The Hammer and The Cross by Harry Harrison. Chapter 9, 10, 11, 12

Only a few yards. Outside the gate, along the fence-posts of the pen, and then, jerked to a stop in front of another gate. Shef realized that the leader of the newcomers was staring hard at him, deep into his eyes, as if trying to burn an understanding into the tough hide of Shef’s face.

“You understand Norse?”

Shef nodded.

“Then understand this. If you talk—doesn’t matter. But if he in there talks—maybe you live. Maybe. Lot to be answered for. But there’s something in there that could mean life for you. Could mean more for me. Whether you live or die, you may need a friend pretty soon. Friend in court. Friend on the execution ground. There’s more than one way to die. All right. Throw him in. Rivet him good.”

Shef found himself hauled inside a shelter propped up against the side of the pen. An iron ring hung from a stout post; a chain from it to another ring. In an instant the collar was being fitted round his neck, a bolt of soft iron forced through its two holes. A couple of blows with a hammer, a quick inspection, another blow. The men turned and tramped out. Shef’s legs were free, but his hands still bound. The collar and chain round his neck gave him only a few feet of space to walk.

There was another man in the shelter, Shef realized, secured as he was; he could see the chain running down from a post into the half-darkness. Something about the figure sprawled there on the ground filled him with unease, with shame and fear.

“Lord,” he said doubtfully. “Lord. Are you the king?”

The figure stirred. “King Edmund I am, son of Edwold, king of the East Angles. But who are you, that talk like a Norfolk man? You are not one of my warriors. Did you come with the levies? Did they catch you in the woods? Move, so I can see your face.”

Shef moved round. The sun, now westering, streamed in through the open door of the shelter and caught his face as he stood at the limit of his chain. He waited in dread for what the king would say.

“So. You are the one who stood between me and Ivar. I remember you. You had no armor and no weapon, but you stood before Wigga my champion, and held him for ten heartbeats. If it had not been for you those would have been the last heartbeats of the Boneless One’s life. Why would an Englishman wish to save Ivar? You ran from your master? Were you a slave to the Church?”

“My master was your thane Wulfgar,” Shef said. “When the pirates came—you know what they did to him?”

The king nodded. With his eyes adjusting to the light Shef could see the face that turned to him. It was pitiless, resolute.

“They took his daughter, my—my foster sister. I came to try to get her back. I was not trying to protect Ivar, but your men were going to kill both of them, all of them. I just wanted you to let me pull her aside! Then I would have joined you. I am no Viking, I killed two of them myself. And I did one thing for you, king, when you had need of it. I…”

“So you did. I called out for someone to break the ring, and you did it. You and a gang of churls from nowhere, with a ship’s timber. If Wigga had thought of that, or Totta, or Eddi, or any of the others, I would have made him the richest man in the kingdom. What did I promise?”

He shook his head in silence, then looked up at Shef. “You know what they are going to do to me? They are building an altar now, to their heathen gods. Tomorrow sometime they will take me out and lay me on it. Then Ivar will get to work. Killing kings is his trade. One of the men who guarded me told me he was standing by when Ivar killed the Irish king of Munster, told me how he stood there while Ivar’s men twisted the rope and twisted the rope and the veins stood out on the king’s neck and he called out curses by all the saints on Ivar’s name. And then the crack as his back broke over the stone. They all remember that.

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