sword soaring up. The pile of rags that was a woman saw it, screamed once and flopped. The blade whirled down; the chain shattered at the point where it joined an iron fetter.
Skapti swung round, his eyes boar-like and red. Instinctively, Ketil Crow and Gunnar backed away.
‘Now you pair of turds can carry her,’ he growled. For a moment, Ketil Crow’s eyes narrowed dangerously and I watched him, for I knew if he struck Skapti it would be from behind. No sane man would face an armed Skapti in a confined space.
Instead, he grinned like a wolf on a kill and moved to the woman. I followed Skapti outside, where Martin was sitting up and shaking his head, dripping from the contents of a ewer Hring had thrown on him. Hring, smirking, was trying to force the pewter pot inside his tunic, flattening it into uselessness as he did so.
Einar hauled the monk up on to unsteady legs and clapped him playfully on the shoulder. ‘Sore head, eh? Now you be quiet and nice, or I will let the Bear Slayer loose on you again.’
Everyone chuckled – save me and Martin.
‘I will want to know more of this, monk,’ Einar went on. ‘But, for now, we will follow your plan. Orm, give him your cloak and helm, for I don’t think Brondolf Lambisson will want him gone from here and may have left instructions to that effect. Lower the woman on to the corpse bed and cover her up. Then we can leave.’
They had completed their task, were hefting the bed and moving from the wreck of the room, when the door opened and Brondolf Lambisson strode in, holding a small chest close to his own.
There had been no warning for him. One minute he was coming into the neat, warm hov of his fortress, slippers on his feet, a nice warm hat on his head; the next he had stepped into a nightmare wreck of a room, reeking of shit and blood, littered with corpses and come face to face with the last six armed men in the world he wanted to meet.
He had time to give a strangled yelp and whirl back out of the door, though, hurling the chest straight at the nearest, which happened to be Skapti and Einar. It hit Skapti on the shoulder, smacked Einar on the forehead and dazed him. With a cry, Skapti dropped his end of the corpse bed, blocking the doorway.
‘Ah, Odin’s bollocks …’
Einar was clutching his head, cursing so hard I made a sign against angering the very gods he maligned. Blood stained his fingers when he removed them.
Skapti started to lumber after the fleeing Lambisson, but Einar grabbed him. ‘No. Time to row hard for it,’ he said through pain-gritted teeth.
Hring picked up the chest and shook it. It rattled with coin and he beamed at Einar.
‘You have a head for business right enough, Einar.’
The answer was a dangerous growl and a shake that sprayed everyone with warm droplets, like a dog climbing out of a stream.
Martin stumbled forward, my hand on the nape of his neck. He tried once to shake me off and I tightened my grip, at which he gave up struggling and trembled, part with anger, but mainly with fear.
‘The chest,’ he managed and Einar took it from Hring, opened it, shot a look full of questions at the monk.
‘On the thong …’ muttered Martin. Einar started raking about in the chest.
‘Time to go, Einar,’ warned Skapti. ‘Lambisson will raise the whole Borg in another blink.’
Einar fished out a leather loop, dangling from which was a heavy coin, punched with a hole to take the thong. It swung, gleaming in the flickering lights.
‘The woman had it round her neck,’ Martin said, thick-voiced with the pain in his head.
We all craned to see it, but it was just a medallion to me.
‘See it,’ Martin urged. ‘On one side and the other …’
Einar turned it over and over in his fingers, while Skapti hovered by the door. ‘Einar ... in the name of Thor, move your arse.’
‘On one side, Sigurd …’ Martin wheezed. And I saw it, as it turned and flashed. On one side, the head of Sigurd, slayer of Fafnir. On the other, the dragon head. ‘Volsung-minted,’ he went on. ‘From the hoard Sigurd took. There is no other coin like it out in the world.’
Skapti slammed the doorpost with his forehead and roared his anxious frustration at us all.
‘All the others, its brothers and sisters,’ Martin breathed, ‘are buried with Attila the Hun.’
Then we were out into the little room, composing ourselves and stepping as quietly as we could, controlling our ragged breathing with effort, to face the guard on the steps.
‘Wouldn’t that weasel-faced little fuck help then?’ asked the guard sympathetically. Beside me, I felt Martin stiffen and poked him meaningfully.
‘No. We will do it with our own rites,’ answered Einar and moved on, keeping his head turned as far from the man as possible, so the blood wouldn’t show.
We were halfway down the stairs when Einar stopped. A red flower bloomed in the dark, beyond the Borg walls. Shouts followed it. Another flower bloomed. The guard above us peered disbelievingly.
‘Fire … ?’
‘Eyvind,’ said Einar bitterly, as if the very name was a curse. Which, of course, it turned out to be.
Just then, the fortress alarm bell clanged out. Lambisson. The guard on the steps whirled, confused. Helpfully, I said, ‘Must be a fire in the town. That will be bad in this gale.’
The guard nodded, now unsure of whether to rush to the gate and find out, or stick to his post. Instead he said, ‘Get on now. Hurry.’ Then he turned into the fortress.
‘Move!’ hissed Einar, but that was a whip we didn’t need. We almost scampered across the main gate, where the guards were staring. Only two now – it seemed Sten had taken the others to help against the fire, which was luck, since he seemed to know my face.
The ones on the gate couldn’t give a rat’s arse whether we had found a monk or given our comrade suitable burial, being too busy craning to see what was happening.
They waved us through and we headed off along the walkway, moving towards the town wall. The reek of smoke, shouts, a whirl of sparks and flame showed that Eyvind’s handiwork was excellent. I remembered the raven, the doomed voice of Eyvind saying: ‘I was looking at the town and thinking how easily it would burn.’
A group of men and women with buckets charged past us, pushing along the walkway. Shouts whirled away with the wind, but some were louder up ahead, where a fresh red flower bloomed.
‘There he goes!’
Eyvind stumbled from the cover of darkness, vaulted a fence, fell on the walkway and got up again. He was wild-eyed and seemed to be laughing. He saw us and sprinted. Behind him, a crowd of pursuers made ugly noises.
‘Fuck his mother,’ hissed Ketil Crow. ‘He’ll have them all down on us …’
There was confusion. All the weapons were hidden with the woman on the corpse bed. Eyvind, half stumbling, laughing with relief, charged up the walkway to us, to safety and his oathsworn oarmates.
Einar stepped forward, whirled, wrenched my breeks to the knee and whipped out the hidden seax, all in one movement that left me frozen in place – which was just as well, since I felt the wind of that edge trail past my naked balls.
Eyvind was trying to speak, gasping for air. Einar stepped forward, for all the world as if to embrace him, and drove the seax up under the ribs and straight to the heart. Eyvind simply collapsed like a bag into Einar’s arms and he promptly threw the luckless dead man back towards the pursuing crowd, sprawling him bloodily on the walkway.
He turned to me and said, ‘Pull up your breeks, boy. This is no place or time to have a shit.’
Then