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The foreigners had wrapped themselves in several layers of cloth and wore either headdresses made of thick bundles of cloth or strange pointed helmets with cloth around the bottom. The ones who wore such helmets were the best hors.e.m.e.n, and they also carried peculiar curved swords, bows on their backs, and quivers at their hips.
The group rode in a loose circle formation, and in the centre was the flock of horses with no riders. It wasn't easy to understand how this was done, but after only an hour it became clear that all the loose horses were following the slightest variation in course made by Sir Arn.
This cavalcade of horses toward Forsvik rode straight through the forest where there were no roads. It was hard to see how Sir Arn could be so sure of the direction in a trackless wood; now and then he glanced up at the sun, that was all. And yet toward the end of the day it turned out that he had ridden straight for the Utter ford on the River Tidan, just above where the Askeberga ting ting met. When the beech forest thinned out and the landscape opened, they could see the river below them like a long, glittering snake. And they approached it at precisely the spot where the horses could make their way across without difficulty. met. When the beech forest thinned out and the landscape opened, they could see the river below them like a long, glittering snake. And they approached it at precisely the spot where the horses could make their way across without difficulty.
As they neared Askeberga they rode past one riverboat after another bringing cargo from Arnas, along with some of the foreigners who did not want to ride. It seemed as though some of their cargo was so precious that they did not want to be parted from it; they sat suspiciously atop the wooden crates that were securely bound with leather thongs. Sune thought it must be gold or silver that they were guarding so carefully, but Sigfrid disagreed, since such treasures would have been stored in the tower chamber at Arnas. They told themselves they would find out soon enough, when the whole party arrived in Forsvik.
At Askeberga all the horses were unsaddled, curried, and watered. Sir Arn then came over to Sune and Sigfrid and demonstrated the care and love they would have to show their horses from now on. Every little burr had to be removed from their tails and manes, and every inch of the horses' bodies had to be inspected and groomed, just as each hoof had to be sc.r.a.ped clean and examined to make sure there was no stone or root stuck in it. And while these tasks were being done, they had to keep talking to their friend, for such a horse was a friend for life, and the greater the friends.h.i.+p between a horse and rider, the better they would be able to work together. The friends.h.i.+p was more important than any movements they made with their legs and hands to command the horses. Soon they would have to learn far more than they could imagine, because not only would they have to be faster at a full gallop than any other rider in the North, they also had to learn to ride backwards and to the side, as none of their kinsmen or friends could do. It would take time.
But during all that time they had to maintain the friends.h.i.+p with their horse and let that friends.h.i.+p grow from one day to the next; that was the foundation of all horsemans.h.i.+p.
Sune and Sigfrid felt at once a strong a.s.surance that everything Sir Arn was saying was part of the great secret, even though to others' ears it might have sounded more crazy than wise. For the sight of Sir Arn on his horse out in the barnyard in Forsvik had been incised into their memory.
An hour before prayers Arn took out his bow, strung it, and grabbed a quiver of arrows to go out and practice. He no longer lived according to the strict Rule which had been his guide for so many years that he could hardly remember his life without it. He was no longer a Templar knight; on the contrary, he would soon enter into the carnal union of man and woman blessed by G.o.d. But the Rule condemned idleness as much as pride the indolence of not practicing the arts of war so as to be able to serve G.o.d in the hour of danger, and the pride of imagining oneself to be sufficiently skilled without practice.
He found the bale of hay that he and Harald had used as a target the last time they were in Askeberga, and headed towards the river to find a place where he would not be disturbed. Young Sune and Sigfrid came sneaking after him in the belief that he, a Templar knight, would not discover that he was being followed. At first he was tempted to pretend not to notice them, just as he had done the time they saw him chastising the lazy guards at Forsvik. But he changed his mind and picked up his pace so that he managed to hide behind a thick oak. Then he grabbed the two boys by the scruff of their necks when they came padding after him.
He warned them sternly never to follow a knight in secret. For as they surely had heard at Arnas, his brother Eskil would have preferred to see a retinue of at least a dozen guards on the way back to Forsvik, since it was rumoured that more than one powerful man in the kingdom would gladly send secret a.s.sa.s.sins to avert the wedding at Arnas. So Sune and Sigfrid could not have chosen a worse time to come sneaking up from behind. The boys were ashamed and hung their heads and begged forgiveness, but this lasted only a moment. Then they were eagerly offering to help their lord by retrieving the arrows after he shot each round.
Arn gave them a solemn nod but could hardly keep from laughing. He pointed to a rotten stump where they could set up the target. They were surprised at the long distance, but quickly obeyed.
When they returned and sat down expectantly on a large, mossy rock, Arn nocked the first arrow on the bowstring, pointed at the target, and said that this was the distance at which he had first noticed them following him. Then he shot five arrows in quick succession and motioned for them to run down and fetch them.
The arrows were grouped so closely together that Sigfrid, who reached the target first, could grab them all with one hand when he yanked them out of the straw. Then he fell to his knees and stared incredulously at the five arrows in his hand. Sune met his gaze and shook his head. No words were necessary.
Five times Arn shot, and five times Sune and Sigfrid ran down to fetch the arrows, which every time but one could be grasped in one hand. The boys' initial excitement was slowly replaced by a dejected silence. If they had to be able to shoot like Arn to become a knight, neither of them thought they would ever pa.s.s the test.
Arn saw their gloomy expression and guessed the cause of it.
'The two of you won't have to shoot with my bow,' he explained in a light tone when they returned with the arrows the fifth time. 'My bow is suited to me but certainly not to you. When we get to Forsvik we'll build bows that fit you, as well as swords and s.h.i.+elds. You already have horses that suit you, and keep in mind that you're just at the start of a long path.'
'A very long path,' said Sune quietly with his head bowed. 'No one will ever be able to shoot better than you, Sir Arn.'
'n.o.body in our land can shoot like that,' Sigfrid added.
'There both of you are wrong. My friend Harald from Norway shoots like I do, and you will soon meet a monk who might shoot even better; at least he did once. There is no limit to what a man can learn except for the limits he creates inside his own head. When you saw me shooting, you simply moved that limit forward farther than you thought possible. And it would be ill-advised to do anything less, since I shall be your teacher.'
Arn laughed when he added this last remark, and he received hesitant smiles in return.
'He who practices most will be the one who shoots best, it's that simple,' Arn continued. 'I have practiced with weapons every day since I was much younger than the two of you, and if there were days when I didn't practice, then there was war and practice of another kind. No man is born a knight; he must work to become one, and I find that acceptable. Will you two work as hard as necessary?'
The boys nodded and looked down at the ground.
'Good. And you will certainly have to work. At first when we get to Forsvik there will be more building work than weapons games. But as soon as we get settled, your long days with sword, lance, s.h.i.+eld, horse, and forge will begin. By evening prayers your bodies will be aching with fatigue. But you will sleep well.'
Arn gave them an encouraging smile in order to make up a little for the true words he had spoken about the path to knighthood, which was a path with no short cuts. He felt an odd tenderness for them both, as if he could picture himself as a young boy in Brother Guilbert's strict school.
'What does a knight pray in the evening, and to whom shall we direct our prayers?' asked Sigfrid, looking Arn straight in the eye.
'You ask a wonderfully wise question, Sigfrid. Who of G.o.d's saints has the most time and the best ear for the prayers from the two of you? Our Lady is the one to whom I direct my prayers, but I have been in Her service and ridden under her banner for more than twenty years. You mentioned Saint orjan before, he who protects worldly knights, and he would probably suit both of you best. But it's easier to say what you should pray for. It is fort.i.tudo fort.i.tudo and and sapientia sapientia, a knight's two most important virtues. Fort.i.tudo Fort.i.tudo means strength and courage, means strength and courage, sapientia sapientia means wisdom and humility. But none of this will be given to you; you will have to work to achieve it. When you pray for this at the end of the day after working hard, it's like a reminder of what you are working and striving for. Now go to your beds and pray for the first time this prayer to Saint orjan.' means wisdom and humility. But none of this will be given to you; you will have to work to achieve it. When you pray for this at the end of the day after working hard, it's like a reminder of what you are working and striving for. Now go to your beds and pray for the first time this prayer to Saint orjan.'
They bowed and obeyed at once. Arn watched them disappear into the twilight. At journey's end there would be a new kingdom, he thought. A mighty new kingdom where peace reigned with such great strength that it would no longer be worthwhile to wage war. And these two boys, Sune Folkesson and Sigfrid Erlingsson, might be the beginning of this new kingdom.
He gathered up his arrows in the quiver, slinging it over his shoulder. He did not unstring his bow but walked silently with it in his hand down toward the river, to the lovely spot for prayer under the alders and willows that he had found the last time he was in Askeberga.
He did not really take seriously the gossip he'd heard at Arnas, that enemies who strove for power might now entertain the notion of sending secret a.s.sa.s.sins to kill Arn Magnusson. There was some logic to this argument, he thought, noticing at once that he had s.h.i.+fted to Frankish in his mind to be able to think more clearly. The a.s.sa.s.sin who could make it look as if Birger Brosa, for instance, were the instigator, would have much to gain. Internecine strife among the Folkungs would benefit the Sverkers in their ambition to seize the royal crown; it would also weaken the Eriks' positions. But all such thoughts were mere theories sodden by ale and wine. It was one thing to think up such plans, and another to carry them out. If someone was now approaching Askeberga in the twilight to murder him, where would the murderer look first? And if the killer were really in the vicinity now that light for shooting was about to vanish, how could he silently advance to use a dagger or sword?
And if the killer approached in the dark, he couldn't very well expect to find a sleeping and unarmed Templar knight, could he?
G.o.d's Mother had not held her protective hands over Arn for all these years of war, and She had not denied him a martyr's death and Paradise only in the end to see him murdered in Western Gotaland. She had given him the greatest gifts of earthly life, but not without conditions, since at the same time She had presented him with the greatest of all tasks She could give one of Her knights. First he was to build a church that would be consecrated to G.o.d's Grave, to show humanity that G.o.d was present wherever people resided and did not have to be sought in war in foreign lands. The even bigger task She had given him was to create peace by building up a force that was so superior that war would be impossible.
Once again Arn found the place by the river where he could rest and pray. The brief hours of darkness had fallen; there were only a few weeks left until Midsummer when it would be dark for merely half an hour. There was no wind, and the sounds and smells of the night were strong. From the farms by the docks he could hear loud laughter when someone opened a door to go outside and p.i.s.s. The oarsmen on the river were probably helping themselves to all the ale that the foreigners refused to drink. There seemed to be a nightingale in a thicket quite close by, and for a moment the bird's powerful song filled his soul.
He had never felt such peace before; it was as if G.o.d's Mother wanted to show him what heavenly bliss was still possible in earthly life. In everything that happened, big and small, he could now see Her will and endless grace. His father was well on his way to regaining all his faculties, and he would soon be ready to start walking again.
Ibrahim and Yussuf had moved Herr Magnus up to the large tower chamber as soon as it was cleaned like a mosque. With the help of some thralls they had built a bridge with two rails on which the sick man could shuffle along with the support of his arms. At first he moved slowly and laboriously, but well enough that they could see from day to day that soon he would be able to walk without support. And he had regained much of his good humour, saying that he would be sure to be walking in time for the wedding perhaps like an old man, but on his own two feet. Until then, since there were only a few weeks left of the season forbidden for weddings, he would keep his blessing secret so that the power of the healing arts could be seen that much better by everyone who saw him at the wedding.
He also was able to speak much better now that he was practicing every day and had left any form of hopelessness far behind. At first he had so stubbornly resisted when they began with a stone that he had to move from one hand to the other. But he now devoted himself with such zeal to the task that Ibrahim and Yussuf sometimes had to stop him so that he didn't overdo it.
To Arn he had said that it was like seeing and feeling at the same time how life returned to both his body and soul. But what he said that gladdened Arn even more was that he understood that this was no miracle, no matter what other people would believe when they saw him healthy once more. This was his own work, his own will, and yes, his own prayers, but most of all it was due to the skills of the two foreign gentlemen. And they were ordinary men, neither saints nor sorcerers, even though they wore odd clothes and spoke an incomprehensible language.
Then Arn had finally told his father the truth, that these men, Ibrahim and Yussuf, as their names were more properly p.r.o.nounced, were Saracens.
Herr Magnus had sat in silence so long when he heard this that Arn regretted his earnest veracity. But at last his father had nodded and said that good skills from near or far were what made life better. He had seen it with his own eyes and felt it in his own limbs. And if the people of the Church had bad things to say about these Saracens, their words were worth nothing compared to what his own son had to say. For who knew better the whole truth: someone who was priest in Forshem or bishop in ostra Aros, or someone who had waged war against the Saracens for twenty years?
Arn took the opportunity to tell him that all the fortresses of the Knights Templar had employed Saracen medical men because they were the best. What was good for G.o.d's Holy Army of Knights Templar would surely be good in Western Gotaland up in the North.
The good humour brought on by this insight made his father ask Arn to accompany him out on the walls to take a look at the new construction.
Arn had feared that it was too soon for his father to go outside, even though he had his son to support him. He had also feared that his father would find the construction unnecessary and forbid it, now that he had regained his reason.
But his concerns were groundless. When Herr Magnus saw how a perfectly smooth and high wall was being formed around the outer portions of the castle closest to Lake Vanern, and when he realized that these walls were intended to surround all of Arnas, he was struck dumb with joy and pride. He himself had improved the fortifications considerably in his younger years, but he had often regretted that he hadn't done better. Arn told him at length how everything would look when it was finished, and how no enemy could then threaten the Folkung clan. In all he recounted he received his father's eager support.
The only matter that caused concern during Arn's brief visit to Arnas was Erika's state of mind. Since he had heard about the death of his unknown little brother Knut, Erika's son, he had spoken about this sorrow with her as he must. But she had made him angry by talking more about the revenge to which she had a right than about her grief. Even worse, she told him that she had offered thanks to Our Lady because a warrior of G.o.d like Arn had returned so that the days of that wretch Ebbe Sunesson were now numbered. For the law was clear. If Arn demanded a duel for the sake of the clan's honour, the villain could not say no. Erika grew so heated that she seemed both to cry and laugh at the same time when she described how Ebbe Sunesson would feel when he was forced to draw his sword against the older brother of the youth he'd slain and then watch his own death coming straight at him.
Arn hadn't been able to allay Erika Joarsdotter's desire for vengeance; he found that out as soon as he tried. Instead he prayed with her for the soul of his brother Knut. Even though she couldn't refuse such a prayer, she seemed to long more for revenge than for the peace of Knut's soul.
It was sad to find Erika filled with such a sinful obsession. During the long night by the river he prayed first of all for Erika's recovery and the forgiveness of her sin.
It felt as though they were on their way to the heart of darkness. The farther the river journey took them, the more certain the Wachtian brothers felt that they were leaving the habitations of men behind them and approaching the inhuman and unnamable. The individual hovels they pa.s.sed looked more and more shabby, and on the banks of the river the livestock and wild children romped about together so that it was hard to tell the animals from the people.
The inn where they were to spend the night was abominable and crowded with savage, filthy men who bellowed in their incomprehensible singing language and drank like beasts until they ended up in brawls or simply pa.s.sed out. All the men from Outremer, Christians as well as Muslims, kept to themselves and made camp some distance away from the inn buildings rather than set foot inside. The food that the thralls brought them they had refused with disgust and horror, and when darkness fell they all prayed, the Prophet's people and the Christians separately, for forbearance.
In the morning it took an eternity to get going, since the sleeping oarsmen had to be rousted from the most unexpected places, wherever they happened to fall asleep. Red-eyed and grumpy, stinking of vomit and p.i.s.s, these men had finally been herded together like beasts of burden to their oars. By then the sun was high, and it was said that Sir Arn and his band of riders had a lead of many hours.
Late that afternoon their boat glided up to the wharves at Forsvik. The unloading began at once, and Marcus and Jacob Wachtian were kept busy ensuring that nothing in their baggage was damaged by these ignorant and worthless souls.
Yet they agreed it could have been much worse, when Sir Arn called a meeting in the courtyard in the midst of the low grey wooden houses with the gra.s.s growing on the roofs. At least all the Nordic people around them were sober and relatively clean. At least they didn't stink like the oarsmen.
'In the name of G.o.d, most beneficent, ever-merciful, He Who is the G.o.d of us all even though we wors.h.i.+p Him in different ways, I bid you welcome to my home,' Sir Arn began as usual in Arabic. 'This is the destination of our journey. Let us therefore, before we do or say anything else, offer prayers of thanksgiving that we have arrived safe and sound.'
Sir Arn then bowed his head in prayer, and all the men around him did the same. He waited until all had raised their heads when they finished their prayer.
'What you see here at Forsvik will impress few of you, I know,' Sir Arn went on. 'But we have four years of work ahead of us until the time we have agreed on is over. None of us will recognize this place after those four years, you can be a.s.sured of that. We shall not build a fortress, but a caravanserai caravanserai, a place of trade. We shall not build walls here as we did at Arnas, but smithies, furnaces for making brick and gla.s.s, and workshops for the manufacture of saddles and tack, felt, leather goods, and clothing. But we can't do everything at once. Of primary importance are roofs over our heads and cleanliness, which will be the same here as in Outremer. Then we will put in order everything else in the sequence we find best. But roofs over our heads must be the first priority, for winters here in the North are of a quite different nature than anything you have ever experienced. When the first snow and cold arrives, I'm sure that none of you, even in silence, will curse me that in your first days you had to slave like simple builders, although your skills could be employed doing more difficult things than dragging lumber. The Prophet's people, peace be upon him, will not see any unclean food before them. Now we have hard work to do, but we will also reap the reward for it, because within less than half a year the first snow will fall!'
Sir Arn repeated his words in Frankish, as usual, and then he went over to the two field masters, Aibar and Bulent, and took them along to a smaller building which lay right next to running water.
'Some people are lucky enough to be spared the slaving on construction from the start,' Jacob Wachtian muttered. 'What skills do we have that will spare us?'
'Surely one thing and another, don't worry,' said Marcus, unconcerned, taking his brother by the arm to study more closely the estate which would apparently be their workplace for several years to come.
They took a tour around Forsvik, and since they were both men who took great pleasure in learning new things about what could be built by the hands of men, they soon had much to discuss. They could see from the quant.i.ty of new timber that was still being dragged in by ox-teams from the nearby woods that several new buildings were planned. But the piles of stones and barrels of chalk and sand made them realize that the new structures would be built differently from those that were already here. Apparently it was going to be like the big wooden longhouse at Arnas, where one gable was entirely of stone and had a huge fireplace at the end. If they heated up that much stone with the fire, maybe they could fight off the terrible cold of winter, Marcus reasoned. Unlike in Outremer, at least here they had unlimited quant.i.ties of wood for fuel.
Sir Arn strode over to the brothers, put his arms around their shoulders, and told them that now they would soon have a chance to work on what they were best suited for. But first he had to show them his idea. He seemed happy and sure of his plan, as if this G.o.dforsaken spot at the end of the world were already a large and flouris.h.i.+ng caravanserai. caravanserai.
First he took them down to the two waterfalls and described how they could get as much power from this water as they wished. He told them that water was much better than wind, because water flowed all the time.
At the smaller waterfall there were two mill-wheels. Arn took them inside the mill and showed them how the rotating power could be transmitted to the millstones.
'But this is just the beginning,' he said. 'We can build ten wheels like this if we like, and we can build them much bigger. The power produced will be slower but much stronger, if we should want to grind limestone to lime for use in mortar. Or we could obtain weaker but much faster power with smaller wheels. I want you to put your minds to work on this!'
He led them out of the millhouse, still cheerful and enthusiastic, and showed them where he wanted to build food storehouses out of brick, next to the larger waterfall so that he could run a cooling stream of water in along the floor and back out into the river.
Along the big rapids they would build a stone channel to harness all the power that would otherwise be wasted. That's where the row of workshops would be located, since the water power could drive both the bellows and hammers. To avoid having to haul all the charcoal and fuel back and forth, he thought they might as well build the brothers' workshops next to the smithies and gla.s.sworks. When Marcus muttered something about trying to think sharply about springs and gears, with all the pounding that would be going on next door, Sir Arn said with a laugh that he truly had not thought about that drawback. But in the wintertime it might be very beneficial to work right next to the smithies and gla.s.sworks for the sake of the warmth.
But first both of them, like Ibrahim the physician, had to start on a completely different project. During the fall with all the mud, and during the long winter, it would be hard to keep themselves and their dwellings clean if they didn't soon begin making soap. Sir Arn apologized with a laugh when he saw the insulted looks on the faces of the two Armenian brothers. Naturally such work would seem to be something for less knowledgeable men, he admitted. But here in the North they would have to choose. Anyone who wanted to stay clean in the wintertime would have to start burning ashes and gathering bone grease to make his own soap. Oil could be boiled out of the Nordic pines the same way it was done from cedar and pines in Lebanon. Sir Arn had already had the bark slashed on many trees in the vicinity, which were bleeding pitch.
Seeing the brothers' reluctant expressions, he a.s.sured them that he could set his own workers to the dirty task of collecting tree resin, but once it was in the iron cauldron even Armenian gentlemen would have to help out and continue the necessary work.
They looked so dismayed that Arn launched into a long, apologetic explanation. He began with something as simple as felt. Aibar and Bulent, the two Turkish feltmakers, had already begun their work. Even though most of the felt would eventually be put to military use, the surplus would be welcome in the winter.
What they had to understand was that everything that was taken for granted in Outremer was not readily available here. The same was true of soap, esteemed by both the followers of the Prophet, peace be upon him, and the Christians from Outremer.
So there were many simple tasks that had to be done before they could start on the real work: constructing crossbows, making arrows for the longbows, forging swords and helmets, extruding iron wire, and firing clay and gla.s.s.
Otherwise, Arn added with a smile, anyone who couldn't find work doing these small, simple tasks would have to a.s.sist with the construction and masonry work. This convinced the Wachtian brothers that they should begin working on making soap, as well as gathering the right sort of water plants for the ash that was needed for gla.s.smaking.
But he asked them, whenever they had time, to think about the water power and what it might be used for.
This last was most encouraging to them. When Sir Arn left and hurried off to talk to other groups, the Wachtian brothers went back down to the water-wheels. Inside one of the millhouses they observed the turning stones and axles as they thought out loud to each other.
Saws, they thought at once. Up here in the North they split timber and smoothed it as best they could with adzes. But what if they could saw it evenly right from the start?
There was more than enough power, just as Sir Arn had said. How could they transfer that power to saws?
It wouldn't be easy to figure out, but this was the type of problem that put the two brothers in a better mood. They went to fetch ink and parchment at once. Both of them thought best when they could sketch their ideas.
FIVE.
Upon her homecoming to Husaby, Cecilia soon found that she was an unwelcome guest; if anyone had wished her banished to the cloister more than Birger Brosa, it was her relatives.
She had not relinquished her inheritance from her father Algot. At least half of the ten farms around Husaby were hers. And her kinsmen circled around the matter like a cat around hot porridge when it came to her sister Katarina's inheritance. The question was whether Katarina had relinquished her birthright when she entered the cloister, and if so, whether the property would fall to the cloister, to Cecilia, or to her male kinsmen.
Husaby had been a royal estate ever since the days of Olof Skotkonung. But the Pl clan had been caretakers there for more than a century, so they reckoned Husaby as their own estate when it came to holding feasts for the clan, even though they always had to make sure that they had plenty of provisions in case the king himself came to visit. They also had to pay tax to the king.
Cecilia's homecoming was such a disappointment to her uncle's son Pl Jonsson and his two brothers Algot and Sture that they could scarcely conceal their dismay. It wasn't hard for Cecilia to understand the reason for their sullen expressions or why they spoke to her only when forced to, preferring instead to sit by themselves. They stopped talking as soon as she came near.
Cecilia's wedding was going to cost them dearly, she was well aware of that. The law and custom were both simple and clear. The richer the bridegroom, the bigger the dowry. And a richer man than the son of Arnas was difficult to find in Western Gotaland. At least that was what Cecilia surmised, without having any idea how much Arn might inherit from his father Magnus.
Cecilia had good reason not to discuss the dowry with her hostile kinsmen. It would be better to save that argument for the dowry ale when Arn's bridal representative, who would undoubtedly be Eskil, came to arrange everything that had to be finished and decided by the wedding day. Very few would dare b.u.t.t heads with Eskil.
Eskil had already sent over the old thrall woman Suom from Arnas, since she was the most skilled in the sewing arts and could make a bridal gown better than anyone. Cecilia instantly became friends with Suom. They found great pleasure in each other's skill with needle and thread, distaff and loom.
Some of the things they could do in the convent Suom had never seen. But she knew other things that they didn't know at the cloister, so the two got on well together. And in this way Cecilia was spared keeping company with the unfriendly Pl brothers.
Eskil arrived at the appointed time on the day as promised, bringing a dozen guards. He quickly drank his welcome ale and explained that he didn't intend to stay overnight, so they had better take care of the business matters at once, without any more drinking.
The Pl brothers could offer no argument, but they blushed with humiliation that this Folkung did not even care to share their bread and meat.
Things did not improve when Eskil said that he would prefer to have Cecilia included in the conversation so that she could speak her piece. This diminished the role of Pl Jonsson, which could hardly have escaped Eskil's notice.
In silence the three Pl brothers entered the feast hall of Husaby first and took their places together at the high seat. Eskil was careful to walk slowly, taking Cecilia's arm and whispering that she must remain calm and not worry about any of the things that now might be said. He had no chance to explain further before they moved further into the dim hall, which was still decorated with ancient runes and images of G.o.ds that were not Christian.
In silence the Pl brothers sat down in the high seat with Cecilia near them and Eskil facing them across the longtable. New ale was brought in by house thralls who said not a word, seeming to sense that this was a meeting that their masters did not particularly desire.
'Well, shall we set the date first?' said Eskil, wiping the ale from his mouth, as if he weren't talking about anything difficult or important.
'It's customary to decide on the date after everyone agrees on all the rest,' Pl Jonsson muttered with annoyance. He was red in the face, and the veins bulged from his forehead as if he were as taut as a bowstring, antic.i.p.ating what was to follow.
'As you like. We can talk about the dowry first,' said Eskil.
'Half of the inheritance from my uncle Algot rightfully belongs to Cecilia. That's what she can take with her into the estate,' Pl Jonsson said.
'Absolutely not!' Eskil snapped back. 'Cecilia's sister Katarina was my wife, as you may recall, and she entered Gudhem cloister while their father was still alive. It was autumn, and during the subsequent Christmas feast Algot drank until he suffered a stroke and died. We all know this sad story, may he rest in peace. So Cecilia's inheritance is Algot's entire estate, all ten farms. She will take those with her into the estate.'
'Doesn't Katarina's inheritance fall to Gudhem cloister?' said Pl, trying to be evasive.
'No, because when she entered the cloister she had no inheritance, since Algot was still alive,' Eskil replied implacably. 'And as far as Gudhem is concerned, I have paid out of my own pocket more for Katarina's admittance into the holy sisterhood than was ever required.'