Valkyries Calling

Chapter 141: The Wolf Waits



The night fog rolled in from the sea, wrapping the Northumbrian camp in pale shrouds.

Fires burned low, casting shadows on the leather tents and the restless shapes of horses tethered to picket lines.

The scent of wet earth, salt, and steel hung heavy.

Armodr of the Jomsvikings sat by the main fire, sharpening the edge of his long axe, his brow furrowed.

"So we sit here and wait?" he grumbled. "The men grow restless. We've already taken their scouts. Why not ride south and crush their levy before it gathers?"

Vetrulfr stood across from him, cloak draped over his shoulders, the white fur of the arctic wolf's head resting above his own.

His voice was calm, but there was a flint edge to it.

"Because, old friend, a wise king will not march into the teeth of my cataphracts. He will hold his men behind timber and stone, force us to burn time and blood in a siege. He knows we are killers, but even killers must eat, and siege lines devour supplies."

Armodr spat into the dirt. "Then what? We just glare at each other over walls until the wind rots our sails?"

"No," Vetrulfr said, stepping closer, his eyes glinting in the firelight.

"If Cnut hides behind his pallisades, then he gives us the gift of time. We will scour the riverlands. From these hills in Northumbria to the green fields of Kent, every village, every monastery, every farmstead will feel our hand. Gold, silver, grain, women, everything of worth will be ours, while his men watch from their gates. We will bleed his kingdom without ever facing his spear points."

Armodr's axe paused in his hands, the grindstone forgotten. "And if he's foolish enough to come out?"

Vetrulfr smiled a slow, wolfish smile.

"Then we ride them down in the open field. My horsemen will shatter his lines before his second rank has time to grip their shields. The Saxons have never faced heavy cavalry from the sea. The shock alone will break them."

He turned his gaze toward the dark south, where unseen fortresses held silent watch. "So we wait and watch. The next move belongs to Cnut. Whether he hides or charges, the jaws will close all the same."

The wind shifted, carrying the faint tang of wood smoke from far-off hearths. Vetrulfr inhaled it like a hunter catching the first scent of prey.

"Let him think himself a lion," he said softly. "He will learn what it is to be hunted by wolves."

---

The chill of early morning clung to the Northumbrian hills.

Along the ridgeline, the banners of the northern earls rose like forest pines, wolves, boars, crosses, and dragons stitched in bold colors.

Horns sounded across the vale, echoing off the low stone walls.

Men-at-arms poured into the mustering ground: chain-clad housecarls, levy spearmen, and a scattering of mounted thegns on shaggy northern horses.

From a distance, it looked like strength, order, purpose, resolve. But to Vetrulfr's eye, it was something else entirely.

He sat astride his black destrier on a rise a half-mile away, the white wolf-pelt hood thrown back so the wind could sweep through his pale hair.

Around him, his captains, grim Varangians, Norsemen forged under their tutelage, iron-faced Jomsvikings, and even a few Skraelingr scouts from Vinland all watched in silence.

Armodr leaned forward in his saddle, eyes narrowing. "They're pushing their lines out. Look at the spacing, they're inviting us to strike."

"Aye," Vetrulfr said quietly. "They want us to believe they've shown their throat."

His gaze followed the slow, deliberate shuffle of their ranks toward a low valley where the mists clung thick as wool. "But that fog hides more than the river."

"They're baiting us?" Gunnarr asked, voice low.

"They're begging us," Vetrulfr replied. "No lord who values his cavalry would charge into that bowl unless he'd lost his wits. Every track in and out will be watched, the banks lined with spearmen and archers. Cnut thinks to pin my riders in mud and blood."

Armodr frowned. "Then what's our move? Break off? Take the bait and shatter them before they spring the trap?"

Vetrulfr's smile was thin. "No. We let them stand there in their armor until their feet ache and their grain runs low. We ride elsewhere. Leave the fools clutching their spears while the villages behind them burn."

He turned his mount with a nudge of his knee, the destrier snorting and stamping the turf.

"They want a battle on their ground. I'll give them a war on mine."

Behind him, the Varangian horns called the order to withdraw, and the host began to melt away into the hills, disappearing like wolves into the forest.

Across the valley, the northern earls' standards still flapped bravely in the wind, unaware that their trap had been seen, weighed, and left to rust in the dew.

Vetrulfr did not look back. The day was young, and there was much yet to plunder.

---

By nightfall, the mists in the valley had thinned, revealing the neat lines of the northern host still standing watch over their empty trap.

The spearmen shifted uneasily, stamping cold feet, muttering about the hour.

Earl Æthelred's brow was furrowed as he scanned the far hills.

"Where are they? Your scouts swore the heathens were close this morning."

"They were," grunted Earl Thurstan, pointing south. In the fading light, a dull smear of grey rose on the horizon. Not cloud, smoke. Heavy, low, spreading with the wind.

A rider galloped up the slope, helm askew, mud caked to his mail. He slid from the saddle, panting.

"They've gone, lord. Slipped past us at dawn. They're riding the river-road… burning every hamlet they touch."

Silence hung over the earls' circle. The banners overhead flapped like tattered sails in a dead wind.

Æthelred spat into the grass. "We sat here all day like bait on a hook, and the fish swam right around us."

"They're not fish," Thurstan said grimly. "They're wolves. And they've scented easier prey."

Below them, the army began to murmur as word spread.

The men had been ready for battle, hearts braced for the clash of shield and steel, but now there would be only long marches and the bitter stench of villages already pillaged.

Far to the south, the smoke kept rising, black against the reddening sky. And would continue to burn until dawn.


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