God's Eye (The Northwomen Sagas #1) (2 page)

BOOK: God's Eye (The Northwomen Sagas #1)
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They thought she bore the eye Odin, the Allfather, had sacrificed for his wisdom. They thought she had seen Asgard. They thought she had brought the sight of the gods to Midgard with her.

 

“There is no other path for me.”

 

Her father nodded. He was training her because he agreed, and because he would be proud for her to fight. He and her mother had not married for love, but they had fallen in love fighting side by side.

 

But as he stood and carried his sword to hang it at its place on the wall, with his back to her as if he didn’t want to see her face when he said it, he added, “Your mother thinks you would make a good healer. She is speaking today with Oili about taking you on as apprentice.”

 

Brenna stood up. “Father, no!” Oili was an old woman who lived in the woods, even farther from the heart of the village than they lived. Everyone went to her for healing and remedies, and everyone made sure that she was safe and warm and fed, but no one ever went to her to keep company. No one ever chatted with her when she came to the river. No one invited her to break bread at their table. More than merely a healer, she was a völva—a witch, a prophetess—and they feared her. They thought her a necessary and powerful being, beyond concerns of good or evil, who helped them because they made her offerings.

 

Her parents, too, believed in Oili’s power, and now Brenna wondered if her mother felt fear, or awe, of her after all. Why else would she seek to doom her own daughter to a life like that?

 

The idea that she would be locked forever into the shackles of life as the village mystic made Brenna feel sick at her stomach. “Please, Father. I cannot.”

 

He turned and faced her, then came back to the table and took her sword from her hands. “Your mother and I will speak on it tonight. For now, there is work to be done.”

 

 

~oOo~

 

 

That night, Brenna lay in her narrow bed and listened to her parents argue. The animals just over the wall from where she lay stirred restlessly, unused to such harsh sounds. One of the young sheep bleated and stuck his snout between the slats of the wall. Brenna scratched its velvety black.

 

“Gunnar, I will not! I will not lose another child!”

 

“You would have her be a crone? You think you will not lose her that way? She wants this, Dagy. She is the daughter of warriors. We should let her walk the path of her choosing. Let her be feared for the power she truly has, not over silly superstition.”

 

“And you are so sure it’s superstition?”

 

“Dagmar, no. Do not. She is a girl.
Our
girl. We would know by now if she were more than that.”

 

“Would we? She has only just come into her blood. What if more than her womanhood flowers now? Shouldn’t she be with someone who understands what that means? Who can help her use her power wisely? The God’s Eye, Gunnar. If they who say it are right…”

 

“It is no god’s eye. It is
Brenna’s
eye. Our daughter. Her eye is only…colorful. It is beautiful.”

 

“Too beautiful for a human to bear. It holds all of sea and earth and sky. It holds Yggdrasil itself. The eye of the Allfather. You know the stories. You know what they say.”

 

“The stories also say that Dagmar Wildheart fought in Jötunheim and fed for a week on the heart of a giant. How did it taste, wife?”

 

Brenna heard a sweetly mocking tone come into her father’s voice, a tone that was familiar. Normally, her mother would laugh and bat his seeking hands away.

 

Instead, her mother said, “Gunnar, stop. I cannot. I cannot have her go off to die the way our sons died. I cannot.”

 

She was crying. When Brenna heard the susurration of her father soothing her mother with whispers, she knew that she was lost. Her father had been a renowned warrior, a fearsome berserker, but he was no match for his woman’s tears.

 

But she could not be apprenticed to Oili. That could not be her life, doomed so young to live alone in the woods forever.

 

When her parents finally slept, Brenna left their home. She took only the sword and shield her father had been training her to use.

 

She hoped to return someday, but she knew not when.

 

 

 

 

Brenna shrieked and leapt forward, over the body of the Estlander who’d just fallen to her sword. The ground all around her was littered with bodies. The liquid heat that always filled her joints and muscles in a fight throbbed and surged. She had known that frantic fire since before she’d ever picked up shield or sword, and she had come to know it as bloodlust. Battle rage.

 

Power.

 

The raiding party had landed too close to the site of an earlier raid and had had to move inland to find spoils worth taking. The Estlanders, broken and weary as they were from fighting the raiders and losing, again and again, were yet putting up a vigorous fight. They’d had time to prepare during the raiders’ inland trek. But they were villagers, with not enough warriors to combat the seasoned party. Only a few were left on their feet, and the dirt had gone muddy with the blood of their dead.

 

“SHIELD WALL! SHIELD WALL!”

 

Brenna heard the call and abandoned her charge, turning instead toward Calder, the raid leader, and running to take her place with her fellows. As she ran, she saw a second wave of resistance charging into the village. Reinforcements—soldiers, dressed all alike, so they were from a nearby lord. Men who were trained, who were fresh, who had not been fighting nonstop while the sun moved through the sky toward midday. With that quick, running glance, Brenna knew that there were considerably more fresh soldiers than there were wearying raiders.

 

That a lord would send his men in such quantity against their war band told Brenna that they had trekked close to the seat of his power. In her experience, lords considered the villages on the edges of their territories expendable—distractions that kept the raiders occupied and away from the true treasure. She had wanted to trek inland for some time, but Jarl Åke and his sons preferred the easy pillage of the shores.

 

Brenna had never argued otherwise. She avoided attention to every extent she could, preferring to let her sword and shield speak for her.

 

She locked in with the others just as a volley of arrows flew into the sky and then thundered down onto their heavy alder shields. Then another volley rained down. An arrow slammed into Brenna’s shield and made her arm sing. And then the new warriors charged, trying to break through the wall.

 

“BRACE!”

 

At the command, Brenna dug into her crouch and locked her shoulder. The impact of the mass of men falling on them at once was great, but the wall was not moved. Unshielded berserkers, men who fought with no protection but their weapons and their inner fire, leapt up and brought their axes down on the bodies of the men trying to breach the shield wall.

 

“OPEN!”

 

A space was opened in the wall, and another shieldmaiden slammed her axe into the face of a soldier who’d lost his helm.

 

“CLOSE!”

 

They closed the wall over his dead body, and the berserkers leapt up again, slamming brutal blows down on the soldiers, breaking pointed swords with mighty axes.

 

Again, Calder, Jarl Åke’s eldest son, shouted, “OPEN!” just as the soldiers surged. At least ten soldiers fell into the breach and were surrounded by raiders as Calder shouted and the wall closed again. Brenna came face to face with a soldier no older than she. She saw terror in his eyes—and shock that he faced a woman.

 

And then she shoved her sword up, into the soft meat under his chin, and his eyes died with the rest of him.

 

When the odds were more balanced, the shield wall came apart, and raiders and remaining soldiers fought freely. Brenna yanked the arrow from her shield as she leapt backward, clear of the scrum. It was to a shieldmaiden’s benefit to let her foe see she was a woman; whenever they fought across the sea, there was always the surprise that caused a missed step, some hesitation, something that gave her the upper hand.

 

Her own people expected women to fight. These savages kept their women weak and helpless, using them like little more than broodmares.

 

One of the soldiers surged toward her as she jumped away, bringing his sword forward with skill and intent. He barely blinked when he saw her face, and she barely managed to block the sword aimed at her neck. She did, though, throwing her shield up, and the force of her block surprised him. Using the half-second of his surprise, she slammed her bare head into him, catching his chin and mouth. His teeth opened her forehead, and her vision ran red with her own blood. As he reeled, she stepped out, bringing her longsword around in the way her father had taught her years before, and slashed the soldier across his back.

 

Unlike the villagers they’d been fighting, the soldiers wore mail, and her blow injured this one, but not mortally. He fell, and she raised her sword for the killing blow—

 

—and was knocked to her knees, her breath gone, by a blunt blow at her back. She spun on her knees, forcing air into her lungs, through the pain, and tried to bring her sword up, but there were two soldiers on her now, and one of them blocked her while the other hit her again, in the head this time, with his iron shield.

 

Her vision fragmented into shards, and she fell back, unable to make her body move. Her shield fell from a hand that had gone slack. With the sense she had left, she prepared to meet the gods in Valhalla.

 

At her first chance, she would ask Odin if indeed she had been given the eye that he had sacrificed for wisdom, and, if so, why. Because she had not, in all her twenty-one years, felt a power worthy of such a gift.

 

She had, however, felt its burden every day of her life.

 

And then a great roar split the air, and both soldiers fell dead, toppling over to their sides like felled trees. In the space they had left stood a bare-chested giant. A fellow raider. A berserker, soaked in blood, a bearded axe in his hands, dripping gore.

 

She didn’t know him by name; he was not of her clan. The jarl she served had allied with another for this raiding season, and they had all converged on the day they’d embarked. This man raided for the other jarl.

 

He turned and killed another soldier who had advanced on them, then leaned down, holding out a massive, blood-drenched hand. She took it and let him pull her up, closing her eyes until the world stopped spinning.

 

When she opened them again, he was staring down at her with bright blue eyes, and the world around them had gone quiet. She looked around—the soldiers and villagers were dead or captured. The air stank of blood and offal. The man she’d wounded moaned, struggling to his knees; she drove her sword into his back and ended his struggles.

 

The berserker had not released her hand, and Brenna turned back and found him yet staring down at her. His face was bathed with blood, it dripped thickly from his beard, and his blue eyes glowed in that dark mask. She pulled her arm, but he seemed unwilling to let her go.

 

It did not occur to her that he wanted her as a woman; no man ever had. Her eye and its supposed origin held them all at bay, even the men acclaimed for their brash courage. None would take the risk that they might be ensorcelled.

 

But the berserker wanted something.

 

“Thank you,” she said, deciding it must have been that. She pulled her arm again, and this time he let her go, so it must indeed have been thanks he was after. Her hand freed, she wiped the blood from her face and bent down to claim her shield.

 

“You are Brenna God’s-Eye,” he answered. As if she didn’t know.

 

She nodded and walked away from him. There were spoils to collect.

 

 

~oOo~

 

 

They made camp deep in the woods, and Calder sent out a party to scout for the lord’s hall. Though they had killed most of the villagers, Calder had ordered several of the women, three young men, and one of the soldiers be held captive: the soldier for information, and the young men for labor. And the women to service the raiders.

 

Raiders after a battle were a wild lot. Brenna understood the fiery need for violent release that didn’t simply end when the targets ran out. She felt it, too. Other shieldmaidens might mate with a comrade, if that was their wont. It wasn’t possible for Brenna, and she didn’t know if she would have partaken even had it been. The rutting she saw was brutal and vile, even among comrades, and it stirred her not at all.

 

As the men fell upon the new slave women, Brenna stood and walked into the woods, her sword and her shield on her back. She closed her mind to the screams and wails behind her and walked until she heard them no more.

 

The women were captives. They were slaves, with no rights to any possession, not even of their own bodies. She understood the ways and laws of her people.

 

But she hated it. Killing in a raid, she understood. She had killed women and men both. She had killed priests and shopkeepers, soldiers and farmers, rich and poor. The violence of a raid fed something in her that was always hungry.

 

Plundering villages, she also understood. Such were the spoils of victory.

 

But she had once been a slave. She could understand killing another human being, but she would never understand treating one as anything less than a human being. Ways and laws be damned.

 

Keeping her eyes and ears sharp for trouble, she followed the stream they’d camped next to until the water began to burble noisily and then rush. She preferred busy water to still; she could not see her reflection in water rushing past. She always seemed to get caught in the reflection of still water, and she hated it.

 

She had had occasions to look into a glass; she had done so only once. What she had seen had upset her too much ever to look again.

 

Not because her eye was so terrible, but because it wasn’t.

 

All she had seen, peering into the glass, was a girl. A blonde girl with long, wild hair trained into thick braids. A girl with one clear blue eye and one eye that was more than that. She had seen brown and green and blue and even yellow in her right eye. The brown seemed to cross through the center and radiate out in lines across the bottom, like the roots of a tree.

 

She understood why people said what they did.

 

But it was just an eye. The head it was in was the head of a girl. A shieldmaiden making her name, but no more nor less than that.

 

And yet, she was alone and would always be, because everyone else saw Yggdrasil in her eye. They saw the world tree. They saw the world, and they said it was Odin’s eye she bore.

 

It would have been easier to bear if it had frightened her, too.

 

So she stayed away from her reflection and let herself imagine it was much more terrible than it really was.

 

It was a waterfall she had heard—just a small one, about as tall as two men, but the water rushed over the top with force. She approached the bank just downstream and prepared to wash her face and hands.

 

Then she noticed a shadow in the fall and realized that she was not alone. She brought her hand to the hilt of her sword and froze, and scanned the area for others.

 

But for the body in the waterfall, she seemed to be alone. Her hand still on her sword, she searched the area more closely and saw, on the bank just at the waterfall, soaking in the spray, the leather boots and bearded axe of a raider.

 

BOOK: God's Eye (The Northwomen Sagas #1)
3.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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