Chapter 142: The Wolf's Tune
The Ouse River steamed in the morning chill, its surface a mirror until shattered by the wake of long, narrow knarrs sweeping south with the tide.
Oars rose and fell in perfect rhythm, steel caps and roundshields gleaming between the high gunwales.
Ahead of the lead ship, Vetrulfr's banner snapped in the wind, a white shape on a field of blood-red.
Along the eastern bank, hooves thundered. His cavalry, mail-clad from helm to heel lie beneath iron lamellar. Rode in a column beside the river, their destriers snorting plumes of frost.
Heavy lances rested in stirruped hands, round shields slung over shoulders. The sigil of the ochre vegisvir displayed proudly across their leather decoration.
The twin advance... one by water, one by land, gave the illusion of an army everywhere at once.
By the time the first hamlet sighted them, it was already too late.
The cavalry struck like a spearhead, smashing into the village green where a dozen levy spearmen scrambled to form a shieldwall.
The wall buckled at the first impact, shields splintering, men crushed beneath iron-shod hooves.
Those who were not already run through, were picked apart by horse Archers. A final blow gifted to the defeated.
Behind them, mailed riders fanned out in disciplined arcs, driving down fleeing men, cutting the paths of those who bolted for the church.
Moments later, the Knarr nosed against the muddy bank.
Warriors leapt ashore, axes in hand, shields locked, surging through narrow lanes toward the storehouses.
Gold chalices and candelabra were ripped from the altar; chests of grain and smoked meat were hauled down to the river.
The river-men worked in relays, while one party looted, another ferried the plunder to the boats, and a third stood guard against any counterattack.
Within the hour, smoke billowed from the thatch roofs, and the wolf banner was already moving south again.
Villages along the river woke to the sound of horns only to see sails on the horizon and riders cresting the hills in the same breath.
This was not the slow, opportunistic raiding of their grandfathers' age.
This was war by clockwork, land and water advancing in tandem, seizing, burning, and vanishing before the enemy could muster.
By nightfall, five settlements lay in ruin, their survivors trailing smoke and ash as they fled into the marshes.
Vetrulfr reined in his horse on a rise, watching both his riders and the knarrs regroup below.
"They'll say the wolf comes by river," he murmured to Armodr beside him, "but the truth is he comes from every direction at once. Let Cnut guess where I'll be tomorrow."
Armodr could only watch the smoke plume rise in the distance, as their ships set sail once more, and realize that he had completely underestimated the level of strategic depth that Vetrulfr possessed.
He was not a raider, or a King... But an Emperor in the making.
---
The hall in Winchester was warm with the heat of the hearth.
The rushes beneath Cnut's boots trodden flat by restless pacing. Outside, the wind carried the distant peal of church bells, not for worship, but warning.
The messengers knelt before him, their faces drawn. "The earls of the north, my king, did as commanded. They held their ground for the feigned retreat to draw him in."
Cnut's teeth ground together. "And?"
"They… waited. All day. The wolf never came."
Cnut's fists clenched on the arms of his chair. "Never came?" His voice dropped into a growl.
"While they sat in the frost like stones, the north burned?"
The older messenger nodded grimly. "And in the south… the lords remain within their palisades, behind crumbling Roman walls. They say they 'hold the line.'"
"Hold the line…" Cnut's voice was almost a hiss. "While the wolves ride past their gates, taking their grain, their gold, and their daughters. Holding nothing but their own cowardly hides."
He strode toward the hearth, embers flaring at his shadow's passing. "The White Wolf does not break his teeth on walls, he will take the land piece by piece until my kingdom is bones and ash. And my earls will have helped him do it."
The king turned sharply, eyes cold as iron. "Send word. If they will not ride out, I will find men who will. This war will not be won from behind walls."
---
The command tent was lit by a single brazier, the glow dancing on the faces of men hardened by wind, salt, and steel.
Maps lay spread across a low table, inked with the jagged coasts and winding rivers of England.
A scout knelt before them. "They march, King. Cnut rides with his huscarls. His earls follow, pulling men from every village in their path. They mean to meet you in the open, to end this quickly."
Armodr of the Jomsvikings crossed his arms, the gold on his bracers catching the firelight. "Then we should strike first. The Jomsvikings have not come to watch the Saxons form their lines while we camp in the mud."
"Aye," growled Gunnarr, Vetrulfr's Jarl. "Better to smash them now, while they're strung out on the march. Once they gather, their shieldwall will be twice as thick."
Another jarl jabbed a finger at the map. "Here, at the ford. If we hit them before they cross, they'll choke in the river and be easy prey."
Vetrulfr listened without a word, his eyes tracing the inked roads and forests. When the voices quieted, he finally spoke.
"You think like warriors," he said. "Bold. Direct. Predictable." He looked to Armodr. "If we meet them now, we fight on their terms. If we hold our ground, we fight on their terms. But if we vanish…" He let the thought hang.
Armodr frowned. "Vanish?"
"Aye." Vetrulfr's voice was low, steady. "We will run. We will hide. They will chase shadows and smoke. We will feign retreat, and when they are stretched thin, we will close around them like the jaws of the wolf."
He stepped back from the table, eyes glinting in the brazier's light. "Cnut wishes me to fight him on his terms. But he has yet to realize…" He paused, letting the silence bite.
"…he will forever be playing to my tune."
---
The frost bit deep that morning. It clung to the beards of Cnut's huscarls and turned the hems of their cloaks to stiff, rattling sheets of ice.
Breath steamed in the air, mingling with the smoke that still lingered from some unseen blaze to the south.
They had marched for days, across churned fields, through villages picked clean as carcasses.
Every well they found had been fouled with ash. Every storehouse was empty but for the gnawed bones of livestock slaughtered in haste. Even the dogs were gone.
"Another hamlet, lord," an earl muttered, drawing his cloak tighter. "Empty."
"Not empty," Cnut replied. His voice was low, bitter. "Hollowed."
They crested a ridge and saw it, a ring fort on the far bank of the river, its timber palisades blackened and sagging.
A harbor of rough-hewn piers jutted into the water, now deserted save for a few half-burned longships left to drift on their moorings.
The tide lapped lazily against them, rocking them like corpses adrift at sea.
The king urged his horse down the slope, hooves crunching through frost-hardened mud.
When he reached the fort's gate, it swung open on hinges that groaned like old bones.
Inside, the camp was a graveyard of coals, fire pits choked with ash, tent stakes left behind in frozen earth.
"They were here," said the same earl, glancing around in disbelief. "Yesterday, perhaps the day before. Where could they have—?"
"Anywhere," Cnut snapped. "The sea is their road, the wind their ally." His gaze swept the trampled yard, noting the hoofprints, dozens, maybe hundreds. All pointed outward, toward the riverbanks and the wide, empty waters beyond.
The wind shifted, carrying with it the faint scent of char. South. Always south.
"They ride ahead of us, lord," said another of his men. "But if we force the march—"
"And leave half our number frozen in the ditch before we see them?"
Cnut spat into the snow. "No. That is what they want. We chase them, we die tired and thin. They vanish, we burn our strength for nothing."
He turned his eyes toward the horizon, toward the smoke that curled faintly in the distance.
"They are not men," he said quietly. "Not here. Not now. They are ghosts… and we are the fools who hunt them."
The huscarls shifted uneasily, each man knowing the truth of it but unwilling to speak.
They had thought to defend the land by steel alone, to catch these raiders in the field and break them like any mortal foe.
But this was not war as they knew it. This was a storm that struck where it pleased, then was gone before the thunder reached the ear.
By nightfall, they abandoned the fort.
Cnut gave the order to turn south, but the men rode in silence, not with the eager discipline of hunters, but with the hollow-eyed gait of men who feared they would never catch what they sought.
And behind them, on the cold river wind, the smell of ash lingered still.