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

“I only killed one. That was in the dark and no one saw. It was no great deed. But someone may have seen me get into the pen and start freeing the prisoners—freeing Alfgar.” Shef’s mouth twisted. “And do you know, I broke the Viking shield-wall with a burning timber when all the king’s comrades could not do it.” Shef turned his palms and looked mutely at the pads of white skin, the tiny thorn holes where the blisters had been.

“Yes. Still, that might not be a cause for blood-vengeance. Ingulf and I have done a lot of favors during this last day and a night. There are many chieftains who would be dead or crippled for life if it had not been for us. You know, he will even stitch together entrails, and sometimes the man will live, if he is strong enough to stand the pain and there is no poison inside the body.”

Shef looked more attentively at the stains on his friend’s tunic.

“You are trying to beg me off? From Ivar?”

“Yes.”

“You and Ingulf? But what do I matter to him?”

Hund dipped a lump of hard bread in the remaining water and passed it over.

“It’s Thorvin. He says it is business of the Way. He says you have to be saved. I don’t know why, but he is totally set on it. Someone spoke to him yesterday and he came running over to see us at once. Have you done something I don’t know about?”

Shef lay back in his bonds. “A lot of things, Hund. But I’m sure of one thing. Nothing is going to get me away from Ivar. I took his woman. How can I pay boot for that?”

“When bale is highest, boot is nighest.” Hund filled the crock with water once again from a skin, placed a handful of bread beside it on the ground, and passed over the length of dirty homespun he had been carrying over his arm. “Food is short in the camp, and half the blankets are being used for shrouds. That’s all I can find for now. Make it last. If you want to pay boot—see what the king can do.”

Hund jerked a chin toward the corner of the pen, beyond where the dying warriors had sat, called something to the watching guards, rose, and left. The king, thought Shef. What boot will Ivar take for him?

“Is there any hope?” hissed Thorvin across the table.

Killer-Brand looked at him with mild surprise. “What sort of language is that from a priest of the Way? Hope? Hope is the spittle that runs from the jaws of Fenris Wolf, chained till the day of Ragnarök. If we start only doing things because we think there may be some hope—why, we will end up no better than Christians, singing hymns to their God because they think he may give them a better bargain after death. You are forgetting yourself, Thorvin.”

Brand looked with interest at his own right hand, spread out on the rough table next to Thorvin’s forge. It had been split open by a sword-blade between second and third fingers, cut clean open almost down to the wrist. Ingulf the leech was bending over it, washing the wound with warm water from which a faint scent of herbs drifted. Then he slowly, carefully, pulled the lips of the gash apart. White bone showed for an instant before the oozing blood covered it in the track of Ingulf’s fingers.

“This would have been easier if you had come to me straight away, instead of waiting a day and a half,” said the leech. “Then I could have treated it while it was fresh. Now the wound has started to clot together, and I have to do this. I could take a chance and stitch it up as it is. But we do not know what was on the blade of the man who struck you.”

A trickle of sweat broke out on Brand’s eyebrow, but his voice remained mild, contemplative. “You go ahead, Ingulf. I have seen too many wounds go bad to take that risk. This is just pain. The flesh-rot is certain death.”

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