Ragnar attacked. Shield high, sword low, and the two shields cracked together and Kjartan’s sword parried the low strike, and both men heaved, trying to topple the other, and then Ragnar stepped back again. He had learned that Kjartan was fast and skilful.
‘She’s not a good whore now, though,’ Kjartan said. ‘She’s too raddled. Too filthy. Even a beggar won’t hump her now. I know. I offered her to one last week and he wouldn’t have her. Reckoned she was too dirty for him.’ And suddenly he came forward fast and hacked at Ragnar. There was no great skill in his attack, just sheer strength and speed, and Ragnar retreated, letting his shield take the fury, and I feared for him and took a pace forward, but Steapa held me back.
‘It’s his fight,’ Steapa said.
‘I killed your father,’ Kjartan said, and his sword drove a splinter of wood from Ragnar’s shield. ‘I burned your mother,’ he boasted, and another blow rang on the shield boss, ‘and I whored your sister,’ he said, and the next sword blow drove Ragnar back two paces. ‘And I shall piss on your gutted body,’ Kjartan shouted and he reversed a swing, took his blade low and swept it at Ragnar’s ankles again. This time he struck and Ragnar staggered. His crippled hand had instinctively dropped his shield low and Kjartan brought his own shield over the top to drive his enemy down, and Ragnar, who had said nothing throughout the fight, suddenly screamed. For a heartbeat I thought it was a doomed man’s scream, but instead it was rage. He drove his body under Kjartan’s shield, pushing the bigger man back by sheer strength, and then he stepped nimbly aside. I thought he had been lamed by the blow to his ankle, but he had iron strips on his boot and, though one strip was almost cut in two, and though he was bruised, he had not been injured and suddenly he was all anger and movement. It was as though he had woken up. He began to dance around Kjartan, and that was the secret of a duel. Keep moving. Ragnar moved, and he was filled with rage, and his speed almost matched Finan’s swiftness, and Kjartan, who thought he had found his enemy’s measure, was suddenly desperate. He had no more breath for insults, only enough to defend himself, and Ragnar was all ferocity and quickness. He hacked at Kjartan, turned him, hacked again, lunged, twisted away, feinted low, used his shield to knock away a parry and swept his sword, Heart-Breaker, to strike Kjartan’s helmet. He dented the iron, but did not pierce it, and Kjartan shook his head and Ragnar banged shield on shield to drive the big man back. His next blow shattered one of the limewood boards of Kjartan’s shield, the next took the shield’s edge, splitting the iron rim, and Kjartan stepped back and Ragnar was keening, a sound so horrible that the hounds around Thyra began yelping in sympathy.
Over two hundred men watched. We all knew what would happen now for the battle-fever had come to Ragnar. It was the rage of a sword-Dane. No man could resist such anger, and Kjartan did well to survive as long as he did, but at last he was driven back and he tripped on a hound’s corpse and fell on his back and Ragnar stepped over the frantic sweep of his enemy’s heavy sword and thrust down hard with Heart-Breaker. The blow broke through the mail-sleeve of Kjartan’s coat and severed the tendons of his sword arm. Kjartan tried to get up, but Ragnar kicked him in the face, then brought his heel hard down on Kjartan’s throat. Kjartan choked. Ragnar stepped back and let his battered shield slide off his left arm. Then he used his crippled left hand to take away Kjartan’s sword. He used his two good fingers to pull it from Kjartan’s nerveless hand and he threw it into the mud and then he killed his enemy.
It was a slow death, but Kjartan did not scream once. He tried to resist at first, using his shield to fend off Ragnar’s sword, but Ragnar bled him to death cut by cut. Kjartan said one thing as he died, a plea to be given back his sword so he could go to the corpse-hall with honour, but Ragnar shook his head. ‘No,’ he said, and never spoke another word until the last blow. That blow was a two-handed downwards thrust into Kjartan’s belly, a thrust that burst through the mail links and pierced Kjartan’s body, and went through the mail beneath Kjartan’s spine to stab the ground beneath, and Ragnar left Heart-Breaker there and stepped back as Kjartan writhed in his death pain. It was then that Ragnar looked up into the rain, his abandoned sword swaying where it pinned his enemy to the ground, and he shouted at the clouds. ‘Father!’ he shouted, ‘Father!’ He was telling Ragnar the Elder that his murder was avenged.
Thyra wanted vengeance as well. She had been crouching with her hounds to watch Kjartan’s death, but now she stood and called to the hounds who ran towards Ragnar. My first thought was that she was sending the beasts to eat Kjartan’s corpse, but instead they surrounded Ragnar. There were still twenty or more of the wolf-like beasts and they snarled at Ragnar, ringing him, and Thyra screamed at him. ‘You should have come before! Why didn’t you come before?’
He stared at her, astonished at her anger. ‘I came as soon …’ he began.
‘You went viking!’ she screamed at him. ‘You left me here!’ The dogs were anguished by her grief and they writhed around Ragnar, their hides blood-matted and their tongues lolling over blood-streaked fangs, just waiting for the word that would let them tear him to red ruin. ‘You left me here!’ Thyra wailed, and she walked into the dogs to face her brother. Then she dropped to her knees and began to weep. I tried to reach her, but the dogs turned on me, teeth bared and eyes wild, and I stepped hurriedly away. Thyra wept on, her grief as great as the storm which raged over Dunholm. ‘I shall kill you!’ she screamed at Ragnar.
‘Thyra,’ he said.
‘You left me here!’ she accused him. ‘You left me here!’ She stood again, and suddenly her face looked sane once more, and I could see she was still a beauty beneath the filth and the scars. ‘The price of my life,’ she said to her brother in a calm voice, ‘is your death.’
‘No,’ a new voice said, ‘no, it is not.’
It was Father Beocca who had spoken. He had been waiting under the high gate’s arch and now he limped through the carnage and spoke with a stern authority. Thyra snarled at him. ‘You’re dead, priest!’ she said, and she gave one of her wordless yelps and the dogs turned on Beocca as Thyra began to twitch like a madwoman again. ‘Kill the priest!’ she screamed at the dogs. ‘Kill him! Kill him! Kill him!’
I ran forward, then saw I had nothing to do.
The Christians often talk of miracles and I have always wanted to witness one such piece of magic. They claim the blind can be given their sight, the cripple made to walk and the leper healed. I have heard them tell stories of men walking on water, and even of dead men raised alive from their graves, but I have never seen such things. If I had seen that great magic then I would be a Christian today, but the priests tell me we must have faith instead. But that day, in the relentless rain, I saw a thing which was as close to a miracle as ever I witnessed.
Father Beocca, the skirts of his priest’s robes filthy with mud, limped into the press of vicious hounds. They had been sent to attack him, and Thyra was screaming at them to kill, but he ignored the beasts and they simply shrank away from him. They whimpered as though they feared this squint-eyed cripple and he hobbled calmly through their fangs and did not take his eyes off Thyra whose screeching voice faded to a whimper and then to great sobs. Her cloak was open, showing her scarred nakedness, and Beocca took off his own rain-sodden cloak and draped it about her shoulders. She had her hands at her face. She was still weeping, and the hounds bayed in sympathy, and Ragnar just watched. I thought Beocca would lead Thyra away, but instead he took her head in his two hands and he suddenly shook her. He shook her hard, and as he did he cried to the clouds. ‘Lord,’ he shouted, ‘take this demon from her! Take the evil one away! Spare her from Abaddon’s grip!’ She screamed then and the hounds put their heads back and howled at the rain. Ragnar was motionless. Beocca shook Thyra’s head again, shook it so hard that I thought he might break her neck. ‘Take the fiend from her, Lord!’ he called. ‘Release her to your love and to your great mercy!’ He stared upwards. His crippled hand was gripping Thyra’s hair with its dead ivy strand
s, and he pushed her head backwards and forwards as he chanted in a voice as loud as a warrior lord on a field of slaughter. ‘In the name of the Father,’ he shouted, ‘and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, I command you, foul demons, to come from this girl. I cast you into the pit! I banish you! I send you to hell for evermore and a day, and I do it in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost! Be gone!’
And Thyra suddenly began to cry. Not to scream and sob and gasp and struggle for breath, but just a gentle weeping, and she laid her head on Beocca’s shoulder and he put his arms about her and cradled her and looked at us with resentment as if we, bloodstained and armed and fierce, were the allies of the demons he had banished. ‘She’s all right now,’ he said awkwardly, ‘she’s all right now. Oh, go away!’ This peevish command was to the hounds and, astonishingly, they obeyed him, slinking away and leaving Ragnar unthreatened. ‘We must get her warm,’ Beocca said, ‘and we must get her dressed properly.’
‘Yes,’ I said, ‘we must.’
‘Well, if you won’t do it,’ Beocca said indignantly, because I had not moved, ‘then I shall.’ And he led Thyra towards Kjartan’s hall where the smoke still sifted from the roof-hole. Ragnar made to go after them, but I shook my head and he stopped. I put my right foot on Kjartan’s dead belly and yanked Heart-Breaker free. I gave the sword to Ragnar and he embraced me, but there was little elation in either of us. We had done the impossible, we had taken Dunholm, but Ivarr still lived and Ivarr was the greater enemy.
‘What do I say to Thyra?’ Ragnar asked me.
‘You tell her the truth,’ I said, because I did not know what else to say, and then I went to find Gisela.
Gisela and Brida washed Thyra. They washed her body and her hair, and they took the dead ivy away and they combed her golden hair, and then they dried it before the great fire in Kjartan’s hall, and afterwards they dressed her in a simple woollen robe and a cloak of otter fur. Ragnar then talked with her beside the fire. They talked alone and I walked with Father Beocca outside the hall. It had stopped raining. ‘Who is Abaddon?’ I asked him.
‘I was responsible for your education,’ he said, ‘and I am ashamed of myself. How could you not know that?’
‘Well I don’t,’ I said, ‘so who is he?’
‘The dark angel of the bottomless pit, of course. I’m sure I told you that. He’s the first demon who will torment you if you don’t repent and become a Christian.’
‘You’re a brave man, father,’ I told him.
‘Nonsense.’
‘I tried to reach her,’ I said, ‘but I was scared of the hounds. They killed thirty or more men today and you just walked into them.’
‘They’re only dogs,’ he said dismissively. ‘If God and Saint Cuthbert can’t protect me from dogs, what can they do?’
I stopped him, put both my hands on his shoulders and squeezed. ‘You were very brave, father,’ I insisted, ‘and I salute you.’
Beocca was enormously pleased with the compliment, but tried to look modest. ‘I just prayed,’ he said, ‘and God did the rest.’ I let him go and he walked on, kicking at a fallen spear with his club foot. ‘I didn’t think the dogs would hurt me,’ he said, ‘because I’ve always liked dogs. I had one as a child.’
‘You should get yourself another one,’ I said. ‘A dog would be company for you.’
‘I couldn’t work as a small boy,’ he went on as though I had not spoken. ‘Well, I could pick stones and scare birds off newly scattered seed, but I couldn’t do proper work. The dog was my friend, but he died. Some other boys killed it.’ He blinked a few times. ‘Thyra’s a pretty woman, isn’t she?’ he said, sounding wistful.
‘She is now,’ I agreed.
‘Those scars on her arms and legs,’ he said, ‘I thought Kjartan or Sven had cut her. But it wasn’t them. She did it to herself.’
‘She cut herself?’ I asked.
‘Slashed herself with knives, she told me. Why would she do that?’
‘To make herself ugly?’ I suggested.
‘But she isn’t,’ Beocca said, puzzled. ‘She’s beautiful.’
‘Yes,’ I said, ‘she is,’ and again I felt sorry for Beocca. He was getting old and he had always been crippled and ugly, and he had always wanted to marry, and no woman had ever come to him. He should have been a monk and thus forbidden to marry. Instead he was a priest, and he had a priest’s mind for he looked at me sternly.
‘Alfred sent me to preach peace,’ he said, ‘and I have watched you murder a holy brother, and now this.’ He grimaced at the dead.
‘Alfred sent us to make Guthred safe,’ I reminded him.
‘And we have to make certain Saint Cuthbert is safe,’ he insisted.
‘We will.’
‘We can’t stay here, Uhtred, we have to go back to Cetreht.’ He looked up at me with alarm in his one good eye. ‘We have to defeat Ivarr!’
‘We will, father,’ I said.
‘He has the biggest army in Northumbria!’
‘But he will die alone, father,’ I said, and I was not sure why I said that. The words just came from my tongue, and I thought a god must have spoken through me. ‘He will die alone,’ I said again, ‘I promise it.’
But there were things to do first. There was Kjartan’s hoard to uncover from the hall where the dogs were kenneled, and we put Kjartan’s slaves to work, digging into the shit-stinking floor, and beneath it were barrels of silver and vats of gold and crosses from churches and arm rings and leather bags of amber, jet and garnets, and even bolts of precious imported silk that had half rotted away in the damp earth. Kjartan’s defeated warriors made a pyre for their dead, though Ragnar insisted that neither Kjartan nor what was left of Sven should be given such a funeral. Instead they were stripped of their armour and their clothes and then their naked corpses were given to those pigs which had been spared the autumn slaughter and lived in the north-west corner of the compound.
Rollo was given charge of the fortress. Guthred, in the excitement of victory, had announced that the fort was now his property and that it would become a royal fortress of Northumbria, but I took him aside and told him to give it to Ragnar. ‘Ragnar will be your friend,’ I told him, ‘and you can trust him to hold Dunholm.’ I could trust Ragnar, too, to raid Bebbanburg’s lands and to keep my treacherous uncle in fear.
So Guthred gave Dunholm to Ragnar, and Ragnar entrusted its keeping to Rollo and he left him just thirty men to hold the walls while we went south. Over fifty of Kjartan’s defeated men swore their loyalty to Ragnar, but only after he had determined that none of them had taken part in the hall-burning that had killed his parents. Any man who had helped with that murder was killed. The rest would ride with us, first to Cetreht, and then to confront Ivarr.
So half our job was done. Kjartan the Cruel and Sven the One-Eyed were dead, but Ivarr lived and Alfred of Wessex, though he had never said as much, wanted him dead too.
So we rode south.
Eleven
We left next morning. The rain had gone southwards, leaving a rinsed sky ragged with small hurrying clouds beneath which we rode from Dunholm’s high gate. We left the treasure in Rollo’s keeping. We were all wealthy men for we had taken Kjartan’s fortune, and if we survived our meeting with Ivarr then we would share those riches. I had more than replaced the hoard I had left at Fifhaden and I would go back to Alfred as a rich man, one of the richest in his kingdom, and that was a cheering thought as we followed Ragnar’s eagle-wing standard towards the nearest ford across the Wiire.
Brida rode with Ragnar, Gisela was beside me and Thyra would not leave Beocca’s side. I never did discover what Ragnar had said to her in Kjartan’s hall, but she was calm with him now. The madness was gone. Her fingernails were trimmed, her hair was tidy beneath a white bonnet and that morning she had greeted her brother with a kiss. She still looked unhappy, but Beocca had the words to comfort her and she drew on those words as if they were water and she were dying of thirst. They both
rode mares and Beocca, for once, had forgotten his discomfort in the saddle as he talked with Thyra. I could see his good hand gesturing as he spoke. Behind him a servant led a packhorse which carried four big altar crosses taken from Kjartan’s hoard. Beocca had demanded they be returned to the church, and none of us could deny him for he had proved himself as great a hero as any of us, and now he leaned towards Thyra, spoke urgently, and she listened.
‘She’ll be a Christian within a week,’ Gisela said to me.
‘Sooner,’ I said.
‘So what happens to her?’ she asked.
I shrugged. ‘He’ll talk her into a nunnery, I suppose.’
‘Poor woman.’
‘At least she’ll learn obedience there,’ I said. ‘She won’t make twelve into thirteen.’
Gisela punched my arm, thus hurting herself instead of me. ‘I swore,’ she said, rubbing her knuckles where they had scraped against my mail, ‘that once I found you again I would not leave you. Not ever.’
‘But thirteen?’ I asked her. ‘How could you do that?’
‘Because I knew the gods were with us,’ she said simply. ‘I cast the runesticks.’
‘And what do the runesticks say of Ivarr?’ I asked.
‘That he will die like a snake under a hoe,’ she said grimly, then flinched as a gobbet of mud, thrown up by a hoof of Steapa’s horse, spattered onto her face. She wiped it off, then frowned at me. ‘Must we go to Wessex?’
‘I swore as much to Alfred.’
‘You swore?’
‘I gave him my oath.’
‘Then we must go to Wessex,’ she said without enthusiasm. ‘Do you like Wessex?’
‘No.’
‘Alfred?’
‘No.’
‘Why not?’
‘He’s too pious,’ I said, ‘and he’s too earnest. And he stinks.’
‘All Saxons stink,’ she said.
‘He stinks worse than most. It’s his illness. It makes him shit all the time.’
She grimaced. ‘Doesn’t he wash?’
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