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Valkyries Calling-Chapter 96: The Lessons of Empire
Chapter 96: The Lessons of Empire
Vetrúlfr stood upon the low rise outside his stone hall, the cold wind snapping his cloak back from broad shoulders.
Before him stretched the white-scored fjord. His new fortress crouched upon its flank like a wolf at rest, wooden palisades bristling and longships rocking gently at the quays.
Horses and men came and went along the muddy roads, dusted with spring melt.
Messengers darted among the ranks, bearing the latest reports from the hunting bands that swept the valleys and narrow passes.
Each scroll was swiftly cut open and read. Each breath of news wove itself into the web of his mind. More skraelingr camps abandoned.
More ambushes drawn out by bait carts laden with hides and salted meat, only to be crushed by shield walls and flying columns of spearmen who struck as swiftly as winter storms.
His huskarljar gathered close, faces red from cold, their laughter edged with bright admiration.
"Your wit slices sharper than our seaxes, konungr," said Ivar Half-Hand, gripping the haft of his axe. "These painted hunters never stood a chance. They thought to sting us from the brush like gadflies, and instead they found steel at every turn."
Another man, a Varangian once of Basil’s court, and Vetrúlfr’s initial host snorted and spat in the dirt.
"Aye. It is how Basil dealt with the Bulgars, is it not? Hunting down their petty warbands, building fort after fort to choke the land. We saw it done a thousand times in Miklagarð."
At this, Vetrúlfr let a faint smile curl the corner of his mouth. His pale eyes remained on the horizon, where fresh columns of smoke from distant brush fires curled up into the dim sky; likely another skraelingr village put to torch after refusing tribute.
"I learned from the best," he said quietly.
The Varangians nodded, certain he spoke of Basil; the famed Bulgar-Slayer under whom they had served in campaigns that spanned from the Danube to Syria.
But in Vetrúlfr’s mind unspooled different images: Latin lines he had copied out by torchlight in Icelandic winter halls, Greek commentaries he had carefully sounded out until the foreign words yielded up their meanings.
Accounts of Alexander chasing Bactrian horsemen through endless valleys, breaking insurgencies by speed and sudden force, by dividing his army into flying columns.
By planting fortified outposts manned by men loyal only to him, each anchoring the land under his hand like pins through a hide.
He had read of spies and scouts; of networks of informants paid in silver to slip among the shepherds and report every movement.
And so he had built his own, even here in this cold cradle of a kingdom, where his law now stretched out like frost fingers gripping the coast.
Another messenger arrived, bowing low before pressing a scroll into Vetrúlfr’s hand. More good news.
A band of skraelingr ambushers had been flushed from the birch ravines north of the fortress, tricked by false drives of cattle, then encircled by lightly armed shield-breakers who fell upon them with axes and iron-tipped spears.
Barely a dozen Norse wounded. Scores of the enemy dead.
Ivar leaned close, almost grinning.
"You have them as frightened as the skalds say the Bjarmians once had our forefathers. Now they run at the sight of a wolf-head crest. Soon even their shadows will flee from us."
Vetrúlfr only nodded, folding the scroll carefully. His mind was not on fear for its own sake, but on continuity.
On driving the skraelingr to break themselves on his layered defenses, on building garrisons where every valley narrowed, on raising granaries and warm halls so that his warriors would outlast even the harshest winters this land could throw against them.
It was the same lesson Alexander had written in the blood of the Bactrians. Conquer not merely by slaughter, but by outlasting the land itself, by forcing it to change its shape to yours.
And when these northern wilds finally learned to speak his tongue. When they no longer dreamed of hunting Norsemen like stray seals but of carrying wolf banners themselves; then he would look across the sea to other shores.
Around him, the huskarljar settled hands to sword pommels and watched the smoke on the horizon with satisfied eyes.
They thought themselves merely in the grip of a cunning warlord who fought as Basil once fought.
None guessed that Vetrúlfr’s education ran deeper than the scars on his forearms.
That he read the old worlds as one might read a map, tracing how empire after empire had bent savagery to service; and how he would do the same here, at the edge of frost and silence.
He turned, cloak billowing, to stride back toward the longhouse gates.
Behind him, iron rang against iron as new recruits drilled in formation; learning to march not as free-ranging raiders, but as spears of a kingdom yet unnamed.
---
They gathered in the hollow of old stones, where the wind could not so easily carry their voices.
Elders, hunters, painted warriors who once stalked seals and rival kin with silent pride; now huddled close like frightened children.
"They do not fight as other men," rasped the eldest among them, his breath fogging in the dim air.
"They lure us out with false prey. They build walls of earth and stone across the valleys. They split their warbands to strike us from many sides at once, as if they are smoke."
Another shook his head, clutching a carved bone charm tight in his fist.
"And now they ride beasts with iron faces. I saw them! High as two men, snorting steam. The riders wear cloaks that hide all but cruel eyes. They come from the mist, bearing long spears, their steps thunder on the ground. Our arrows shatter on their bodies like twigs against frozen rivers."
A young hunter let out a low moan.
"Then these are not men at all. They are spirits of winter, come to claim our bones. How can we stand against them? They wear the snow as a cloak, their mounts eat the sun from the sky."
For a long moment, no one answered. The cold seemed to breathe among them, hollow and deep.
At last, the elder bowed his head.
"We must decide. Stand one last time, though we know it is death, or flee across the sea; and carry this shame to our children."
Around the circle, eyes gleamed wet in the gloom. None spoke.
Above them, the pale moon rose, bright upon lands that no longer listened to their prayers.
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