Crowbone simply wondered why the thrall had done it, for there seemed little reason for it. Grima saw the look and knew it for what it was. When he spoke Crowbone jerked, as he always did when he suspected folk were reading the whirl of his thought-cage.
Perhaps because I did not kill him and he was no better than a thrall when I took him anyway, Grima said. Nothing much changed for him except he breathed sea air. I am in his debt. I have nothing to give to him but what I can make happen in the short time left me, with my last breaths. He has eighteen summers on him and will prove valuable to you. Trust me in this and free him, in return for what I can give.
Crowbone smiled.
What makes you think you have anything I need? he pointed out and Grima grinned; sweat rolled off him. Gjallandi had come up in time to see and make tutting sounds as he inspected the ruin of the old warriors hands.
You are a prince with no princely ship crew I can see, Grima grunted. Unless you have more hidden away. Which means you have no princely ship, either. I am jarl of the Red Brothers, who are a crew with a ship and in need of a prince. Free Berto and I will lead you to them. Kill this Balle and those who follow him and make me jarl again then I will hand crew and ship to you, for I have no use for them where I am going.
Crowbone considered it and was thinking the old man might not last long enough for all this. He was set to scowling when Grima chuckled.
I will live long enough to watch Balles face when I arrive full in it with a prince and a fistful of the famed Oathsworn, he growled and Crowbone sat still for a time, put out at the idea of the old man reading his thoughts or, worse, his own face being so blatant that anyone could see what went on inside his head.
Then he nodded and spoke the words aloud, so there would be no going back. The thrall blinked a little from the bland round of his face and Kaetilmund, grinning, cracked the links of the chain, so that the freed thrall could unravel himself.
There you have it, No-Toes, he said. Fetch that axehead back and fix it on properly, for you can carry it like a man now. You had better thank Prince Olaf here, for now you are a warrior.
Then he nodded and spoke the words aloud, so there would be no going back. The thrall blinked a little from the bland round of his face and Kaetilmund, grinning, cracked the links of the chain, so that the freed thrall could unravel himself.
There you have it, No-Toes, he said. Fetch that axehead back and fix it on properly, for you can carry it like a man now. You had better thank Prince Olaf here, for now you are a warrior.
I am Berto. I am thanking.
The voice was high and thick with accent, for the Wend knew Norse only as spoken by Frisians and his own sort, which was as like the true sounds of men as dogs barking. Crowbone held the flat gaze of the Wend with his own odd eyes, seeing the deep blue eyes and round olive face of a youth not yet even into beard. He had seen Wends before, travelling up the Odra River with Orm. He had not thought much of them, so he was surprised to find himself being studied carefully and there was something both attractive and disturbing about that; not much of a thrall in his own lands, this one, he thought, that he can keep his head up and his eyes bold. He found he had muttered as much aloud.
No doubt a prince at home, Onund grunted, hearing it as he passed. As all thralls are who are raided from others.
He went away laughing, with others who knew how Crowbone had been rescued by Orm and claimed his princely rank with his first words joining in. Crowbone, remembering the slaughter that had come after, could not find a smile and turned to the old man instead, cocking his head in a question.
We have a sto?var, Grima said. An old seasonal place where we lie up. The crew will be there, for Balle has all the clever of a rock and thinks me dead and gone.
Berto the Wend bent his head over the old man while the yellow dog whined and tried to shove its scarred ears under an oxter. It was, Kaetilmund thought, a powerful, wedge-headed bitch and as ugly an animal as ever disgraced the earth. A strange friend for a thrall, he thought but the Norns had woven them a deal of luck and you had to take such matters into account.
Berto cradled the old mans head and waved away the greedy flies as Gjallandi marked out fresh runes on clean wrappings and rebound the blackening stumps. The metallic stink of blood was strong and the sweat ran stinging in Crowbones eyes.
This is Prince Olaf, Grima said to Berto, his eyes closed. He will one day be a king and, if your life-luck holds as firm as it has done, you may profit each other yet, for all that he is of the Oathsworn and you follow the Christ.
Crowbone looked at Berto and saw the fierceness in his round, large-eyed, sharp-nosed face, so that he looked, for a moment, like a hunting owl. He nodded. Grima spasmed with pain as Hoskulds men picked him up and half-carried, half-dragged him back to the ship.
Onund Hnufa lumbered up as the harsh stink of smoke wafted to Crowbones nose. The same wind brought distant sobbing and the crackle of burning and Crowbone turned moodily away as the terp started to flare and burn, spilling smoke to stain the sky.
Onund lumbered alongside, happily clutching their entire treasure a stiff, thick square of half-cured leather the size of his chest.
Holmtun, Isle of Mann, some time later
Olaf Irish-Shoes
Jarl Godred perched on a bench in his own hall while Olaf lolled in his High Seat draped in a winter wolf pelt that ran like a river of milk down on to his shoulders. Under the fur coddling them his shoulders were still wide, despite his hair and the winter wolf pelt being the same colour. The matching white beard was twisted in three long braids weighted with rust-spotted iron rings. Above it, out of a knob-cheeked face, the eyes, feral as hunting cats, glittered like blue ice.
Godred saw that what could be a smile was hacked out of the Jarl of the Dyfflins lumpy face as he deviously questioned Ogmund about the raiders. Not only was the old war-dog spoiling for another bash at the Ui Neill a war Godred had always thought beyond foolish now he was showing an unhealthy interest in monks.
Olafs royal belly strained the tunic, which had been delicate green trimmed with red knotwork once but was now mainly food stains; standing close to him, Ogmund thought it might be possible to trace the whole life of Olaf Irish-Shoes in those stains, meal by meal, like reading runes on a raised stone.
This son of Gunnhild said he sought the monk Drostan? the Jarl of Dyfflin asked, the smile still like a cleft in rock.
Ogmund wished the lord of Dyfflin would not smile, for it was as off-putting as wolf-breath on the back of your neck. So was the look of his own Jarl Godred and he knew Hardmouth was less than happy with the entire business especially the arrival of Olaf Irish-Shoes, stamping his authority.
Not in all those words, he answered, but it was clear that was what he did when you tally matters up.
He glanced at Godred, who sat next to Sitric, Olafs younger son. The twig does not fall far from the tree, Ogmund thought, for Sitric, still dark-haired, was round-faced and stocky. One day he and his da would be as alike as two gobs of spit the eldest boy was a third gob of the same spit and limped so that no-one these days called him anything but Jarnkne Iron Knee.
There was another son, Raghnall, back in Dyfflin and Ogmund had seen him, too. Tall and cream-haired, from a different mother, he was Olafs favourite. He liked his women, did Olaf currently he was thundering himself into the thighs of an Irish beauty called Gormflaeth and showing little sign that his belly got in the way of matters.
We know Ulf found two dead monks in a keill up in the hills, Sitric growled, shaking his head. One looked to have had his head beaten in, but the rats had eaten well on the pair of them, it was hard to tell. Two monks, all the same. This Drostan is dead.
Then who was with Hoskuld the Trader? demanded Olaf, leaning back on the High Seat and spreading his feet to the fire sensibly shod feet, Ogmund noted with surprise but then, the name cuarans, Irish Shoes, was only given by Norwegians and Danes as a sneer against the Dyfflin Norse, who were all thought to be half-Irish of lesser worth because they had forgotten how to be true people and taken to wearing Irisher sandals.
Hoskuld came to Dyfflin with a monk, but I never saw him, Olaf went on, fiddling with his beard rings. Hoskuld came with a preposterous tale of how this monk knew where Eiriks old axe was and that this monk he had was prepared to reveal the where of it for money. The monk, Hoskuld said, would only come to me in person once assurances had been given which was not a little insulting, I was thinking.
I thought it the worst attempt to gull you out of silver I had heard in many a long day, Sitric rumbled and his father nodded and grinned ruefully.
Aye but Hoskuld is a good trader and valued, so I let him have his nights hospitality, as if I considered the matter. Truth was I had already decided to send him packing back to his shy monk, or else bring the charlatan before me but before I could do anything, Hoskuld left my hall. In haste. In the night. That was even more insulting, as if he thought I would do him harm.
Not so stupid, though, Sitric growled, since that is what he deserved for such a tale.
His father looked sharply at him.
Yet here is Gunnhilds last son, come from Orkney looking for a monk, he said. A man with the sense of a stone can see that this tale of Hoskulds now has legs on it.
Yet here is Gunnhilds last son, come from Orkney looking for a monk, he said. A man with the sense of a stone can see that this tale of Hoskulds now has legs on it.
Find Hoskuld, answered Godred and Olaf soured the jarl with a hard look.
Good idea, he snarled. I had not thought of it at all now that it is clear Gunnhild seeks him hard enough to send her last son.