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NovelHook/Valkyries Calling/Chapter 23

Valkyries Calling Chapter 23

23: The Forging of Fáfnirsfangr 23: The Forging of Fáfnirsfangr Ísland and Vestmannaeyjar began to change rapidly under Vetrulfr’s rule. At the close of the war, he commanded a host of one thousand. But in the reorganization of the realm, this force was not kept whole. Instead, he scattered them to the winds; to the lands of every man who had been named Jarl or Thane. They were not dismissed, but charged with a holy task: to raise new hosts of their own, build harbors of their own, forge fleets of their own, and till fields of their own to sustain them. Each fief was to become a war camp in miniature. Every lord, a war-chief in training. It was not peacetime Vetrulfr prepared for. And Ullrsfjörðr stood at its heart. Armies were not the only thing being raised. Roads, bridges, and stone walls were erected as well. New mills and granaries replaced fields cleared with fire and prayer. All the wisdom Vetrulfr had earned from a decade in the East, from Constantinople to the Caucasus was brought to bear upon this northern kingdom. His vision had become law. His will, the pulse of a rising empire. Yet even with all of this, his true pride would be the fleet. The northern sea demanded mastery. So, a new flagship would be needed to herald the coming storm. Frostrtönn had served well in battle. But it was a ship made for a Varangian captain, not a High King. And so, Vetrulfr summoned his greatest shipwrights to Ullrsfjörðr and laid before them the sketch of a sea-beast reborn. What he showed them was no mere longship. Inspired by the Byzantine dromons he once saw dominating the waters off Nicaea, this vessel would stretch nearly fifty meters—capable of bearing between one hundred and one hundred twenty-five warriors into battle, fully armored and armed. It would be rigged with two central square sails and flanked with smaller triangular lateen sails at prow and stern, allowing it to catch wind from every angle and cut through both sea and river. The center would rise with a reinforced deck; fortified for archers and shield-bearers alike. Mounted ballistae would guard her flanks. And at her bow, carved of blackened bronze, would be a dragon’s head—not merely ornamented, but functional. Within its gaping maw would lie a concealed siphon. A fire-spewing throat designed to loose a northern analog of the feared Greek fire. Her whispered name already passed among the craftsmen: Fáfnirsfangr. And despite her size, she would maintain the shallow draft of a longship, capable of riding both sea and river, landing upon shore and striking inland like a serpent in the reeds. When the shipwrights laid eyes upon the design, silence fell over the hall. “This is no ship,” one muttered at last. “It’s a floating fortress. If we build this as you ask… will it float?” Vetrulfr rolled the parchment, his gaze sharp beneath his brow as he thrust the scroll into the master shipwright’s chest. Njörðr will see to that. You need only see that it sails.” And with that, he turned on his heel and began to walk. But before he had gone ten paces, a voice called to him; soft, almost spectral, and yet close. As if it had followed him like his own shadow. “You should be kinder to them,” the voice said. “They labor for your dream, not their own. They do not know what you have seen. They have not marched the burning shores of Miklagarðr or watched fire rain from the walls of cities. Can you not offer them even a sliver of grace… to help them understand?” Vetrulfr paused, but said nothing yet. For in his heart, even he wondered whether grace had a place in the world he was building. Brynhildr could see that her son was faltering, and was quick to remind him of the world around him. “Gaze upon the city you have built and tell me what you see?” Vetrulfr was quick to examine his surroundings, but could not quite understand exactly what his mother was hinting at. Even so, his voice was certain, and filled with fortitude just like his character. “I see a hold fit to outlast Fimbulvetr and Ragnarǫk itself. Am I wrong?” A long and heavy sigh escaped the ageless seidkona’s lips as she shook her head with disappointment. “Oh, my son… You still think like a conqueror, but not yet the High King you now are… These men, a year ago they were farmers, fishermen, smiths, and shipwrights. Many of them still are those things…” The woman’s tone carried on, far beyond its natural reach, inspiring those around her as she paid them no heed. “Many of them still are those very things… And yet, you expect them all to raise spear and shield, and march beneath your orders, suffer the wrath of your fist, and kneel before you? You grew up alongside warriors like yourself, hard men, built for war.” Her voice fell silent for the briefest of moments and brought forth the frost of winter when it resumed. “But some simply want to live life, worship the gods, and provide for their families. Those men should not be treated like wolves who answer your howls in kind. Remember that, or you will not be king for long…” Brynhildr did not wait for her son’s response. She simply walked away, leaving the man to ponder her words in silent introspection. — South Connacht, near modern Kinvara, on the southern coast of Galway Bay, Róisín had found herself in one of the few moments of the day she was permitted to leave her room. And it was not for her three square meals. No, she was to arrive in the library of the convent, and receive tutoring from one of the prioresses beneath the mother superior. The woman was older by at least a decade and a half, and had a face that only God could love. Though only in her mid-thirties, her face was already a battlefield of crow’s feet and envy. She claimed to be a righteous and holy woman, free from sin, but the look she gave Róisín, who was her exact opposite, was one of sheer resentment. Róisín was graceful, young, and filled with vigor. It was perhaps with this stark contrast that the Prioress’s tone was far from cordial as she snapped at the young sister. “Róisín ingen Éoganán mac Bríghde! You are late by precisely half a minute! Did you intend to keep me waiting until the sun had set? I will have to speak to the Mother Superior about your tardiness yet again!” Róisín knew better than to argue. For whatever reason, the woman had it out for her; holding her accountable to the second. She could have fallen ill with boils and still be told her soul lacked discipline. And it wasn’t just the prioress. Róisín had lost her family young. The exact details were unknown to her, only that she had lived in the convent ever since. Forced to take the vows when she came of age, even if nearly every sister seemed to despise her. With a heavy sigh and a submissive bow of her head, Róisín spoke softly. “Apologies… Sister… I will do my best to be on time tomorrow. If you don’t mind me asking, where is Sister Eithne? I do not see her by your side today…” The Prioress’s eyes narrowed, suspicion and contempt flaring, as she closed her book sharply and laid it down with purpose. “The Mother Superior has seen it fit to remove Sister Eithne from her duties as my personal scribe. It would appear her affections for you have grown… concerning.” Normally, Róisín would accept mistreatment in silence. But Eithne was the only friend she had known in all these years. More than a friend—family, in every way that mattered. Their quiet talks over scripture, their stolen laughter when no one else was watching. Those were the only warmth left in her world. Her cheeks flushed red; not just with shame, but fury. Her hands trembled, and her voice quivered with defiance. There is no impropriety in our relationship! We are friends, sisters! Must you find every excuse imaginable to treat me like I’m some kind of monster? Why must you go so far to torture me? What have I ever done to deserve this—” The words were cut short by a stinging slap. The Prioress had stood and struck her with full weight behind her palm. Róisín staggered, falling to the floor as tears welled in her eyes and streaked down her freckled cheeks. She fled back to the only sanctuary she had, the lonely cell where she was confined outside moments like these. And as the door slammed behind her, Róisín did not weep quietly. “I hope somebody burns this place to the ground… and all of you with it!” The words, like her sobs, were carried by the sea winds. Far beyond the grey tide. Unseen, something heard her.
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Valkyries Calling Chapter 13Valkyries Calling Chapter 14Valkyries Calling Chapter 15Valkyries Calling Chapter 16Valkyries Calling Chapter 17Valkyries Calling Chapter 18Valkyries Calling Chapter 19Valkyries Calling Chapter 20Valkyries Calling Chapter 21Valkyries Calling Chapter 22Valkyries Calling Chapter 24Valkyries Calling Chapter 25Valkyries Calling Chapter 26Valkyries Calling Chapter 27Valkyries Calling Chapter 28Valkyries Calling Chapter 29Valkyries Calling Chapter 30Valkyries Calling Chapter 31Valkyries Calling Chapter 32Valkyries Calling Chapter 33
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