Robert Low

The White Raven


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fathered this Klerkon, who shoved a stool towards me and indicated I should sit, as if the hall was his own. In the shadows behind him, as I searched for Tor or Thordis, I saw shapes, the grinning faces fireglowed briefly and then gone, the gleam of metal. I knew the rasp of hard men’s breathing well enough and the rich smell of my own livestock cooking reeked through the hall.

      When I strode out for the smoke of Tor’s steading, sick and furious, a dozen men followed. First we saw that only outbuildings burned – a byre and a bakehouse. Not long after, we found Flann, Tor’s thrall and, guddling about for plunder in Flann’s blood, a stranger with sea-rotted ringmail and tatters of wool and weave hung about him. He looked like something long dead risen from the grave and climbed slowly to his feet at the sight of us, wiping his palms down the front of his breeks.

      ‘Are you Jarl Orm?’ he asked in a voice thick with Finn accent.

      ‘Who wants to know?’ I countered and he shrugged.

      ‘I am Stoor and serve someone who wishes you well,’ he replied, sonorous as if he was a real herald. ‘He bids you come to the hall ahead, in safety. I was left here to guide you.’

      ‘Fuck you,’ Finn growled and would have said more, about traps and stupidity had I not stilled him with one hand. I looked at him and he at me. Then I followed Stoor, alone.

      It was a wolf den now, Tor’s comfortable hov; the idea of it drove a dry spear into my throat and clenched my balls up into my belly.

      ‘There is pleasure in renewing old friendships,’ Klerkon went on easily. ‘A pity about the misunderstanding earlier, but such things happen on a strandhogg. Men get excited chasing chickens, you know how it goes. No slight was intended and little harm done.’

      His voice made it clear that what I had lost in the way of livestock was well offset by the death of six of his men. Then he called for ale, which Thordis brought. She did not look at me when she laid the wooden cup at my elbow, but her whole body was hugged tight to her and there was a straggled lock of dark hair escaped from one coiled braid, which she would never usually have allowed.

      ‘Tor,’ I said to her and she blinked once or twice. Klerkon gave a little laugh and men shifted out of the darkness, grating a bench into the light. Tor swayed on it, his face a bruise, his lips fat and raw as burst blood puddings. His feet, I saw, hung unnaturally sideways; hamstrung so that he would never walk again.

      ‘I did not think you would object over-much to having an awkward neighbour put at a disadvantage,’ Klerkon said. ‘We needed some bread and cheese and the men needed to dip their beaks a little, so this place seemed good enough.’

      ‘I am sorry for it,’ I said to Tor and his single working eye flicked open.

      ‘Your fault,’ he managed to puff through his broken mouth. ‘Your kind. Your friends. You brought them here.’

      Men laughed at that. I stared at the bald patch on top of Tor’s slumped head and felt sick. They were no friends to me, but he had it right – my fault, for sure. For bringing hard raiding men as neighbours to a peaceful bondi farmer. For thinking I could get away with it.

      Not now, all the same, for Jarl Brand would see it, too. Once this mess was fixed, he would sigh and have to admit that he had no use for us now that the fighting was done. He would be sorrowful, but point out that he could not have swords such as us waving about on his lands, frightening decent folk, inviting bad cess on them.

      Bad cess sat opposite, smiling his Pan-smile and sliding his platter across to me, the meat-grease cooling. I ignored it.

      ‘Not hungry?’ he asked and men chuckled. ‘Pity – that was a tasty horse.’

      ‘I hope you have silver left from other raids,’ I managed to answer him. ‘That meat you are enjoying will cost you. Jarl Brand will scour every wavelet for you after this. So will I. It will take a fat blood-price to still our hands.’

      He leaned back and waved a languid hand.

      ‘A risk worth taking,’ he answered, narrow-eyed. ‘I am betting-sure that you can afford a horse and more besides. I hear you have a mountain of silver to draw on.’

      Well, there it was. The circling rumours that had brought hard men flocking to join me had whispered in his ear and brought him. I knew Klerkon of old, had sailed with him on many a strandhogg, a supply raid, when we had both fought for Jarl Brand. Even among hard and vicious men like us, Klerkon was shunned as something sick.

      ‘Now you know more, so you know something,’ I answered. ‘I did not take you for a man who followed bairn’s tales.’

      ‘Just so,’ said Klerkon, watching me like a cat with a mouse, daring it to move. ‘I am not. But just as priests parted us on bad terms, one brings us together, as friends. As partners.’

      My left knee was twitching and I could not stop it. The air was thick with rank breath, meat smells and the acrid stink of men sweating fear and he saw me struggle with the bewilderment and curiousity his words had forged. I had crossed him once, over a pair of Christ priests he had captured and I had grown tired of his bloody attempts to shake their faith by having them hold red-hot iron and the like. Klerkon was twisted when it came to Christ priests and some folk who claimed they knew said it was because one had been his father and abandoned him as a boy.

      ‘Priests?’ I managed.

      ‘Aye. You knew one, once, I understand. Tame Christ-dog of Brondolf Lambisson, who ruled Birka.’

      ‘Birka is gone,’ I harshed back at him. ‘Lambisson and the priest with it.’

      Klerkon nodded, still smiling the fixed smile that never reached those slitted, feral eyes.

      ‘True, it was diminished the last time we paid a visit. Hardly anything worth taking and the borg had been burned. But we burned it again anyway.’

      He slid his feet off the stool and sat forward.

      ‘Lambisson is alive, if not entirely well. The priest also and he is even less good to look on.’

      He sat back while the wave of this crashed on me and his smile was a twist of evil.

      ‘I know this because Lambisson paid me to bring the priest to him,’ he said. ‘In Aldeigjuborg, last year it was. I plucked the priest – Martin, his name is – from Gotland, where he was easy to find, since he was asking after Jarl Orm and the Oathsworn. Why is that, do you think?’

      I knew, felt a rising sickness at what Klerkon might still have to reveal. Lambisson and the priest Martin had set us off on this cursed search for Atil’s tomb years before, when I joined the Oathsworn under Einar the Black.

      The priest had used Lambisson’s resources to ferret out something for himself, the Holy Lance of the Christ-followers and used the Oathsworn to get it. Now I had it, snugged up in my sea-chest alongside the curved sabre it had made and Martin would walk across the flames of Muspell to seek me out and get that Christ stick back. What Lambisson wanted with Martin was less clear – revenge, perhaps.

      Klerkon saw some of that chase its own tail across my face and his smile grew more twisted.

      ‘Well,’ he went on, his voice griming softly through my ears, ‘perhaps this priest wanted his share of Atil’s silver and so sought you out. The rumours say you found it, Bear Slayer.’

      ‘If so, only I know how to reach it,’ I said, feeling that pointing out that fact at this time might prevent him from growing white around his mouth and a red mist in his eyes.

      This time there was no smile in the wrench that took his lips.

      ‘Not the only one,’ he said. ‘Before the priest, Lambisson gave me another task – to fetch two from Hedeby. I knew they were Oathsworn. Only later did I find out that they knew the way to this treasure of Atil, but I had given them to Lambisson by then.’

      Short Eldgrim and Cod-Biter. Their names thundered in my head and I was on my feet before I knew it; benches