Valkyries Calling

Chapter 150: The Empire of Wolves



The wind howled down from the ice-wreathed cliffs of Ullrsfjordr, biting sharp as wolf teeth, but the harbor below pulsed with life.

The great fjord had become more than just a cradle of northern might; it was now the beating heart of an empire cast upon waves.

Dark-hulled knarrs, wide and deep-bellied for cargo, bobbed against the docks, their dragon-prowed cousins, lean, swift drakkar, weaving around them like predators among whales.

Smoke curled up from forge-halls and smokehouses, where long strips of dried fish, jerky, and cured fat were bundled and hauled aboard in barrels.

The rhythmic creak of wood and slap of rope against mast carried across the water, mingling with the shouted calls of sailors.

Norse, Gaelic, and a smattering of foreign tongues picked up from trade across the isles and ice ways.

One knarr was bound east, heavy with crates of forged spearheads, linen, iron nails, mead, and salted cod.

Its course would follow the coast of Alba, docking at newly allied harbors to supply Vetrulfr's host, an army no longer limited by the icy logistics of Iceland alone.

Another trio of ships, loaded with smoked meats, copper kettles, goats, and kegs of fermented milk, hoisted their sails for the long western haul.

They would brave the grey teeth of the North Atlantic to reach Greenland's icy settlements, and beyond them, the mist-veiled colonies of Vinland.

These ships bore messages and tools for expansion, bricks of iron, polished axes, and crossbows crafted in Icelandic forges at a pace no one had imagined before Vetrulfr's rise.

Still others arrived from foreign shores, with furs from Rus', spices from distant Frankish traders, or stolen English grain bought from smugglers.

Each crew had its own tale, its own loyalties, but all served the dream that Vetrulfr had kindled.

A horn sounded once from the watchtower. A blessing from the skald-priest followed, a ritual mix of Norse and Celtic rites now common in these halls.

A splash of blood, a muttered prayer to Ullr and Brigid alike, and a ceremonial toast of warm mead from a carved antler horn.

The sails filled, and like silent ghosts, the ships slipped away, some east into war, others west into the unknown, while back on shore, the wolf banners flapped in the wind above the blackened peaks.

And high above it all, in the long hall atop the hill, Roisín stood by the high window once more, watching her husband's empire stretch itself across the sea.

In the quiet shadow of that long hall, Roisín turned from the high window as a chill crept through the stone beneath her bare feet.

The manifest scroll still lay open upon the carved oaken table, inked with tallies of smoked venison, iron cart wheels, and trade-pledged Skraelingr thralls.

These were not the words of a frontier. These were the ledgers of a kingdom. And though Vetrulfr's shadow stretched across oceans, it was she who held the quill in his absence.

The ships sailed by his will, but it was her hand that signed their leave.

And as the wind howled once more from Ullrsfjordr's crown, Roisín knew: this empire, for all its strength, would stand or starve by the choices made not just in battle, but here, at the hearth.

---

The coast of Vinland roared with the sound of waves breaking against black stone and pine-fringed fjords, but louder still was the ceaseless labor of a young empire in motion.

Timber piers stretched like claws into the sea, where knarrs and karves floated in tight procession.

Crews shouted in Old Norse and Gaelic, hauling barrels of whale oil, salted seal meat, iron nails, and furs from the interior down gangplanks slick with sea spray.

Others loaded casks of mead, copper tools, and coils of hemp bound for Greenland and Iceland; the great circulatory system of the northern empire never at rest.

Overlooking the harbor stood a sturdy mead-hall clad in white-painted timber and capped with a silvered roof, glinting like the fang of a wolf.

Before it, a gathering of warriors stood in a semicircle formation, mail-clad, armed with long axes and Norse swords forged in the damascene pattern, their eyes cold and hardened by this frontier land.

At the center of the group stood Jarl Hrolfr Bjarnisson, a man with grizzled hair and a mangy beard. His eyes swept the harbor with pride and frustration alike.

His hall bore the carved wolf of Vetrulfr's sigil, and his words echoed with the authority of a man trusted to govern the most distant reach of the northern world.

"We build, we trade, we grow. And yet we bleed," Hrolfr muttered, passing a message scroll to his skald, who tucked it into a leather pouch to be sent east on the next tide.

"The Skraelingr do not sleep. The raids from the southern forests grow more brazen. And Vetrulfr has taken our finest scouts to Albion's shores."

One of his huskarl, a younger man with a raven tattoo across his throat, scowled.

"The chieftains we conquered swore fealty. Their sons serve us well still. The scouts we trained among them fight for our cause even now… in England."

"Aye," Hrolfr nodded, "and the loss is felt here. The woods are vast. The Skraelingr are clever and patient. They know how to melt into the trees. With our best eyes gone, we are less blind than before… but still less than we were."

Another voice, feminine and firm, cut through the sea wind. Yrsa Gormrsdóttir, daughter of Gormr, and wife of the Jarl of Vinland.

"Then train more," she said. "We've ruled these tribes for five winters now. Their blood runs through the veins of our courts. Make their children our own eyes."

Hrolfr's grim frown cracked into a toothy smile. "You speak like your father. Good... we'll need more of that before long."

He gestured toward the harbor again, where another knarr was slipping into the bay, its deck lined with barrels marked for Vetrulfr's campaign, pitch, rope, dried fish, sharpened stakes, and crates of Skraelingr-forged arrows.

"Vinland is no longer a colony," the Jarl said. "It is a wolf-den of its own. And the howl of our war is heard even across the sea."


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.