A long time ago, two men made a partnership. They were different men with different ways of viewing the world. They did not agree on many things. But they were desperate, and that made all of the rest unimportant.
***
“Are you certain, Haakon?”
“Heya.”
“You didn’t just see a funny cloud?”
“No.” Haakon Ordsson leaped down from his precarious perch on the longboat’s mast. His faced was as lined and creased as old parchment, and his eyes were fixed in a permanent squint from a lifetime spent staring off into rhimy horizons. “I saw land. Only for a second before it vanished behind a wave, but I swear on Freya’s name I saw it. With any luck, we will be making landfall tonight.”
“I trust your eyes, Haakon.” Erik the Red turned to face the rows of faces on the oarbenches, looking expectantly his way. “Land, men! The Gottlander’s map led us true!”
A raucous cheer. Erik smiled. Everything was falling into place.
He was a short, intense man. A shaggy mane of red-gold hair fell from his shoulders, only slightly tidier than the matted fur of his bearskin cloak. At 36, 21 years since his first battle, he was approaching what most Vikings would consider old age.
The gods had gifted him with a smile that spoke different truths to different people. Friends were encouraged and enboldened by his smile. Enemies took a step back.
“Haakon, spread the word to the ships behind us. Make sure the captains second a few of their oarsmen to landing preparations.”
Haakon dipped his head respectfully, walked to the stern of the longboat, and began hollering orders to the ships riding in their foam wake. There were twelve longboats and 240 men in total, a fleet assembled from Erik and Haakon’s shared resources. They had been brought out here with the promise of new land and wealth. It seemed that the first part of that contract was already being fulfilled.
***
Haakon was vindicated by late afternoon. A frigid, white landmass was approaching, and soon ice-covered sandbars and cliff faces were visible. The cliffs didn’t look like rocks. They looked like convex and concave bone structures.
It was as forbidding a place as any of the men had seen.
Here it is at last. Erik thought, stroking his mustache. A continent that lies but a few days’ sailing from Iceland, and yet no man has ever colonized it. Sailors avoid it. Fishermen do not cast their nets in its waters. There are rumors of a Norseman called Gunnbjörn who tried to settle here. He and his entire crew were never heard of again. It is said to be cursed, although no-one can ever why or how or who found out. I think it’s time to put the old superstitions to the test.
By nightfall, the ships were within a stone’s throw of the coast. They traveled further north by the stars, and the rocky cliffs and ice shelfs became smooth sand beaches and softly flowing hills. After enough sailing, the crew observed birch trees growing in straggly clumps.
There was no sign of habitation.
“Why aren’t we making land, sir?” A young warrior called Ulfsson asked.
Erik gestured at the water along the coast. “Notice how flat it is? How the waves seem to be breaking underneath the water? There’s a reef there. We’ll sail on, and try to find a better place to land. If we don’t…well, that’s tomorrow’s worry.”
They did not make landfall that night. In a way, the men did not mind this so much. There was something unsettling about this mysterious continent they had found by following the directions of a vague map.
***
The next morning, they continued to follow the coast north. After sailing for some hours and finding no break in the reef, Erik decided to take a calculated risk.
“We’ll go across the reef. Tell the men to furl the sails and take it at half oarpower. If there are hidden rocks we should strike them with our oars before they damage the ships.”
It was a dangerous stunt, and with an ordinary ship would have been suicide. But the highly maneuverable dragon-prowed longboats, or drakkar, of the Vikings did not fit any man’s definition of ordinary.
The longboats were the best-designed ships of the day. With them and sheer pig-headed stubbornness, the Vikings ruled the waves.
Before the age of the longboats, sea warfare was unheard of in northern Europe. There were no ship designs that could carry large numbers of troops, weather rough seas, and not bankrupt the small landholders building them. If a king launched an invasion, he did it by land.
The drakkar longboats changed all that. With their stout hulls and shallow drafts they were cheap and versatile. They could undertake journeys of hundreds of kilometers on open waters, be rowed upriver and over shallows, and even be carried across land for short distances.
In summer and winter alike, the devastating longboats sailed. A village could no more anticipate Viking raids than it could lightning strikes. “God, save us from the wrath of the Norsemen” was a prayer spoken all across Europe.
Erik the Red’s filthy arms were adorned with jewellery that did not belong to him. He wore a stolen torc around his neck. His cloak had originally belonged to a monk in Gaul. All up, he guessed that he and his crew owned possessions from twelve different countries.
And all because of the longboats. Now, Erik hoped that they would prevail against the reefs of this new land.
“Tell the men to take it slowly. And if they strike anything at all with their oars, they must stop immediately. The reef out there could claw out hulls out from under us.”
***
The maneuverable longboats were slowly rowed towards the beach. As Erik had suspected, rocks lurked underneath the waves.
They had covered half the distance when a cry came up from the boat straight ahead of Erik’s. An oarsman had scraped something solid, and the crew were frantically back-rowing, their oars clashing.
It was not enough. Even at half oar-power, the ship’s momentum carried it onto a hidden reef. There was a terrifyingly loud crunching sound, and the rest of the fleet look to see a stricken ship pinioned against the submerged rocks.
“We’s shipping water!” A warrior yelled across the waves.
The slate-grey sea rose and fell on the stricken vessel, battering it against the submerged rocks. The two rear longboats rowed to the scene, attempting a rescue of the crew.
Erik the Red whirled on his men of his ship. “Get your eyes back on your tasks, or we could join them! Go across the rocks at one-quarter speed.”
The rocks were impossible to detect by sight, and only with the greatest care could they be avoided. Nine longboats attempted to probe the water for clear access-ways, while two more were busy saving the crew of the damaged longboat. The landmass ahead was tantalisingly close.
“Come on, we’re nearly there!”
Sweat was running into Erik’s eyes as they slowly crossed the treacherous waters. Occasionally a reef would be found, and the men would pole their ships away with their oars. The din of shouted orders filled the air like the buzzing of a hornet nest.
Erik looked down into the opaque ocean, and in a trough following a large wave saw a craggy pinnacle of rock directly in their longboat’s path.
“Hard left! There’s a reef ahead!”
The left bank of oarsmen relaxed their oars while the right bank put on full power. The ship turned like a graceless swan, and they bypassed the reef.
From there, it was clear sailing. The other ships were able to follow in Erik’s path, and there were no more losses. The entire crew of the sunken ship was saved, and only the supplies were lost.
The curved keels struck sand with a wet slap.
Erik jumped down off the longboat’s prow, the first crewman to set foot on this new continent.
He looked around. Ice, snow and frost covered everything. A few patches of weeds and straggly trees grew from the ground, looking almost ashamed to be there. There were a few half-starved gulls that looked as pathetic as the beggars outside King Haraldr’s palace. A savage wind howled and hooted across the rocky outcrops.
It was apocalyptically huge, a vast expanse of nature’s wrath. It was a land impossible to look upon without feeling small.
“I think I will call it Greenland” Erik said to the men behind him with a tooth-baring grin, as they disembarked from their ships.
***
The Norsemen spent the whole day without having cause to suspect Greenland had any redeeming qualities whatsoever.
They beached the ships, threw linen flax canvas over them to protect them from the worst of the weather (“A stopgap measure” explained Haakon. “Soon we’ll have to drag them out of the water and under shelter somewhere, but that’s another day’s worry.”) and then moved inland. They walked for some hours, and then fanned out to the sides. No matter where they went, the landscape stayed the same. Rock, ice, and weeds. No good timber, no gold and ore deposits, and seemingly nothing to eat.
It was as if the land was mocking them. Think you can settle here, mortals? Give it your best.
“What are we doing here, battle-master?” Asked Eirik, and inveterate complainer. “We may as well build a settlement on an iceberg.”
Erik turned his withering stare on the young man. “We are forging history, dolt. One day in Greenland and you want to return home already? Stop flapping your gums and keep looking, all we need is one prosperous valley and we’ll build a kingdom to make Haraldr envious.”
Eirik shivered unhappily. “It’s cold. What if there is no shelter? We could freeze to death overnight.”
“You call yourself a man? When the god Odin cut out his right eye to receive all the wisdom of the world, do you think he was worrying about the pain? This is our chance at riches and glory, and all you can think about is the cold?”
An awkward silence settled across the crew. They all knew that Erik the Red was not sailing to Greenland for riches and glory.
Back in Iceland, his family had been wealthy livestock owners of high repute. They had journeyed from Visby to Norway when Erik was but a boy. Erik had participated in three raids under King Haraldr Fairhair and had acquitted himself well. He and was marked as a man who might eventually become a jarl.
All of that had ended one day three years ago when Erik was chopping firewood with Thorgest, the son of a powerful landowner. Thorgest had made some joking remark not worth remembering. The jest had gone sour, and soon a quarrel was raging between the two men. The argument had turned into a fight, and that fight had ended with Erik’s hatchet buried in Thorgest’s skull.
Erik had thought they were alone, but the killing had been witnessed in secret by Thorgest’s manservant, who ran back to the village longhouse and informed Thorgest’s father. That night, Erik’s family home was set on fire and their livestock stolen.
Erik had realised his life was in danger. He had fled to Iceland, met Haakon, and together cobbled together a small fleet with the promise of a new land away from despots like Haraldr. He had tried to keep them from knowing the truth, but there was not a man on board who did not know the truth.
This charismatic, powerful man, who promised them the Viking dream of glory and discovery, was nothing more than a fugitive on the run for murder.
This late in the game, none of them cared. In this empty, forbidding land, events in Norway seemed as unimportant as any fact on earth.
***
They wandered the new land with a sense of wonder and disquiet, like men who had been scooped up and dropped on the moon at the hand of some playful god.
The terrain was monotonous, unvarying.
Erik had more to worry about than just the land. The men are growing unhappy. If we do not find inhabitable land, I may soon face a mutiny.
He found himself sweating in the deathless cold.
No-one was more happy than Erik when, with the sun beginning to dip down over the horizon, they found a stream of fresh water.
***
The crew rushed towards it and began filling their waterskins. The brackish water they had brought on their long journey was poison next to this. Haakon’s eyes lit up when he spotted the bones of a deer…a very promising sign.
They made camp on a ridge from where they could see their ships beached on the coast. None of them had the stamina to light a fire. As was his custom, Erik lay down to sleep with a short-bladed stabbing sword in his hand…it was not unheard of for disgruntled warriors to kill their battlechiefs as they slept.
Thus ends our first day in Greenland, he thought. Soon he was drifting off, his ears full of unfamiliar sounds and his nose full of unfamiliar smells.
***
The next day was filled with more of the same. Half the crew went back to the ships to unload supplies, while the others continued exploring the continent.
They spread out and ranged over dozens of square miles, following the contours of the river. Groves of alder and spruce were found further upriver, and oak trees towered off into the distance. Dried animal dung dotted the increasingly grassy plains, another good sign.
Erik busied himself with the minutiae of organising the crew, while internalising facts about the continent of Greenland that would help him build a colony.
By their third day in Greenland, they had still not seen another human being.
***
At the start of the third week, a disquietening discovery was made.
Jaarni was a stout veteren of many battles. He led a party of foragers east on to the land next to the huge ice shelf that met the ocean. Greenland’s hunting options were unreliable at best, so berries were proving to be the colony’s mainstay.
A yell of alarm pierced the air.
Jaarni and three others came running, hands on weapons. Middle-aged Brodir stood over what appeared to be a pile of frost-covered sticks, looking horrified.
Jaarni jerked to a stop, his buskins kicking up a flurry of snow. “What in Fenrir’s name is happening?”
Ashen-faced, Brodir shifted the pile of sticks with his moccasin. The men all took a step back when it was revealed to be a pile of human bones.
They had bleached and cracked with age, but the shape of a femur and a pair of ribs was unmistakable. The men looked across the frost and saw other bones scattered across the snow, as if some giant had mistaken them for gambling dice. Under the shadow of a birch a human skill grinned up at them, half-buried under a tangle of tree roots.
“Hel’s teeth. What happened here?” Jaarni was apoplectic.
“A battle?”
“I do not think so.”
“How many people?”
“Six. Maybe a dozen. And that’s only what we can see from the surface. We can’t possibly know how many bones are buried under snow.”
“A gravesite?”
“Why weren’t they buried?”
A metallic glitter caught Jaarni’s hawkish eyes. He strode over and pulled a rusty iron sword out of the snow.
It was ancient, but no man failed to recognise the design of the fuller and crossguard. Many of them possessed identical weapons.
“This belonged to a Viking” breathed Brodir. “We’re not the first of our people to set foot on Greenland.”
The other men were scrounging around the site. One of them let up a cry and pulled a battered helm out of the ground. It had rusted to a dark maroon color. Another man found a shattered spear haft, so weakened by rain and snow it crumbled in his hands.
A horrified silence settled over the men. They were all thinking what didn’t need to be spoken aloud. So this is what became of Gunnbjörn.
Jaarni’s voice cut through the quiet like an axe blade. “Swordbrothers, there is nothing to see here. Let us return to camp and inform Erik and Haakon about this. They may be able to offer us some insight.”
***
Erik politely sat through the scouts’ report, but his mind was elsewhere. There was so much to be done that he did not possess much interest in an old explorer’s bones lying miles away.
We’ve found the ideal spot for a settlement, he thought, Jaarni’s voice fading into the back of his mind. Not far away from the river and the ice shelf, there is a grassy plain bordered by forest. Not too much clay, and it’s high enough to be safe from frost. Growing food in Greenland will be like picking a beggar’s pockets, but a determined group of men could survive here. It will never become a kingdom; but by the gods, we’ll be better off than we were in Iceland! In fact…
Haakon spoke up, cutting through Erik’s thought train like an axe blade. “Thank you for your report, Jaarni. We will make preparations to leave as soon as possible.”
Erik jerked upright, outraged that his partner could suggest any such thing. “Leaving? Who said anything about leaving?”
”Gunnbjörn and his men did not just lie down and die. They were killed. What if there is a hostile tribe here? We should go, and not endanger the lives of our menlives.”
“Are you crazy? Leave in spite all that we have done? Leave in spite of all that we have yet to do? This is nonsense. Gunnbjörn’s party was killed years ago. Maybe decades ago. And we haven’t seen any living native since we arrived here.”
Haakon pursed his lips. “Open graves, unburied bodies…the omens are all bad.”
“Too much time away from a woman is turning your brains to porridge. Gods, you were always a cautious one, but now you’ve become a coward!”
Furious rage settled over Haakon’s face. Seeking to keep the peace, Erik backpedaled. “I retract what I said, brother. It was spoken in haste. You are no coward. We’ll stay until the settlement is complete, and then reassess our position. I don’t know what you’re afraid of, but if anything goes wrong we still have the ships.”
“Be glad you apologized, brother” Haakon said slowly. Erik couldn’t tell how satisfied he was, but the murderous look had gone out of his eyes. “I was about to challenge you to a duel.”
***
The Norsemen, a hardy race who had spread their tentacles from the Northern Baltic to Gaul and Iberia in the south, took to the challenge of the new land. The remaining stores on the ships were unloaded, and work in earnest began on the settlement.
Men scoured the perimeter of the forest, hacking off fir and spruce branches and wrapping them in bundles for thatch roofing. Other men worked at felling oak and pine.
Over the next three weeks, they managed to frame twenty two cottages and one open hall. Sawpits were dug, and logs were cut into servicable lengths for planking. The thatch was dusted in fire soot, and woven into wooden batons on the roof to provide protection against the rain. The tools the Norsemen had were rudimentary, but they made up for it in persistance and stubbornness.
It’s the way we are, thought Haakon as he watched the proceedings with something like pride in his heart. We don’t tame the land. We wrestle it under control with sheer force of will.
Winter in Greenland came far earlier than the Norsemen had anticipated. The weak, anaemic sun was soon buried under rolling black clouds, and the area was soon engulfed in blizzards. Soon, daylight was reduced to just a few short hours of sunlight.
Further work on the settlement became impossible. The men sat huddled around fires, eating fish and caribou meat. The river froze and they needed to crack the ice every time they collected water.
From time to time, far in the distance, there came a long, ghoulish wolf howl, a sound that has struck fear into the hearts of shepherds throughout the ages. The Vikings only laughed. “Like being at home, heya?”
***
Cold, miserable days continued like a procession of drab, gray beggars outside a church. Whole days would pass when they did not see the sun. The bay had transformed into a small ice shelf, and the ships out in the bay were trapped.
The days progressed so slowly that the men resorted to anything to stave off boredom. Exhibitions of strength and stamina were held, and wagers were carried out using coin that had become worthless.
In the evening after the onset of a fresh blizzard, the men sat gathered in the half built mead hall, listening to a jolly warrior called Harold Vigsson play a barely recognisable song on a set of wooden pipes. Wind whistled through cracks in the building and set them shivering.
Suddenly, one of the men threw a tankard to the ground in disgust. “How long does this song go for? Between your pipes and this wind my teeth are tingling like crazy.”
Haakon put the pipe down, and his half-formed chords stopped. “You don’t like my playing?”
“By the gods, let me die on an enemy spear instead!”
Harold feigned hurt dignity. “Would a story be to you lads’ satisfaction?”
The response was less than enthusiastic, but Harold nevertheless launched into an old, old tale that each of the men present had heard perhaps twenty times. It was only after the men starting throwing their mead-cups at him that he shut up and lapsed into despondency, his head resting on his breastbone.
Bored of the spectacle, Haakon stood and walked over to the doorway, massaging life back into his cold limbs.
“Where are you going?” Asked Erik waspishly. Following their standoff over Jaarni’s report, the relationship between the two men had turned black. They fought constantly, and countermanded each other’s orders.
“To take a piss. I’d sooner saddle and ride a wild boar than have to listen to this crew. What’s wrong? Would you like me to ask for your permission?”
“I don’t care what you do. Go and die out there.” A sharp, poisonous barb. Not at all like the playful banter they had exchanged in more peaceful days. It had hate in it.
***
It was so cold outside the building that Haakon forgot his irritation with Erik immediately.
Cold was almost the wrong word. The blizzard sucked heat out of him like a sponge. It bit into his bones like a fire, even though he was wearing the heaviest clothing they had. His fingers started to go numb, and he knew that if he spent more than a few minutes out in this devilish cold he would suffer frostbite.
With shaking hands he undid the drawstring on his trousers and emptied his bladder on to the ground as fast as he could. His urine froze immediately. He re-tied his trousers and was about go back to the relative warmth of the hall when his he saw…something…out of the corner of his eye.
Visibility was restricted to a few yards in each direction, and vague shapes could be discerned for a couple yards more. The snow was whipping along almost horizontally.
In a small break in the white flurry Haakon could make out a shape standing on the crest of a hill. A man, who was either extremely bulky or was wrapped up in impossible amounts of clothing. He was a stone’s throw from the building, but Haakon could only catch brief glimpses of him behind the screen of snow.
He stood there for perhaps ten seconds, and then turned and started jogging away from the building. Haakon caught a brief glimpse of his backside before he vanished forever.
A single thought echoed in Haakon’s head. There are men in Greenland! He was so transfixed he did not notice the frightening numbness in his extremities. He finally pulled himself away and walked back inside.
“I saw a man out there.” Were his first breathless words.
***
The debate raged for three days.
Haakon, who had felt nothing but disquiet in this knew land, took it as a sign that he was right and they had overstayed their welcome. “He was watching us! He knows we are here. And do you think one man lives alone? Once the winter ends, we’ll be attacked, mark my words. We’ll end up by ”
Erik the Red opposed him, loathe to leave all of their work behind. The rest of the men were polarised in their opinions, supporting one leader or the other.
But it was Erik who had led them here, Erik who had financed and supplied most of the ships. Haakon had his supporters, but Erik could over-rule any decision he made.
“We are staying. Accept it” he snapped, after a heated row with his old friend.
Haakon ground his teeth together like tombstones, saying nothing.
***
One blustery day, when the storms were becoming weaker than weaker and the ice was beginning to melt, everything came to a head.
Fifteen men, all of them known supporters of Haakon, were found down by the beach, working on the longships. They claimed to be checking for damage, but it was obvious they were doing nothing of the sort.
The men were carrying supplies out to the ships, and making the ships seaworthy. Extra planks were being nailed to the ships in a lapstrake design to reinforce the hull, and new sailcloth and oars were being fitted.
The most damning fact was that they were breaking the ships out of the ice. If they hadn’t been caught, they may well have left then and there.
Erik was so furious he was unapproachable for days. The would-be deserters were flogged and reduced to menial servants. And his attitude towards Haakon turned from dislike to loathing. He could prove nothing, but it seemed very likely that Haakon himself was indirectly involved in the events down on the beach.
Concerned about direct retribution from Erik, Haakon left the hall and began building a small hut for himself up on the ridge, far away from his fellow Vikings.
***
Spring, or some pathetic mockery of it, returned to the land. Animals awoke from hibernation, birds’ young began to leave the nest, and the river melted and began to flow. The days lengthened and the sun actually shined for most of the time.
The land was transformed, but the conflict and strife that was tearing the colony apart continued.
Erik the Red became ever more vengeful, and Haakon became ever more paranoid. He posted regular guards up on the hills to watch out for invaders. He suggested that a picket fence be built around the settlement, but Erik vetoed him, saying their timber could be better used elsewhere.
The men had almost run through their winter stores, and Erik began leading hunting parties out to search for reindeer, mallard ducks and other animals.
***
One fine day that he did not feel, Erik and his hunting party were traversing a thin forest just north of the settlement. They carried snares and and traps in their hands, and their eyes were watchful for the signs of edible wildlife. Dried dung. Disturbed leaf piles. Scratches on trees.
Erik gave orders. “We’ll take one more look through this glade for good trap locations, and then we’ll spread out. There has to be something around here.”
They moved forward, their eyes fixed on the ground.
Erik dimly heard a hsss-thwock sound somewhere to his left. Strange, he thought. That almost sounds like…
A man fell to the ground, gasping and writhing, an arrow buried in his eye socket.
“Attack!”
Erik looked up and saw a line of perhaps thirty men charging towards them, screaming and yelling in some foreign tongue that was nonsense to him. They carried no metal weapons, but had fire-hardened spears and arrows.
They looked like no men Erik had ever seen. They were short, barely up to his shoulders, and squat and round. They had no facial hair, and their clothing was a mystery. Rage contorted their faces. They brandished their weapons with deadly intent.
Arrows slashed into the Norse hunting party, felling two. Erik saw a tribesman bending a bow in his direction. White-hot panic flushed through his stomach and he rolled to the left, shielding himself behind a tree. Unperturbed, the tribesman adjusted his aim and sent the arrow thudding into the neck of the Norseman who had been behind him.
The remaining warriors formed ranks around Erik, dodging shafts and giving ground. Jaarni hurled his spear at the attackers and turned to Erik. “Battlechief! Your orders?”
Erik drew his short sword and waved in the direction of the smoke plume over the hill. “Retreat! Back to the settlement!”
Within seconds the entire party of hunters was in full flight, running from their pursuers like deer from wolves. Arrows hissed and thudded around them. Brodir took a shaft to the leg and fell. No-one looked to see what became of him.
Haakon was right. Damn him. Haakon was right. It shamed Erik that he should feel resentment in circumstances such as this.
They hurdled fallen trees, jumped over rocks. One man tripped, and two swordbrothers helped him up. They were all big, long-legged men and extremely fit. Their short-legged pursuers were slowly falling behind, and eventually stopped firing arrows. Erik felt confident that they would reach the safety of the settlement. With the sounds behind them receding, they waded across the river and began ascending the hill at a run.
Smoke. Was that smoke they could smell in the air? Surely not.
***
“Hell’s teeth.” Breathed Jaarni. His swarthy face was white as a ghost. “We’re all dead men.” They all stood at the top of the hill, looking down at the settlement.
…There was no settlement any more. All but three of the buildings were ablaze. The mead hall was a burning ruin. Flames leaped and danced and crackled. Bodies littered the ground, dozens upon dozens of them of them. Hundreds of tribesmen were surging across the destroyed in a roaring mass, killing surviving Vikings and throwing lit firebrands into the buildings. The scene was a roiling, chaotic mass of blood, and fire, and screaming men.
A Norseman – it could only be Haakon – had succeeded in rallying a few score warriors to his side and was fighting a gallant battle over near the shore. The tribesmen wore no armor, and were easily slain by the battle-hardened Norsemen and their iron weapons. But they were ferocious and almost animal in their attacks, and they had nearly a three to one advantage.
Swarms of tribesmens hurled themselves in waves at the disciplined Norse warriors, hacking and stabbing at them with fire-hardened spears and flint axes. There was no resisting them. Strong men broke down and wept as their saw their friends and swordbrothers cut down and killed.
Battle-lust descended over Erik the Red and his men. They ran down the slope, arming themselves with weapons from the dead as they went, and charged at the huge mass of tribesmen. There was not a single thought in their heads. Not strategy. Not tactics. Not survival.
***
Haakon fought desperately against the sea of freakish, beardless men. They just kept coming, climbing over piles of their own dead. One by one, his stalwarts were being dragged down and slain.
One of the Norse took an arrow in the eye. His head snapped back under the impact and he fell. Three men swarmed into the breach immediately and Haakon charged them. He smashed one man in the mouth with an axe, causing his lower jaw to break away from his skull in a foul explosion of blood and bone. The second man stabbed at Haakon’s chain-mail overcoat with a bone knife, and looked surprised when his blow failed to penentrate. Haakon half-decapitated him with a backhand stroke.
The third barbarian was about to strike at Haakon’s unprotected flank, but a warrior stepped in and plunged a swordblade into his side. “Erik’s coming!” He shouted in Haakon’s ear. “We’re saved!”
Haakon took a glance at the hill that had bordered their once-safe settlement and saw fifteen odd men running to their defence. He spat into the ground. There would be no salvation for them. They would all die here, unremembered and unmourned.
“Odin, you who sees all! Watch me this day!” Haakon roared into the faces of the tribesmen. “Count my deeds! Decide if I deserve a seat with you in Valhalla!” His axe-arm rose and fell like a tireless engine of death, killing and maiming.
***
Erik’s red hair and beard bounced in their braids like a firebrand. He and his men let loose a terrible battle-cry, a defeaning roar designed to rattle nerves and loosen bowels. And then they struck.
They collided with the tribesmen army like death dealing tornadoes, cutting, hacking and slashing, cleaving through them like a hot knife through butter. Jaarni killed two, ducked, and ripped out a third man’s tendons with an ankle-heigh slash of his broadsword. Ulfsson drove a captured spear into the man’s neck as he fell. Most of the Norsemen had quickly buckled on armor before joining battle, and enemy spears and arrows clattered off their breastplates and helms harmlessly.
Erik waded into the thick of the battle, his strikes and parries dazzlingly fast. A meaty hand clamped down on his shoulder, seeking to pull him off his feet. With a cry, Jaarni charged forward and slashed down. The hand was chopped clean off and fell to the ground in a spray of gore. Hot blood splashed across Jaarni’s face from the tribesman’s spurting forarm.
Erik pushed and shoved through the battle, ignoring the risk. He shouldered men aside, using his short sword to stab at them only when there was enough room. Eventually he broke through and threw himself to the ground at the embattled defenders’ feet.
Haakon looked down at him, and smiled. “I was wondering where you were.”
Erik stood up and joined the battle-line, hacking and cutting at the wall of flesh in front of him. “I suppose I should offer an apology.”
“It does not matter now.” Sweat shone on Haakon’s brow, highlighted by the fires that blazed all across the settlement.
The battle raged like a caged beast. Men fell to the ground and were trampled under the feet of their friends. Arrows and spears flew like a hailstorm of pain. Despite the overwhelming odds, the Vikings fought magnificently. Scores of tribesmen died. But even so, the battle could only go one way.
A war club smashed Jaarni from his feet and hurled him to the ground. Three tribesmen jumped on him, stabbing him relentlessly. He screamed as a flint spearhead tore through his eye and into his brain.
Harold Vigsson chopped his sword two-handed through an enemy’s breastbone. The sword wedged there and was pulled from his hands as his opponant fell. He let loose one final wolf howel and threw himself at the clot of savages racing towards him, kicking and punching furiously before being overwhelmed.
Ulfsson fought with the energy of the young. He did not see a wounded tribesman reaching out a hand and grasping his ankle. Before he could react, he was on his back and it was all over for him. Tribesmen piled on top of him, knives and spearpoints ready.
The exhausted Erik and Haakon fought back to back, labouring on with the reserves of their strength and stamina. All around them friends were dying. There was no fancy swordplay, just a raw endurance contest against the enemy.
A spear punctured Erik’s chain mail, grazing the flesh. Haakon bled from six or seven small wounds. Their lungs burned from the blistering heat of the fire and the suffocating smoke that filled the whole world. Both of their weapon arms were about to seize up.
Perhaps this was not so bad. They would die here surrounded by brothers.
But unknown to them, it wouldn’t be all of their brothers.
Because some of the Norsemen had plans other than fighting.
***
When the attack on the settlement occurred, the fifteen men who had attempted to desert were roped up within the confines of the mead hall. From midday to noon they had their freedom, but for the rest of the time they were no better than the slaves the Norsemen had captured in Ireland and Gaul for hundreds of years. Such was their punishment. At the moment, no-one had need of them.
“What’s going on?” A blonde giant called Svarni asked, craning his neck out of the window. “I can’t see.”
“Screaming…yelling…something’s happening, and I doubt it’s a Season of New Life festival.”
The men waited in ghastly anticipation as the noises came closer, and soon armored warriors were observed racing past their vantage point by the window. Clashes. Clangs. More screams.
“The settlement is being attacked.” Svarni observed helpfully.
“By whom?”
An old, disgruntled warrior tethered to a oak support sighed in resignation. “Have a look through that solid timber wall and tell us, idiot.”
The battle-noies swelled until they filled the prisoners’ ears. Orders were being shouted. Battle-horns sounded. There came the hiss and thwock of arrows.
Without warning, an ugly, beardless face appeared at the window and hurled a flaming torch through the window. The men cried out as it bounced to the ground, hissing furiously, before finally landing on a bundle of dried straw.
“Hell’s teeth!” Svarni swore. They struggled to kick it away, but their bounds only allowed them a yard’s worth of movement and none of them could get at it.
For a glorious moment it seemed that the torch would die out without catching, but with a soft flump sound the straw ignited, spreading fast and burning bright.
Long minutes passed in the tense and sweat-stinking room as the fire spread. The bearskin rugs laid down on the floor caught. Flames started licking at the slender wooden supports. The pine resin in the walls began to burn. Bitter acrid smoke filled the room, and the men began coughing.
“AAARGH!’ A slender black-haired man called Vigrid roared, straining at his bonds. They were secured with roped ankles and leather thongs holding their hands together. He kicked out, lashing around in a panic. A table was knocked down.
***
The door burst open, and two figures tumbled in.
They wrestled and grappled on the floor, as smoke was sucked out of the building. The prisoners gasped in lungfuls of air, hacking and coughing like poison victims.
One of the combatants on the ground kicked his adversary in the face. The man reeled back, giving the first man – they could recognise him as a Norse warrior – enough space to free a dagger in his belt and slash open the tribesman’s jugular.
He shakily got to his feet, look around at the prisoners, and walked over to Svarni. Working quickly, he began untying the man’s bonds.
“Aren’t we supposed to be prisoners?” Svarni pretended nonchalance.
“Gods’ teeth, man, can’t you hear what’s happening out there? We’re being attacked. Hundreds of men. We need as many swords out there as possible. Master Haakon has instructed me to free you.”
The knots came off Svarni’s feet and he shook them free, moving over to untie his friends.
“Go to the smith and arm yourselves.” Their rescuer said. One by one, the men were being freed. “…and then join the main party of warriors.”
Svarni nodded reasonably, and then reached over and picked up a wooden club. The man’s mouth moved, about to frame a question of what he was doing, but he never got the chance. With no warning, Svarni brought the club down across the man’s head. There was a frighteningly loud thud, and the man fell, his eyes pointing in different directions.
Svarni turned to face his friends’ shocked faces. “If there are hundreds of men out there, Haakon and the rest will be killed, and so will anyone who tries to help them. Let’s grab some supplies and make a break for the ships. If they’re still in good order, we can escape and leave this piss-ache land behind.”
The men let up a cheer, emboldened by Svarni’s iniative. He allowed himself a small moment of satisfaction.
***
Erik had fallen.
His foot had struck rock, jarring his hip, and he went down on his back, watching the bloodthirsty savages rushing towards him with a kind of dazed detachement.
Three Norsemen ran to save him. One of them blocked a downward axe strike aimed at the fallen leader, while the other two drove the tribesmen back with their battleaxes. Erik was pulled back behind the thinning line of Norsemen, where he lay trying to regain his strength.
He chanced a glance over his shoulder, and saw something that he could scarcely credit.
A line of human figures, burdened down with sacks and crates, marching towards the ships down on the beach. They were distant specks, and neither the Norsemen nor the tribesmen seemed to notice.
His mind joined the dots. The prisoners. They, of course, were escaping in the confusion.
As he lay there in the mud, clangings and screams corkscrewing through his ears, a small seed of doubt was planted in his mind.
It went against his training and instincts. He had called men cowards in the past for less. And yet…
…there was no desire in his heart to die a warrior’s death.
***
Haakon had become distanced from Erik by the ebb and flow of the melee, but he could see that the battle only had minutes to go. Only about twenty Norse still stood, the best of the best, kept alive by their fighting skills and sheer luck. The tribesmen packed in like a roiling mass of rodents, pushing them relentlessly back. Soon the wavering Norse line would crack, and that would be that.
But the savages had paid a dear price of their victory. The battlefield was heaped with their bodies.
His weariness was bone deep. He wanted nothing more than to rip off his encumbering armor and lie down and sleep. The muscles in his axe arm were screaming.
Instead, he spat into his palm, rubbed it in, and picked up his axe, resolving to sell his life and dearly.
A question entered his mind. Where’s Erik?
There was no sign of him in the battle. Had he been killed or tripped up? Or was he…?
Haakon turned his head to the beach, and his gaze hardened like water freezing.
***
Erik saw a sight he hated. A man had broken away from the battlefield and was running towards him. He was fairly sure of the man’s identity.
“Get ready to leave.” He whispered at Svarni and the escapees. “I’ll deal with this.”
***
“Bastard! You’re leaving us!”
The man’s voice was Haakon’s. Erik could not have identified him any other way. Mud and blood splattered every exposed inch of skin, and his beard was a bedraggled clump. His eyes burned with rage from under a dented and battered helm. “Explain yourself. I’ve a mind to snap your neck with my bare hands.”
Erik remained calm. He spread his hands before him, two men discussing a business deal. “We’ve lost, friend. We should have listened to you from the beginning. This land isn’t worth living in, much less dying for. Come and join us.”
“Look at those men!” Haakon gestured out at the remnants of the colony, fighting vainly in the ruined village. “They followed you, and you’re abandoning them!”
“I can see you’re distraught.” Erik’s face was unreadable. “Get on the boat and we’ll talk about it later.”
“You’re scum, Erik. May you die on that ocean.”
“This is fascinating. You’re protesting at my leaving when that is what you wanted to do from the beginning. All the men who stay will die, surely you can see that. Now get on the damned boat.”
With an impotent roar, Haakon swept up his axe and charged the unarmed Erik. Instead of trying to avoid, the smiling Erik stepped forward into Haakon’s path, giving him no room to swing his axe. Erik kneed Haakon in the balls, and then smashed his fist into the bridge of the man’s nose, dumping him to the half-frozen sand.
Haakon had no more strength to resist. He lay there, gaping like a fish, as Erik bore down on top of him. “I regret doing this, brother. But you’ve chosen your path, so walk it like a man.”
With that, he brought his booted foot crunching down on his old friend’s neck. With his windpipe crushed, Haakon could do nothing but stare as stars swarmed in front of his vision, multiplying and speeding up, before blackness swamped his vision.
A small, buried part of Erik conscience twinged at the action. But did not wolves fight their packmates when food was scarce? He turned and saw all fifteen of his pathetic little crew staring at him in horror.
Svarni finally spoke. “What have you done, Erik?” His voice was soft. Awed.
Erik rounded on Svarni. “I offed him because I didn’t feel like sharing a boat with him, that’s what. Do any of you lads have any opinions to express about my methods of running things?”
The crew looked perturbed.
Erik pressed on. “Look, I’ll make this short. I know many of you were friends of Haakon, but that is all elementary now. There are sixteen of us, and we need all the oarsmen we have. More to the point, I am the only capable navigator amongst us. You lads can sail away without me if you want, but consider yourself lucky if you even get past those rocks.”
His crew looked unhappy, but seeing no options they assembled and began breaking the longboat out. Erik joined in, trying to mollify them with loud praise and compliments of their skill and efficiency.
Fifteen short minutes later, they were gone. Leaving the burning shell of their settlement and dozens of dead comrades behind them. They tried to persuade themselves that the bitter taste in their mouths was sea air. More than one pair of hands were shaking as they sent their oars dipping and sweeping into the briny waves.
But not Erik. He seemed to be coping quite well.
***
Erik the Red’s hair was no longer red, but he still spoke with conviction, and his smile was yet dangerously relative. His grandson looked up in rapt attention, believing every word. Who could deny this man had led hundreds to their doom in a strange land?
“What happened next, grandfather?”
“The journey back was slow and unpleasant. I was in an agony of anticipation. These were men whose favorite leader I had killed. I was ever expecting a knife between my ribs.
“My mind joined in the torment. Would I be barred from the Hall of Heroes for my crime? Haakon was a miserable bastard, true, but had he really deserved…that?”
“To cut a long story short, I arrived back in this very port in a leaky ship with a half-starved crew. But I was in one piece, and for that I thank the gods. My story soon spread throughout the colony of Reykjavic and I was invited to a personal audience with King Haraldr to discuss my findings. I told him of the hostilities with a tribe of natives and my lucky escape. I also told him that my beloved friend Haakon had died at there hands.” He shrugged. “I’m sure my crew were going around spreading the true story, but I was under the king’s protection by that point, so it didn’t matter.”
The grandson sat in silence for a few seconds. Then: “but why did you do it?”
“What? Lie to the king?”
“No, why did you…kill your friend Haakon?”
“Why didn’t I just leave him there on the beach, you mean? He would have caused trouble for me if I had brought him back to Iceland. I never intended to let him on the ship. And he would have perished in Greenland.” Erik spoke hesitantly. A man who fully knows that his explanation is inadequate.
Seemingly eager to change the subject, Erik cast an eye out of the castle window over the Bay of Reykjavic. Huge ships could be seen entering and leaving. He sighed. “Haraldr Fairhair is long dead, and his son is much more of an explorer. I have heard he is financing a new expedition to Greenland. I have sent him several letters urging him to reconsider.
“Well, what comes will come. I now have business to attend to. Enjoy your holiday, lad.”
He ran a friendly hand through the boy’s hair and departed, closing the door against the incessant drafts that plagued the castle.
The young boy sat thinking. Erik was a god among men. But could a god be so cruel as to crush a friend’s neck and callously leave him to die? And for so little reason?
Would my friends ever do that to me?
The lad shivered. It wasn’t from the cold.
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