*** Ah well, I missed Hallowe'en once again. :(
This chapter predates some of the last one by a few days at one point, but the rest is pretty much concurrent. I doubt that you'd notice, so it's no big deal, really.
There is a character in it which I've always found to be a little laughable, no doubt the imaginings of some "wise men" someplace. It began as a dragon-ish serpent with a bad reputation, but by the 12th century and onwards, it grew to be confused with the mythical cockatrice and was just as ludicrous in its supposed appearance.
Even Leonardo DaVinci commented on it in his writings and repeated the drivel of those before him - and of course, he'd never even seen one - just like everybody else.
I read the name in a novel and looked it up to be sure. Since they never existed, I made mine as living up to its title - The King of the Serpents.
Just so you know, the bodies of water in this are the North Sea, the Skaggerat and the Kattegat.
The Baltic Sea, where our group of tourists are headed, flows into the Kattegat, a body of water once considered treacherous before the advent of modern navigation removed much of the hazards.
The Kattegat flows into the Skaggerat, known for its sandbars. From there, it's out to the North Sea. Our heroes are sailing the other way, eastward.
There are records which indicate that the Limfjord once had a channel out into the Kattegat but it has since closed off and is a true fjord once more today.
Names?
Chiorstan, an early version of Kirsten and spoken the same way.
The little baby's name is MĂ iri-Ceit and it's pronounced "Mary-Kate".
Oh, and Gudrun the troll-girl is in it too. :)
0_o
***
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"Three days, "Louhu muttered to herself as she looked out of the window which gave her a view out of the front of the little inn and smithy belonging to Leif and Moppy. It also provided a view of the road which passed by the place and if one had the interest, one could see across that road and into the forest beyond for a little distance.
She was staring at a figure out there among the trees who never moved on and often crept from one vantage point to another. Louhi had no idea just how long the person had been out there, but it became rather obvious to her and Cuilén that the only reason that anyone might have for hanging around in the wet and cold was to keep the place under surveillance.
And she'd been aware of him for the past three days.
Cuilén had suggested that he could likely capture the individual without much fuss, but Louhi felt a slight desire to exercise a bit of caution.
"I do not think that this one is there to choose the best moment to rob the place," she said, "but I do wish to know, all the same."
Ren was asked to investigate and when he returned, they decided that the man out there was keeping watch on behalf of someone else. Louhi nodded to Cuilén and he left by another door.
Twenty-seven minutes later that late afternoon, Gilbert looked up from his quiet observation, wondering at the soft sound behind him in the leaves and he fell unconscious from the blow that he received on the other side of his head from the flat of Cuilén's sword. At that point, Cuilén went to retrieve the glove that he'd tossed to distract Gilbert.
The young man was trussed up and tied to an 'A' frame made from sapling trunks before Cuilén dragged him out of the woods and over the road behind his horse.
Gilbert began to stir when the frame was hoisted up so that he hung from his bonds, but what finally brought him around was the bucketful of cold seawater which Cuilén poured over his head.
Gilbert sputtered and raised his head, almost groaning to see that the one who had captured him so easily was the very same one that he'd told MĂ iri that he was a little nervous about.
Then he saw the woman who he'd been sent to watch as she sat on an unsplit section of tree trunk which she used as a chair for the moment. They looked at each other for a long few minutes and in that time, Gilbert felt as though she gleaned information from him without even the asking.
"Why were you watching us?" Louhi asked him.
Gilbert was young and rather idealistic, and that feeling was out of a fair bit of gratitude and loyalty to MĂ iri and Beathag. He held his tongue.
Louhi watched him in silence for a more than ten minutes, hardly blinking and never shifting her gaze - and looking at her cold stare became a little unnerving for Gilbert.
"I can tell you a few things that I see about you," she said, "and then you have a choice to make.
You work for someone -- a woman or women and you pass what you have seen to her -- or them. I would not care at almost any time, but I believe that the woman is a wise one who has an interest in us.
It makes me curious, which is why you are here.
This person is your lover, and I see also that you are very loyal to her. It is very admirable in my eyes."
Gilbert could not keep the surprise from his face, not being really very far along in this business of being a spy and Louhi nodded to him.
"I see that I am not far from the mark."
She walked up to him and smiled up at where he hung shivering. "Not the best weather to be wet to the skin, I fear."
She looked off at the trees which hid the view of the little cove down below.
"A few more buckets of brine will make matters worse, especially if my large friend here turns the thing that holds you on its end and hangs your head in the cold water. It is a lot of work for the song of a young man, but you will tell me what I wish to know -- and if it must go that way, then I will kill you.
I hold nothing against you, but I need to know why we are being watched. Tell me something that I know to be truth and I will keep you warm and dry - and fed -- until your lover comes for you, for she will because she cares very much for you."
Louhi sighed then, "I do not feel that this woman wishes me harm. If I did, you would already be dead out of principle, the price for putting her nose where it does not belong."
Gilbert said nothing, and Cuilén poured another bucket of seawater over his head as slowly as he could, keeping the stream over the boy's mouth and nose as much as possible.
Gilbert coughed and retched as he hung his head.
Cuilén tied Gilbet's head back against the frame and picked up a second bucket.
"Who is the woman and why does she want us watched?" Louhi asked, "To keep on this way will only cause you to hate us and it is not needed, since I do not think that we are speaking of anything worth your death. I only need to know."
It took four more buckets and then Louhi had her answers. Gilbert was taken down and tied up before Cuilén toweled him off roughly and dragged him off to a warm bed after Ren spoonfed him, while making no answers to Gilbert's many questions.
Annikki walked past once and when Gilbert looked at her, she smiled and said. "He does not speak English at all. You should just eat."