didnât take her eyes from the man before her. âI will never want you, Baldr. Never!â
He glanced behind her to the others who had surely noted her outburst. âIt matters not what you want, Kadlin. If itâs the jarlâs wish, youâll accept me into your life.â His lustful gaze raked her body before settling on hers again. âAnd into your bed.â With that promise, he turned on his heel and left.
Fingers shaking with a mixture of anger and fear, she handed the baby over to her mother only moments later. She was out of time. Her father would know before nightfall and she had no idea what to do. The worst of it was that she couldnât even dispute what Baldr had said. Gunnar wouldnât acknowledge their child. He didnât want them.
Ignoring her motherâs questions, she ran all the way back to the longhouse and shut herself inside her chamber where she gave in to the despair that had threatened her all along. And waited for the summons she was certain would come from her father.
* * *
It came later that night.
âWhat have you done?â
It was the second time her father had asked that question, but she still had no answer for him. She stood just inside the door of her parentsâ chamber; it was closed tight behind her to keep the conversation as confidential as possible in such close quarters. The only sounds were the sighs of the baby sleeping peacefully on the bed and her motherâs soft sobs from her chair beside her father. Seeing the tears on her motherâs cheeks made her throat ache with her own unshed tears.
âWhat man did this to you?â
She risked another glance at the face she held so dear, only it wasnât the kind face of the father she cherished. His cheeks were aflame with his fury, and his greying, golden hair was dishevelled, as if heâd raked through it with his hands countless times. Everyone said that he indulged her, that he favoured her too much, and perhaps they were right because sheâd never seen him so angry.
âLeif, calm yourself. Canât you see that sheâs afraid?â Her motherâs soft voice broke the tension and she held out her hand to Kadlin, but Kadlin couldnât make her feet move her forward to accept it.
The jarl cursed under his breath and raked a hand through his hair. When he looked up at Kadlin, the anger had receded a fraction, replaced with concern. âWere you forced?â
Kadlin shook her head and found her voice. âNay, Father, I was not forced.â
âSo itâs true.â He sighed as if heâd been hoping that the information heâd been given was wrong. âSeduced, then?â
Again she shook her head, nay.
The anger returned. âGive me his name.â
âWhat will a name do? Heâs gone, across the sea with everyone else.â
âOh, Kadlin.â Her mother brought a hand up to cover her lips as she processed those words before continuing. âWhy? If there is someone you favoured you could have come to us and we could have arranged a marriage before he left.â
Addressing her mother, she spoke evenly. âBecause you would not have arranged a marriage for us so easily. And because I wasnât even certain of him myself. I hadnât seen him in years.â
The jarl shook his head. âI have brought countless men before you and youâve eschewed them all. All of them! Even Eirik. And you ask me what will a name do? I want to know this paragon of masculinity who stole your good sense and virginity when not one of the men I brought before you even turned your head. A name, Kadlin.â
She drew herself up to her full height and took a deep breath. It wasnât as if her father could kill him now, and besides, he was gone, never to return. She would never see him again, never touch him, never laugh with him. The ache in her throat threatened to choke off her words when she spoke. âIt was Gunnar. Gunnar is the father of my child.â
Her parents sat in a stunned silence that was only broken when her mother broke down into sobs again. Her father was unnaturally still before he finally spoke. âYou gave yourself to a bastard?â
âHe is acknowledged, Father. Itâs not as if heâs without a family. Besides, he cannot be blamed for the manner in which he was conceived. I want to marry him.â Nay, that wasnât right. Not any more. When would she learn to think of him as part of her past? âI wanted to marry him. I donât know why this comes as such a surprise. As a child, I spoke often of marrying him. But itâs been years since Iâve seen him and I needed to see him again to be sure.â
But her father shook his head. âKadlin...he is not for you. Aye, his father has acknowledged him and raised him, but he has no future. No lands, no place in the world except to swing a blade and count his treasure.â
âAye, Father, thatâs right. He has treasure from his excursions. He leads his own ship. He has the means to support me and a family. Why was he such a bad choice?â Not that it mattered now with him long gone, but she couldnât stop the unreasonable well of anger that rose within her. If her father had sanctioned her choice all along, perhaps this wouldnât have happened. Perhaps they could have married years ago.
âWhy was he such a bad choice? Tell me this, Daughter. Where would you live with him? Does he have a home? A hall to keep you warm in the winter, a place to keep your children protected as they grow? He is not that type of man, Kadlin. Heâs transient. He lives on only what his fatherâs good conscience has provided for him and when that ends he will pass his winters in hovels or whatever place he has managed to come by through pillaging, where he will live in constant fear of being killed. And one day he will be killed and what do you suppose would become of you? You would be passed to the next man in line, or perhaps taken as a triumph of his murderer, and you would live with him until he, too, is killed and so on and so forth until you, too, are gone. By then your children will have been scattered to the whims of life. Is this how you envision your future?â
Kadlin shook her head to deny the harsh future he described. âNay, you are wrong.â
âAm I? Then let us go back to the essential question. Has he offered you marriage?â
She swallowed past the ache in her throat and forced the word out. âNay.â
âHe beds a woman like you, a prize that every bachelor wants, and doesnât even have to speak of marriage to do it?â
âStop it, Father!â She held her hand up to ward off his words. âNone of this matters now. I loved him and he left me! Does that make you happy? There will be no marriage. I gave myself to him and he didnât want me.â Her voice broke on that last word and tears spilled down her cheeks as she wrapped her arms around her middle in some attempt to hold herself together, as the pain threatened to rip her apart. Her motherâs arms joined her own and she turned into the womanâs embrace, seeking some nameless solace from the pain of the gaping wound in her heart.
âYouâll marry Baldr.â
âNoââ
Her father shook his head. âDonât attempt to sway me, Kadlin. Heâs offered and I see no other choice. Your child needs a father, a name.â
âPlease, Father.â Pulling away from her mother, she ran and fell to her knees before him, bringing his hand to her cheek. âPlease, not him. I donât like him.â
He smiled wryly and brushed his fingers across her cheekbone, the anger momentarily gone from his eyes. âYou donât like any of them, Kadlin. But you must accept that your child needs a father. Do you want him to be a bastard like Gunnar? Youâve seen how difficult his life is.