birches, and even the bright chill of a winter morning when the land seemed crusted with diamond and the air crackled in your nose. There was no point in talking of any of that. She had made her decision, for reasons which still seemed good, and she would abide what came of it. Edain best of all, and where he was she would make her home.
âThe harvest was fine,â she said instead, the surefire conversational gambit; she couldnât imagine anyone not being interested in that. âThe heads in the sheaves were thick and heavy.â
âFifty bushels the acre if itâs one, despite pushing it just a wee bit early for the warâs sake and letting the grain dry in the stooks,â Edain agreed. âNor any sign of the rust. As good as any can remember since the Change.â
He cocked an eye at her. âAnd you pitched in very well, with not a word said. Everyone was pleased, and more than one told me so.â
Asgerd flushed, happy and a little angry at the same time that anyone could have doubted her. Sheâd seen lands where a few rich lorded it over all others and despised toil and sweat, but she was glad that among Mackenzies everyone worked, and fought when needful. Back in Norrheim sheâd often seen King Bjarni with his hands on the handles of a plow or the haft of an ax, and Queen Harberga busy with loom and churn or helping get in the hay.
âWho but a nithing would do otherwise?â she said. âWhen thereâs real work to be done, you do it with all you have. The wights give no luck to the lazy, nor would Frey and Freya if I lacked respect for Their gifts.â
Edain chuckled. âI know you, acushla, and have for a year now; and I know your folk a little, so I know why your backâs up and bristling like an angry cat. Thereâs no harm making a good impression on those who donât know you or them, though, eh? We Mackenzies think well of a hard worker too, and youâre the new wolf in the pack here.â
She nodded. I havenât met many Norrheimer men who are as good at following a womanâs thoughts, she mused. Heâs a troll-killing terror in a fight, my Edain, and a stallion in the blankets, and he can hunt anything that flies or runs, but in some ways heâs as sensitive as another girl.
The thought gave her a flush of pleasure. She hid it by cocking her head to one side and considering Dun Fairfax itself, seen as a bird or a God might view it and away from the confusing thronging closeness that had blurred her vision of it before. There was nothing quite like a Dun of Clan Mackenzie in Norrheim. The thorp of a godhi , the home-place of a ring-giving drighten chief, would come closest; but that would be dominated by the Hall, and none held quite so many dwellers. Most Norrheimers lived each family of yeoman bondar by itself in the center of its allodal family land, the way her own parents and siblings did, with perhaps a few dependentsâ homes to make a hamlet for the most prosperous.
Dun Fairfax was a rectangle surrounded by a palisade of logs set in concrete and bound together with steel cable. There were blockhouses at the corners and flanking the gate made from squared baulks of timber; the whole was built from big logs, as thick as her body and many man-lengths high, for the trees grew tall and great here. Theyâd been stripped of bark, too, and varnished and oiled and polished, and bands across them had been carved with low-relief patterns of twining leaves and vines and serpents and elongated beasts, colorfully painted and inlaid with glass and stone from which whimsical faces peered, human and demi-human, bestial and divine.
Mackenzies were fond of that effect, but it always made her feel as if something was looking at her, just out of sight at the corners of her eyes. Here you always felt that the Otherworld was only a half step away.
A clear space of close-cropped pasture was kept outside the walls. Within were the
John Lloyd, John Mitchinson