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Sharp blades thrusting, spear-blades killing As aethelred, Lord of Slaughter, slaughtered thousands, Swelling the river with blood, sword-fed river, And Aldhelm, n.o.ble warrior, followed his lord Into the battle, hard-fought, felling foemen And so the poem goes on for many, many, many more lines. I have the parchment in front of me, though I shall burn it in a moment. My name is not mentioned, of course, and that is why I shall burn it. Men die, women die, cattle die, but reputation lives on like the echo of a song. Yet why should men sing of aethelred? He fought well enough that day, but Fearnhamme was not his battle, it was mine.

I should pay my own poets to write down their songs, but they prefer lying in the sun and drinking my ale and, to be frank, poets bore me. I endure them for the sake of the guests in my hall who expect to hear the harp and the boasts. Curiosity drove me to buy this about-to-be-burned parchment from a monk who sells such things to n.o.ble halls. He had come from the lands that were Mercia, of course, and it is natural that Mercian poets should extol their country or else no one would ever hear of it, and so they write their lies, but even they cannot compete with the churchmen. The annals of our time are all written by monks and priests, and a man might have run away from a hundred battles and never once have killed a Dane, but so long as he gives money to the church he will be written down as a hero.

The battle at Fearnhamme was won by two things. The first was that Steapa brought Alfred's men to the field just when they were needed and, looking back, that could so easily have gone wrong. The aetheling Edward, of course, was notionally in charge of that half of the army, and both he and aethelred possessed far more authority than Steapa, indeed they both insisted he gave the command to leave aescengum too soon and countermanded his order, but Alfred overruled them. Alfred was too sick to command the army himself, but, like me, he had learned to trust Steapa's brute instinct. And so the hors.e.m.e.n arrived at the rear of Harald's army when it was disorganized and when half still waited to cross the river.

The second reason for success was the speed with which my swine head shattered Harald's shield wall. Such attacks did not always work, but we had the advantage of the slope, and the Danes, I think, were already dispirited by the slaughter beyond the ford. And so we won.

The Lord G.o.d granted victory, blessings to aethelred, Who, beside the river, broke the hedge of shields.



And Edward was there, n.o.ble Edward, Alfred's son.

Who, shielded by angels, watched as aethelred Cut down the northmen's leader...

Burning is too good for it. Maybe I shall tear it to squares and leave it in the latrine.

We were too tired to organize a proper pursuit, and our men were dazed by the speed of their triumph. They had also found ale, mead, and Frankish wine in the Danes' saddlebags and many became drunk as they wandered the butcher's shop they had made. Some men began heaving Danish corpses into the river, but there were so many that the bodies jammed against the Roman bridge piers to make a dam that flooded the ford's banks. Mail coats were being heaped and captured weapons piled. The few prisoners were under guard in a barn, their sobbing women and children gathered outside, while Skade had been placed in an empty granary where two of my men now guarded her. Alfred, naturally, went to the church to give thanks to his G.o.d, and all the priests and monks went with him. Bishop a.s.ser paused before going to his prayers. He stared at the dead and at the plunder, then turned his cold eyes on me. He just gazed at me, as if I were one of those two-headed calves that are shown at fairs, then he looked puzzled and gestured that Edward should go with him to the church.

Edward hesitated. He was a shy young man, but it was plain he felt he should say something to me and had no idea what words to use. I spoke instead. "I congratulate you, lord," I said.

He frowned and for a moment looked as puzzled as a.s.ser, then he twitched and straightened. "I'm not a fool, Lord Uhtred."

"I never thought so," I said.

"You must teach me," he said.

"Teach you?"

He waved at the carnage and, for a heartbeat, looked horrified. "How you do this," he blurted out.

"You think like your enemy, lord," I said, "and then you think harder." I would have said more, but just then I saw Cerdic in an alley between two cottages. I half turned, then was distracted by Bishop a.s.ser sternly calling Edward away, and when I looked back there was no Cerdic. Nor could there have been, I told myself. I had left Cerdic in Lundene to guard Gisela, and I decided it was just one of the tricks that tired thoughts can play.

"Here, lord." Sihtric, who had been my servant, but was now one of my household warriors, dumped a heavy coat of mail at my feet. "It's got gold links, lord," he said excitedly.

"You keep it," I said.

"Lord?" He stared up at me with astonishment.

"Your wife has expensive tastes, doesn't she?" I asked. Sihtric had married a wh.o.r.e, Ealhswith, much against my advice and without my permission, but I had forgiven him and then been surprised that the marriage was happy. They had two children now, both st.u.r.dy little boys. "Take it away," I said.

"Thank you, lord." Sihtric scooped up the mail coat.

Time slows.

It is strange how I have forgotten some things. I cannot truly re member the moment when I led the swine head into Harald's line. Was I looking into his face? Do I truly remember the horse's fresh blood flicking from his beard as his head turned? Or was I looking at the man to his left whose shield half protected Harald? I forget so much, but not that moment as Sihtric picked up the mail coat. I saw a man leading a dozen captured horses across the flooded ford. Two other men were tugging bodies free of the corpse-dam at the ruined bridge. One of the men had red curly hair and the other was doubled over in laughter at some jest. Three other men were tossing corpses into the river, adding to the blockage of bodies faster than the pair could relieve it. A thin dog was scratching itself on the street where Osferth, Alfred's b.a.s.t.a.r.d, was talking to the Lady aethelflaed, and I was surprised that she was not in the church with her father, brother, and husband, and surprised that she and her half-brother appeared to have struck up a friendly relationship so soon. I remember Oswi, my new servant lad, leading Smoka into the street and pausing to talk to a woman, and I realized that Fearnhamme's townsfolk were returning already. I supposed they must have hidden in the nearby woods as soon as they saw armed men across the river. Another woman, wearing a dull yellow cloak, was using a paring knife to cut a ring-circled finger from a dead Dane's hand. I remember a raven, circling blue-black in the blood-smelling sky, and I felt a sharp elation as I stared at the bird. Was that one of Odin's two ravens? Would the G.o.ds themselves hear of this carnage? I laughed aloud, the sound incongruous because in my memory there was just silence at that moment.

Till aethelflaed spoke. "Lord?" She had come close and was staring at me. "Uhtred?" she said gently. Finan was a couple of paces behind her, and with him was Cerdic, and that was when I knew. I knew, but I said nothing, and aethelflaed walked to me and laid a hand on my arm. "Uhtred?" she said again. I think I just stared into her face. Her blue eyes were bright with tears. "Childbirth," she said gently.

"No," I said, quite quietly, "no."

"Yes," she said simply. Finan was looking at me, pain on his face.

"No," I said louder.

"Mother and child," aethelflaed said very softly.

I closed my eyes. My world went dark, had gone dark, for my Gisela was dead.

Wyn eal gedreas. That is from another poem I sometimes hear chanted in my hall. It is a sad poem, and thus a true poem. Wyrd bi ful raed, it says. Fate is inexorable. And wyn eal gedreas. All the joy has died.

All my joy had died and I had gone into the dark. Finan said I howled like a wolf, and perhaps I did, though I do not remember that. Grief must be hidden. The man who first chanted that fate is inexorable went on to say that we must bind our inmost thoughts in chains. A saddened mind does no good, he said, and its thoughts must be hidden, and maybe I did howl, but then I shook off aethelflaed's hand and snarled at the men heaving corpses into the river, ordering that two of them should help the men trying to clear the bodies from between the ruined bridge piers. "Make sure all our horses are down from the hilltop," I told Finan.

I did not think of Skade at that moment, or else I might have let Serpent-Breath take her rotten soul. It was her curse, I realized later, that killed Gisela, because she had died on the same morning that Harald had forced me to free Skade. Cerdic had ridden to tell me, his heart heavy as he took his horse through Dane-infested country to aescengum, only to find us gone.

Alfred, when he heard, came to me, took my arm and walked down Fearnhamme's street. He was limping and men stepped aside to give us room. He gripped my elbow, and seemed about to speak a dozen times, yet the words always died on his lips. Finally he checked me and looked into my eyes. "I have no answer why G.o.d inflicts such grief," he said, and I said nothing. "Your wife was a jewel," Alfred went on. He frowned, and his next words were as generous as they were difficult for him to say. "I pray your G.o.ds give you comfort, Lord Uhtred." He led me to the Roman house which had been sequestered as the royal hall, and there aethelred looked uncomfortable, while Father Beocca, dear man, embarra.s.sed me by clinging to my sword hand and praying aloud that his G.o.d should treat me with mercy. He was crying. Gisela might have been a pagan, but Beocca had loved her. Bishop a.s.ser, who hated me, nevertheless spoke gentle words, while Brother G.o.dwin, the blind monk who eavesdropped on G.o.d, made a plangent moaning sound until a.s.ser led him away. Finan, later that day, brought me a jar of mead and sang his sad Irish songs until I was too drunk to care. He alone saw me weep that day, and he told no one.

"We're ordered back to Lundene," Finan told me next morning. I just nodded, too oblivious of the world to care what my orders were. "The king returns to Wintanceaster," Finan went on, "and the Lords aethelred and Edward are to pursue Harald."

Harald, badly wounded, had been taken by the remnants of his army north across the Temes until, in too much agony to continue, he ordered them to find refuge, which they did on a thorn-covered island called, naturally enough, Torneie. The island was in the River Colaun, not far from where it joins the Temes, and Harald's men fortified Torneie, first making a great palisade with the plentiful thorn bushes, then throwing up earthworks. Lord aethelred and the aetheling Edward caught up with them there and laid siege. Alfred's household troops, under Steapa, swept eastward through Cent, driving out the last of Harald's men and recovering vast quant.i.ties of plunder. Fearnhamme was a magnificent victory, leaving Harald stranded on a fever-infested island, while the remainder of his men fled to their boats and abandoned Wess.e.x, though many of the crews joined Haesten, who was still camped on Cent's northern sh.o.r.e.

And I was in Lundene. Tears still come to my eyes when I remember greeting Stiorra, my daughter, my little motherless daughter who clung to me and would not let go. And she was crying and I was crying, and I held her as though she was the only thing that could ever keep me alive. Osbert, the youngest, wept and clung to his nurse, while Uhtred, my eldest son, might have wept for all I know, but never in front of me, and that was not an admirable reticence, but rather because he feared me. He was a nervous, fussy child and I found him irritating. I insisted he learned sword craft, but he had no skill with a blade, and when I took him downriver in Seolferwulf Seolferwulf, he showed no enthusiasm for ships or the sea.

He was with me aboard Seolferwulf Seolferwulf on the day that I next saw Haesten. We had left Lundene in the dark, feeling our way downriver on the tide and beneath a paling moon. Alfred had pa.s.sed a law, he loved making laws, which said that the sons of ealdormen and thegns must go to school, but I refused to allow Uhtred the Younger to attend the school which Bishop Erkenwald had established in Lundene. I did not care whether he learned to read and write, both skills are much overrated, but I did care that he should not be exposed to the bishop's preaching. Erkenwald tried to insist I send the boy, but I argued that Lundene was really part of Mercia, which in those days it was, and that Alfred's laws did not apply. The bishop glowered at me, but was helpless to force the boy's attendance. I preferred to train my son as a warrior and, that day on the on the day that I next saw Haesten. We had left Lundene in the dark, feeling our way downriver on the tide and beneath a paling moon. Alfred had pa.s.sed a law, he loved making laws, which said that the sons of ealdormen and thegns must go to school, but I refused to allow Uhtred the Younger to attend the school which Bishop Erkenwald had established in Lundene. I did not care whether he learned to read and write, both skills are much overrated, but I did care that he should not be exposed to the bishop's preaching. Erkenwald tried to insist I send the boy, but I argued that Lundene was really part of Mercia, which in those days it was, and that Alfred's laws did not apply. The bishop glowered at me, but was helpless to force the boy's attendance. I preferred to train my son as a warrior and, that day on the Seolferwulf Seolferwulf, I had dressed him in a leather coat and given him a boy's sword belt so he would become accustomed to wearing war-gear, but instead of showing pride he just looked abashed. "Put your shoulders back," I snarled, "stand straight. You're not a puppy!"

"Yes, Father," he whined. He was slouch-shouldered, just staring at the deck.

"When I die you'll be Lord of Bebbanburg," I said, and he said nothing.

"You must show him Bebbanburg, lord," Finan suggested.

"Maybe I will," I said.

"Take the ship north," Finan said enthusiastically, "a proper sea voyage!" He slapped my son's shoulder. "You'll like that, Uhtred! Maybe we'll see a whale!"

My son just stared at Finan and said nothing. "Bebbanburg is a fortress beside the sea," I told my son, "a great fortress. Windswept, sea-washed, invincible." And I felt the p.r.i.c.k of tears, for I had so often dreamed of making Gisela the Lady of Bebbanburg.

"Not invincible, lord," Finan said, "because we'll take it."

"We will," I said, though I could feel no enthusiasm, not even for the prospect of storming my own stronghold and slaughtering my uncle and his men. I turned from my pale son and stood in the ship's prow, beneath the wolf's head, and gazed east to where the sun was rising, and there, in the haze beneath the rising sun, in the mist of sea and air, in the shimmer of light above the slow-swelling sea, I saw the ships. A fleet. "Slow!" I called.

Our oar-banks rose and fell gently, so it was mostly the ebbing tide that swept us toward that fleet, which rowed northward across our path. "Back oars!" I called, and we slowed, stopped, and slewed broadside to the current. "That must be Haesten," Finan said. He had come to stand beside me.

"He's leaving Wess.e.x," I said. I was certain it was Haesten, and so it was, for a moment later a single ship turned from the fleet and I saw the flash of its oar-blades as the rowers pulled hard toward us. Beyond it the other ships went on northward and there were many more than the eighty that Haesten had brought to Cent, because his fleet had been swollen by the fugitives from Harald's army. The approaching ship was close now. "That's Dragon-Voyager Dragon-Voyager," I said, recognizing the ship, the same one we had given to Haesten on the day he took Alfred's treasure and gave us the valueless hostages.

"Shields?" Finan asked.

"No," I said. If Haesten wanted to attack me he would have brought more than one ship, and so our shields stayed in Seolferwulf Seolferwulf 's bilge. 's bilge.

Dragon-Voyager backed her oars a ship's half-length away. She lay close, heaving on the water's slow swell, and for a moment her crew stared at my crew, and then I saw Haesten climbing up to the steering platform. He waved. "Can I come aboard?" he shouted. backed her oars a ship's half-length away. She lay close, heaving on the water's slow swell, and for a moment her crew stared at my crew, and then I saw Haesten climbing up to the steering platform. He waved. "Can I come aboard?" he shouted.

"You can come aboard," I called back, and watched as his aftermost oarsmen expertly turned Dragon-Voyager Dragon-Voyager so her stern came close to ours. The long oars were shipped as the two vessels closed, then Haesten leaped. Another man was waving to me from so her stern came close to ours. The long oars were shipped as the two vessels closed, then Haesten leaped. Another man was waving to me from Dragon-Voyager Dragon-Voyager's steering platform, and I saw it was Father Willibald. I waved back, then worked my way aft to greet Haesten.

He was bareheaded. He spread his hands as I approached, a gesture that spoke of helplessness, and he seemed to have difficulty speaking, but he finally found his voice. "I am sorry, lord," he said, and his tone was humble, convincing. "There are no words, Lord Uhtred," he said.

"She was a good woman," I said.

"Famously," he said, "and I do feel sorrow, lord."

"Thank you."

He glanced at my oarsmen, doubtless casting an eye on their weaponry, then looked back to me. "That sad news, lord," he said, "shadowed the reports of your victory. It was a great triumph, lord."

"It seems to have persuaded you to leave Wess.e.x," I said drily.

"I always intended to leave, lord," he said, "once we had our agreement, but some of our ships needed repair." He noticed Uhtred then, and saw the silver plates sewn onto the boy's sword belt. "Your son, lord?" he asked.

"My son," I said, "Uhtred."

"An impressive boy," Haesten lied.

"Uhtred," I called, "come here!"

He approached nervously, his eyes darting left and right as if expecting an attack. He was about as impressive as a duckling. "This is the Jarl Haesten," I told him, "a Dane. One day I'll kill him, or he'll kill me." Haesten chuckled, but my son just looked at the deck. "If he kills me," I went on, "your duty is to kill him."

Haesten waited for some response from Uhtred the Younger, but the boy just looked embarra.s.sed. Haesten grinned wickedly. "And my own son, Lord Uhtred?" he asked innocently, "he thrives, I trust, as a hostage?"

"I drowned the little b.a.s.t.a.r.d a month ago," I said.

Haesten laughed at the lie. "There was no need for hostages anyway," he said, "as I shall keep our agreement. Father Willibald will confirm that." He gestured toward Dragon-Voyager Dragon-Voyager. "I was going to send Father Willibald to Lundene," he went on, "with a letter. You might take him there yourself, lord?"

"Just Father Willibald?" I asked. "Didn't I bring you two priests?"

"The other one died," Haesten said carelessly, "after eating too many eels. You'll take Willibald?"

"Of course," I said and glanced at the fleet that still rowed northward. "Where do you go?"

"North," Haesten said airily, "East Anglia. Somewhere. Not Wess.e.x."

He did not want to tell me his destination, but it was plain that his ships were heading toward Beamfleot. We had fought there five years before and Haesten might have had bad memories of the place, yet Beamfleot, on the northern bank of the Temes estuary, offered two priceless a.s.sets. First was the creek called Hothlege, tucked behind the island of Caninga, and that creek could shelter three hundred ships, while above it, rearing high on a green hill, was the old fort. It was a place of great safety, much safer than the encampment Haesten had made on the sh.o.r.e of Cent, but he had only made that to entice Alfred to pay him to leave. Now he was leaving, but going to a place far more dangerous to Wess.e.x. In Beamfleot he would have an almost una.s.sailable fortress, yet still be within easy striking distance of Lundene and Wess.e.x. He was a serpent.

That was not Father Willibald's opinion. We had to bring the two ships within touching distance so the priest could clamber from one to the other. He sprawled clumsily onto Seolferwulf Seolferwulf 's deck, then bade a friendly farewell to Haesten, who gave me a parting grin before leaping back aboard his own ship. 's deck, then bade a friendly farewell to Haesten, who gave me a parting grin before leaping back aboard his own ship.

Father Willibald looked at me with confusion. One moment his face was all concern, the next it was excitement, both expressions accompanied by an impatient fidgeting as he tried to find words for one mood or the other. Concern won. "Lord," he said, "tell me, tell me it isn't true."

"It's true, father."

"Dear G.o.d!" he shook his head and made the sign of the cross. "I shall pray for her soul, lord. I shall pray for her soul nightly, lord, and for the souls of your dear children." His voice trailed away under my baleful gaze, but then his excitement got the better of him. "Such news, lord," he said, "such news I have!" Then, despairing of my expression, he turned to pick up his pathetic sack of belongings that had been tossed from the Dragon-Voyager Dragon-Voyager.

"What news?" I asked.

"The Jarl Haesten, lord," Willibald said eagerly. "He's requesting that his wife and two sons be baptized, lord!" He smiled as if expecting me to share his joy.

"He's what?" I asked in surprise.

"He seeks baptism for his family! I wrote the letter for him, addressed to our king! It seems our preaching bore fruit, lord. The jarl's wife, G.o.d bless her soul, has seen the light! She seeks our Lord's redemption! She has come to love our Savior, lord, and her husband has approved of her conversion."

I just looked at him, corroding his joy with my sour face, but Willibald was not to be so easily discouraged. He gathered his enthusiasm again. "Don't you see, lord?" he asked. "If she converts then he will follow! It's often thus, lord, that the wife first finds salvation, and when wives lead, husbands follow!"

"He's lulling us to sleep, father," I said. Dragon-Voyager Dragon-Voyager had rejoined the fleet by now and was rowing steadily north. had rejoined the fleet by now and was rowing steadily north.

"The jarl is a troubled soul," Willibald said, "he talked to me often." He raised his hands to the sky where a myriad waterfowl beat south on throbbing wings. "There is rejoicing in heaven, lord, when just one sinner repents. And he is so close to redemption! And when a chieftain converts, lord, then his people follow him to Christ."

"Chieftain?" I sneered. "Haesten's just an earsling. He's a t.u.r.d. And he's not troubled, father, except by greed. We'll have to kill him yet."

Willibald despaired of my cynicism and went to sit beside my son. I watched the two of them talk and wondered why Uhtred never showed any enthusiasm for my conversation, though he seemed fascinated by Willibald's. "I hope you're not poisoning the boy's brain," I called.

"We're talking about birds, lord," Willibald explained brightly, "and where they go in winter."

"Where do they go?"

"Beneath the sea?" he suggested.

The tide slackened, stilled, and turned, and we rode the flood back up the river. I sat brooding on the steering platform while Finan tended the big steering oar. My men rowed gently, content to let the tide do the work, and they sang the song of aegir, G.o.d of the sea, and of Ran, his wife, and of his nine daughters, all of whom must be flattered if a ship is to be safe on the wild waters. They sang the song because they knew I liked it, but the tune seemed empty and the words meaningless, and I did not join in. I just gazed at the smoke haze above Lundene, the darkness darkening a summer sky, and wished I were a bird, high in that nothingness, vanishing.

Haesten's letter stirred Alfred to a new liveliness. The letter, he said, was a sign of G.o.d's grace, and Bishop Erkenwald, of course, agreed. G.o.d, the bishop preached, had slaughtered the heathen at Fearnhamme and now had worked a miracle in the heart of Haesten. Willibald was sent to Beamfleot with an invitation for Haesten to bring his family to Lundene where both Alfred and aethelred would stand as G.o.dfathers to Brunna, Haesten the Younger, and the real Horic. No one now bothered to pretend that the deaf and dumb hostage was Haesten's son, but the deception was forgiven in the ebullience that marked Wess.e.x as that summer faded into autumn.

The deaf and dumb hostage, I gave him the name Harald, was sent to my household. He was a bright lad and I set him to work in the armory where he showed a skill with the sharpening stone and an eagerness to learn weapons. I also had custody of Skade, because no one else seemed to want her. For a time I displayed her in a cage beside my door, but that humiliation was small consolation for her curse. She was valueless as a hostage now, for her lover was mewed up on Torneie Island and one day I took her upriver in one of the smaller boats we kept above Lundene's broken bridge.

Torneie was close to Lundene and, with thirty men on the oars, we reached the River Colaun before midday. We rowed slowly up the smaller river, but there was little to be seen. Harald's men, they numbered fewer than three hundred, had made an earth wall topped by a thick thorn palisade. Spears showed above that spiny obstacle, but no roofs, because Torneie had no timber with which to make houses. The river flowed sluggish either side of the island, and was edged by marshland, beyond which I could see the twin camps of the Saxon forces that besieged the island. Two ships were moored in the river, both manned by Mercians, their job to prevent any supplies reaching the trapped Danes. "There's your lover," I told Skade, pointing to the thorns.

I ordered Ralla, who was steering the ship, to take us as close as he could to the island, and, when our bows were almost touching the reeds, I dragged Skade to the bows. "There's your one-legged, impotent lover," I told Skade. A handful of Danes had deserted, and they reported that Harald had been wounded in the left leg and groin. Wasp-Sting had evidently struck him beneath the skirt of his mail, and I remembered the blade striking bone and how I had forced it harder so that the steel had slid up his thigh, ripping muscles and opening blood vessels, and ended in his groin. The leg had turned rotten and had been cut off. He still lived, and perhaps it was his hatred and fervor that gave life to his men, who now faced the bleakest of futures.

Skade said nothing. She gazed at the thorn wall above which a few spear-points showed. She was dressed in a slave's tunic, belted tight around her thin waist.

"They've eaten their horses," I told her, "and they catch eels, frogs, and fish."

"They will live," she said dully.

"They're trapped," I said scornfully, "and this time Alfred won't pay bright gold for them to go away. When they starve this winter, they'll surrender, and Alfred will kill them all. One by one, woman."

"They will live," she insisted.

"You see the future?"

"Yes," she said, and I touched Thor's hammer.

I hated her, and I found it hard to take my eyes from her. She had been given the gift of beauty, yet it was the beauty of a weapon. She was sleek, hard and shining. Even as a degraded captive, unwashed and dressed in rags, she shone. Her face was bony, but softened by lips and by the thickness of her hair. My men gazed at her. They wanted me to give her to them as a plaything, and then kill her. She was reckoned to be a Danish sorceress, as dangerous as she was desirable, and I knew it was her curse that had killed my Gisela, and Alfred would not have objected had I executed her, yet I could not kill her. She fascinated me.

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The Burning Land Part 7 summary

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