Tincture - Chapter 3
Reader x Ivarr, Reader x Hytham
Part One, Two
Friendly reminder that, irl, we donāt tolerate bastards. We kill and eat them.
Chapter Three - Promises and Assurances
Basim greets you with a nod. He is the only one to greet you at all. Surrounded by two grim-faced Danes, one big, the other bigger, Basim looks out of place. Out of place, but not uncomfortable.Ā
You, on the other hand, know that you appear both. With the sun bright in the sky, some of the cold has retreated, but it hardly improves your restless mood. The camp is a small one, a dozen tents scattered round, and you wonder how much of the blood on the axes and stained leather these men wear belong to your neighbors. You do not meet their eyes when they stare. Instead, you search the shadows for any sign of the mad Dane.
Basimās voice draws you from your thoughts.
āMy wayward apprentice and his charge.ā He clasps Hythamās outstretched forearm and the grin that follows turns to something genuine that warms the black of his eyes.
Hytham looks to one of the Danes, a woman, tall and with hair the color of frosted straw.Ā
āEivor, this is the healer we found on the road, the one I spoke to you about.ā
She smirks and tosses her head with a chuckle, sending her war-braids spilling. āWith the spark in your eye as you did? Yes, I remember the story.ā She ignores Hythamās spluttering and turns to you. āAs Hytham has said, I am Eivor, of the Raven Clan. If you can mend scratches, you are welcome.ā
āI can mend more than scratches,ā you assure her, āBut I hope it will not be needed. Thank you for allowing a stranger in your midst. It is a generous offer.ā
Eivor nods, though her attention returns to Basim and the other Dane. The latter is an immense bull of a man. He has been quiet thus far, his face serious. Something about it bothers you the longer you look at it, until you are staring, and you are sure recognition is only a thought away.
Something in the eyes, the hair, the chin...
Warm breath on your cheek draws you from your thoughts. Hytham is near, very near, leaned over the distance between your horses.
āWe will ride soon.ā His eyes find yours. Blue, you decide. Today, they are blue and gilded like a kingās crown. You cannot look at them long, glancing downward to see his fingers flex. They hover in the air, as though he may reach for you. You wish he would. A steadying hand would do you good right now. You watch, disappointed, as that hand falls to his thigh.
What does he read on your face, you wonder? Fear? You certainly feel it, you have since rising this morning, and doubly so when you and Hytham had arrived at the camp.
You fear being recognized atop your stolen mare.Ā
But of the two dozen faces you count milling about, none belong to the Dane who had set you on this path. You donāt dare ask after him. As the others speak of plans, you remain silent, intent on looking disinterested, even as you listen.
Hythamās promise holds true. Within the hour, you are riding. Basim guides his horse to the other side of yours, and you find yourself caught -- guarded -- by these pretend monks. It sets your jaw to grinding, even as you remind yourself to be grateful for their protection. The Danes stop watching you as the two men close ranks. Maybe it is the threat in their curved swords or the seriousness of their faces. Either way, no one bothers you.
Hytham, you understand. You have never made friends quickly, but the man is as close to one as you have. But Basim? He owes you nothing, no matter Hythamās claims. When he watches you, it isnāt with a manās interest, as you had first assumed. He seems curious. Like a cat watching a bird before deciding whether or not to crush it under a paw.
There is as much danger here as you would have found had you kept to the road alone.
The reins protest between your fingers and you realize that you are squeezing the leather tightly enough to color your knuckles.Ā
Wilting flowers do not survive as long as you have, but there is nowhere to run should you catch the wrong eye. You are eased when Basim informs you that most of the party will follow the large Dane tomorrow, parting from your smaller group that is bound for Ravensthorpe.Ā
Riding a little farther in companionable silence, Basim catches your eye. His face is free of the road-dust that cakes so many others, and he lets you have your momentās study. The cracks and crannies reveal no secrets, however, and you eventually look away.Ā
āHe is not here,ā Basim whispers, āDo not look so worried.ā
The words do not land as Basim perhaps hopes. There is no feeling behind them, and you are left frowning at the road ahead. That uncanny knowing will not settle -- something is amiss, and if it is not yet so, it will be.
Is this a mistake? Am I a fool? Not long ago, you would have called such a neatly presented gift as this one a trap. But the years you have spent in motion, never lingering until arriving at Fremedeleigh, are weighing on your shoulders. The frown settles into the lines of your face as you squint into the early autumn sun.Ā
But it shines brightly, and if it knows what lies ahead, it keeps those secrets to the heavens.
.
ā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦.
.
Something is wrong.
Fitful dreams weave webs of a dangerous face full of teeth and hateful eyes. They stir you, until you are pulled from their depths by fear and the nightās encroaching cold. For a momentās time, you do not open your eyes to the blackness. Instead, you listen. A fire crackles beyond the flaps of your tent, the sound warm enough to chase away some of the chill. Softer still, voices murmur in the rough tongue of the Daneās. You hear no breathing from the opposite corner. The woman who had agreed to share her tent has yet to come to bed.
But despite the gentle sounds of a well-guarded camp, a tickling in your bones tells you that all is not as it seems. You have heard the quiet before, and you know the danger that comes with it.Ā
You open your eyes to darkness, unable to feign sleep any longer.Ā
And for the first time, the knowing fails you.
It has come too late and met a cannier foe.Ā
You see nothing, but you feel a weight sweep over your face as a heavy, callused hand cups your mouth and presses hard. Breath is driven out of you on a gasp, but the air meets the resistance of a palm and you are forced to swallow it back down. Cold, gripping fear balls in your chest, and you flail, striking at the body that settles above you.
Thighs press on either side of your middle, lifting only as your left arm is wrenched down and caught under one knee. You strike again with your free right arm, aiming high, clipping the intruder around the head. A voice hisses at you in the darkness, the sharp sound of sucking breath through teeth, and when you strike again, the hand that holds your face shifts to dig its nails into the skin of your cheeks and jaw.
āFound you, foxling,ā says the voice. Itās sound is harsh even in a whisper, like the noise of a body dragged over rocks.Ā
āFoxlingā. You know at once who has you - the mad Dane.Ā
āNext time, find a hole farther from your hunter.ā He titters softly, and through the darkness, you think you can make out the gleam of teeth. āNow, how shall I skin you?ā
A sudden effort from you sends him forward, loosing his hand enough for you to sink your teeth into the meat of his palm. He tightens his grip, lifting your head in the span of his large hand, and then sends it cracking back against the ground. Sparks burst behind your eyes as, dimly, you register his weight shifting, moving to better subdue you.
He leans low over your ear, his breath hot at your neck. āI think I will kill you,ā he hisses, āWhat our Raven-feeder doesnāt know wonāt hurt her. Letās start here --ā
You donāt need to see it to know steel when it presses at your skin, the tip of a dagger digging into the flesh below your jaw. You squeeze shut your eyes, pressure mounting as you try again to throw him off. A rustle of fabric at the edge of your hearing stills you for a single beat of your heart, and you feel the Dane go rigid atop you.
A womanās voice cracks out, āOi, whatās this? Find your own tent for your business -- oh, itās you, Ivarr. I didnāt realize.ā
Light from the campfire spills past her, chasing away the shadows from the tentās interior. For the first time, you can see Ivarr above you, his weathered face and neck flushed, his lank hair obscuring half his face and the snarl that forms on his lips.Ā
āCan you not see I am busy?ā he growls, one hand still tight over your mouth, the other poised with a jagged little knife, the end of which you can just barely see.
The woman hesitates, glancing back over her shoulder. The sounds of campfire chatter have ceased, replaced by the noise of quick steps crunching over stone and dirt. Ivarr sighs, sitting back to rest on your knees. His weight is heavy -- you had learned as much during your struggle, and you know that you had been right in your brief observation that he is a larger man than his build and movements would have you believe on a glance.Ā
A second figure appears in the opening and a grin curls around Ivarrās lips. āAh, Wolf-Kissed! I found a --ā
āGet off the woman, Ivarr.ā Eivor steps forward and when she is near, the fingers of one hand curl in the back of Ivarrās shirt. A moment later, he is lifted off of you, Eivor sending him stumbling back.Ā
Ivarr rights himself with fluid whirl, so smoothly you would think he had not just been tossed away like refuse in the wind. āShe is a straggler, Eivor --ā
āA survivor,ā the woman snaps, āShe has escaped you. What rock did you emerge from under, Ivarr? I thought you had returned to Shropshire.ā
āI smelled a rat,ā his cold blue eyes turn to you, āHad to come check the larder.ā
You try not to let him see the shudder that runs through you as you pull your cloak around your shoulders. But he sees past the movement and smiles again. He is almost ugly, except for the moments when the light catches his eyes and the glint in them distracts you from the scars and deep angles. There is a depth in them that frightens you -- it dawns on you that those eyes are not those of a madman, as he first seemed, but rather a very singular personality, one that revels in the sort of violence that nearly left you cut from ear to ear.
A crowd gathers beyond the walls of the tent; you can hear their shuffling and their murmurs and see their shadows playing through the cracks. Two men push past, and a breath leaves you in relief as Basim appears with Hytham at his heels. Hythamās worried gaze finds yours, dragging over your face to land at a spot near the left side of your jaw. He scowls at what he sees there and it is only then that notice the trickle of warmth running down your neck. Ivarrās cut had been a nearer miss than you had realized. All over again, the rising, frozen fingers of fear grip you tight.
Basim gestures between the two glaring Danes. āI see our new friend yet lives. Perhaps we can move our arguments outside?ā
āPiss off,ā grunts Ivarr. He sweeps past Basim. āUnless you want to argue with the tip of that curved sword.ā
āEntertaining as that would be, it would be a mistake.ā Basimās eyes shine with a look that would have most men stepping back, but Ivarr only waves a hand at the man.
He calls on his way out, āSomebody get me a drink! If I canāt kill horse thieves, I will drown myself in ale instead.ā
At last, the tent is quiet, save for the quiet shuffling of feet. With Ivarr gone, Eivor turns to you. Her eyes run from your feet to your head, her lips quirking. She gestures to the wound left near your jaw. āSeems youāve a scratch to mend already.āĀ
At that, she slips out, Basim following her. Only Hytham remains. He looks grim, as he so often does, his eyes on the ground near his feet.Ā
āFrown much harder and you will dig a hole,ā you say, though the words are difficult to get past your lips.
āGood,ā scoffs Hytham, āSomeone can bury him in it.ā
Harsh words, but hard to disagree with. The bite in them surprises a grin out of you. The fear and panic are fading, and you find yourself moving on steady feet to Hythamās side. The press of your hand at his arm draws his eyes up to yours. He seems to at last catch himself, shaking his head.Ā
āI am glad Eivor was here,ā he says with a gentleness you feel in your chest.
āYou and Basim were not far behind her,ā you remind him.
āCutting a throat is a quick thing. If he meant to do it, I think we would not have been here in time.ā
āIf he meant to do it?ā You raise a hand to your neck, fingers sliding over skin tacky with drying blood.Ā
āEven Ivarr knows better than to kill a woman in the middle of camp.ā
āSo he meant to frighten me then?ā He had done a fine job of it. He had snatched up your life and held it between his hands on a whim.
Hytham shakes his head again. āI think he likes to play with his food.ā
āMust we call me that?ā
Hytham laughs, even as your stomach churns. āYou are right. I am sorry. A poor image.ā His cheer sobers quickly, his eyes settling on you once more, though the shine in them remains. When you had joined him at his side, you had placed yourself nearer to him than perhaps you should. He has somehow closed the distance further still without you noticing, the heat from his body warm across the small space. So close, you can see the freckles across his cheeks, remnants left from a time in a sunnier climate than Englandās. He appears to be considering something.
āHere,ā he says after seconds have passed, āTake this.ā With one hand, he reaches for you, his palm soft over the back of your hand. With the other, he reaches around to his side and frees a small, sharp-looking knife from his belt. He presses it into your outstretched fingers. āIn case Eivor is not around next time.ā
āWhat of you?ā The question leaves you without you meaning it to, and your cheeks heat mercilessly. Hythamās gaze softens in the light.
āIt is my knife. Think of me when you stab the man with it.ā His fingers run over the back of your hand, so light it could almost be imagined, and you shiver at the touch. He pulls his hand away.
āThatās very cut-throat of you, Hytham.ā
āYou would be surprised how cut-throat I can be, healer.ā At this, something passes over his expression, but it is gone before you can name it. āNow, get some rest.ā
āGoodnight,ā you tell him. He slips out of the tent, pausing before the flap can fall. He catches your eye, smiles once, and then is gone.
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ā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦.
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The next morning, your mare is already saddled when you find her.Ā
Ivarr sits atop her, grinning down at you as he braces against the saddle. The mare tosses her head, snorting when he pulls her reins tight. You frown as you watch his fingers wind their way through her silver mane, twirling the hair, taunting you.Ā
āYouāve taken good care of her,ā he says when you come to a stop safely out of his reach. āSo kind of you to return her to us.ā
It is another cold day, cloudier than the one before it, but anger heats your face as you glare at him. But what can you say? She is not your horse. She belonged with the Danes to start with, not quite stolen, but itās a near enough difference that you wonāt argue it. One glance at him tells you that Ivarr knows this, as he knows that you are snared by your helplessness to protest.Ā
He nudges his heels into her sides. She comes to you, her velvet nostrils flaring as she noses your arm. As you reach to pet her, heat spreads behind your eyes, unreasonable and traitorous. She is a horse. Nothing more or less. Still, as you feel her warm breath on your palm, it feels as though Ivarr is taking something more from you.
And when you find the nerve to meet his eyes, you know that has been his intention from the start.Ā
He smiles, all teeth.Ā
āThey say you are a healer. Or did they call you a witch?ā He tilts his head - mocking you. āDark seidr, that. So, tell me, witch, why is it that you did not heal all those people? What good are you if you cannot attach heads back onto shoulders?ā His voice rings with the sing-song sound of a childās rhyme. It echoes in your ears like bitter wind. He digs his heels into the mareās sides once more, circling her around you. Her dark eye watches you as she passes, and somewhere in your heart, you think that the beast is sorry. Ivarr continues, his voice rising loud enough to turn heads. āInstead, you ran. Like a coward. Do you know what we do to cowards?ā
The blood in your veins goes cold as you glare spitefully up at him. You want to spit at that grinning face, or claw at it, or sink Hythamās knife into the socket of one of those eyes. Ivarr leans closer, craning down until his face is only a foot from yours. He studies your face and his eyes glimmer at the boiling wrath he must read there. He raises a hand, runs his thumb over his lip as though to taste the air as it sours between you.Ā
When you do not answer, he says, āWe polish our blades with their innards.ā
Coward. Witch. They are only names. But as they slither out from his lips, they sound like curses, echoing in the back of your mind. Hands clenching at your side, it takes all your effort not to reach up and drag him from his horse. He likely wonāt fall for that trick twice.Ā
Instead, you raise your chin, and try not to think about how your insides feel as though they have turned to water.Ā
As levelly as you can, you reply, āYou did not manage it the first time, nor the second. Do you want to know what they say about you? They call you ābonelessā.ā You peer up at him, unblinking. āI wonder if it is because you do not have the spine to back up your words.ā
A boom of laughter fills the air, startling the mare and sending her prancing. He snatches her reins and pulls her back around to face you.Ā
āYou,ā he levels a finger at you, āyou, I will skin cunt first. The Raven Clan and its strays will not protect you forever. Rest easy knowing that your fate is already sewn. You wonāt be my finest kill, but I am a man who can find joy in the little things.ā
He pulls at the mare, rounding her with a bellowing whinny, and leads her away.Ā
You are glad to see him go. But as you know many things, you know, down to your heart, down to your bones, that you will see him again.















