Chapter 200: Christendom on Fire
The halls of Senlis were bright with banners and tapestries, yet the court of King Henry I of France hummed with unease.
Summer light spilled through the arched windows, catching the dust motes that drifted above the heads of courtiers.
Knights lounged in polished mail, priests muttered in corners, and the king's advisors bent low at his ear.
Henry was young still, scarcely into his third decade, but already the lines of strain had etched themselves at the corners of his mouth.
To the east, the Holy Roman Emperor Conrad bled on two fronts.
To the north, England smoldered, its crown torn between Duncan of Scotland and Cnut's son Svein.
Frankia, by contrast, lay unburnt, its fields thick with grain, its markets bustling, its castles quiet.
Yet Henry did not smile at fortune.
His hand tightened on the arm of his throne as the whispers came again.
"Robert of Normandy builds," hissed Count Fulk, his beard forked and sharp.
"More motte-and-bailey forts each season, rising like mushrooms after rain. He trains men-at-arms beyond his levy, knights in iron who swear to him alone. Such strength, my king, can only mean rebellion."
Another joined in, Bishop Hugh of Beauvais, his voice oily.
"It is not only castles, sire. He gathers ships along the coast, more than needed to guard trade. He raises horsemen without your summons. He does not speak against you, no… but silence is itself suspicious."
Henry frowned.
He had heard such things before.
The court had grown fat on rumors of Normandy's ambitions.
Rebellion, treachery, overreach, all words tossed about like dice.
Yet the truth was harder to grasp.
Still, the king's mind gnawed at the picture: Robert, Duke of Normandy, shoring up his borders, drilling his knights, and building fleets as though war lurked just beyond the Channel.
"Why?" Henry asked aloud, his voice sharp.
"Normandy prospers under me. Why should Robert raise fortresses like a besieged man? Does he think to match my crown?"
The courtiers bent closer, eager to fan his suspicion.
"He would wear it, if given the chance," Fulk said.
"He bides his time, as the Bastard's line always has," murmured another.
Henry's lips thinned.
Rebellion. Always rebellion.
France's crown had long been heavy with it.
Dukes and counts who acted as kings in their own halls, who bowed in ceremony but ruled in fact.
Robert of Normandy, restless, proud, cunning, was he any different?
He had seized his current seat of power by rebelling against his own brother.
Who was to say he would not do the same again him, the King of France?
Robert may be taking his oath seriously, but to the rest of France it appeared as if he were preparing to turn his blade against his own sovereign.
And those who sought to gain from Robert's fall, from Normandy's ruin were quick to spin the web of lies.
"The duke hides his true intent," said Bishop Hugh, his eyes glinting in the candlelight. "He fears not wolves from the sea, but his rightful lord here in Paris. He builds against you, my king. What need has he of fleets, unless to strike at your coast?"
Henry sat silent, fingers drumming the arm of his chair.
He thought of Normandy's wealth, its hardy knights, its stone churches, its restless duke.
Feudal law gave him suzerainty, but law was thin armor against ambition.
And yet, deep inside, Henry wondered.
Could it be true? Could Robert's castles rise not against him, but against something worse?
One night, alone in his chamber, Henry confided to his chaplain.
"These tales of the wolf-king, they grow with every telling. They say he has turned thralls to work the fields, turned free men into legions, forged them with iron discipline, made even children drill with spear and shield. They say his fjords brim with silver and ships. And what do we have?"
The chaplain bowed. "Feudal levies, lord. Peasants bound by oath, knights bound by land. The old way."
Henry's lips curled bitterly.
"The old way kept the Northmen at bay once. Castles, knights, and oaths. But if the rumors are true then this wolf is not like the raiders before. He does not strike and vanish. He stays. He builds. And feudalism… feudalism bleeds more from within than without."
The chaplain dared a whisper. "Then perhaps Robert is wise, sire."
Henry stared long into the candle's flame, but gave no answer.
---
But Robert's halls in Rouen told a different tale.
The duke stood on the ramparts of his half-built castle, the timber towers smelling of fresh-cut pine, the ditch below alive with men digging and carting earth.
Beyond stretched the rolling fields of Normandy, dotted with thatched villages and new mottes crowned by palisades.
Knights clattered past on horseback, their spears upright like a grove of pines.
Robert's eyes narrowed toward the sea.
He remembered the stories, the longships of his ancestors, the raids that had carved Normandy itself from Frankish soil.
In those days, motte and bailey had been enough to blunt the Northmen's fury.
But this new wolf in the north, this Vetrulfr… he was no raider.
He was a conqueror. A builder… an emperor….
Reports reached him from traders and envoys alike.
Each passing day he received word of Iceland's fjords groaning with knarrs, and longships.
Of fields worked by thralls taken in raids, of warriors drilled like legions.
His blood chilled at the thought.
The old Norse had come for plunder and left with silver.
This one came to stay. Or worse….
No matter how much he pondered it, he could not see the answer…
What drove this white wolf of the north?
To conquer… to build?
Was this really the last gasp of a dying people?
Or was there something more?
Robert turned to his steward. "More men. More horse. More ships. If the wolf sails south, Normandy will be his first feast. I'll not be caught unready."
The steward hesitated. "My lord, the coffers strain already. Knights demand land for service, peasants grumble at new levies. To match the wolf-king's brood…"
Robert's hand clenched on the rampart. "To match him? No… I realized long ago that I cannot. But I can bleed him if he comes. And bleeding him is better than feeding him."
Robert pressed harder.
Castles rose at Caen, Falaise, Bayeux.
Timber turned to stone where coin allowed.
He sent riders through the countryside, summoning men to drill in new formations, tighter, more disciplined, echoing the tales of wolf-warriors in the north.
He bargained with merchants for horses, though prices soared.
He poured coin into shipyards, though every hull strained his purse.
Still it was not enough. His fields could not feed legions of men.
His peasants could not toil day and night as slaves.
Every knight demanded his fief, every levy returned to his plow.
Robert saw it clearly now, what had once been strength was weakness.
Feudal bonds raised men quickly but never held them long.
Castles defended, but they did not conquer.
The system that had checked his ancestors' raids could never withstand a wolf who turned plunder into empire.
Alone in his hall, Robert whispered to himself: "We are too slow. Too divided. When he comes, only fire will hold him back. And fire burns us all."
Thus, while France's king saw rebellion in Normandy's castles, Robert saw only the shadow of Vetrulfr's sails.
One man girded himself for treachery.
The other braced for invasion. And the wolf in the north sharpened his fangs, knowing both misread him in their own way.
---
In Rome, the Lateran halls smelled of incense and old stone, their frescoed walls heavy with the weight of centuries.
Pope Benedict IX sat in council, his youthful face pale beneath the red of his mantle.
Though still barely a man, he wore the Fisherman's Ring, and the burden of Christendom pressed like iron on his shoulders.
Letters lay strewn across the marble table, wax seals broken, ink still fresh.
Reports from the north, from the east, from the empire. Each one painted the same picture: chaos.
Conrad King of the Germans, Holy Roman Emperor was at war, not just against heathens, but also against fellow Christians.
The Wends poured into the Saxon Eastern March with fire and spear.
The Danes, enraged at their poisoned queen, had turned against the empire as well.
Invading the Duchy of Saxony from the North.
Two wars, both born of suspicion and treachery, both consuming the heart of Christendom.
Benedict rubbed his temples, his voice a whisper.
"What madness is this? The Emperor bleeds in Saxony, the Danes howl at his throat, and yet England is still lit aflame by Duncan and Svein? Where is Christ's hand in this?"
A cardinal shifted uneasily.
"Perhaps it is punishment, Holy Father. Pride and sin have sown this war. The princes rend each other like beasts."
Another spoke more darkly. "Or perhaps it is no punishment, but a test. For as the Germans bleed and Anglo-Saxons suffer, whispers rise of the White Wolf and this being his doing. Perhaps it is not Christ's hand that moves our Kings so, but the devil's...."
The words hung like smoke.
Benedict stared into the candlelight, young though he was, and felt older than the city around him.
"Christendom tears its own throat out," he murmured. "And the wolves wait for the carcass."