Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  

A Viking Moon

T M Rowe


A VIKING MOON

  A Sarah Tremayne Adventure

  Book One

  By

  T M Rowe

  A Viking Moon

  T M Rowe

  Copyright 2014 T M Rowe

  License Statement

  Thank you for downloading this. You are welcome to share it with your friends. This book may be reproduced, copied and distributed for non-commercial purposes, provided the book remains in its complete original form. If you enjoyed this book, please return to your favourite ebook retailer to discover other works by this author. Thank you for your support.

  For Hannah and Michael

  Always have a go – don’t be afraid.

  Table of Contents

  In the Beginning

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  About the Author

  Other Titles

  Connect with T M Rowe

  In The Beginning

  My name is Sarah Tremayne and I am of the “Myrhes an Loor” which is Cornish (the ancient language of Cornwall) for the “Daughters of the Moon”. Why Cornish and Cornwall? Well, this is where we began, the ‘we’ being the “Daughters of the Moon”. Actually, to be more precise, this is where those with my gifts began. Our true beginnings were much further away and belong to another story. The ancient sites which you see around the county have a secret history, our history, a history that would probably blow the minds of many academics, my father included.

  I was born in Cornwall; my family on my father’s side has a long, long association with the county. Funnily enough he, my father, is an archaeologist and I often have to stop myself from arguing with him as he lectures me on the archaeology of particular places. It is of course possible that the Daughters were born in many different places around the world, after all many cultures have been known to worship the moon in the past.

  Unfortunately events in our past, events over which even we have no control, caused many of us to go ‘underground’, to hide and to a certain extent deny our very selves. Fear can be a great motivator. We are divided and the elders who watch over those of us who choose to exercise our gifts insist that our safety is best served by being divided – I do not agree. Anyway, I am going off track, as all this will eventually become clear and this is neither the time nor the place for that particular discussion.

  This is the story of my beginning.

  I have been allowed to write this first chapter because as I pointed out there needed to be some background to my story and as I was not a Daughter in the beginning it needed to be written by someone who knew my story well and it wasn’t exactly rocket science as to who that was. Seamus said I had caused a bit of a stir insisting on this and the fact that I wanted to have absolute final say of whatever else was written. However, given they owe me big time what else could they do but agree?

  Anyway I am probably getting ahead of myself. Firstly, I’d like to introduce Seamus who is my chronicler and it is he who will be the story teller of my life to date. There are only a few true chroniclers left in the world today where once there had been many but the Brotherhood put paid to that and those which remain do so under our protection.

  A true chronicler can through various means, each unique to them, view the past. They are trained to be observant, impartial and objective. Because of this they were hunted by the Brotherhood and exterminated, after all, the really bad guys will always seek to justify and demonstrate that what they are doing is in fact for your own good. My father once said that history is only ever written by the victors, the Chroniclers were there as means of balancing out this bias…not so much now though.

  I mentioned the Brotherhood, well, you will find out more about them later but for now I will give a brief introduction. To put it simply they are, agents of The Dark and yes capitals are necessary. I don’t really know what exactly The Dark is, in fact I’m not sure that even the elders know, but it is enough to say that the purpose of The Dark is to cause discord, chaos and general craziness through the world.

  The more insane the world gets the stronger The Dark becomes, it thrives on the madness of men (and women). The Brotherhood is the human face of The Dark. They do its work and we, the Daughters of the Moon try to undo that work and in some cases prevent it. Sometimes we are successful and in others, well, the less said the better. Once upon a time, the Brotherhood and the Daughters of the Moon were in perfect harmony. There was a balance; after all you need to have the bad times to appreciate the good times. Good and evil should co-exist in balance. It all changed though when one of the Brothers killed my mother.

  My mother was also a Daughter of the Moon. The powers granted to the Daughters are hereditary, passed from mother to daughter over many generations (the name is apt in so many ways). Usually when a daughter turns thirteen her mother will hand her a moon disc and with it the mantel of being a Daughter of the Moon. There follows a period of training and mentoring where they discover their ability to move between times (yes, yes it is time travel but that sounds so sciency and this is more of a mystical thing). They learn to view the world through other eyes, literally, and they learn about the past and different cultures and most importantly they learn how to defend themselves. By their eighteenth birthday they are allowed to go it alone and their very grateful mothers retire, to become advisors/teachers. Like I said this is what happens normally, but for me it was anything but normal.

  My mother died when I was eight and so there was no one to initiate me into my powers, the elders decided to leave me to my own devices. For reasons I kind of understand now though didn’t at the time I had what turned out to be a sink or swim type of training. The following chapters are all about that time and as I don’t want to spoil the story I will say no more.

  When my mother died my father turned to his work and seemed to forget he had a daughter. I am older now and can forgive him (sort of) but at the time it was like losing both parents and it hurt...a lot. My saving grace was my Nan. For a while I lived with her in her little cottage in the far west of Cornwall, where the sea, the moors and the big sky helped to heal some of the hurt.

  Nan has always been a reassuring presence in my life and even when dad decided to pack me off to a nasty boarding school, all the school holidays were spent at Nans and not at my Dad’s London house. The less said about boarding school the better, wherever girls band together they are the meanest, nastiest things in the entire world. It is no wonder that the Brotherhood want us divided.

  Anyway, boarding school was nothing like the stories I had read where crazy escapades, kindly matrons and midnight feasts were the rule. The only good thing about school had been meeting Rosie, my BFF. She and I had clicked on the first day, becoming inseparable fairly quickly. You see, at school it is really important to have someone who will watch your back, a proper friend.

  Things went pear shaped at school when Rosie left, her father had been made redundant from his fancy pants London Company and had decided to go back to his roots in Scotland. Needless to say, boarding school was no longer affordable and Rosie went with her parents to Scotland. Thanks to a generous phone allowance from Dad and the internet we were able to keep in touch and still do. But it did
mean that I was without the one person I could rely on and no one was watching my back.

  Anyway, after an unpleasant run in with the school bully (whose father was a generous benefactor to the school), followed by an unladylike scrap in the dorm, I ran away from school (needless to say I was also expelled). It was to Nan’s cottage I ran and I have never been so happy to see the twinkling lights of St Michael’s Mount as the train rounded that last bend before heading into Penzance.

  Funnily enough this had all happened on the eve of my thirteenth birthday, strange coincidence you might say? I didn’t think much of it at the time but now I am very suspicious of coincidences. The next day at Nans I went for a walk up the hill onto the moorland and that is when I had a very odd encounter with a crazy lady wearing a mad hat. She probably wouldn’t thank me for calling her crazy, no actually, she would find it very funny and probably agree, then fix me with that penetrating stare of hers whereupon I would stammer out an apology and she would laugh all over again. She can be very unnerving. Apparently, it’s what happens when you don’t have a daughter to pass the gift to. I ask the goddess not to let that happen to me.

  At the time though, I knew nothing of this. I was, in my mind, just an ordinary girl with a dead mother and father who couldn’t care less. It was my thirteenth birthday and I was feeling very sorry for myself sitting there on a hard granite seat under the big blue sky of West Cornwall.

  Then IT happened.

  “That was a big sigh for one so young” said a voice.

  I almost flew off the rock into orbit, heart beating, eyes wide as saucers, I looked around and there perched on a rock just above me like some naughty piskie was an old lady. From her clothes she looked like any other rambler, complete with stick out walking. However, it was that mad hat that drew my attention. It was a big, floppy, crocheted number and looked as though someone had used up all their odd bits in its production; it was a hat of many colours.

  “Jiggers! You scared the bejesus out of me”

  The old lady laughed raucously “Ha, I know, you should have seen the way you moved; gave me a right giggle”.

  I had never met an insane person before and was trying to figure out if there was some way I could leave without getting into a pickle.

  “No, Sarah Tremayne, I am not insane but we do need to chat,” she said in a tone of voice my old matrons would have been proud.

  “Huh, how do you know my name and what I was thinking; sorry I’m sure you’re not insane; chat about what?” The questions tumbled out of my mouth before I had a chance to put them into order.

  Smiling the old lady in the big floppy hat of many colours patted the spot next to her. Strangely, I sat. Turning, I looked into her eyes. They were kind eyes but I also had the feeling that they were eyes that had seen a lot and not all of it was good.

  “Well, firstly I can see your mother in you, secondly your face is like a book – you’ll have to learn a poker face, otherwise there will be trouble – thirdly, don’t worry about it, sometimes I too think I’m insane”.

  Of all things she had said the only one that registered was that she had known my mother. “You knew my mother?”

  “Yes, you look just like her, in another lifetime before the goddess called her”

  “The goddess?” I was getting more and more confused as time went on.

  “All that aside, we are not here to talk about your mother – that is for another time and besides you are not ready for ‘that’ chat” said the old lady brushing imaginary crumbs from her lap.

  “You have wasted enough time already, I have been calling to you since dawn and it’s now past midday, I had hoped to have more time to explain things but I guess you will have to learn as you go – after all I did and it did me no harm, sort of…” The old lady trailed off her thoughts going inwards. Patience is not one of my strengths and at this point I kind of lost it.

  “What are you rambling on about?” I virtually shouted.

  Startled out of her thoughts the old lady replied, “Sorry my bird, it’s my age you see” she chuckled to herself.

  “Anyway back to the business at hand. I have come here today to give you this. Keep it safe and carry it with you at all times and it will keep you safe – you are of the Myrhes an Loor”.

  The old lady reached into her jacket pocket and pulled out a small velvet drawstring bag. Her eyes narrowed as she held it out towards me. The wind had died down and in the distance a rumble of thunder could be heard. The world seemed to take a breath, everything contracting, focussing on this moment. My hand automatically reached out for the bag but stopped short of taking it from the old lady, I had an odd moment of déjà vu, a shiver ran up my spine. The hairs on my neck stood to attention and as I took the bag my stomach lurched; I closed my eyes as a feeling of dizziness swept over me. When I opened them and looked down at the velvet bag in my hand I felt the world begin to breathe again.

  “Golly, you gave me a fright young lady, thought you weren’t going to accept. Goodness knows what would have happened then eh?” said the old lady feigning a fainting fit.

  Tentatively, (I was half expecting this to be some elaborate prank) I opened the bag and out tumbled a circular amulet, warm, no bigger than my palm. It was made up of circles within circles. The first was a thin flat piece of bone with a faint knot work pattern incised around the edge, on top of this was another smaller circular disc. It was a very bright shiny bronze material with the same knot work pattern repeated around its edge. The third circle was a perfectly round pale blue stone set into the bronze disc. I recognised the stone straightaway, it was moonstone. The only thing I had from my mother was a pair of moonstone ear rings.

  The amulet hung on a plaited leather thong and without thinking I put it on, thereby sealing my fate. I remember holding the disc in my hands closing my eyes as a feeling of completeness came over me. At the time I thought it looked very old. Pictures of Iron Age and Bronze Age metalwork from Dads books flashed into my mind for they also had patterns similar to the one on the discs. As I tucked the amulet under my t-shirt a memory, unbidden tickled the edges of my mind.

  “Was this my mother’s?” I asked.

  “Yes, for a time, though for now it is in your keeping until you pass it on. There is much you need to know, but time is short, I hope we will meet again Sarah Tremayne so I can tell you more. The only thing to remember for now is this; the amulet is important. You must understand that whatever happens from now on, happens for a reason,” said the old lady hastily.

  To be honest I wasn’t really listening, still looking at the amulet, it all felt a bit overwhelming. I turned towards the old lady and asked;

  “How did you know my mother?” But as soon as the words were out of my mouth I realized that I was alone. I jumped up and scanned the plateau, the view is 360 degrees, but there was no old lady in a big floppy hat of many colours to be seen; in any direction.

  All of this happened a long time ago but even now the memory is still very fresh in my mind. I know so much more than I did then and I often wonder if I knew then what I know now would I have taken the amulet?

  Maybe, maybe not.

  How different would things have been if my mother had been the one to pass on the amulet. Would I have done the things I did?

  Maybe, maybe not.

  I have often wondered why no one ever tried to stop the Brotherhood from killing my mother and thus upsetting the balance. Then there would have been no need for me to do what I did in order to return the balance. Was it fair to put a thirteen year old girl onto that path?

  Maybe, maybe not.

  The goddess works in mysterious ways and we are only her servants.

  My name is Sarah Tremayne.

  I am a Daughter of the Moon and this is my story.

  Chapter One