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To Love Again - Bertrice Small [28]

By Root 1341 0
Gaius Drusus, and our father’s dream was shattered.”

“I know nothing at all about my mother’s people. I will need to learn more if I am to understand,” Cailin said slowly. “My grandmother says we cannot go back to my home. She says my cousin, Quintus Drusus, will kill me simply for my father’s lands. I must become a Dobunni, Uncles. Is such a thing possible, I wonder?”

“You are Kyna’s daughter,” Eppilus answered her. “You are already a Dobunni.”

Chapter 3

The village in which Cailin now found herself was the main village of the hill Dobunni Celts. It was a hill fort, typical of Celtic villages in Britain. There were fifteen houses within the walls, her grandfather’s being the largest. All the dwellings but Berikos’s were built of wood, with walls of mud and wattle, and had thatched roofs. The chieftain’s house was stone with a thatched roof. There were ten other villages belonging to the hill Dobunni, but each had only eight houses apiece.

While the houses were comfortable, they were a far cry from the villa in which Cailin had been raised. The villa’s floors had been made of marble or mosaic. The floor in her grandfather’s hall was stone, while in the other Dobunni houses they were hard-packed dirt. The walls in the villa had been plaster, painted and decorated. Cailin had to admit to herself that the mud and wattle walls, while certainly not beautiful, kept out the rain and the cold. That was, after all, the true purpose of a wall. In her father’s villa she had her own small bedchamber. In her grandfather’s house she shared a comfortable sleeping space with Brenna. It was built into the wall and, Cailin thought, quite cozy.

“You are not at all spoilt,” Ceara noted as Cailin shelled peas for her one afternoon. “I would have thought that being raised as you were, with slaves around you, you would know little and complain much.”

“I was taught,” Cailin told her, “that in the early days of Rome, women—even of the highest social order—were industrious and knowledgeable in the domestic arts. They personally oversaw their households. Although my father’s family has lived in Britain for hundreds of years, those values were retained. My mother taught me how to cook, weave, and sew, among other things. I will be a good wife one day, Ceara.”

Ceara smiled. “Yes, I think you will. But who will be your husband, Cailin Drusus? I am surprised you are not already married.”

“There is no one who pleased me, Ceara,” Cailin said. “My father tried once to match me, but I would not have it. I will choose my own husband when the right time comes. For now, I need to be free to nurse my grandmother and earn my keep. There is much I do not know.”

Ceara was silent. At the Lugh festival, after the harvest had been brought in, there would be a great gathering of all the hill Dobunni. Perhaps there would be a young man there who would please Cailin. She was fifteen, close to being past marriageable age. Ceara, however, knew all the young men in the various villages. She could not think of one who might be right.

Cailin would need a husband before the year was out. Brenna would not live much longer than that. Although she had not seemed injured by the fire at the villa, her lungs had probably been seared by the heat and the smoke of the blaze. She had never regained her strength. The least effort was far too strenuous for her. She spent most of her time sitting or sleeping. Walking, even a short distance, taxed her, so that Corio would now carry Brenna from one place to another so she might remain a participant in their family life. If Cailin did not see her grandmother fading away, Ceara and Maeve did.

Daily life in Berikos’s village revolved around cultivation of the fields and care of the livestock. The land belonged to the tribe in common, but ownership of stock separated the social classes. Berikos had a large herd of short-horned cattle that were used for milk, meat, and sometimes were sold. He owned sheep that grew wool of an excellent quality. Each man in his family had at least two horses, but Berikos had a herd. He possessed

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