One King’s Way by Harry Harrison. Chapter 18, 19, 20

“Someone will get burnt out over that one,” Brand remarked. “Hard men round here, they can get away with things for a fair while. Then the neighbors get together, come down and torch the place. Kill everyone who tries to get out. Works even on berserks, eventually. As the poem says:

“Every wise man shall count himself warlike

With moderation.

Or find, when he comes among the fierce ones,

No man has no match.”

On the second afternoon, as Shef lounged in the sunshine watching Guthmund bargain furiously for two barrels of salt pork—his bargaining tactics were much admired, even by the victims, who swore that they could never believe a famous abbey-robber could express such passion over a mere clipped penny. Then Shef noticed men’s attention start to waver, heads turn, and then a general drift begin up to the stones of the doom-ring. Guthmund broke off, releasing the pork-merchant’s collar, slapped his money down, and began to follow the drift, Shef hastening after him. “What’s up?” he asked.

Guthmund had picked the story out of the crowd. “Two men agreed to settle their business Rogaland-style.”

“Rogaland-style? What’s that?”

“The Rogalanders are poor, couldn’t afford proper swords till recently, just carried cutlasses like the one you had, or timber-axes. But they really mean business just the same. So if they decide to fight a duel, they don’t square off inside an enclosure marked with hazel twigs, or fight a formal holmgang like you did once. No, they stretch out a bull’s hide, and both men stand on it. Not allowed off. Then they fight with knives.”

“That doesn’t sound too dangerous,” Shef ventured.

“First they tie their left wrists together.”

The place for duels of this kind was in a hollow, so men could line the sides and watch. Shef and Guthmund found places high up. They saw the bull’s hide carefully laid out, the contestants brought forward. A priest of the Way spoke words which they could not hear, and the two men slowly stripped off their shirts and stepped out in their breeches alone. Each held in his right hand a long, broad knife, like the seax-knife Shef’s catapult-men carried, but with a straight blade and sharp point—a stabbing weapon as well as a chopping one. A leather rope was tied first to one wrist, then the other. Shef noted that there was maybe three feet of slack left. Each man took half the slack and held it in his bound left hand, so that the fight began with the backs of the left fists touching. One man was young, tall, with long fair hair braided down his back. The other twenty years older, burly and bald, an expression of grim anger on his face.

“What’s it about?” Shef muttered.

“Young one got the other one’s daughter pregnant. He says she consented, the father says he raped her in the field.”

“What does she say?” Shef asked, remembering similar cases from his own time as a judge.

“I don’t think anyone asked her.”

Shef opened his mouth to ask further, realized it was too late. More words spoken, a ritual request to accept mediation, now impossible to take without shame. Two headshakes. The law-speaker stepped carefully off the bull’s hide, made a signal.

Instantly the two men were in motion, springing round each other. The father had stabbed at the first flicker of the judge’s hand, stabbed low under the linked hands. But at the same moment the young man had dropped his slack and sprung back to the full extent of the rope.

The father dropped his slack too, snatched forward at the rope trailing from his enemy’s wrist. If he got it he could hold the younger man to him, keep him no more than one arm’s length, perhaps pull him close and stab him in the body. But to commit yourself to a mortal stroke left you open to a mortal counter. In this kind of duel it was easy to kill your enemy. If you cared to give him the chance to kill you.

The older man’s snatch missed, the younger one was leaping away, keeping near the edge of the hide. Suddenly he stretched forward, slashed his enemy across the back of the arm. A shout as the blood showed, a sneer in answer from the wounded man.

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

Leave a Reply 0

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