Chapter One
HIDDEN THREAT
Without making a sound, Briana O'Toole slipped
out the door to walk the mountain behind her
home. In the half-light before dawn her reddish blonde
hair swirled around her face. Her brown eyes peered into
the mist that hid the valley below.
From the time she was born, Bree had lived in the
Wicklow Mountains of Ireland. As if they were close
friends, she knew every bush, tree, and stone along the
path. What she didn't know was that this September day
in the late tenth century marked the end of her old life
and a new beginning.
After a steep climb, Bree reached her favorite spot on
the side of Brockagh Mountain. When the breeze came,
she felt it first upon her face. Moments later, the rising
sun broke through the mist. The distant waters of the
Irish Sea drew Bree in a way she couldn't explain even to
herself. If only I could know what's out there.
For Bree the thought was not new. Years ago it started
as a hunger-a curiosity that built with each story she
heard about life in distant places. By now her wish to
know the world beyond Ireland was a longing that
wouldn't go away. What would it be like to see faraway
lands?
Still watching the sea, Bree felt the dream of adventure.
Then a whisper of fear crept into her thoughts.Would I have the courage I'd need?
Her brother, Devin, seemed brave enough for most
anything. But Bree knew an unknown world might be
frightening too. Whenever friends gathered in the cottages
of Ireland, she heard stories about Vikings and their
fast ships with the dragon heads. Fierce raiders from the
North countries, they fell like lightning upon a peaceful
countryside.
Bree shivered. Please, God, not here. Not ever again.
As the red ball of light grew large, the sun glittered
and danced on the sea. Tossing her long hair over her
shoulders, Bree shrugged off her worry. She'd let nothing
spoil the wonder of this, her thirteenth birthday. In a
loose-fitting blue dress that gave her the freedom to climb
steep hills, Bree felt ready to celebrate.
When she started down the mountain, the mist still
hung in the valleys, but she took the long way home. Even
without seeing them, Bree knew every turn of the rivers that
passed near her family's farm on their way to the Irish Sea.
Below her lay the place where she took her younger
brother and sisters swimming. Beyond that sheltered spot,
two rivers flowed together. Close by, her father had nearly
drowned as a child. Often he warned them about the
stepping-stones just upstream.
"People think it's an easy spot to cross," Daddy said.
"But if something goes wrong-"
More than once, he had told Bree what to do if the
younger children ever needed help. Always Bree felt glad
for the way her dad praised her ability to swim. But now
she felt the sun on her face and welcomed its warmth in
her thoughts.
Someday I'll travel beyond these mountains, she promised
herself. Someday I'll see the world beyond the Irish Sea.
In that moment the mist parted, showing Bree the
place where the current ran swift and deep. There on the
stepping-stones just above the joining of rivers was a lad
with blond hair. Tully!
The boy stood on a rock with his back turned, but
Bree felt sure she would recognize him anywhere. Wearing
long narrow trousers and a sleeveless tunic, Tully was the
son of her daddy's best friend. But what was he doing
here, so far from home?
Bree's heart leaped just thinking about it. Has Tully
come to give me a birthday surprise?
It would be just like her mother to plan something
special with the Byrne family. But Bree couldn't wait. Moving
on silent cat feet, she hurried down the hill, planning
a surprise of her own.
On that September day the river ran full from
autumn rains. Swirling water covered the stepping-stones
on the far side of the river. As Tully moved from one
stone to the next, Bree's excitement about a birthday surprise
changed to uneasiness. Can't he see how swift the current
is?
When he reached the last big stone, ready to slip into
the water and swim the rest of the way, Bree called a
warning. "Tully!"
At the sound of her voice he started to turn.
Suddenly his foot slipped, and he lost his balance. Arms
waving, he tumbled into the water.
On bare feet Bree raced to the edge of the river and
followed the stones into the stream. There she found her
worst fears true. Tully had hit his head when he fell. He
lay facedown just beneath the surface of the water.
Dropping onto the closest stone, Bree stretched out.
In that instant the current caught the still body and
washed it beyond reach.
Filled with terror, Bree stood up and leaped into the
river. With quick, powerful strokes she swam through the
water. The moment she saw Tully's head, she reached
down, caught his hair, and pulled him up. One hand
under his arm and the other treading water, she kicked.
When they broke the surface, she held up his head and
kept kicking.
With one arm across his chest and swimming with
the other, Bree started for shore. She had only one
thought-getting Tully to breathe. But in that moment
the full force of the current caught her. The powerful
rush of water took them downstream.
Go with the current, Daddy had taught her. Don't fight
it. Let it carry you toward shore. But time for Tully was running
out. Her panic growing, Bree looked around for help.
The surrounding countryside lay empty, even of
sheep. And now Bree faced another fear. How long could
she hold him up?
Then, just as she started slipping under the water, she
felt the river bottom. Setting down her feet, she found
firm ground and headed for shore. With her last ounce of
strength she dragged Tully onto a broad, flat rock.
As he lay on his stomach, Bree turned his face to one
side and pounded his back. When Tully gagged, water
poured from his mouth. Coughing, he started to breathe.
Relief stronger than any current poured through Bree.He'll live!
Then the boy raised his head. For the first time Bree
caught a good look at his face. It isn't Tully!
A ripple of shock washed through her. If it's not Tully,
who is it?
A red bruise on the boy's forehead marked the spot
where he hit his head. Now his gasps for air became long
gulps. Turning his head toward Bree, he muttered two
words she didn't understand.
Puzzled, Bree watched the boy. Still catching her
breath, she dropped down on the grassy bank next to
him. Even her knees felt weak. Never had she felt so glad
to touch the green sod of Ireland. Who could the boy
possibly be?
On this side of the river, grass and stones gave way to
steep hills. In the brief time they had been in the water,
the sun had disappeared. A cloud of mist drifted between
the mountains.
As though feeling the change in air, the boy rolled
over and sat up. He seemed close to Bree's age, but the sun
had given him a deep tan. His blond hair hung in a loose
cut just below his ears. Most of all, Bree noticed his
strong square jaw. Whoever this stranger was, she felt sure
he wouldn't be afraid to express his opinions. But now his
blue eyes looked confused.
"What happened?" he asked.
"You fell and hit your head."
"Where am I?"
"On a river that flows to the Irish Sea."
"Who are you?" the boy asked.
He spoke in Norse, a language used by traders, and
Bree answered the same way. Her father, a great Irish chieftain,
was also a merchant who traded with people from
other lands. From the time Bree and her older brother
were little, their daddy had taught them to speak Norse.
Instead of giving her name, Bree jumped up. "There's
a spring nearby. I'll get you water." Moving quickly up the
hill, Bree reached the spring and found the clay cup left
for any passerby. Filling it with water, she returned to the
boy.
"Thank you," he said when he had drunk deeply.
Bree only nodded. She was angry now-angry at the
danger this boy had caused. "What were you doing,
crossing there when the river runs so high?"
"I could have made it"
Bree couldn't believe her ears. "Don't you understand
what happened?"
"I'm a strong swimmer."
"You hit your head." Bree's voice curled around her
words. "You weren't breathing."
When his angry gaze met hers, Bree's temper flared.
"You would have drowned without me!"
"I swim every day."
The blue eyes had changed. Not so confused, Bree told
herself, glad that he seemed to be returning to normal.
But his voice held a swagger that upset Bree even more.
Watching him closely, Bree understood why she had
thought the boy was Tully. The same blond hair and blue
eyes. The same look of knowing what they want and
going straight toward it. But there the similarity ended.
What is it? Bree asked herself. Then she knew. While
Tully was always kind to her family, the look of this
stranger was sharp, almost cold. Even now, after nearly
drowning, he wore a prideful air.
"So where do you do all this swimming you're so
proud of?" Bree asked.
For an instant the stranger didn't speak, as though
thinking about his answer. Then his words came in a rush.
"Around my home."
"And where is your home?" Bree had lived near the
river all her life. She had never seen the stranger.
Like a shifting shadow, something flitted through the
boy's eyes. Turning toward the river, he tipped his head
downstream. "That way."
Watching him, Bree felt uneasy. "What do you mean,
that way? Down by the sea?"
"And beyond," he said.
Bree knew a stone wall had gone up between them.
He was avoiding her questions. Upset now, she pounced.
"What are you trying to hide?"
"Hide?" He looked innocent, but he reminded Bree
of a boy she knew who didn't tell the truth.
"What's your name?" she asked.
"Michael," he told her.
Michael. Instantly Bree remembered a story in the
Bible. When a courageous man named Daniel fasted and
prayed, a high-ranking angel named Michael came to help
him. But there was something about the way this Michael
said his name. It bothered Bree. What was it?
I'm just jumpy, Bree told herself. As she started to ask
more questions, the boy shivered. In the changing air Bree
felt the cold. Though Michael also had good reason to be
cold, she watched him closely.
His next shiver looked real. Grasping his upper arms,
he hugged himself against the wind. "Do you have a blanket?"
he asked. "Any food?"
Bree jumped to her feet. When she was only a young
child her mother had taught her the Irish way. Countless
times, Bree had seen her mother offer food, water, and
shelter. "Sure, and it's the Lord Himself that we serve,"
she'd always say. But now a thought flashed through Bree's
mind. Whoever this lad is, I don't want to invite him home.
"My mother will loan you some dry clothes," she told
Michael.
Even as she spoke, Bree kept watching him. The boy
couldn't be much older than she, but he seemed more
grown-up. More sure of himself. Bree wondered about it.
Then her family's habit of hospitality won out. "I'll
get you something to eat"
Michael nodded. He trembled now, and his teeth
chattered.
Walking quickly, Bree crossed a nearby pasture and
climbed over a stone wall. Beyond were a grass-covered
hill and then the oak forest. Partway up the hill, Bree suddenly
changed direction. Not even to herself could she
explain why.
Instead of taking the shortest route home, Bree headed
for a rise where trees grew close together. When she reached
a place where she could slip out of sight, she looked back.
Michael still sat at the edge of the river, huddled against
the cold. Even from where she stood, Bree saw the trembling
in his shoulders. He had turned to watch which way
she went.
Raising an arm, he waved. In that moment Michael
seemed just another boy about her age. For the first time
Bree felt sorry for him. He would have been better off
walking fast with her. At least he would have stayed warm.
But Bree still felt uneasy and wasn't willing to ignore that
warning.
The moment the trees hid her, she changed direction
again. As she climbed the steep hill at the bottom of
Brockagh Mountain, she felt grateful for her strong body.
Just last week her brother Devin had told her, "Bree,
you've kept up to me all your life. You don't have to do
everything I do."
"Yes, I do" Bree had answered. But even to this brother
she loved, Bree couldn't explain why. Always she had
known that she needed to be physically strong, able to
climb mountains without panting for breath. Able to
walk long distances and swim in cold water. This morning
had proved it.
Moving quickly between the oaks, Bree doubled back
onto the shortest route home. Soon she dropped down to
a meadow. Sheep grazed there, looking so peaceful that
for the first time ever, they seemed out of place.
By the time Bree reached her family's farm, she decided
she had imagined all her reasons for questions. Inside the
house, she snatched up dry clothes and a blanket. In the
kitchen she gathered a loaf of bread and a small pail of
milk. As she headed back out the door, she nearly crashed
into her older brother.
Slender and tall for his age, Devin stood straight as an
arrow and had their father's black hair and deep blue eyes.
A year older than Bree, Devin was the one who shortened
her name. Using the Irish word for a high, rocky hill, he
often told her, "When you're stubborn, you're like a
mountain that can't be moved."
Her brother meant to tease, but Bree liked having a
name that reminded her of the lofty headland up the coast
from where they lived. For as long as she could remember,
Devin had watched out for her. Usually Bree didn't appreciate
his help. Now he wanted to know what she was doing.
"I saved a lad from drowning," Bree said.
"Drowning?" Devin's blue eyes widened. "Where?"
"You know the stepping-stones where the rivers come
together? Where we never swim because of the current?"
"So you swam there? Dad won't like that!"
"If I hadn't, the boy would have drowned. He hit his
head when he fell."
As Bree started back across the meadow, Devin took
the bread and pail of milk and followed. "So now you're
bringing him this?"
"He's tired. Too tired and cold to come here."
Still wondering if she were imagining things, Bree
didn't explain her mixed-up feelings. She and Devin
walked quickly without taking time to talk. When they
reached the high place overlooking the river, Bree glanced
ahead and stopped short.
"Where is he?" Devin asked.
Bree shrugged. "Maybe he's behind a bush or tree.
Staying out of the wind"
Worried now, she broke into a run. But when she
reached the rock where Michael had been, there was no
one in sight.
Continues.