charge to safety before giving in to his natural inclinations and attacking the murderers. But with her large pregnant belly, Ingrid’s movements had been slow and awkward. After discovering the bolted door next to them, he had ushered her towards the concealed door behind the high table, the one his father had insisted only the family should know about.

Half-hidden in the growing smoke, an assassin with a silver scar like a shooting star emblazoned across his cheek had blocked their way, his sword wet with blood. His grin had increased when he saw Ingrid’s distressed loveliness. He tore her from Sandulf’s protective grip, slicing through Sandulf’s forearm, declaring she’d be his prize. She’d screamed and beat at him with her fists. Sandulf had drawn his sword and attempted to free her, tearing an arm ring from the attacker, but another assassin had struck him from behind, forcing him to his knees. Sandulf had rolled and struck back. They’d tussled for a while, grunting and slashing at each other until he’d finally managed to disarm the female assassin, cutting her on her back. He made sure she was down before pivoting to confront Scarface and coming face to face with a sight more horrifying than any he could have imagined.

In the last rays of the sun, Sandulf shuddered and knew the image of the man standing over his brother’s dying and defiled wife would linger in his mind for the rest of his life.

When the woman assassin had cried out, Scarface had abandoned his prey, and they’d both vanished into the smoke. Sandulf had stood guard over Ingrid, powerless to do anything more than bear witness as the life seeped from her womb. Her chest had wheezed and rattled as she gasped out her final words. He had not abandoned her to chase after the woman, Scarface and their two companions. He’d stayed by her side until the flames had licked them both and his father’s helmsman had arrived, insisting he move or die.

A shout went up and the party led by his eldest brother returned, not to the resplendent wedding feast they must have been expecting, but to a ruined shell of a longhouse, all of the boats hulled below the waterline, and the dead and the dying laid out in rows exposed to the autumn sun.

Sandulf raced towards his eldest brother, reaching him before anyone else. ‘Brandt, there’s something you must know,’ he whispered, starting to say the piece he’d rehearsed in his mind—delivering his brother’s wife’s final message—but Brandt pushed past him with hard impatient hands and turned towards their mother who gestured towards where the bodies lay.

An unearthly howl emerged from his brother’s throat when he discovered his wife’s mutilated body.

Sandulf started towards where Brandt crouched.

‘Leave him,’ his half-brother Rurik said with a curl of his lip. His gaze seemed to take in Sandulf’s injured arm and the gash on his head. Small injuries. Injuries which would heal in weeks, unlike the ones his middle brother had endured, the ones which would take years to heal. ‘What happened?’

‘They went into the longhouse... I tried to...’ Sandulf’s throat closed and he knew no words could do justice to the carnage. ‘Father is dead, Rurik.’

The others started speaking, drowning out his words. Sandulf waited until they had stopped and Rurik turned to go. He grabbed his arm. The look Rurik gave him spoke of his contempt at Sandulf’s failure.

‘I tried to stop this. I injured one of them, on the back,’ Sandulf began his speech again, intending to tell him everything about his fight to save Brandt’s wife, show him the arm ring he’d wrestled from Scarface and explain about the female assassin, but Rurik stopped him with an impatient gesture.

‘Only marked? Were you not able to kill even one of them? You with the fabled sword skills you always boast of?’

Sandulf gulped and closed his hand about the arm ring. ‘No.’

His half-brother stalked off in search of his twin, without waiting to hear more.

‘Sandulf,’ his mother called, reminding him of his duty towards Brandt.

Sandulf gulped and obediently went over to Brandt to try again. ‘Brother.’

His brother’s eyes, which had been so full of life and love for his wife when they parted, were bleaker than Maerr in January. His face had settled into unfamiliar harsh planes which reminded Sandulf of their father when he was in one of his fearsome moods. ‘Yes?’

Sandulf straightened his spine. The time had come. He knew what he had to say. ‘I stayed with her until the end. She didn’t die alone.’

Brandt’s gloved fingers closed about Sandulf’s neck, cutting off his air, and as they tightened they made the world go dark at the edges. Sandulf struggled against the force, but his struggles made his brother grip tighter. ‘You should have given your life for her.’

His mother’s screams for Brandt to stop echoed in Sandulf’s ears. ‘Please, please.’

‘Enough. If we fight among ourselves, our enemies win.’ The hard arms of his father’s helmsman forced them apart. Sandulf gulped a lungful of life-giving air.

‘I will kill him, Joarr. I swear it.’ Brandt wiped a hand across his mouth. ‘One job I gave him, one job, and my dolt of a baby brother couldn’t even do that. Just like he made a hash of the last battle and we were stuck on that promontory.’

‘I...’ Sandulf’s throat worked up and down. He fingered the arm ring in his pocket. If he showed it now, Brandt might not realise its potential. ‘I tried. You weren’t there. It happened so fast. The doors were bolted.’

‘You froze, Sandulf. You froze last summer and the summer before that. You always freeze and expect others to come to your aid,’ Brandt said, his face turning a deeper shade, the same shade their father had always turned before he exploded in temper. Brandt drew his sword. ‘You are a disgrace to the family’s name. Father isn’t here to protect you any more...’

‘Enough killing, I said!’ Joarr’s voice resounded around the yard.

Even

Вы читаете Conveniently Wed to the Viking
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