I have no food on me. This is bad. Food would be a diversion. But then, I don’t know what a snake eats. I have no stone in hand, no large stick. And I see nothing easy to grab and use to toss the snake away.
The child has still not noticed the snake. This is good at least. Animals can do their worst if a person acts their worst.
I walk through the opening in the gate swiftly and surely. Animals respond to confidence that doesn’t seem aggressive. I am steady, calm. I walk past the child.
A woman screams. But my hand has already closed around the snake below his head. The woman is screaming and screaming, and now the child screams and people shout and run at us, which is all wrong, because this way I have nowhere safe to throw the snake.
I hold firm, but the snake writhes and fights and I can’t believe how strong this short, stout fellow is. I move my other hand to grab him better, and he bites into the web between my thumb and index finger. In shock, I let go. The snake hangs a moment by his fangs, and I’m lifting my hand high by my eyes and watching him as though this hand is not mine.
Then he drops. A sword flashes past and slices the snake in half. Blood spurts.
I stumble backward to get away from the sword, but someone’s says, “She’s falling. Catch her!” A man lifts me, one arm under my legs, one under my back. He carries me into the house. I am aware of everything, every detail, until I realize my hand is on fire. I look at it, amazed there are no flames shooting out. The two puncture wounds are black. My hand changes shape before my eyes; it blows up like an udder that needs to be milked, shiny and hot. I breathe loud. And now it’s hard to breathe. My chest tightens. I try to roll out of this man’s arms, but he holds me fast and there’s nothing I can do; I’m sick all over him.
Then the men are gone and women wash me. When I lived in Eire, servants washed Mel and me. When I arrived all battered at Thora’s door, she washed me. So I’m not afraid. I just wish I would stop coughing. I wish they would let me be. And finally they do. Finally. I sleep.
* * *
When I wake, I can’t see. But then I realize it’s because my eyes are shut. I can’t open them. My hands move toward my face, but the bit one throbs hard, and I can’t force my eyelids apart with just the other. I think of the god Loki, who writhed in pain when serpent venom dripped on his face. The giantess Skaði did that to punish him for a murder. His eyes must have puffed up too. What if I’m blind forever? A scream escapes me.
“What is it? What do you need?” The voice is breathless.
“I can’t open my eyes.”
“That’s because of the høggorm—the serpent that bit you. It will go away. It was good he bit you and not Hakon.”
I reach toward the woman and find her arm. “Is that the child’s name, Hakon?”
“Yes. The king is named Hók. The sword he slew the serpent with is named Høking.”
“The king?”
“You’re in the king’s home. You’re the honored guest. The queen saw what you did. That serpent only made you sick, but it might have killed Hakon. I don’t think the king could have endured losing another child. Certainly the queen couldn’t have.”
“Another? Did a snake kill another of their children?”
“Don’t be daft. Killer serpents are rare. Their daughter died with the damp of winter rattling in her chest, gurgling phlegm. Hakon’s their only child now. Go back to sleep.”
“I’m not tired. Help me open my eyes.”
“They’ll open when the poison passes. Sleep. You’ll be fine tomorrow.”
I hear her walk away. I’m in a king’s home. I was born in a king’s home. And I was wrong a moment ago; I am sleepy. Very. I drift off.
* * *
I still can’t open my eyes. What if I am blind forever, like the god Hød? Because he couldn’t see, he was tricked into killing his own brother Bald. Hideous fate.
Something rustles. “Who’s there?”
“Hakon’s mother.”
“The queen?”
“In this moment, all I am is Hakon’s mother. I am grateful to you.”
“Will you tell me the truth, then?”
“Of course.”
“Will I really heal?”
She gives a little cry. “Tomorrow you’ll be fine. Or maybe the next day.”
I sigh in relief and feel my body sink deeper into the padding of blankets under me.
“You thought you might die, and yet you picked up the serpent. To save my son.” The queen’s voice breaks. “Thank you.”
“It wasn’t like that. I just did it. I’m good with animals. The bite surprised me.”
“You’re modest or honest or both.” She sits beside me, and whatever I’m lying on swings. How strange! I feel her press against my side. “How old are you?”
“Twelve.”
“My daughter would have been ten now if she had lived. Probably your size, though. You’re diminutive, but I knew you were older. You’re not as fair as she would have been. Still, you’re pretty.” I feel her pull on my curls. “I’m glad you’re not coughing anymore. It terrified me. I imagined the world red. Blood can shock, it’s so bright.” She pats my chest.
I am thinking of the red blood of the severed snake, but that’s not what she means, I know. She means a daughter, a dying daughter, coughing up blood. I work to suppress coughs. And tears.
“Do you tame animals?” she asks.
“Sort of. Like I said, I’m good with them.”
“Better than good, I wager. The weavers told me you sought a job with animals. Or farming. Or boats even.” She’s quiet for a moment. “Did you come from Ribe?”
I swallow. “Why would you think that?”
“The way you talk. You sound like them.”
I have no answer.
“I hear you’re an orphan. With money you know nothing about. A mystery.”
“Mysteries are scary. I’m not scary,” I say quickly. “I’m just a girl without a home.” I don’t dare say more. She is Norse, and I know how Norse people feel about foreigners. It’s best she believes I’m an orphan from Ribe—nothing mysterious about me. But she whimpers now. What did I say wrong? “What is your name, queen?”
“Tove. I am Queen Tove. And what is your name?”
“Alfhild.”
The queen gasps. “I knew it. I had that strange sensation the moment your hand reached for the serpent. Then, when the weavers said you sought work on a boat, that confirmed you were special. You were sent to us. It’s what the gods want.”
“I don’t know what the gods want. But I need to find work. Once my eyes open again.”
“Høking, the sea king, he sent you.”
Høking? “The woman in here before, she said the king’s sword is named Høking.”
“Yes. The usual name for a sword that belongs to a Hók. The king’s father named him Hók so he would inherit the characteristics of the sea king Høking. He had aspirations for his infant son. He wanted him to become king of Heiðabý, and a king of Heiðabý must rule sea as well as land.” The queen now touches my injured hand. “Does it hurt horribly?”
I shake my head slowly. Moving my neck hurts more than my hand.
“Would you tell me if it did?”
“I don’t know.”
She gives a quiet laugh. “You are the daughter of Høking, a princess of the sea.”
I am the daughter of a king. But not that king. My throat closes in sadness. “I’m sorry, but—”
“Stop. Please. Listen to me. Alfkona is the name of Høking’s daughter. A tiny girl, elflike. That’s you. But you’ve been away from home so long, you mixed up your own name. Or maybe you changed it on purpose, because you had to fend for yourself, become a warrior. You had to enter hild—battles. So now we will call you Alfhild, because that’s what feels natural to you. Either way, you are Høking’s daughter. This I will tell the king. And you will not contradict me.”
“But why?”
“Because you were sent here to become our daughter.”
I am so sad for her. Oh, how much I need a family. But this queen may need more than I can give—she needs to be loved like a daughter loves a mother. I have no idea if I can love her that way. I have never lived with a woman who filled that role other than my real mother. I reach out for her with my good hand. “I can’t stay.”
Her hands close around mine. She sniffles.
“I must find my sister. I must go searching for her. Not now. But when I’m old enough. I have to.”
“I understand.” She sniffles again, and her hands rub mine. “That’s years away. In the meantime, you’re our daughter.”
“I don’t know if I can do that.”
“I don’t know either. But we can try.”