, too. I’m as much a threat as he is.”
Cursed witch. Things were much easier in Norway. Without giving it another thought, Tyr lowered his weapon, then grabbed a fistful of his captive’s hair. He’d give in to her dimwitted request to pacify her, but not without satisfying his own need for revenge. “Horse. Food,” he demanded.
“I’d rather die than betray my country—” the criminal started.
Tyr thumped his head. He sank down, shaking and whining.
Sick with rage, Tyr stared at Rachelle. “This situation is ripe for trouble.” His only concern should be for his own survival.
She addressed her countryman. “If you refuse him, he’ll cut your heart out.”
For a noblewoman, she had a way with words.
Tyr nearly laughed out loud at the absurdity of what came out of her mouth.
He’d learned something important about her, though.
Either she’d experienced more violence than any woman should or she was as frigid as an ice shelf.
Regardless, her warning changed the Saxon’s mind.
The man pointed at his camp. “There are horses and food over there.”
With a twist of an earlobe, Tyr forced him to his feet.
He harbored a special hatred for rapists.
If he couldn’t disembowel the bastard, he’d find another way to make him suffer.
It didn’t take long. A grin spread across Tyr’s face as he framed the man’s punishment in his mind.
He would tie a noose around his neck, loop the rope over a high branch, and make him sit astride a horse with his hands tied behind his back.
If the drukkin moved, he’d hang himself.
All three started up the footpath leading to the far side of the lake. After eating his fill, he’d saddle a horse and ride like thunder. Nothing would stop him from reaching his ship.