Read Northern Lights Trilogy Online
Authors: Lisa Tawn Bergren
For now, she choked down dry flatbread with water and forced herself to think of the future instead of her meager meal. Looking far out to sea, she observed the different patterns on the water, caused by either wind or current, she could not tell. Away from the ship, it was more difficult to discern the swells that plagued the
Herald
. If she kept feeling this nauseous, she wouldn’t need any rations from her miserly sister. But she was happy for the wind. The wind that filled the topgallant, topsail, and forecourse sails above her, like clean sheets in a spring breeze, and meant that she was inching her way to America.
“Pardon me, miss,” said a sailor at her elbow. She dragged her eyes away from the horizon to the pesky man.
“Yes?”
“Cap’n wants to see you. I have orders to escort you to his cabin immediately.”
Tora looked him up and down, idly wondering if it was worth the effort to sweet-talk him into taking her for a walk instead of to the captain. But his face was resolute, and he studiously avoided her gaze. There was little doubt he knew she was the stowaway and the cause of Vidar’s imminent departure.
“Very well,” she said, rising to follow him.
He led her to the captain’s quarters, where he left her in the sitting room and then departed immediately without a word. Tora, despite her resolve, felt her mouth water at the smells of roast beef, onions and vegetables, and fresh bread. It just made her angrier that her sister could deprive her so. She was family! She should be treated like the princess to her sister’s queen!
Tora saw Elsa lean over to one end of the table, hidden behind the cabin wall, no doubt to tell Peder that his sister-in-law had arrived. Elsa wiped her mouth with a cloth napkin and then set it to one side. She rose and entered the sitting room, followed by Peder and their dinner guests, Einar and Nora, and Birger and Eira Nelson. After polite good-byes, the foursome departed quickly, as if wanting to get out of the way of the executioner’s blade.
As the door closed, Peder spoke. “Vidar has been punished for his indiscretions.”
“I know. I think it is a barbaric practice,” Tora said huffily. She looked at Elsa with accusation in her eyes, blaming her for not intervening as promised.
“Not as barbaric as some captains,” Peder said. “I have known a few who would have thrown him overboard, and you as well.”
Her heart skipped. “You wouldn’t dare.”
“It is not a matter of daring, Tora; it is a matter of doing.” He stared at her, and she noticed that the deep smile lines that were almost always present were conspicuously gone. His dark green-brown eyes stared at her dully. His mouth turned down at the corners. Obviously Peder Ramstad was a man one should not cross. Even her most potent little-girl glance, known to melt the toughest of men, failed to soften his gaze. She squirmed and looked to Elsa for relief.
She was little better. “I have found a decent answer to our dilemma,” Elsa began, folding her hands in her lap.
Observing this composure, Tora had to admire her sister a little. Since her engagement, Elsa had gained an adult countenance that made her seem secure, peaceful, sure of herself.
“An answer? To what?” Tora inquired.
“To how you should pay for your passage, just as the other good people aboard ship have done.”
“I will repay you, Elsa. I promise—”
“Kristoffer Swenson has stepped forward and offered to pay for your passage. In return you will care for young Knut for the duration
of this trip and assist Astrid with Knut and their new child once in Maine. For six months.”
Tora was dumbstruck. Her mind raced as she searched for a good argument. “That’s nothing more than indentured servanthood!” she cried.
“You deserve much less generosity,” Elsa calmly informed her. “Men who stow away and are not thrown overboard are often not only flogged, but sentenced to seven years of servitude aboard ship. By all rights, Peder could make you work for him until you turn twenty-three.”
Tora stood, her fists clenched at her sides. “I would like to see you try and flog me,” she said to Peder. “I know of at least four men aboard this ship who would stay your hand.”
Peder’s look turned from formidable to glowering. He too rose, towering above Tora’s slender frame. “Do not make mutinous threats, Tora. A ship is a different world from Bergen. There is a clearly drawn line and a rigorous order. Do not threaten me again,” he said, shaking his finger in her face, “or I will spank you for the spoiled child you are.”
Elsa rose and edged between them, reminding Tora of her mother. “You may go now, Tora. But you are to report to Cook at five tomorrow morning.”
“Cook?” Tora squeaked.
“Agree to the arrangement with Kristoffer and report to Astrid’s cabin at seven, or to Cook at five. And you
will
be nothing but a gentle, courteous servant to whichever one you choose.”
“I will do no such thing!” Tora shouted, grabbing her skirts and giving the two of them what she hoped was a murderous glance. “I have never heard of anything so unfair!” With that, she exited the cabin and slammed the door behind her. She rushed to the fo’c’sle and looked out across the starboard railing to America. Oh, America, America. The
Herald
couldn’t reach her fast enough.
Peder had watched his wife in wonder during the scene with Tora.
She handles herself so well
, he thought. Already, she is a woman of substance. Yet as soon as Tora slammed the cabin door, she wilted on the love seat. He sat down beside her, gently urging her to relax and place her head in his lap. She did so, and he wordlessly unwove her chignon until her hair—the color of a morning moon—lay in waves over his knees and thighs. He ran his fingers through the silky strands, pausing at her scalp to massage her skin.
“You did your best,” he said as she sighed heavily.
“Yes. But was it enough? How did I go from newlywed to parent in two days?” She smiled wearily up at him.
“What can I say? I am especially virile.”
They laughed together softly, finding relief in humor.
“She looks at us with those doe eyes of hers and thinks she can get out of anything. It is time she finds out that she is responsible for her actions … before it’s too late.”
“I think she gathered that that was your stance,” he said, slowly moving his fingers to trace the delicate lines of her sculpted jaw, chin, and nose. He moved on to her lips as she closed her eyes, obviously relishing his touch, visibly relaxing. “She will figure it out soon enough, sweetheart. Do not worry.”
“It is difficult not to worry about Tora. I am afraid—”
He cut her off, pulling her into his arms, unable to keep from kissing her any longer.
She smiled up at him as he leaned back again. “I take it you have something on your mind other than my sister.”
Peder nodded. “I have the fairest Anders sister on my mind.”
“I like that about you,” she said, giving him an impish grin. “Your distinct taste in women.”
With that, Peder gently picked her up in his arms and stood. “It is difficult to focus on a captain’s duties when one has honeymoon
thoughts on his mind.” And without another word, he carried her into their bedroom, shutting the door tightly behind them.
Karl took his turn at the wheel later that night when all was quiet above deck, the passengers sound asleep in their bunks, along with the sailors who were not on duty. Tonight there was a warm breeze that reminded Karl of a Polynesian island and a waxing moon that threw a bright trail on the shimmering waters of the North Atlantic.
Night was Karl’s favorite time aboard ship, a time when he could almost imagine he was on the
Herald
alone, ready to conquer the world with such a vessel beneath his feet. Oh, to be captain! Everything in him yearned for it, and he knew it wasn’t far off. By owning 40 percent of the Ramstad Yard, by rights, the next ship off the Ramstad ramp would be his.
The watch had rung four bells for ten o’clock when Peder joined him, standing silently behind and to his left, doing as Karl was, lifting his nose to the gentle headwind, enjoying the gentle pitch of the ship like a friend’s welcome laughter. They stayed that way in companionable silence until Peder broke their private thoughts with words.
“It is good to be on our way.”
“Yes. It is at moments like this that I long for my own ship.”
Peder paused. “I understand.”
“I still think that we should consider a steamship as the next project. Sail is on its way out. I know you love it, Peder, but we must be realistic. As your partner in Ramstad Yard, I must insist upon it.”
Peder coughed and changed the subject. They had been over the same ground many times. “How are the ill faring?”
“Most have recovered from their seasickness,” Karl said, glancing at him. “A few will suffer all the way to Boston. But the most worrisome are Kaatje and Astrid.”
“Is it their condition?” Peder asked delicately.
“I suppose,” Karl said with a nod.
“Does Cook have anything that could help them?” As was customary, Cook also served as doctor and carried a chest of supplies to help remedy a variety of ailments.
“He gave me a bottle of tonic tonight.”
“Let me take over here,” Peder said. “You go see to the women, if you don’t mind.”
“Not at all,” Karl said amicably. He turned to leave.
“Karl,” Peder said.
“Yes?”
“There’s something I need to talk about with you.”
A note in Peder’s voice sent a chill of foreboding down Karl’s back. Did he know about his feelings for Elsa? Had he seen the growing admiration that Karl had tried so valiantly to hide? Karl halted his wild concerns, willing himself to face whatever was at hand. “Yes?”
Peder looked down at the deck flooring, and after a moment of hemming and hawing, finally said, “It’s nothing. We’ll speak later.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, yes. It can keep.” He dismissed his friend with a look and Karl turned away, feeling ill at ease. Peder was not one to keep things back. What was he hiding? Something told Karl it was not Elsa.
He walked to the water barrel and poured fresh water into two tin cups for the women below. He knew it would be tough for them to get it down. He also knew that if they didn’t start retaining some fluid soon, both mothers and their expected babes could die of dehydration. After days at sea, they were already perilously weak.
Karl entered the dark passageway that led to his cabin and the rest of the passenger hold. The thick, oily smell of the kerosene lamps that lit the passageway—as well as the stagnant, spoiling aroma that arose from the bilge—filled his nostrils. It made him feel a bit nauseous himself when he paused to think of it. Knocking twice, he entered the cabin after a feeble voice bid him welcome.
Kaatje and Astrid looked even worse than yesterday, if possible. Even in the warm light cast from the flame of the lantern, both
women were ghastly gray. Karl pasted a smile on his face and found himself speaking loudly, as if by his voice’s power he could infuse life into the women.
“Fresh water,” Karl said, holding out the two cups.
Both women groaned, but sat up.
“You need to drink as much as possible, if not for you, then for your babies.”
They nodded and accepted the tin cups as he offered them.
“Are you feeling any better?” he asked hopefully.
“I am afraid not,” Kaatje said. “But thank you for inquiring.” She reached out to touch his hand. “I am sorry that we have displaced you in your own cabin. We could move to our place in the hold now.”
“No, no,” Karl said in dismissal. “Just focus on feeling better. I am fine.”
He looked at Astrid. “Are you at all better?” She simply shook her head.
“Well, I do not know if you’re interested,” Karl said, pulling a bottle from his back pocket, “but I have a bottle of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, sent to you from Cook. He picked it up in New York.” Karl leaned closer to the flame to read the label.
“Hostetter’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters. A pure and powerful tonic, corrective, and alternative of wonderful efficacy in disease of the stomach, liver, and bowels …”