them.
Long was that talk. It ended well after he had promised to do his best for the girl. Her three siblings would linger a while to make sure; he must let her go to the strand every dusk and meet them. Father Knud pleaded with them to stay ashore too, but this they would not. They kissed their sister and took their leave. She wept, noiselessly but hopelessly, until she fell asleep. The priest tucked her in and got what rest he could on the bench.
Next day, and more and more in the days of waxing summer which followed, Yria was in better spirits. At last she was quite cheerful. Agneteâs kin held aloof, afraid to admit she carried their blood, but Father Knud dealt with her as kindly as his meager means allowed. It helped that the other halflings brought gifts of food fresh-caught from the sea at their regular meetings: which quickly became brief ones. To her, the land was as new and wonderful as she was to the youngsters of the hamlet. Erelong she was daily the middle of a rollicking swarm. As for work, she knew nothing about human tasks but was willing to learn. Kirsten Pedersdatter tried her on the loom and said she could become uncommonly skillful.
Meanwhile the priest had sent a youth to Viborg, asking what should be done about the girl. Could a halfling be christened? He prayed this be so, for otherwise he knew not what would become of the poor darling. The messenger was gone for a pair of weeks; they must be ransacking their books at the bishopric. Finally he returned, on horse this time, accompanied by guards, a clerical amanuensis, and the provost.
Knud had been giving Christian instruction to Yria, who listened wide-eyed and mostly silent. Now Archdeacon Magnus saw her in the parish house. âDo you truly believe in one God,â he barked, âthe Father, the Son Who is Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost which proceeds from them?â
She quailed before his sternness. âI do,â she whispered. âI do not understand it very well, but I do believe, good sir.â
After further questioning, Magnus told Knud privately: âThere can be no harm in baptizing her. She is not an unreasoning brute, albeit badly in need of more careful teaching before she can be confirmed. If she be devilsâ bait, the holy water should drive her hence; if she be merely soulless, God will hit upon some way to let us know.â
The christening was set for Sunday after Mass. The archdeacon gave Yria a white robe to wear and chose a saintâs name for her, Margrete. She grew less afraid of him and agreed to spend the Saturday night in prayer. Friday after sunset, full of eagerness, she wanted her siblings to come to the serviceâsurely the priests would allow it, hoping to win them tooâand she cried when they refused.
And so, on a morning of wind, scudding white clouds, dancing glittery waves, before the Alsfolk in the wooden church, beneath the ship model hung in the nave and Christ hung above the altar, she knelt, and Father Knud led her and the godparents through the rites, and signed her and said with joy, âI baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.â
She shrieked. Her slight form crumpled. A hissing of breath, some screams and hoarse calls, sounded from the pews. The priest stooped, forgetting his stiffness in his haste, and gathered her to him. âYria!â he cried. âWhatâs wrong?â
She looked about her, panting and with the eyes of one stunned. âIâ¦amâ¦Margrete,â she said. âWho are you?â Provost Magnus loomed over them. âWho are you?â
Knud cast his tear-streaming gaze up toward the archdeacon. âIs it that, that, that she is in truth soulless?â
Magnus pointed to the altar. âMargrete,â he said, with such iron in his tone that the whole rough congregation fell silent, âlook yonder. Who is that?â
Her glance followed the knobbly