The Viking's Captive (36 page)

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Authors: Sandra Hill

BOOK: The Viking's Captive
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In the evenings, she would be invited to dine with the royal family and their guests. In the large dining chamber, which held a huge table made of gold and was surrounded by thirty-six couches, meals were served on plates of gold. But even the smaller dining chambers with only a dozen couches held splendors unimaginable to the average person. Between courses, they would be entertained by jesters, mimes, dwarves, acrobats, musicians, poets … and her.

Ingrith would be really, really impressed with the staggering number of exotic dishes served each day. Vana would bemoan the amount of work to be done in polishing all the marble. Drifa would swoon at the profusion of heavy-scented flowers. And, Breanne … holy Thor! The ideas for building and renovating she could come up with here boggled the mind. She would no doubt be inspired to put marble pillars and indoor fountains in their father’s great hall at Stoneheim.

Tyra never would have guessed that she could miss her bothersome sisters so much. And her father … the egotistical fool! He could teach this monarch much about reigning with dignity, even if his Norse castle was lacking the Byzantine’s splendor. She hoped her father’s health was continuing to improve, but she trusted that Adam would not leave Stoneheim till he was assured of that fact.

Personally, she thought these Byzantines took themselves far too seriously.
They need a good hole-in-the-head joke, if you ask me.
Tyra had to smile to herself when that thought occurred. She must be going barmy if she missed Viking humor.

Occasionally, she and her soldiers had free days.
Then some of them would go to the Hippodrome for entertainment, usually horse races or the circus. All of the men found women on whom they could ease themselves at night, she supposed. She never asked.

It was at Tyra’s insistence that Romanus finally allowed her to join her fellow soldiers in the practice fields. And even there, they treated her like a curiosity. Many of the Byzantine soldiers wanted a chance to fight her one on one, no doubt to boast later of what great men they were to have triumphed over the Amazon soldier in combat. Some of them had been surprised when she trounced them soundly. In other cases, she’d been trounced herself. But mostly, she’d performed admirably, and slowly she was gaining their respect. She was unaccustomed to having to earn respect, and it grated on her.

Just then a soldier she recognized as an aide to General Phocas came up to her. “The general would like to speak with you at once,” he said without preamble.

She was bent over at the waist, hands on her thighs, trying to regain her breath after her latest bout of swordplay. She straightened and swiped a forearm across her forehead to wipe off the perspiration. “Now? Immediately?” she asked, trying to catch her breath.

He nodded.

“Should I not go off to bathe and change my dirty garments?”

“Now!” he repeated. “Follow me.” And off the rude fellow went.

She glanced over at Gunter and Egil, both of whom shrugged, and she went off to meet with the general in his quarters.

Within moments, she learned what was so urgent to the gnomelike commander. She did not let his almost ugly appearance mislead her. She knew he was an excellent
soldier and leader. Good looks mattered not in battle, as she well knew.

“My sources tell me you are anxious to get into active battle,” he said straight off.

Well, anxious to be out of Byzantium itself … anxious to no longer be a spectacle … anxious to be given a useful job.
“I would welcome an assignment,” she said carefully.

“My brother, Leo Phocas, is general of the Army of the East. Always we are plagued by our greatest enemy there, Saïf ed-Daula. ‘Tis time to end the life of that pestsome gnat and to take the Syrian lands into the Byzantine Empire. Will you join him in his fight there?”

Lately, Tyra had been uncomfortable with aggressive warfare. She had no qualms whatsoever about defensive fighting to protect a homeland, or an ideal. But battle motivated by greed was different.

Inwardly, she struggled with all these issues, especially since she had come in contact with Adam the Healer and his criticisms of her warlike attributes. But for now her most important priority had to be getting out of the imperial city. Yea, ‘twas best to accept the general’s offer. Later she would have time to resolve her inner conflicts.

“I accept your assignment, provided all my men may accompany me,” she finally said.

“Why must your men be with you? Can you not stand alone?” A shifty look came over the general’s face, the same look Tyra had seen on too many occasions lately when he was in whispered consultations with the empress.

“Yea, I can stand alone, but we Stoneheim warriors came here as one unit, and that is how we intend to stay. Take one, take all,” she insisted.

Nicephorus frowned at her, and a tic worked rhythmically to the side of his mouth, causing his lips to jerk up in a rather grotesque fashion. In the end, the general said, “So be it. You will leave on the morrow.”

Tyra left the general’s quarters and went off to give the news to her men. A heavy cloud settled over her mood, however. With this latest action, she would be taking herself another step farther away from Stoneheim … another step farther away from Adam, wherever he was.

What will my future hold now?

T
HE EASTERN
B
YZANTINE FRONTIER

Felled by a jealous queen …

“I never thought I would miss the cold of the Northlands, but I do.” Tyra was sitting under the overhang of a tent, fanning her sweltering face with a palm leaf.

“I agree,” Gunter said. “Thor’s balls! Two sennights in the Syrian deserts and I would like nothing more than an icy Stoneheim wind, accompanied by a good dose of snow.”

The two of them were watching a patrol of soldiers, including Egil and some of their comrades, come back from night duty. It would be their turn to go out soon. Wherever that slyboots Saïf ed-Daula was, he hadn’t made an appearance yet … leastways not for any direct confrontations. Instead, there were constant hit-and-hide assaults that were driving them all barmy.

A shortage of men was always a problem for the Byzantine armies, especially this Eastern division. As a result, soldiers were given land in return for service. The men were permitted to live on and work their own properties, but they had to present themselves fully armed and mounted whenever summoned to the frontier army. To say they were not dedicated soldiers was an understatement.
Mercenaries and soldiers like the Varangian Guard were rewarded with huge salaries and the right to take booty after battles. Tyra thought they had the better deal.

Soon she was saddled up and about to ride out on what turned out not to be the usual guard duty. Instead, General Phocas assembled a large troop, almost two hundred soldiers, and announced they were going farther than they had in the past. This would be an overnight foray to a distant village, where Saïf had presumably been raiding the last few days.

The odd thing was that, at the last moment, the general ordered Gunter, Fegil, and Tyra’s Stoneheim warriors to stay behind while she went alone. They protested vehemently, but the general claimed he needed the accomplished talents of the Northmen to hold down the garrison post. So, at least this time, they gave in.

By that evening, Tyra understood why she and she alone had been singled out from the Stoneheim contingent to go on this foray. As they approached a desert oasis some distance from the village where they were headed, Tyra’s horse suddenly went lame. When she dismounted and examined the mare’s foreleg, she saw immediately that it had been gashed. Before she had a chance to stand and confront whoever had done this dastardly deed, Tyra was struck from behind. She lay in the sand staring up at a hazy image of General Phocas bending over her, smiling grimly.

“Kill the horse,” the general ordered, even as her heavy eyelids were closing. The pain at the back of her head was unbearable. Was this how Adam had felt when she’d whacked him with the flat side of her broadsword?

“Should we leave her here, unattended?” one of the Byzantine soldiers was asking the general.

“Aye. Leave her. She will be
rescued
shortly. It will be as the empress desires.”

There was much chuckling and soft laughter then as the men mounted their horses and prepared to ride off.

Then Tyra’s world went black.

When Tyra awakened later that day, she was in strange surroundings. Bit by bit, she took in her situation. She was lying on a marble slab. There were cool breezes from water falling into a courtyard fountain. She noticed the pungent scent of desert flowers, the sound of giggles and soft feminine chatter.

Tyra’s head throbbed painfully. Still, she glanced to the right, then to the left. There were scantily clad, beautiful women everywhere, of all ages and colors.

She recognized two facts then:

She was totally naked.

She was in some sultan’s harem.

Tyra gasped and felt her heart begin to race with panic. A hysterical reaction to an unbelievable situation. Rashid had suggested one time that she would make a good harem concubine, and she’d laughed. It would seem that the decision had been taken out of her hands.

For a certainty, she wasn’t laughing now.

B
YZANTIUM … AT LAST!

Betimes just prayer is the best plan …

Six sennights of travel, and they were finally arriving in Byzantium. Adam felt as if dozens of butterflies were fluttering their wings in his belly, so anxious was he at the prospect of seeing Tyra again.

What should I say?

How will she look?

How do I look? Rashid says the blue tunic matches my eyes, but mayhap I should try the red-fox-lined cloak
instead. Better yet, I should probably wear armor … appear more soldierly.

Bloody hell, what difference does it make how I dress?

On the other hand, some women are swayed by fine trappings.

Not Tyra. Never Tyra.

Well then, how best to handle her?

Fool! Handling is the worst thing I can do.

I must be firm with her.

Nay, I cannot be firm. She will consider that overbearing. Gentle is better. Yea, gentle … but firm.

“Why are you talking to yourself?” Tykir asked, looping a companionable arm over Adam’s shoulder.

“Fear.”

Tykir nodded his head, as if that was perfectly understandable. “Do you have a plan?”

“Nay, and do not think of suggesting another of your lackbrain plans, like the one all of you concocted back at Stoneheim.”

Tykir blinked his eyes rapidly, pretending affront. “You did not like our
Seduction Plan for Adam?
There were many good points in that plan.”

Adam was not about to get involved in that silly discussion again. “Shouldn’t the emissaries be back by now? ‘Tis almost noon, and they have been gone for two hours.”

King Thorvald, resting on his ship bed, had sent some emissaries to seek permission from Emperor Romanus for their contingent to enter the royal sector of the city. His health was much improved, but he tired easily. Today he wanted to appear at his best.

Tykir shrugged. “We still have plenty of time. The imperial gates do not close till three. Once inside, we have the rest of the day to find Tyra.”

“I have decided to stay behind here on the ship with some of the soldiers and Alrek,” Rashid said. He was on Tykir’s other side. “The Byzantines do not have much love for us Arabs, and I prefer not to take a chance.”

“Mayhap that is a good idea,” Adam agreed. “With luck, we will be leaving this harbor on the morrow. You are right about Alrek, as well. Good Lord, the boy is proving a real handful.”

At the moment, Alrek was running from one end of the ship to the other, trying to get the best view of the “Great City.” Adam could not blame him. It was a spectacular sight, even for those like himself who had been here before. He had come to study a unique hospitium, and Tykir had made innumerable visits during his amber-trading days.

Byzantium occupied a triangular promontory at the northern end of the Sea of Marmara. What had Alrek wide-eyed, though, was the Pharos, a famous lighthouse that guided mariners but also sent signals to distant parts of the empire by means of a relay system. In addition, Alrek was agape at the many palaces that could be seen from the harbor; some of their gilded domes were prominent from a far distance.

Adam would have liked to show Alrek the royal zoo or aviary, but there would be no time for that. Tyra was his main priority.

“Are you ready?” Thorvald asked. “I see my men, along with the emperor’s guard, approaching.”

Adam nodded. The butterflies in his stomach now felt like hummingbirds.

“I hope you have a plan, boy,” the king added.

“Wh-what? I thought
you
had a plan,” he stammered out. When King Thorvald had insisted on making this journey, Adam had assumed he knew what protocol to follow.

“See, Adam, I told you that you needed a plan,” Tykir said.

Adam closed his eyes and said a prayer … the first time he’d prayed in two long years.
Please, God, hear me this time.

Someone was going to pay for plucking her …

Harems were not all they were touted to be.

Of course, the only persons Tyra had ever heard touting harems were men. And Rashid, who was of course a man. That had to be taken into account.

It had only been three days since Tyra had joined the harem of Amin ed-Daula, some desert sultan who was a cousin or half-brother or something of Saïf ed-Daula, but already she was bored to the point of numbness, and angry to the point of … numbness. She had yet to meet her “master,” who was presumably off fighting Byzantines, or capturing more slave girls for his harem, or hiding from her. He only had two hundred females in his harem so far. About one hundred eighty of them hadn’t seen the old guy, who was more than fifty, for five years or more. She’d sure like to see him. She’d like to give him a piece of her mind … or a piece of her sword if she could recover the weapon.

To be fair, she was certain that the leaders of this tribe … rather, harem … would like to get rid of her, too. In fact, she had taken to sleeping with her eyes half open, just in case she pushed someone too far. “Troublesome, loud, big, barbarian” were words often used to describe her.

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