A hide blanket comes down over my back. I look up at Clay Man. He’s a watery blur through my misery.
Brigid is gone.
Clay Man says something in a quiet voice. I jump away.
He jumps too, as though for an instant he thought I might attack him. He speaks again. An ugly, stupid language. An ugly stupid man.
He backs away from me slowly rolling the ring in one hand, clutching the three stork feathers in the other. He says something to the crew members.
They return to their posts. Rowing, rowing. All but Thick Neck. He picks up the oil lamp and comes over near me, lamp on high. I am illuminated in the silent snow that keeps falling, soft as mouse breath.
I move out of the glow.
Clay Man says something.
Thick Neck backs away.
Every few moments Clay Man looks at me. His eyes glisten, but his face is too much in the dark and too far away to be readable.
The children look at me too. From close by. And their faces speak clearly: envy.
I take the blanket from my shoulders and drape it over the children. They lie down and squirm together like the piglets Brigid put ribbons on her last day in Downpatrick. Four Irish babes and one boy who led a cow. The blanket is big, and they are little. There’s enough to tuck them in at the edges.
And what do I care about being warm? Brigid is gone.
I look back at Clay Man. He frowns. Even from here distress is unmistakable. He walks over to the blanket pile and goes to put a second one on me.
But I grab it from his hand before he can touch me. I shake with fear.
He makes a quick intake of breath. Then he backs away again. The three stork feathers are still in one hand. I don’t see where he put the ring.
I give the blanket to Crazy Woman. She doesn’t hesitate. She beckons over Weeping Woman and the still bare-chested Saxon youth who stayed behind. The three of them immediately lie close together under the second blanket.
Clay Man stares at me.
I stare back. Brigid is gone. Nothing matters. I shiver. My teeth chatter.
Crazy Woman lifts the edge of the blanket. Her eyes are barely visible in the lamplight. Still, they command. And I know I should obey, though I’ve forgotten why. I wiggle myself in beside her. We are not small, so the blanket is hardly adequate for four. Crazy Woman should have left me standing. I close my eyes.
I wake. I eat. I use the pot. I sleep.
Days go by. I’m not sure how many.
I go long stretches without thinking. But when I do think, it feels unreal. Brigid cannot have jumped overboard. I cannot still be on this ship.
I sit by the mast and bleed onto my tunic. I don’t care what a mess I make of myself. I wish all my blood would come out and drown Clay Man. And Leering Man. And Club Fist. And all of them. All of them are complicit.
None of them comes near me except at mealtimes.
Our gags come off to eat. The others talk. I don’t. And I don’t listen, either.
One morning I wake and look around and my eyes actually function. The boat is not moving. We must be anchored.
Clay Man wears my teething ring on a leather strap around his neck. The three stork feathers are jammed in his hair at odd angles.
I had forgotten all about those feathers. They were supposed to be a surprise for Brigid, to lift her spirits when times got hard. How naive I was—I never imagined anything as hard as what has happened.
Crazy Woman’s eyes meet mine. Hers light up. She comes over and sits beside me and whispers in my ear, “I’m Maeve.”
I cannot respond. She’s the only one not wearing a gag. Did Clay Man never have it put back on her after the night she told stories? The night Brigid left. My own gag is gummy in my mouth. And it stinks.
Maeve kisses my cheek. “That’s Gormlaith.” She tilts her head toward Weeping Woman. “She gave me her name last night. At the evening meal.”
Maeve and Gormlaith. Good Gaelic names. I look at the youth from Saxon Britain.
Maeve’s eyes follow mine. “He’s William. He doesn’t speak Gaelic. But he can say his name, at least.”
William is sitting with one of the children on his lap. He’s playing some sort of hand-clapping game. His breath makes smoke in the air. The child’s head bends toward that smoke.
“The boy we picked up in Saxland is called Markus. The Irish boys are Morc and Nyle. The girls are Kacey and Riley.”
Markus I can pick out—he’s the one who led the cow. But for the Irish children, I wonder which ones go with which names. I will continue to call the child who helps everyone Patrick, even if he turns out to be a girl.
“We have a name for you,” says Maeve.
I already have a name. But that doesn’t matter so much. I move my face toward her curiously.
“Aist.”
I flinch. I remember Clay Man repeating that word the night Brigid left.
“Ah, so you recognize it,” says Maeve. “It’s Russian. Adopt it and you’ll be saved.” She stands up. “Now, shall we clean you?”
Saved? The word has little meaning.
Maeve pulls me up by the hand. Our hands are free. Have they been since the night Brigid left?
She leads me to a wide bucket of water. It’s iced over on top. I realize I’m shivering.
I look over the ship’s side.
We’re near a shore to our right. A sandy beach stretches far inland toward towering trees. Sunlight shimmers on the frost in the highest needles of the evergreens. A small cove lies ahead. The little lagoon within it is ice-covered. Ice on salt water. We must be very far north if there’s ice in the sea so late as March.
“Don’t look too long,” says Maeve. “It will discourage you. The Russians call this the Baltic. It’s the East Sea. A strange sea. Here” She breaks the ice in the bucket with her fist. It doesn’t crack; it slushes apart. She scoops with a cupped hand and brings water to my mouth. “Taste. Put your head back and I’ll dribble it over your gag.”
Maybe she is crazy.
But I do as she says. The water soaks through and around my gag. It is foul, but that may be my own sour tastes.
“See? It’s hardly salty.”
That’s true. The Irish Sea is much stronger.
Some of the crew are watching now. Leering Man, Club Fist, Thick Neck, and, of course, Clay Man. He’s always watching me. Two others, the ones who seem to have nothing to do with us prisoners, are playing a game with what look like colored pebbles. And some crew members are missing. Three?
“Gormlaith,” calls Maeve, “come help.”
Gormlaith’s face is drawn. Her hair stands out like a wild thing’s. She favors her right side as she approaches. She moves like an old woman. But I know she’s not. I remember how she was when I first saw her.
William and the children watch.
“Treat her like you’d like to be treated,” says Maeve in a scolding tone.
The Irish children go to the front of the boat. William and Markus follow. They sit as a group, their backs to us, a blanket stretched across them.
Maeve and Gormlaith stand on either side of me and pull my tunic up.
I fight to hold it down. I look around at the crew.
“Forget their eyes,” says Maeve. “They’re animals.”
That’s exactly my fear. I sink to my haunches and hold the hem of my tunic to the deck and I realize that my rib doesn’t hurt nearly so bad now. The body heals on its own—perhaps in spite.
“They won’t touch you,” says Maeve. “They won’t dare. Not with him looking on. Not with what he believes.” She jerks her chin toward Clay Man. “And you’ll get sores and fever and delirium if you don’t clean up.” She beckons. “NyIe, come help.”
Nyle turns out to be my Patrick. He comes running.
“Stand wherever you can to block the view of her. You’ll have to change positions as we move. Just do the best you can.”
Again Maeve and Gormlaith reach for my tunic.
I close my eyes.
When Nuada was little, we’d play hide-and-seek. I was two years older than him, and I won. But, in fact, anyone could hide better than Nuada. He didn’t go behind anything. He simply closed his eyes, believing that if he couldn’t see you, you couldn’t see him. Once he finally figured things out, the game was no longer fun. He was quick and quiet and he won all the time.
I open my eyes and force myself to lift my arms over my head.
They pull off my tunic and sink it into the bucket water. Then Maeve lightly slaps my own sopping tunic on my belly.
The shock of the freezing water makes me jump.
Brigid jumped into freezing water. As snow fell.
They scrub me with that dirty tunic. They scrub me everywhere. I turn under their hands like I did under Delaney’s hands the night we rushed back from Dublin, when Nuada’s hand was cut off.
They scrub my face. They wash my hair.
I shiver violently. My jaw tries to chatter. I taste blood as the corners of my mouth rip on the crusty edges of the gag.
They wrap me in the second blanket.
“Now you,” says Maeve to Gormlaith.
Gormlaith takes the wet tunic and washes her face and hands and feet.
Maeve nods to my Patrick.
He washes obediently.
“Come for a wash,” calls Maeve.
All the others scrub themselves with my dirty tunic, Maeve last of all.
Then she scrubs my tunic in the bucket and stretches it over a chest to dry.
She dumps the brown, filthy water over the side of the ship. Then she lowers the bucket by the attached string and brings it back up full again. And the water is brown again. It wasn’t my filth that made it that color.
This is a brackish sea. With hardly any salt. How strange everything is here. Nothing is as it seems.
Maeve comes over and snakes her hand inside the blanket and pinches me hard.
I gasp.
“You are right to keep your voice to yourself, Aist,” she says into my ear. “Hush. You’re the one who started this silence—you have to keep it up. Or you lose yourself. He’ll just snuff you out.” She makes a puff of hot air that warms my brain. “Like that, like a lamp flame. A slave life counts for nothing unless the slave finds a trick. You’ve found yours. Stick to it. Hush.”
I don’t understand. But I will hold my tongue. The last person who told me to hush was Mother.
Travel is slow. We pass rivers that empty into this sea. Many. That must be why this water is so nearly sweet. But I have no explanation for why it is so brackish.
At the mouth of almost every river, we stop and anchor nearby. The crew take turns going ashore—two or three at a time. They bring back barrels of fresh water. They bring back river fish. They bring back game that they roast on the beach. They bring back jugs of beer, though where the people are that they get that beer from, I do not know.
They share it all with us. The first time we feasted, Maeve mumbled to me, “They’re fattening us up. There must be a slave market ahead within a half moon at the most. Otherwise they’d never do this. Fat slaves bring more money than skinny ones, because they don’t drop dead on you right off.” The very next day Clay Man finally gave a shirt to William. Maeve hissed in my ear, “So he’ll be warm enough to put on a little flesh. Hogs before the slaughter, that’s what we are.” Clay Man pinches the upper arms of the children each morning, clearly measuring their fat with his fingers. Sometimes we eat so much, I think my belly will split.
It is bitterly cold. Each morning I wake with dread that a child will have succumbed to the chill overnight. No one does. Somehow the abundant food sustains us, down to the weakest, who is Kacey.
I spend daytime standing as close to the shore side of the deck as I can get. I watch the land.
It’s been twelve days since I started counting. And I started counting the day Maeve washed me.
I stand and watch the land and see four children. Out in the open. Like flowers waiting to be plucked.
Clay Man’s shout interrupts my thought. I wince. He must be constantly scanning for prey to be so quick about it. A serious predator.
As soon as we have passed the next curve of shore and are out of the children’s sight line, we drop anchor. Of course.
My head spins.
Five men hold spears pointed at us.
Four men go over the side of the boat and run back along the beach. Four. One per child.
Oh so soon, they are back, carrying trussed children on their shoulders, like sacks of meal.
These children fight less than Markus or William did. They fight less than Brigid and I did. Maybe that’s because Clay Man talks to them as they are dumped into the ship. They appear to understand his language. At least somewhat. He says things and they act as a unit, clearly following directions.
By nightfall their obedience has so mollified Clay Man that he has their blindfolds removed and hands untied. But they stay gagged like the rest of us—except for Maeve.
We eat. As the gags come off, people talk to one another. Even William and Markus join the talk, though no one else speaks the language of either one of them.
Maeve sits beside me. She barely moves her lips as she speaks softly. “Silence, Aist. It will pay off in the end. You’re smart enough, I can tell” And she pinches me hard enough to bring tears.
I didn’t need the reminder. “Hush” has become my internal chant. It drums in Mother’s voice like a heartbeat. I eat with my gaze lowered.
Then we are gagged again. Except for Maeve.
Night comes. We move into a circle around Maeve. She calms us with stories. Tonight’s story is of the gods. Last night’s was of the heroes. She alternates. They aren’t in disguise anymore; they are our traditional Irish tales. I look forward to them.
Riley climbs onto my lap. This has become her habit. I am almost sure that Morc and Kasey are brother and sister. And maybe Patrick-Nyle is their brother too. They are far enough apart in age for that to be possible. But Riley seems to be alone on this ship, and she latches on to me at storytime.
The four new children listen, rapt. Though they cannot understand the words, somehow they understand that these are stories. Somehow they enjoy them.
As Maeve talks I grow rapt as well. But in a different way. I ride a current of fantasy. This is not Maeve who speaks. This is Nuada. We are not on this Russian slave ship. We are in Downpatrick. The child on my lap is not Riley, but Brigid.
And I am not Aist. I am, once more, Melkorka.
This current is wonderful.
When Maeve finally stops, the Irish children and Markus pile together under a blanket. Maeve and Gormlaith and William pile under our other blanket. I watch the four new children.
Their clothing is warmer than ours. But I cannot ignore the fact that the night wind off the water stabs like an ice pick.
I go over to the crew’s pile of blankets and take a third one.
Clay Man rushes over. I knew he would. I knew he was watching me. He’s always watching me. I hear his clumping feet.
I spin around to face him, to meet his blow head-on.
He shouts at me.
But I am still in the haze of Maeve’s storytelling. I am still Melkorka, the princess of Downpatrick. If I didn’t have this gag on, I would shout back. I rip at the gag.
His eyes open wider. He appears enormously surprised. He grabs my arm and turns me around and works at the knot on my gag. He’s going to unleash my tongue himself. He wants me to shout at him.
The gag comes away.
“Aist,” shouts Maeve. “Aist”
“Aist?” says Clay Man. It’s a question.
Hush, says Mother inside my head.
I face Clay Man.
“Aist?” he asks.
I walk past him, clutching the blanket to my chest. I give it to the tallest of the new children.
The new children lie down together in a pile under the third blanket.
I go over to Maeve and nestle in beside her, and I realize that the movement brings only a muted, distant hurt, almost the memory of pain rather than the thing itself. My bones grow strong again.
“You did good,” she says in my ear. “The children from Vendland will sleep. You did good. You sleep now too, Aist.”
Maeve knows that the land we picked those children up in is called Vendland. Maeve knows a lot. This fact comforts me.