“I’ve never tried it.”
Ragna smiled. “I feel sure you wouldn’t like it.”
Cwenburg, the wife of Erman and Eadbald, walked by with a basket of silvery fish fresh from the pond, some of them still flipping their tails. Ragna guessed she was heading for the house of Bucca Fish. Cwenburg had always been plump, Ragna recalled, but now she was quite fat. In her twenties she had lost the vigorous freshness of youth, and was no longer even mildly attractive. However, Edgar’s brothers seemed content with her. It was an unusual arrangement but it had worked for nine years now.
Cwenburg stopped to speak to Dreng, her father, who was just coming out of a storehouse with a wooden shovel in his hand. It was always a little surprising to see unkind, unpleasant people showing affection, Ragna mused. Then her thoughts were interrupted by an angry shout from inside the alehouse.
A moment later Theodberht hobbled out, fastening his belt. “She’s pregnant!” he said angrily. “I’m not paying a penny for a pregnant whore!”
Dreng came hurrying up, still holding the shovel. “What’s this?” he said. “What’s the matter?”
Theodberht repeated his complaint at the top of his voice.
“I didn’t know that!” said Dreng. “I paid a pound for her at Bristol market and that was not even a year ago.”
“Give me back that penny!” said Theodberht.
“Cursed girl, I’ll teach her a lesson.”
Ragna said: “It’s your fault she’s pregnant, Dreng—don’t you understand that?”
Dreng replied to Ragna with surly formality. “My lady, they only get pregnant if they enjoy the shagging, everyone knows that.” Hefumbled in his belt purse and gave Theodberht a silver penny. “Have another cup of ale, my friend, forget about the whore.”
Theodberht took the money with ill grace and walked toward the pasture, whistling to his dog.
“He would have drunk a gallon of ale and stayed the night,” Dreng said sourly. “Might even have paid for another tumble in the morning. Now I’ve lost that money.” He limped inside.
Ragna said to Blod: “What a fool. If he prostitutes the poor girl she’s almost certain to get pregnant sooner or later—doesn’t he know that?”
“Who told you Dreng was a rational man?”
“I hope he isn’t going to punish that girl.”
Blod shrugged.
Ragna said: “The law is that a man can’t kill or beat a slave unreasonably.”
“But who says what is unreasonable?”
“I do, usually.”
They heard a cry of pain from inside, then a grunt of rage, then sobbing. Both women got to their feet, then hesitated. There was a silence for several seconds. Blod said: “If that’s all...”
Then they heard Mairead scream.
They rushed inside.
She was on the floor, covering her belly with her arms. She had a head wound, and bright red blood was soaking into her dark-red hair. Dreng stood over her, the shovel held in both hands and raised above his head. He was yelling incoherently. His wife, Ethel, was crouching in a corner, watching with a terrified face.
Ragna shouted: “Stop that at once!”
Dreng brought the shovel down hard on Mairead’s body.
Ragna repeated: “Stop that!”
From the corner of her eye she saw Blod grab the oak bucket that was kept on a peg behind the door. As Dreng raised the shovel to hit Mairead again, Blod lifted the heavy bucket to strike him. Then Dreng staggered.
He dropped the shovel, and one hand went to his chest.