Hearts, Home,
and a Precious Stone
by
Annie Whitehead
East Anglia – 616
She
stared up at him. Her hands were wet from clutching the washing and for a
moment she was only aware of the drip trickling through her fingers and the
ragged breathing sounds. His, not hers. For it seemed like she had been holding
her breath since he pulled up in front of her, his boots half-sinking as the sucking
mud tried to claim them.
He had no war-gear, nor scars on his
face, but he didn’t seem to be a trader either. His fingers were clenched and
he was pumping his fist.
Why was he anxious? She was no threat.
He wouldn’t know that she was a Mercian princess married to a Northumbrian
prince, a guest here and paying her way by doing her share of the chores.
All he would see was a woman washing
clothes in the estuary where traders came and went and the court of King
Redwald welcomed strangers.
A shout rose from where the boats bobbed
in gentle resistance against their moorings. The sails that usually billowed
had been caught and tied; they looked naked, Carinna always thought, when they
were thus subdued. A man came running along the bank, a rich man, she thought,
for he had a belly which spoke of plentiful rations, and there were no shiny
patches on his breeches. He shouted as he ran, spittle flecking across his
beard as he voiced his anger.
“Come back you little shit! Thief! I’ll
flay your skin from your back, slave-boy!
The youth glanced at his pursuer, and took
two squelching steps towards Carinna. She woke from her torpor, dropped the
washing, and stood up. The young man shrugged, as if deciding that he had
nothing to lose, and planted a kiss on her lips. As he did so, he pressed
something into her hand. He ran off, the older man in noisy pursuit. Carinna
watched them go, their feet making boot-prints which instantly vanished as they
filled back up with water.
She caught the shouts as they carried on
the wind.
“Give it back! Without it, I’ll never
get home. And neither will you!”
“No, I won’t, but I’ll be free!”
The young man had not been nervously
pumping his fingers; he’d been holding something. Now that object was in her
hand. It was cold, hard, like a pebble. Was this what he had stolen? Why would
this mean that they couldn’t go home?
Carinna knew the pain of that, what it
felt like to be far from home. She glanced down at the object in her hand.
It was not a pebble, but a clear stone. When
she held it up to look more closely, she could see right through it. It
glittered when the sun’s rays caught it.
Carinna’s father was the King of Mercia.
Her husband would one day be a king; he was sure of it, and so, then, she must
believe it. But she was no more at liberty than this boy. Let him run, let him
be free.
“Lady?” Aylsa had come to fetch Carinna
to the hall. “You seem far away?”
I
am far away,
thought Carinna. Far from my homeland, at
any rate. Just like that young man. She opened her fist again and looked at
the shiny object.
Aylsa’s eyes grew wide. “Oh, that is so
pretty!”
“Have it.” She didn’t want it. Whenever
she looked at it, it would remind her of pebbles washed from lands far away to
end up on distant shores.
The
harvest was in and the East Anglians would not go hungry over the winter. Many
of the women would, however, be spending those dark cold months on their own,
newly widowed or bereaved. King Redwald’s army was huge, but there would
inevitably be casualties. Aylsa knew that Armund could be one of them.
Last night they had crept from the feast.
Away from the braziers keeping the enclosed yard lit and safe, there were dark
corners where couples could go.
This morning she could not get close for more than a moment. The men
were gathering outside the hall, more were outside the gates, and she had to
stick her elbows out to barge through the throng of warriors, their women, and skittering
children.
In the dark night his flesh had burned upon
hers, his kisses soft, breath warming her body in mists as he spoke gentle
words of love.
This morning only a brief caress was
possible, and in that moment, she took the deepest inhalation, stealing the scent
of his skin, hoping it would see her through the winter, holding her cheek
against the pulsing vein in his neck, praying the goddess would keep it beating,
and that he would not, in a few days, be lying cold on the distant
battleground. Down from her tiptoes, and preparing to let go, she said, “Take
this. May it bring you safe through the fight.”
Last night he had loved her, today…Was
it bravery in cold light, or had the promises in the dark been whispers on the
wind, to carry, clear at first, but then vanish?
He took the transparent stone from her,
and his brows drew together. For a moment it seemed he might refuse, but he
smiled, and said, “If it brings you peace, I will take it.”
Northumbria - 634
He
was home. And he was King. Oswald had pursued and cornered his enemy, and slain
him with no more thought than if he’d despatched a diseased hound. Now was the
time to assess the damage to his army, to give orders for Christian burial, and
send the wounded to the monks for care.
Where the fighting had been most
intense, the ground was slimy. The grass had been churned to mud with the
pushing of the shield wall, and now that mud was wet with blood. On his back,
eyes open to the sky, a young thegn lay, one leg twisted underneath his body,
arms spread as if in supplication, one fist closed. A wound split his head from
temple to neck. The blood had ceased to pump, and the open gash was a garish blend
of pink flesh and white bone.
Oswald’s steward, Manfrid, came to stand
beside his lord. “Beric, son of Armund. A good man.”
“I don’t recall…”
“You did not know him, Lord. His father
fought with your uncle’s hearth-troop and came north from East Anglia with King
Redwald’s army. He settled here, and his son grew up thinking himself
Northumbrian. He fought well for you this day.”
Oswald was humbled. So many good men had
fought and died for him. “What was he holding; perhaps his foe’s hair?”
Manfrid uncurled the youth’s fingers to
reveal a blood-smeared stone. “It’s naught, Lord.”
“Let me see?”
The stone, once wiped, revealed itself
to be clear, like glass, yet more transparent. A talisman? If so, it had served
the boy ill. God’s purpose was obviously greater.
“I heard tell,” said Manfrid, “That his
father carried a stone which he said had brought him freedom because he lived
through all his battles. He must have passed it to his son.”
“Don’t bury him with this. It’s a pagan
thing.”
Oswald thought he might throw the stone
away. But Manfrid began talking to him, they spoke of arrangements, and he
found himself turning the stone over and over in his palm.
Mercia - 909
The
Lady Æthelflæd looked across the gaming board table at Earl Alhelm. He
marvelled that she and he were sitting together still, when the stories of their
lives were all but written. Alhelm returned her wry smile as the monks walked
solemnly across the hall. The moving of Saint Oswald’s bones had been both an
expedient and a shrewd move, ensuring their safety, and the Lady’s reputation
as protector of people, and of faith.
Brother Cenred came forward and bowed
low. “My lady, we have translated the bones but there is something else. I am
not sure…” He handed her a carved box.
She took the reliquary from him. “Should
this not be in the minster also?” She lifted the lid and said, “Ah, I
understand. What is this?” The leather pouch had a drawstring closure, and she
loosened it. Upturning the pouch, she revealed not a relic, but a clear, shiny
stone.
Alhelm let out a low, almost inaudible
whistle. “A pretty thing, indeed.”
The monk cleared his throat. “It has
been in Bardney Abbey since King Oswald’s remains were placed there, so the
tale is told. Tradition holds that the saint kept it by his side from the
moment of his triumph in battle, mayhap in the next too, when he was slain. But
the abbot denounced it as pagan, and would not have it buried with the bones.”
The Lady seemed lost among her thoughts,
stroking the stone with her thumb. She looked up at Alhelm and gave a little
shake of her head. She pushed the stone towards him and said, “You have served
me faithfully.”
“Not always in the way you wished.”
She shrugged. “Even so, take it.” Her
smile was not broad, yet still it reached her eyes.
Elvira
tried to slide into the shadows behind the wooden pillar, but he’d seen her,
watching him. Watching them. Her jealousy would eat her soul, he thought.
Caught out, she snatched the stone from
his grasp. “The Lady gave you this?” Her lips pinched shut, drawn together in
anger, but also, perhaps, to guard against further pain.
He would never admire her more than in
the moment she forced light to shine from her eyes and, swallowing all hurt,
said, “She must have meant for me to have it. What a gift. I’ll keep it safe;
perhaps one day our sons or daughters may pass it to theirs.”
Cheshire - 980
King
Edward had been buried with full honours. Uncle Alvar had seen to that. The new
king was crowned, Siferth’s baby was gurgling in his crib, and all was right
with the world. That’s what he’d thought this morning.
Now, with approaching dark, Siferth was
still waiting. How far inland had the Vikings come after they landed at
Chester?
At dusk, he had his answer.
Beotric came running, smelling of smoke
even though he’d been away all day and nowhere near a hearth. Panting, all he
could say was, “They’re coming.”
Inside, Eadyth was standing over the
cradle. She turned, and he saw that she knew.
“I’ll fight.” His words rang hollow. Why
would they not? There was no substance to them. He had no men, beyond Beotric.
He could not protect his family.
She stepped forward, reaching for his
hand. Lifting it to her breast and closing her other hand around it, she said,
“It was not your fault. You did an honourable thing, and no man could have
foreseen what would happen. Your uncle thought he did right by having you hide
out here, living quietly.”
He stared over her head to the crib. She
followed his gaze. “Is your mother’s little boat still moored on the river?”
“Yes, but it’s not big enough for the
open sea. And I don’t know how to…”
She released his hand and went to the
corner of the room, opening a wooden chest. Showing him the shiny stone she
said, “Alvar had this from his mother. He gave it to yours and she gave it to
me. We’ll use it to pay a boatman.”
Guthred’s
earliest memories were of leaning against his father’s chest, feeling the beating
rise and fall, listening to Father’s tales of how he’d settled in Cheshire. Guthred
was proud of his Danish heritage, and thought that was why he was drawn to
making a living as a boatman. When this young couple came to him, desperate,
and tried to pay him, he couldn’t believe their luck.
Holding the stone to the cloudy sky,
nevertheless he watched as the sun’s rays poured through it and warmed his
hand. He said to his female passenger, “How came you by this?”
“It was passed down by my husband’s kin.
My mother-by-law told me the legend; that it would bring freedom to all who
carried it, but there would always be a price to pay.”
Guthred nodded. “Aye, true, if it’s kept
too long on land. ’Tis what my kinfolk call a Sunstone. With this, I can guide
this boat across the wider sea, as far as you wish me to take you.”
The
swell lifted the boat up and down and the birds swooped low before darting
away, screeching. The wind slapped salty water against her cheeks, and Eadyth
hugged the baby close to her breast.
Siferth said, “We will never get home
now.”
“No,” she said, “but we’ll be free.”
Notes: Carinna,
Oswald, Manfrid, Æthelflæd, Alhelm, Elvira, Siferth & Eadyth appear in my
novels, and their circumstances here relate to certain events in the books. Of
course, the Anglo-Saxons wouldn’t have known about diamonds, and we don’t know
for sure when the ‘Vikings’ began using sunstones for navigation either, but
fiction is a wonderful device for dealing with uncertainties!
©
Annie Whitehead
About Annie Whitehead
Annie Whitehead is an author and historian, and a member of the Royal Historical
Society. Her first two novels are set in tenth-century Mercia, chronicling the
lives of Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians, who ruled a country in all but name,
and Earl Alvar, who served King Edgar and his son Æthelred the Unready who were
both embroiled in murderous scandals. Her third novel, also set in Mercia, tells
the story of seventh-century King Penda and his feud with the Northumbrian
kings. She is currently working on a history of Mercia for Amberley Publishing,
to be released in 2018.
Find out more
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Follow the Tales…and Discover some Diamonds
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7th December Denise Barnes The Lost Diamond
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9th December Lucienne Boyce Murder In Silks
10th December Julia Brannan The Curious Case of the Disappearing Diamond
11th December Pauline Barclay Sometimes It Happens
12th December Annie Whitehead Hearts, Home and a Precious Stone
13th December Inge H. Borg Edward, Con Extraordinaire
14th December J.G. Harlond The Empress Emerald
15th December Charlene Newcomb Diamonds in the Desert
16th December Susan Grossey A Suitable Gift
17th December Alison Morton Three Thousand Years to Saturnalia
18th December Nancy Jardine Illicit Familial Diamonds
19th December Elizabeth St John The Stolen Diamonds
20th December Barbara Gaskell Denvil Discovering the Diamond
21st December Anna Belfrage Diamonds in the Mud
How brilliant of you to let us follow a sunstone through the ages. The more it made me want to know about the people whose lives it changed...I wonder where it is now.
ReplyDeleteGreat introduction for a reader to your descriptive fluid prose, Annie.
Thank you Inge - I'm so glad you liked it :-)
DeleteHyfryd! What a lovely series of vignettes. And you knowing all the details of those different eras. Diolch!
ReplyDeleteDiolch yn fawr! It's the first time I've taken existing characters and given them new scenes, so it was quite a challenge, especially when trying to not to throw any spoilers into the mix! :-)
DeleteWhat a beautiful story and I loved how the sunstone was a symbol of freedom.
ReplyDeleteThanks Pauline! :-)
DeleteThis is a wonderful story. I love how all these characters interconnect through the ages from this one precious stone.
ReplyDeleteThank you Cryssa - I enjoyed the challenge of linking the characters from all my books :-)
DeleteExcellent as ever, Annie! I was right there, in each of the centuries...
ReplyDeleteThanks Richard - glad you enjoyed it :-)
DeleteMost enjoyable. But I'm not sure I like Armund ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks Anna - I can see why you wouldn't ;)
DeleteI have SO enjoyed all these stories - and I am delighted that so many others are also enjoying them!
ReplyDeleteIt was a great idea of yours Helen - thanks for putting it all together!
DeleteA complex but neatly intertwining set of stories linked by the diamond. Clever stuff!
ReplyDeleteThank you! :-)
DeleteGreat reading, Annie! I'm ready for where the sea (and the stone) takes them now.
ReplyDeleteThank you - glad you enjoyed it :-)
DeleteI enjoyed (re)reading this tale, I love the idea of following an artefact through the years.
ReplyDeleteThank you Lucienne - I enjoyed the challenge of plotting its journey :-)
Delete