eivor teaches his daughter to art and secrets of creating cairns
SVANDÍS PROTESTS WHEN you veer from the path leading down to the wharf, instead taking to one of the benches outside the longhouse. Sitting down with a long and heavy sigh, you wipe the sweat from your brow —it is only a spring morning with a cool breeze, but the aches and sniffles from the prior evening have taken hold. Valka will tell you it is a spring fever and that rest, and a good meal is the best remedy, but you have an antsy five-year-old on the verge of tears, tugging at your skirts. "But you promised!" She pouts.
"I know" —you stroke back her blond hair, already in disarray from chasing rabbits— "I know, little one, and I am sorry." Svandís crosses her arms and looks up at you with those clear blue eyes that are impossible to resist, yet another reflection of her father. You sigh, wiping the dirt from her cheek. Breaking promises never feels good, especially ones made to your young daughter, even if it was to stack stones. "All I need is a few days of rest, and then we can go," you assure her. Where are you, Eivor?
As though the gods have heard your silent prayers, two long horn blasts echo around Ravensthorpe and the surrounding forests. Shortly after, the longship docks —Eivor and his crew dispersing among the settlement. "Eivor!" You call, waving to him as he nears the longhouse —a smile blossoming on his travel-worn countenance when he sees you and his daughter. Little Svandís darts to her father quick as an arrow. He scoops her up into his arms, pressing short kisses across her cheeks and forehead, laughing as she does. Her arms wrap around his neck as he balances her on his arm.
Eivor places Svandís back on the ground, frowning as he sees the pallor tinting your complexion and the sheen of sweat on your brow. "Are you ill?" He asks, pressing the back of his hand against your forehead before you can give him an answer —your skin is hot to the touch, his frown deepens.
"Spring fever," you tell him, swatting his hand away, "nothing rest will not solve." He knows it to be true. A few days rest would see you right as rain, but for now, he'll take his chances and kiss his wife. Eivor bends down, his lips wind-chapped from the sea and river, but his kiss is gentle and sweet, a way to say I love you without speaking. When he pulls away, he brushes the wisps of hair clinging to your forehead aside and lays a quick kiss there too, sitting next to you.
Svandís's excitement has already worn away —the pout on her lips is back. If she can't get her way with you, then she knows her father won't be able to deny her. "And what is wrong with you, my little shieldmaiden?" Eivor asks, picking Svandís up and setting her on his knee. She crosses her arms, squinting at you —still crestfallen.
"Mama promised she was gonna teach me how to stack stones," she tells him.
Eivor's lips curl into a smile beneath his golden beard —longer and shaggier than you are used to seeing. "She was?" Svandís nods. "Well, do you want to know who taught her to stack stones?" He inquires, raising a brow, eyes flitting to you. She looks between you and Eivor, blue eyes wide and questioning. "I did," he tells her, boastful, smile widening as her arms uncross, already seeing the next question popping into her racing mind. "And my mother taught me when I was just a boy," Eivor explains.
He strokes back Svandís's messy braids and looks to you with a wide smile, grateful to have the chance to be the one to teach his daughter the art of making cairns. Eivor reaches for your hand and cranes his head down, blond whiskers tickling your skin before his lips brush against your knuckles. "Let your mother rest, Svandís," he says, letting your hand go as he stands, shifting Svandís up onto his shoulders, "I know just the spot."
EIVOR PULLS BACK on the reins of his chestnut horse, bringing the beast to a halt next to a bend in the River Nene. He slides from the saddle, then lifts Svandís, setting her on the riverbank. "First," he says, freeing a woven sack from his belt, "we must gather our stones." Crouching down, he picks up a stone, smooth and flat —like a honey cake— and places it in his daughter's hand, letting her feel the weight and rounded edges. "Look for ones that are smooth and flat," Eivor explains, knowing those are the ones to make for easy stacking for a young novice. It does not take long for them to fill the small sack with river stones —setting back off for the hilltop.

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Assassin's Creed Drabbles
FanfictionA collection of one-shots and drabbles focusing on Alexios, Deimos, Brasidas, Eivor, Ivarr, and Edward. [requests are currently: CLOSED] Note that this book contains some stories rated 18+; such stories will be identified with a warning before the m...