Valkyries Calling-Chapter 92: A King in the New Land
Chapter 92: A King in the New Land
The fortress rose like a scar of black stone and pale timber against the Greenland coast.
Its ramparts were rimmed with sharpened stakes, born of stone and mortar, cunningly laid, stout enough to turn aside a warband’s fury.
Within, long halls of driftwood and whalebone ribs clustered close, smoke coiling up from their high vents.
It was here on this frozen strand far from the crowded fjords of Iceland, that Vetrúlfr had carved his seat away from home.
Through the bitter months of winter, his men had worked the earth and rock, building walls, digging fire pits, driving the posts deep into the frost-hard ground.
Now spring cracked the ice along the shallows, and ships came; low-slung knarrs and slender fishing boats nosing into the small harbor.
Some bore furs and dried fish to trade. Others brought curious settlers from scattered homesteads along Greenland’s fjords, drawn by rumor like crows to a battlefield.
They spoke quietly as they gathered outside the fortress gates.
Broad-shouldered farmers with heavy axes slung over their backs, wiry traders from beyond Eriksfjord, even sharp-eyed hunters in cloaks still crusted with old salt.
"He came out of Ísland," one man whispered, voice low. "Not just a jarl, they say, but a konungr in his own right. Driven by omens. Some speak of the gods naming him the son of Ullr."
"And I’ve heard he hunts the skraelingr to avenge a slain farmer and his kin," another said, brow creased. "Who does such a thing now? What king cares so for the murder of one poor homestead?"
"Or uses it as an excuse to gut the whole land," muttered a darker voice. "If we kneel, will he leave us our halls? Or will he ask for more blood to feed those hungry iron blades of his?"
The debate swirled through the small crowd, uneasy yet tinged with a raw awe.
For these were Norse folk who had long lived half-forgotten at the edge of the world, scraping out hard lives under the grinding cold.
To see a king, a true king, who struck back at insult with iron and fire; it was like witnessing an echo of an older age, when jarls still raised dragon-prows and men spoke plainly of oaths and vengeance.
Within the great hall was alive with motion. Fires burned in deep pits, roasting seals and tough shaggy cattle brought from Iceland.
Traders spread out bolts of coarse Greenland cloth and bundles of arctic fox pelts. Nearby, smiths hammered out simple spearheads on stone anvils, the clang ringing against the high beams.
At the center of it all sat Vetrúlfr, his wolfskin cloak draped around his broad shoulders, the sword at his side dark with old salt.
His hair was pulled back in a tight plait, stark white against the deep blood-red tunic beneath.
Pale eyes watched everything with the same cold, measuring stillness that had stalked through skraelingr camps like a wraith.
Men came to him with petitions; to settle grazing disputes, to swear oaths of service, to offer grain in trade for iron nails and wool.
Some did so with open relief. Others with wary glances, hands never far from the hafts of their axes.
---
The first of the Greenland chieftains arrived at midday, sailing narrow boats up the fjord with shields hung along the gunwales.
Bright disks of red and blue that seemed almost mocking against the pale water.
Their prows grounded on the stony shore below Vetrúlfr’s new hall, and dark-cloaked men stepped out, hands resting lightly on sword hilts.
They came warily, staring up at the mound that rose like a giant’s burial beneath the sky. At its crest loomed the hall, half-built from heavy cut stone. ƒгeewebnovёl_com
Strange for Greenland, where timber and turf had long sufficed. Pale granite blocks from the coast itself formed stout walls, ringed by sharpened stakes.
Gatehouses flanked a narrow approach, each crowned by rough fighting platforms of planked timber.
And everywhere, wolf-head carvings snarled down at them, mouths open as if to howl.
When they were finally allowed inside, escorted by grim-faced huskarls with long spears, they found the interior even more startling.
Broad pillars of driftwood and whale jawbone lined a cavernous hall, the roof high and dark, thick with the tang of smoke and seal oil.
Warriors lounged at the long benches, mail glinting beneath heavy cloaks and leather lamellar, axes laid across knees.
At the far end, upon a chair raised on three low stone steps, sat Vetrúlfr. His cloak of white wolf fur spilled across the seat and down to the floor.
Beside him rested the dark sword that had already fed so deeply on Greenland’s wilderness the same blade rumor whispered had come from the hand of Rán herself.
The chieftains paused, trading uneasy glances. None here had ever seen a hall so fortified, nor a man sit a throne as if it were a mountain throne from the old sagas.
At last, one stepped forward. He was older, beard streaked with grey, a broad iron brooch fastening his sealskin cloak.
His name was Asgeirr, from the inner fjords; a man who until now had feared no rival this far west.
"So," Asgeirr said, voice carefully even, "you are the high king of Ísland, Vestmannaeyjar, and Færeyjar come here to stake a claim upon Greenland’s cold stones. Many wonder why. Many wonder whether it is wisdom, or madness."
Vetrúlfr did not rise. His pale eyes rested on the chieftain as if weighing him like silver on a scale.
"I have come," he answered at last, his voice deep and quiet, "because the gods have given me a sign. Because this land needs more than scattered farms scratching at the ice. Because the skraelingr believe this coast belongs only to them; and that our kin may be hunted like seals without answer."
His hand fell to the hilt of the sword. The hall seemed to hush around it.
"No more. I will build something here that outlives my bones. Those who join me will share in its strength. Those who would test it may do so as they like; once."
Asgeirr studied him for a long moment. Then he nodded slowly, though his jaw was tight.
"And if we kneel, what then? Will you let our sons keep our lands, or shall this new kingdom swallow them as surely as the sea swallows the ice come summer?"
Vetrúlfr’s gaze was cold but not unkind.
"Kneel, and your sons will stand higher than ever before. Refuse; and your names will become footnotes in the songs of those who do. But know this, the church of christ and his followers hold no place in my lands. For those among you who have forsaken our gods and way of life, I offer pennance but once."
Silence stretched, thick as smoke. Then Asgeirr exhaled, almost as if releasing a weight he had carried up the mound.
He dropped to one knee, his hand to his heart. One by one, the others followed, some slowly, some with bitter reluctance.
Outside, the sea winds howled around the fortress walls. In that sound was both promise and warning; that here in Greenland, something old and dark had taken root.
And it would not be easily pulled up.
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