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Raven's Feast
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Raven's Feast
Hakon's Saga Book II
Eric Schumacher
Copyright (C) 2017 Eric Schumacher
Layout design and Copyright (C) 2017 Creativia
Published 2017 by Creativia
Cover art: David Brzozowski, BlueSpark Studios (additional art by Reza Afshar and Dominik Mayer)
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Glossary
Part I Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Part II Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Part III Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Epilogue
Historical Notes
About the Author
To Marie, Aidan, Lily, and the rest of my family, for your love, patience and support
Acknowledgements
This book may never have come to be without the advise, support and help of a handful of individuals. First and foremost, I need to thank Marg Gilks and Lori Weathers, whose keen eyes helped shape the story for public consumption. I am indebted to Gordon Monks, chief marshal of “The Vikings” re-enactment group, and the rest of the early readers, who served as an invaluable source of insight and feedback during the final days of writing. I want to thank Creativia for taking a chance on not just one of my stories but two. And last but certainly not least, I want to thank my readers, who have asked for this sequel and who have waited patiently for me to finish it. It is to you all, and to the countless others who have gladly accompanied me on this journey, that I owe a huge debt of gratitude.
Glossary
Aesir – One of the main tribes of deities venerated by the pre-Christian Norse. Old Norse: Æsir.
Balder – One of the Aesir gods. He is often associated with love, peace, justice, purity, and poetry. Old Norse: Baldr (pronounced “BALD-er”).
Balder's Eyelash – A chamomile substitute also known as sea mayweed. It is found in many coastal areas of Northern Europe, including Scandinavia and Iceland, often growing in sand or amongst beach pebbles.
bonder – Free men (farmers, craftsmen) who enjoyed rights such as the use of weapons and the right to attend law-things. They constituted the middle class. Old Norse: baendr.
byrnie – A (usually short sleeved) chain mail shirt that hung to the upper thigh. Old Norse: brynja.
Dominica – Day of God. Sunday.
Dreki – Old Norse for “dragon” or “serpent.”
Frey – Brother to the goddess Freya. He is often associated with virility and prosperity, with sunshine and fair weather. Old Norse: Freyr.
Freya – Sister to god Frey. She is often associated with love, sex, beauty, fertility, gold, magic, war, and death. Old Norse: Freyja.
Frigga – The wife of the god Odin and the highest ranking of the Aesir goddesses. She is often associated with love, marriage, and destiny. Old Norse: Frigg.
fylke (pl. fylker) – Old Norse for “folkland,” which has come to mean “county” in modern use.
fyrd – An Old English army made up of citizens of a shire that was mobilized for short periods of time, e.g. to defend against a particular threat.
godi – A heathen priest or chieftain. Old Norse: goði.
Hel – A giantess and/or goddess who rules over Niflheim, the underworld where the dead dwell. Old Norse: Hel.
hird – a personal retinue of armed companions who formed the nucleus of a household guard. Hird means “household.” Old Norse hirð.
hirdman (pl. hirdmen) – A member or members of the hird. Old Norse: hirðman.
hlaut – The blood of sacrificed animals.
jarl – Old Norse for “earl.”
jarldom – The area of land that a jarl ruled.
kaupang – Old Norse for “marketplace.” It is also the name of the main market town in Norway that existed around AD 800–950.
knarr – A type of merchant ship. Old Norse: knǫrr.
Nidhogg – The name of the dragon that gnaws at a root of the world tree, Yggdrasil. Old Norse: Níðhǫggr.
Niflheim – The mist-filled afterlife for those who did not die a heroic or notable death. It is ruled by Hel. Old Norse: Niflheimr.
Night Mare – The Night Mare is an evil spirit that rides on people's chests while they sleep, bringing bad dreams. Old Norse: Mara.
nithing – A person without honor. Old Norse: níðingr.
Njord – A god associated with sea, seafaring, wind, fishing, wealth, and crop fertility. Old Norse: Njörðr.
Odal rights – The ownership rights of inheritable land held by a family or kinsmen.
Odin – Husband to Frigga. The god associated with healing, death, royalty, knowledge, battle, and sorcery. He oversees Valhall, the Hall of the Slain. Old Norse: Óðinn.
Ostara – The celebration of the goddess of spring that bears that goddess's name.
seax – A knife or short sword. Also known as scramaseax, or wounding knife.
skald – A poet. Old Norse: skald or skáld.
shield wall – A shield wall was a “wall of shields” formed by warriors standing in formation shoulder to shoulder, holding their shields so that they abut or overlap. Old Norse: skjaldborg.
steer board – A rudder affixed to the right stern of a ship. The origin of the word “starboard.” Old Norse: stýri (rudder) and borð (side of the ship).
skol – A toast to others when drinking. Old Norse: skál.
thing – The governing assembly of a Viking society or region, made up of the free people of the community and presided over by lawspeakers. Old Norse: þing.
Thor – A hammer-wielding god associated with thunder, lightning, storms, oak trees, strength, the protection of mankind. Old Norse: Þórr.
thrall – A slave.
Valhall (also Valhalla) – The hall of the slain presided over by Odin. It is where brave warriors chosen by valkyries go when they die. Old Norse: Valhöll.
Well of Urd – A well or lake that lies beneath the world tree, Yggdrasil. It is also from this well that the Fates (or Norns) come. Old Norse: Urðarbrunnr.
wergeld – Also known as “man price,” it was the value placed on every being and piece of property.
Yggdrasil – An immense mythical tree that connects the nine worlds in Norse cosmology. Old Norse: Askr Yggdrasils.
Yngling – Refers to the Fairhair dynasty, which descended from the kings of Uplands, Norway.
Part I
Odin's sated birds
Afterwards clawed the fliers;
The ravens sought their food,
And glutted their lust.
Hakon's drapa
Chapter 1
The Vik, Summer, AD 935
Hakon sank to his knees before the broad trunk of a maple tree and clutched the cross that hung from his neck.
Closing eyes that stung from lack of sleep, he tried to recall a prayer he had learned in the Christian court of his foster father, King Athelstan, but it would not come. Instead, images invaded his thoughts that were neither wanted nor welcome. Images of Erik and his bloodied battle-axe. A crimson-faced Gunnar roaring as he beheaded the youth who had speared him. The glint of Ivar's blade as it slashed Aelfwin's neck and her life poured forth, dark and horrid, onto her killer's hands. Quickly they came, one after the other, uninhibited; and just as quickly, Hakon's bloodshot eyes opened to erase them.
For three days now — ever since the battle against Erik — the visions had accosted his young mind. They came in the quiet moments to torment his thoughts and steal his peace. When he rested. When he slept. When he prayed. Chilling images that varied in their horror, yet whose vividness never faltered. Fighting them was like fighting the mist.
“You curse your luck, boy.”
Hakon flinched at the sudden voice beside him, and his hand instinctively reached for the grip of his seax, but it was only Egil Woolsark, the aging leader of his household guard. He had once been a renowned warrior in the army of Hakon's father, Harald. Now he served Hakon and was the only man in Hakon's employ allowed to call his teenage king “boy.” He usually used the term affectionately, unless it involved the Christian God, as it did now.
Egil nodded at the cross in Hakon's hand, the movement shifting his white strands of hair to briefly reveal his bald scalp. “The battlefield belongs to Odin, not your White Christ.”
Hakon glowered. It was a common rift between them, and he was tiring of Egil's derision. “Save your words for the afterlife, Egil.”
Egil snorted and changed the subject. “The enemy moves.”
Hakon pushed himself to his feet. Though he'd seen only fourteen or fifteen winters — he had lost count of which — his body felt far older. The battle with his brother Erik had battered and bruised him, and
the subsequent march to the coast had taxed his limbs, a reality that became even more apparent as he followed Egil through the woods toward the enemy camp.
Egil knelt at the edge of the woods and Hakon dropped down beside him. The camp lay but an arrow's flight away, a few paces inland from a small beach. It was a crude base, home to a motley rearguard whose mission it was to protect the ships that rocked in the nearby surf. Within the camp's protective fencing, warriors scrambled to dismantle their tents and pack their sea chests. Camp women helped gather their supplies.
Hakon eyed the enemy coldly. He felt no remorse for their impending doom. The crushing loss of Aelfwin had frozen him to such feelings. Besides, he had pushed his army hard to get to this place; he could not deny them the weapons and armor and arm-rings of the enemy warriors, for they were the spoils of victory. Nor would he let these nameless men take the ships beached on the shore, especially the one that used to belong to his father. Dreki, or Dragon, was her name. Even from this distance, Hakon could see her tall sides and sweeping prow towering over the other ships resting beside her.
“We should attack now, while all is still chaos,” growled Egil.
“Aye. Bring them forward,” Hakon responded.
Egil flashed a grin full of rotten teeth and moved off to ready the men, including Hakon's allies, Jarls Sigurd and Tore.
Little by little, his warriors crept through the forest and fanned out on either side of Hakon, their weapons drawn but held low. No one wore helmets or metal armor for fear the sound and sheen would alert the enemy. Within the camp, the warriors were oblivious to their peril, for all were intent on leaving.
Hakon pulled his seax from its sheath and squeezed its leather grip. It had a shorter blade than his long sword, which he had named Quern-biter, and was a better weapon for the close-quarters fighting of the shield wall. Slowly he slipped his arm into the straps of his shield, wincing as his bruised forearm slid across the wood. He exhaled slowly, steeling himself for the coming bloodshed.
“Loose!” came Egil's command from somewhere back in the trees.
Arrows arced through the morning air, seeking their prey with a wicked hiss. In the camp, three warriors crumpled to the ground. Another two grabbed at the missiles now protruding from their limbs. Screams shattered the morning calm. Seagulls scattered with angry cries.
Hakon charged from the underbrush as a second volley of arrows sent even more men to their death. Shield up and short sword ready, he sprinted, his aching body now alive with adrenaline, his battle cry joining the yells of his sword-brothers who charged beside him. Ahead of him, Hakon's friend Toralv hacked with his axe at the twine holding the gate shut. Hakon kicked the gate open and charged into the camp, shield high, ready for the missiles he knew would come. And come they did. An arrow ricocheted off his shield rim and lodged in the turf by his feet. A spear followed, slamming into the center of his shield and sending a stab of pain across his forearm. He yanked it free and moved on.
“Shield wall!” Hakon yelled at his men.
With practiced skill, his front rank came together beside him, overlapping their shields with his. To his right stood Egil. To his left, the young giant Toralv. Behind them, the second rank brought its shields up and readied itself. Jarl Sigurd's men fanned out to his right. Tore's line moved left. Before them, the enemy rallied around their leader, a brute of a man who carried only a sword and shield and wore neither armor nor helm. They too formed a shield wall, though in the face of Hakon's army, it looked pathetically small. Still, they did not lack in courage. They pounded their weapons on the shield rims and urged the attackers to come and die on their blades.
“Forward!” Hakon yelled.
His men advanced, their shields locked and weapons ready to strike. The enemy took a step backward, retreating with surprising order. The camp women scattered like rats in a burning hall. Some made for the ships. Others for the safety of the trees. Hakon's army ignored them, concentrating instead on the threat aligned before them.
“Faster!” implored Hakon. He could not let them reach their ships. His ships.
Hakon's warriors began to jog, doing their best to keep their shields even. The enemy continued their retreat. A few of their less seasoned warriors broke ranks and ran for the ships. The leader bellowed for the others to hold the line. He was not a man afraid to die, for despite the overwhelming numbers coming at him, he kept his men focused and ready.
The lines met with a thunderous clash that echoed across the beach. Hakon stared at the youthful face of the warrior before him. After the battle, he would remember that there had been fear in the boy's eyes, but in the heat of battle such things didn't register — all that mattered was surviving. And so Hakon stabbed over his shield rim at that face. His blade struck something, though just what he could not tell, for all was chaos and jostling. He pulled his seax back just as a spear point slid past his shoulder. An axe blade followed, hooking the top of his shield. Hakon pulled back sharply, yanking the axe-wielder forward and off balance. Egil sliced his blade across the warrior's thigh. As the man faltered, Toralv hacked into his neck and the warrior dropped dead at Hakon's feet.
Hakon stepped over the body, locked his shield with Toralv's again, and continued pressing forward. Beside him, Egil roared as he brought his sword down on a man's exposed head, splitting his skull.
A cheer rose suddenly, and Hakon ventured a glance about. The enemy leader had fallen, and so too had his standard. The enemy shield wall crumbled and men broke ranks and ran. Hakon's army pursued them, slicing the hapless cowards in the back as they reached the shore or tried to climb aboard the ships. Around the standard a pocket of warriors fought on, but they too soon fell under the relentless blades of their assailants. Hakon's army swarmed the ships, attacking the women and the few men who tried to protect them, for the battle frenzy was upon them now and nothing would stop them until their anger and lust were slaked.
Hakon watched for a moment, then turned his back to the scene. Behind him rose the screams of the dying and the molested. He closed his mind to it, wanting only to cleanse himself of the blood that clung to his skin and breathe deeply of air not fouled by death.
Tossing his battered shield aside, he knelt on the pebbled strand beside the sea and dipped his hands into the cold water. He scrubbed the dirt and gore from his face and the youthful whiskers that now grew from his jaw, realizing distantly that for the first time, he hadn't vomited after a battle. Though whether that counted as maturity or callousness, he couldn't tell, nor did he wish to know.
Washed and refreshed, he stared at his reflection rippling on the ocean's surface, at the icy eyes, long nose, and wheat-colored tresses. Men said he carried the looks of his late father, King Harald. Whether there was any truth in that, Hakon didn't know, for he had only known his father as an old man, long after his signature “fairhair” had gone white and his eyes rheumy with age.
Calmer now, Hakon gazed at the ships. When he found the one he sought, he approached her reverently, ignoring the corpses draped over her gunwales and floating in the surf beside her hull. Dragon was named for the serpent head that adorned the bow-post in battle and for the long, sloping lines of her oaken hull. She could seat thirty-four oarsmen per side, with room for more in the fore and aft decks. It was one of the greatest ships the North had ever seen, and now it was his. Hakon waded into the surf and ran his hand over the carvings that decorated her lines — serpentine designs that depicted the life and adventures of Hakon's celebrated father.
“It is good to see you again, my old friend,” Hakon whispered, remembering with a pang of nostalgia all the times his father had sailed off in her to some distant land or battle, leaving Hakon alone with the hope that one day he too might follow his father's path. And now she was his. He smiled at that thought, but his gladness was short-lived, for someone coughed behind him. Hakon turned to see Egil standing on the strand, the crimson feculence of battle spattering his white beard and namesake woolen shirt, or woolsark.
“It is done,” Egil said simply. Behind him, the warriors were beginning to strip the enemy dead of their weapons and possessions.