And he did.

  Twice.

  At the end, a well-sated Alinor was heard to murmur, "You've got to love a Viking."

  Truer words were never spoken.

  Later that night, Bolthor regaled the gathering with one of his poems in the Saga of Tykir the Great.

  "There once was a Viking smitten.

  By a witch the troll was bitten.

  Some say love comes to those

  Who need it most.

  Some say love comes when

  Least expected.

  Some say love is a gift

  From the gods.

  But mayhap 'tis just

  A form of bewitching."

  Epilogue

  The wedding at Dragonstead of Jarl Tykir Thorksson and Lady Alinor of Graycote was a rip-roaring Viking event.

  It was a Friday, or Friggsday, in commemoration of the goddess of marriage. The heavens reciprocated by smiling down on them with warm weather and bright sunshine.

  People came from far and wide, filling the hills and the valley surrounding the lake, where gaily colored tents had been erected. Among the guests were Tykir's Uncle Haakon, the all-king of Norway, a fair-haired handsome man a few years younger than Tykir. Haakon brought with him his best friend, Sigurd, the jarl of Lade. Only slighter in size than Haakon's royal entourage was that of King Anlaf and his many wives and concubines, not to mention his ebullient daughter Signe, who was trailed by a perpetually grinning husband, Torgunn, and his sister Gudny, who cared not if anyone noticed the jingling noises beneath her gunna as she held on tightly to her bewildered husband, Alfrigg, walking beside her.

  Alinor was a sight to behold in her soft wool gown and surcoat, tailored to hide her slight stomach, both of a cream color embroidered with Byzantine gold thread. At her neck was a magnificent neck ring of amber teardrops. Atop her flaming rust-colored hair, left loose in the Norse bridal fashion, was a garland of Dragonstead's own lilies of the valley, mixed with tiny rosebuds.

  So beautiful was she that some said rusty hair and freckles became a favored attribute for women of the North that day.

  People generally accepted now that Alinor was not a witch, but they took no chances. Many of the men were seen in her presence with their shields placed casually in front of their manparts... most obviously, King Anlaf. And more than a few spectators were seen checking the back hem of Alinor's gown, just in case a tail was seen falling off now that she'd wed-locked a mortal man.

  Besotted was the only way to describe Tykir as he gazed at his beloved approaching the bridal canopy on the arm of Bolthor. Eirik, standing at his side, squeezed his arm, and the two brothers exchanged a look of understanding. Both knew the profound effect the women in their lives had on them and how hard in coming that knowledge had been.

  Tykir was dressed all in black, from leather ankle boots to braies and tunic. The starkness of his rich attire was broken only by a thick gold-looped belt at his waist and his usual star-shaped amber pendant. As always he wore at his one ear, exposed by blond hair left loose, but braided on that side only, his father's silver thunderbolt earring.

  After the Christian marriage vows performed by Father Caedmon, they proceeded to the Viking wedding rituals.

  "Who accepts the mundr, or bride-price, on behalf of Alinor of Graycote?" King Haakon's lawspeaker, Ketel asked."

  "I do," Bolthor said, stepping forth to take in hand a chest of magnificent jewels from Tykir. 'Twas a task of Alinor's father, or other family members, would have undertaken if they were about, which, thank God, they were not.

  Rumor was that Tykir's Morgen-gifu for Alinor—the "morning gift" to be presented the next day, following that night's consummation—was to be a strangely shaped piece of polished amber that seemed warm to the touch and pulsed. What an odd Morgen-gifu that would be! one and all proclaimed in hushed whispers, and wondered at its purported erotic purpose.

  "And dost thou have a heiman ftygia for your husband?" Ketel asked the bride.

  "Yea, I do. I give to my husband half-share in a flock of two-dozen prize sheep and a rare curly horned ram."

  Tykir was heard to chuckle then, and his bride was seen jabbing him in the side with a sharp elbow, murmuring something that sounded like, "Behave, troll!"

  "Who acts as witness to the handsal that thus seals this wedding contract?" Ketel inquired, and six men stepped forth: Eirik, Selik, Bolthor, Rurik, Anlaf and Haakon.

  King Haakon handed to Tykir the ancestral sword, Millstone-biter, which had belonged to the famed King Harald Fairhair. Legend said that Harald once cleaved a millstone to the eye with it. Placing a plain golden finger ring on the tip of the sword, Tykir offered it to Alinor, stating, "I give you this ring to mark the continuous circle of our unbreakable vows, and this sword to hold in trust for our sons."

  She nodded, with tears filling her eyes as was her wont of late, and repeated the ritual words with a male finger ring for her groom.

  With one hand each on the hilt of the sword and their other hands joined, Tykir motioned for their witnesses to step forth. Then the lawspeaker said, "We declare ourselves witness that thou, Alinor of Graycote, and thou, Tykir of Dragonstead, do bond to each other in lawful betrothal, and with the taking hold of hands, dost promise one to the other, love, honor and fidelity, as long as blood flows through your veins." The lawspeaker then made a small slit in each of their wrists, pressed them together and proclaimed, "With the blending of their blood, Tykir and Alinor are one."

  It was not exactly the traditional Viking ritual, handed down through the ages, but close enough, if the smiles on hundreds of the faces were any indication, followed by rowdy Norse whoops of congratulations to the newly wedded couple. Besides, calling on the goddess Freyja to bless the couple with fertility would be an indelicate reminder of the bride's already fertile condition.

  "Are you ready, wife?" Tykir said with a wink.

  "Yea, I am ready, husband," Alinor replied with a wild shout that did a Viking maiden proud. Then she ran for the keep, lifting her gown calf-high as she made her way across the grassy knoll for the castle. It was the brudh gumareid, or "bride-running"—though it looked more like "bride-lumbering" due to her condition.

  Tykir chased after her—albeit slowly, though his leg was feeling better these days—followed by the entire wedding party, laughing and cheering. In the end, it was Tykir who awaited her at the keep door, grinning, with the sword laid across the entryway. If she stepped over the sword, it was the final proof that she accepted her change of status, from maiden to wife.

  She did, to the raucous cheers of all.

  Some said Tykir then whacked her across the buttocks with the broadside of the sword. Viking men were trollish like that betimes.

  Once inside the great hall, Tykir plunged his sword into the rooftree, putting a deep scar into the supporting pillar of the house. The depth of his cut was an indication of virility and good family-luck.

  With the ceremonial drinking of the bridal ale, Alinor presented mead to her new husband in a two-handled bowl and recited the traditional words:

  "Ale I bring thee, thou oak-of-battle,

  With strength blended and greatest honor;

  'Tis mized with magic and mighty songs,

  With goodly spells, wish-speeding runs."

  After sipping, Tykir made the sign of Thor's hammer Mjolnir over the cup and presented the same to Alinor, saying:

  "Bring the Hammer the bride to bless:

  On the maiden's lap lay ye Mjolnir;

  In Frigg's name then our wedlock hallow."

  After that was much feasting and drinking of the honey-mead, which would be imbibed for a month during the "honey-moon" period. Some said that honey was taken into the bridal chamber that night as well. But who can say if that is true?

  Bolthor did write a poem about it, though, to no one's surprise.

  "The troll got honey

  On her feathers,

  So the witch proclaimed.

  'Am I complaining?'
r />
  Laughed the Viking.

  'There is honey

  On my quill, too.' "

  Three months later, Thork Tykirsson came howling into the world, a blond-haired, green-eyed babe of winsome disposition. Some say he is destined to win the world, not with his sword, but with a wink and a smile.

  Author's Note

  "The girl with ash-smooth arms is already getting used to my bad ways."

  —Egils Saga

  Laughter is a survival skill in today's modern world, as so many of you readers have told me. "You made me laugh out loud at a time when I really, really needed a smile in my life," is a common refrain.

  And apparently that was the case in early times, as well. Don't you just love the fact that some Viking skald hundreds and hundreds of years ago referred to old Egils' "bad ways"? I like to put my own particular spin on this stanza and imagine Egils as an overconfident, handsome rogue who has his eye on a fair maiden with ash-smooth arms. And, Lordy, that damsel had best pull up the drawbridge before she is tempted by this guy's "bad ways." Like my very own Tykir with his "bad ways." It is particularly appropriate that Dorchester Publishing start its new humor romance line with a book about Vikings, who were certainly romantic and had a wonderful capacity for laughing at themselves, as evidenced by their marvelous sagas.

  All writers want to touch their readers in some way—sometimes with strong emotion, sometimes to teach historical facts or an important life lesson, sometimes to share empathy or common experiences. (Erma Bombeck did this so well.) But I have come to believe that readers can be touched just as deeply, and no less importantly, with humor.

  And it doesn't have to be only those who are in dire need of a laugh, like the lady whose husband had just undergone a kidney transplant, or the disabled trucker, or the young girl with a learning handicap. It's enough sometimes to entertain, period. And sometimes those books are remembered most of all.

  We hope you will agree that laughter can be an important part of romance, and that the best sex in the world has a smile in there somewhere.

  If you'd like to know more about these Vikings and their sense of humor, try The Long Ships: A Saga of the Viking Age by Frans Bengtsson; or any of the books of Viking sagas or eddas in your public library. Or check out the research of Christie L. Ward (Gunnora Hallakarva) at ; some of the wedding rituals in my epilogue are adaptations of ones listed on her website, or exact in the case of the ritual words themselves. And, of course, if you're looking for gorgeous Vikings with a wicked sense of humor, note that The Bewitched Viking is the fourth book in a series of loosely linked novels (which can be read out of order), following an the heels of The Reluctant Viking, The Outlaw Viking and The Tarnished Lady.

  Please let us know what you think of our new humor line, and of my brand of Viking humor in particular.

  Sandra Hill

  PO Box 604

  State College, PA 16804

  [email protected]

  http://www.sff.net/people/shill

 


 

  Sandra Hill, The Bewitched Viking

 


 

 
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