[A Sea Queen’s Sailing by Charles Whistler]@TWC D-Link bookA Sea Queen’s Sailing CHAPTER 1: The Old Chief And The Young 3/29
Thence I must watch all that went on, helplessly, and after the roof fell I cared no more what should be done with me, for I was alone and desolate. Nor did I know who these foemen were, or why they had fallen on us. In the gray of the morning they had come from inland, and were round the hall while we broke our fast.
We had snatched our weapons as best we might, and done what we could, but the numbers against us were too great from the first. They had come from inland, but they were not Scots.
We were at peace with all the Caithness folk, and had been so for years, though we had few dealings with them.
My father had won a place for himself and his men here on the Caithness shore in the days when Harald Harfager had set all Norway under him, for he was one of those jarls who would not bow to him, and left that old Norse land which I had never seen.
Presently, he handselled peace for himself here by marriage with my mother, the daughter of a great Scots lord of the lands; and thereafter had built the hall, and made the haven, and won a few fields from the once barren hillside.
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