One King’s Way by Harry Harrison. Chapter 21, 22, 23

The crowd began to disperse towards the smell of roasted oxen and the great vats of beer which the new king would provide as part of the price of his election. The German Ritters watched them with a certain envy, a certain scorn. Bruno decided to hold them in their ranks a little longer, to make certain no-one went down to the party, got into a fight.

Another figure was coming towards them, the scrawny black-clad Englishman, Erkenbert. As he came closer Bruno saw a slight flush of excitement on his pale face, and felt his own heart thud in anticipation. The Englishman was holding one of his everlasting lists.

“Do you think you’ve found it?” said Bruno as soon as the other was in earshot.

“Yes. Down at the tents I found an old man. Too old to attend the election, but not so old that he had lost his memory. He was at the raid on Hamburg. More than that, he was among the men who sacked the cathedral. He remembers closely who was there—especially closely, for he feels still that he was cheated of some share of the loot. He gave me a complete list of the chieftains present, seven of them who led more than a dozen ships’ crews, he says. Now, and this is the important thing. Six of those chieftains we have news of already, and we know they do not fit.”

“So it must be the seventh?”

“So it would seem. His name is Bolli. He is jarl of the Tronds.”

“And who in Hell are the Tronds? I’ve been in this God-forsaken country half a year, I’ve heard of more tribelets and kinglets than my father has pigs in sties, and I never heard of the Tronds.”

“They live far in the north,” said Erkenbert. “Far up the North Way, where they seek to control the fur-trade.”

“Far in the north they may be,” muttered Bruno, “but if there were a new king there, an emperor-in-being, we would still have heard about it. I begin to wonder if our method is wrong. Or could even the holy Rimbert have made some mistake? Perhaps there is no Holy Lance.”

“Or perhaps it is lying in a treasury, unnoticed.”

Bruno’s face took on an expression quite unfamiliar to Erkenbert, one of depression and defeat. “I can’t help thinking,” he said, “you tell me the Lance is in Norway. We hear also that the great struggle for power in the North is going to take place where we left in the spring, at Hedeby in Denmark, everyone is full of it. And here we are, running round provincial gatherings in Sweden.”

“Gautland,” corrected Erkenbert.

“Same place. I have gone in the wrong direction.”

Erkenbert reached up and patted the disconsolate knight on his enormous shoulder. “Whom God loves, he chastises,” he said. “Think of King David in the wilderness. Think of Samson at the mill, and how in the end he brought down the great temple of the Philistines. God can bring forth a miracle at any time. Did He not deliver Joseph from Potiphar, and Daniel from the lions’ den? I will tell you the holy text you must remember: Qui perseravabit usque ad finem, ille salvabitur. He who shall persevere to the end, he shall be saved. To the end, though. Not to near the end.”

Bruno’s face slowly cleared. He wrung Erkenbert’s hand in a careful grip. “Thank you,” he said. “Thank you. Wise words. We shall find out more about these Tronds. And meanwhile, I shall hope that God has some errand for me in sending me to these parts.”

Hrorik, King in Hedeby, gnawed his beard as he listened to the reports of his scouts. “Definitely the Ragnarssons?” he queried.

“Definitely. We got close enough to see the Raven Banner.”

“Flown only when all the bastards are together. Well, at least there’s one bastard fewer of them now. And him the worst bastard of them all. A hundred and twenty ships, you say, and harbored on the mainland opposite Sylt?” Hrorik calculated thoughtfully. “Well, the Ragnarssons are always bad news, but that could be worse. They have to get through the marsh first, and then they have to get over our good wooden walls. I know all about their rams and the tricks they learned from their father. I think we ought to be able to see them off.”

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *