my kin, and he will come to visit and he will approve of you, you will see.â
âI have heard of Harald Fairhair. I have heard he is ruthless and he seeks to subdue no matter the cost. It is said he rarely shows mercy.â
âAye, and he is greedy and wants more and then more after that.â Magnus shrugged. âHe wants every chieftain, every earl in Norway, to bend to his will and obey his every dictum. He is a man and he is a Viking. There is no limit to his appetites, and his power grows by the year, and he falters not, though he is near my father in age. He has conquered an entire country and brought it to heel. He searches for more, as do most men of my country.â He grinned then, shaking his head. âThe men in my countryâif they feel at all crowded by their neighbors or persecuted by their king, then they simply leave to find new lands. We all cherish our freedom and we allow no one to curtail it.â
âAnd does he wish to have your lands and those of your father? Will you wish someday to leave your home?â
âNot as yet, but it would not surprise me to have him levy taxes on us that would break our backs. Then, of course, we would have to fight him, king or no. Distant kin or no. Or we would leave.â
She saw that he was perfectly serious. He would enjoy the fighting, she guessed, and he would be as brutal as he had to be and feel no regret. Nor would he flinch at the thought of leaving his home bound for a distant land. He would always do what had to be done. It pleased her, this certain knowledge of him.
âItâs also true that during five months of the winter there is little sun and snow covers the ground. We will spend much time in the longhouse, but you wonât fret with inactivity. Skalds visit in the winter months and sing songs to amuse everyone. They tell sagas that have been handed down for hundreds of years, and invent new ones to make the master of the farmstead feel like a king with all their flattery. We play games and dance and drink until our heads pound. And when you are not in my bed, or playing, or dancing, you will be sewing, spinning, cooking, directing all the house jarls and the thralls. Do you know how to make butter, Zarabeth? And buttermilk?â
âButter?â she repeated, bemused yet again with the sudden shift in his talk.
âAye. I remember my mother lifting and dropping and shaking the churnâsuch a size it was, but then again, my mother is a woman of great strengthâuntil she had separated out all the yellow butterfat. Ah, but the buttermilk thatâs left is sweet and wondrous to drink. Children always fight for the first mug fresh from the churn.â
âI make butter,â she said. âBut my churn is small and requires no great strength to shake it.â
His fingers were wrapped about her upper arms. âLife isnât easy at home, Zarabeth, but I cannot thinkyou would seek to doze away with boredom. I will protect you and love you and give you as many children as Frey blesses us with. I would like to kiss you again, sweeting. Your mouth is soft and draws me from reason itself.â
Without hesitation, she stood on her tiptoes and pursed her lips, her eyes closing.
He looked at her lovely face, a face that was already very dear to him. âAfter I kiss you, I should like to cup your breasts in my hands, like this.â He kissed her, burying her startled cry with his mouth, and his hands opened and he held her breasts in his palms.
âMagnus,â she said, and pulled back. âOh, truly, nay, you cannot.â
âYour breathing is harsh,â he said, and grinned down at her. âYour words make little sense now. Do you like my hands on you? Ah, âtis but the beginning, sweeting. Think of me suckling at your breast as will our sons and daughters. And when I part your thighs, Iâll come between them and part them wider, and then, Zarabeth, Iâll cover
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