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Viking 2: Sworn Brother

Page 18

by Tim Severin


  Disgusted, I pushed open the door of the house and gathered up a few clothes, thrusting them angrily into a travelling satchel. I vowed that I would never again enter that odious house, or work one more hour on the farm for old Audun’s benefit, or speak to my treacherous wife. Slinging the satchel over my shoulder, I stormed out of the building feeling utterly betrayed.

  OF COURSE I went to Thrand. Of all the people who had ever guided and advised me, Thrand had always been the most staunch. When I told him about the scorn poles and asked how I could fight back against the slur, he brought me to my senses.

  ‘The more you stamp on a turd,’ he said bluntly, ‘the further it spreads. Let the matter alone, there’s nothing you can do about it.’

  It was good advice, but I was too angry and resentful to accept it outright.

  ‘What about Grettir?’ I said. ‘Should I tell him? And how will he react?’

  ‘Grettir’s got far more serious threats to think about,’ said Thrand. ‘Of course, he will get to know about the scorn poles like everyone else. All you can do is make sure that he hears the news before it is common gossip. Then it is for him to decide if he wants to do anything about it. But, as I said, a public denial is useless. Let the matter drop, ignore it, wait for the uproar to die down and for the next new scandal to erupt and smother it. If you tell me where to find him, I’ll go to see Grettir and talk with him.’

  ‘He’ll still be hiding out at his mother’s house,’ I replied. ‘Should I do anything about Gunnhildr?’

  ‘Well, for a start you can expect that she will bring divorce proceedings against you. She’s probably lined up some hostile witnesses already, rehearsing them to appear at the next district gathering to support her claim.’

  ‘I’ll go there myself and deny the accusation,’ I said defiantly, still stung by the injustice of my predicament.

  ‘I doubt that will do much good,’ said Thrand calmly. ‘For any chance of success you’ll need to be represented by skilful advocates at the court, and there’s no one you know who can act in that capacity.’

  ‘Maybe I could ask Snorri Godi,’ I suggested.

  ‘Snorri Godi is unlikely to act on your behalf. He helped to arrange the match in the first place and he will look foolish trying to act for an aggrieved spouse. The best you can expect from him is that he might help to recover your mundur, the fire ruby. And when it comes to keeping the jewel from falling permanently into Gunnhildr’s hands, I think I can be of use.’

  ‘How can you help?’ I asked, but Thrand did not answer. He only advised me to get a good night’s sleep so as to have a clear head in the morning. That was impossible. It was long after nightfall before I fell into a restless slumber, plagued by black dreams in which I was pursued by a death hag. When I woke, it was to find Thrand gone.

  He came back four days later, and in his absence I alternately seethed with anger at Gunnhildr and concocted wild plots to avenge myself for her perfidy, or I felt sorry for myself and wondered how to escape from this crisis.

  Thrand was as calm as always when he returned. ‘Gunnhildr has announced publicly that she is seeking a divorce,’ he confirmed. ‘She and her father are claiming back the farm. It was her dowry, so that is just a formality. But they also want to keep your mundur, the fire ruby, as you are the one at fault.’ My face must have showed my vexation and despair.

  ‘The divorce is all but guaranteed,’ Thrand went on, ‘but for the moment you need not worry about the fire ruby. It is in safe hands.’

  ‘What do you mean?’ I asked.

  ‘Snorri Godi has it. I went to see Snorri Godi and reminded him about the initial agreement at the time of your marriage: that the mundur was to be valued at thirty marks and could be redeemed in the event of a divorce. He said that his inclination was not to get involved in such a messy business, but because Grettir had spared his son Thorodd’s life he would use his influence to get Audun and Gunnhildr to hand the jewel over to him, and he would hold it in safe keeping until you could provide thirty marks to redeem it.’

  ‘I’m surprised that Gunnhildr or that miserly father of hers agreed to such a proposal,’ I said. ‘They are so grasping that they wouldn’t accept a verbal assurance. They know that I could never raise thirty marks.’

  ‘Snorri Godi told them that the sum is guaranteed. He is holding a surety for that amount.’

  ‘What do you mean? Snorri won’t lie about something like that.’

  ‘He didn’t,’ said Thrand. ‘I’ve left thirty marks of hack silver with him.’

  I was stunned.

  But Thrand had not finished. ‘I also went to see Grettir and had a talk with him, told him about the scorn poles and asked him what he wanted to do about it. As I expected, he took the matter in his stride. Commented that far worse things were being said about him and one more false accusation would make no difference. When I suggested that he could solve all his problems by leaving the country and that you would probably go with him, he answered that he had no intention of running away from his enemies, which you knew already. Also to tell you that his younger brother, Illugi, has now grown to manhood, and that he felt he should stay to protect him. Grettir still feels guilty that he deserted his older brother Atli, who was killed during his first outlawry. He asked me to wish you well on your travels.’

  ‘My travels?’ I asked.

  ‘Yes,’ Thrand replied ‘I told Grettir that you and I were leaving Iceland for a while, long enough for the scandal to die down and for you to have a chance to win the thirty marks to redeem your mundur.’

  ‘Thrand,’ I said, ‘I’m deeply grateful to you for the money you have left with Snorri Godi, but there’s no reason for you to desert your farm.’

  Thrand shrugged. ‘I have been sitting too long in this quiet corner. I feel the wanderlust coming back, and I want to return to the places I knew as a young man, the places where I won my silver. Who knows – you may do the same.’

  ‘You never told me where or how you got your hoard,’ I said.

  ‘Until now there was no need. Besides, I had my reasons for remaining silent,’ he answered. ‘But you should know that I fought with the felag, with the Jomsvikings.’

  Every boy in Iceland who dreamed of plunder and martial glory had heard about the Jomsvikings, but I had not known whether they were mythical or whether they really existed. If Thrand said they were real, then I was prepared to take his word on it.

  ‘What did Grettir say when you told him that you and I would be going abroad?’

  ‘He quoted some lines from the Havamal:

  “A better burden may no man bear

  For wanderings wide than wisdom

  It is better than wealth on unknown ways

  And in grief a refuge it gives.” ’

  Thrand looked at me and with a note of compassion in his voice said, ‘Appropriate, don’t you think?’

  TEN

  JOMSBURG WAS AN indistinct smudge on the horizon for half a day. Since first light our ship, a weather-beaten merchantman owned by a syndicate of Wendish traders, had been edging slowly towards the home of the Jomsvikings, yet by noon we did not seem to have come any closer. After the dramatic cliffs and rocky shores of Iceland and Norway, I was disappointed by the apparently featureless Baltic coast ahead. Its monotony was accentuated by the grey overcast sky reflected in murky water under our keel. Thrand and I had already spent two weeks on the voyage and I was impatient to reach our destination. I stood gripping the weather shrouds as if I could drag the vessel bodily forward.

  ‘We’ll arrive at the time the Gods have decided, and that will be soon enough,’ said Thrand, noting my mood.

  ‘Is that where you won your hoard?’ I asked, staring towards the dark line on the horizon where the sky met the sea.

  ‘Not here, but in the company of comrades who lived here,’ he replied.

  ‘When was the last time you saw them?’

  ‘Not since the great battle in Jorunga Bay against Earl Haakon of Norway
more than thirty years ago.’

  ‘Do you have any idea what might have happened to them since then? Have you heard anything?’

  ‘No, not after our defeat,’ he answered and walked away to the far side of the deck and stood staring down into the water, his face expressionless.

  I would have left the matter there if one of the Wendish sailors had not sidled up to me. Ever since Thrand and I had joined the ship as passengers, the man had been glancing at my taciturn companion, trying not to let his curiosity show. Now as our ship crept closer to Jomsburg, the sailor took his chance to ask the question that had been on his mind for days.

  ‘Old Jomsviking, eh?’ he enquired in his heavily accented Norse, jerking his head at Thrand.

  ‘I don’t know,’ I replied.

  ‘Looks Jomsviking, sure,’ said the sailor. ‘Going to Jomi. Maybe for his friends. But not many to find now. They liked to die.’

  I waited for a few moments and then crossed to where Thrand stood watching the water rippling gently past our scuffed hull and asked him what the sailor had meant. There was a long silence before the tall Icelander finally replied and he spoke so quietly that I had to strain to hear him. For the first time in all the years I had known him, Thrand’s voice had a tremor of emotion. Whether it was sorrow, pride or shame, I could not tell.

  ‘Only eighty came out of the sea battle alive; eighty of all those who did not turn their backs on the enemy. They took refuge on an island and ten of them died of exposure before the enemy hunted them down and brought the survivors before their executioner. Thorkel Leira was his name. Earl Haakon had ordered that no Jomsviking was to be left alive. Their hands and legs were bound so tightly that a stick had to be thrust through their hair – they took great pride in braiding their hair before battle – and each man was half-carried to his fate, as if he was a dead animal brought home on a pole after the hunt. The headsman asked the same question of each man, “Are you afraid of dying?” ’

  ‘What did they reply?’

  ‘Some answered, “I am content to die,” or words to that effect. Others insisted that they be allowed to face the headsman’s sword so they could see the blow coming. One man’s last request was that his hands should be untied so he could hold a dagger in the air while his head was lopped from his shoulders.’

  ‘Why such a strange request?’ I commented. ‘What could he have been thinking of?’

  ‘He said that in the Jomsviking barracks he and his companions had often discussed if the mind resides in the head or in the body, and now he had the chance to settle the matter. He had decided to hold up the dagger after death, so if he let it drop when his head left his body, then his head was the seat of his decision. However, if the dagger stayed clutched in his hand, then his body had made the decision and was sticking to it.’

  ‘And what was the outcome of the experiment?’

  ‘The dagger hit the ground before his body.’

  ‘If I understood the Wend properly, he said that a few of the Jomsvikings survived. So why did Earl Haakon spare their lives when he had sworn to kill them all?’

  Thrand smiled grimly. ‘It was Sven the son of Bui’s doing. He had exceptional yellow hair, long and glossy, and he was very proud of it. He grew it almost to his waist and spent a great deal of time combing and arranging it. When his turn came to go before the executioner he asked for someone to be assigned to hold up his hair so it did not get bloodstained when his head came off. Thorkel Leira agreed, and told his chief assistant to hold the hair to one side. Then just as Thorkel made his sword stroke, Sven jerked his head forward, pulling the assistant off balance so the sword struck the man’s wrists, cutting off a hand. Of course Thorkel Leira was furious and was about to take a second cut at Sven and behead him properly when Earl Haakon, who had seen what happened, intervened. He said that the Jomsvikings were proving so awkward even in the manner of their death, that it would be easier to set the remainder free if they promised never to take up arms against him again. He knew that a Jomsviking honours his word.’

  ‘How many were left alive to make that promise?’

  ‘Just twenty-five of the eighty who were captured,’ Thrand answered, and before I could put the obvious question he added, ‘and, yes, I was one of them.’

  It was dusk by the time our ship entered the channel leading to Jomsburg itself, and by then I realised I had been mistaken about the apparent monotony of the coastline. The final stages of our approach revealed a long line of cliffs, not ragged and raw as in Iceland, but a regular wall of brown and grey rock. At its foot a beach of rocks and boulders gradually changed to a long strip of white sand backed by dunes. Here we turned into a river mouth to find a town built on an island where a steep hill rose close to the bank. Its summit provided the site for the stronghold of the Jomsvikings. Watchtowers dominated a palisaded citadel and two long breastworks extended down the slope of the hill to enclose a military harbour within the protective perimeter. Heading for the commercial wharves, our ship continued upstream, and I noticed Thrand look into the mouth of the Jomsviking harbour as we passed. He must not have liked what he saw. The pilings which fronted the river were in poor condition, their timbers soggy and rotten. Two massive wooden gates faced with iron plates had formerly protected the entrance – in times of siege they could be swung closed, sealing off the harbour inside. Now they were sagging and askew, and the ramparts which had allowed the defenders to hurl missiles at their attackers were crumbling. The stronghold of the Jomsvikings looked rundown.

  As soon as we docked, Thrand and I left the ship and set off for the citadel. The town looked prosperous enough and was far larger than I had expected, with a regular grid pattern of streets and numerous stalls, warehouses and shops, now shuttered up for the night. It was when we began to climb the hill towards the Jomsviking citadel that signs of neglect reappeared. The roadway was potholed and weeds grew along each side. Nor was the main gateway leading into the citadel properly guarded. A trio of bored soldiers made no attempt to stop us as we walked through the gate into the main enclosure. The space inside was a large oval and in its centre was a parade ground. On each side stood four large barn-like structures, which were clearly barracks. Each building was at least eighty paces in length, and solidly built from heavy tree trunks in blockhouse construction, with a roof of wooden shingles. I noted that three of the barracks were derelict. Their roofs had holes and in several places the roof ridges sagged. Only the fourth barrack block, the one nearest the entrance gate, was still in use. Its roof was neatly patched, smoke arose from several chimney holes, and at least a score of men were seated on benches at the main doorway, talking or playing a board game set on a trestle table between them.

  As Thrand and I walked towards them, they looked up. Thrand was still twenty paces away when I saw one of the men rise to his feet. He was a leathery-looking character, dressed in sombre civilian clothes but with the unmistakable bearing of a professional warrior. Judging by his grey hair, he was about the same age as my companion. Suddenly he slammed his hand down on the table, making the game pieces jump into the air. ‘Thrand!’ he called. ‘By the head of Hymir’s ox! it must be Thrand. I would know those long shanks anywhere!’ He hurried across to my companion and seized him in a bear hug. ‘I never thought to see you again!’ he cried. ‘Where have you been all these years? I heard rumours that you were with a raiding party in the Irish Sea, but that was at least ten years back and since then there was no further news.’

  ‘I’ve been living quietly in Iceland,’ answered Thrand, ‘until I felt it was time to see what had happened to the old felag.’

  ‘Things aren’t at all what they used to be, as you can see,’ said the old soldier, waving at the empty barrack buildings. ‘But never mind, that will change. We’re gaining recruits, though not as many as I would wish and we are not as strict as before about their qualifications. Here, let me introduce you.’

  Proudly he steered Thrand towards the group of loungers and began to make
introductions. Thrand, he boasted to them, had been a member of the brotherhood in the glory days, had fought Earl Haakon’s men at Jorunga Bay and survived. He was a warrior of experience and knew what it was like to be a true Jomsviking. His description of my companion was so extravagant that I began to wonder if there was a purpose behind it, and looked more closely at his audience. They were a mixed lot. Some were scarred warriors, while others were considerably younger without a martial bearing. Nor, judging by their appearance, were they all Norsemen. Several had square Wendish faces; others were narrow jawed with foxy eyes and probably came from the Permian regions further north. Their only common feature was that they all wore good daggers, and many were dressed in the padded jerkins which are worn beneath the chain-mail shirt the northerners call a byrnie.

  ‘Who’s your companion?’ asked Thrand’s acquaintance, whose name I later found out was Arne.

  ‘He is called Thorgils. He came with me from Iceland.’

  ‘Is he a fighting man?’

  ‘More of a traveller and observer,’ said Thrand, ‘He is a devotee of Odinn the Far-farer.’

  ‘Well, Odinn is the God of battles, too, so he may find himself at home among us—’

  Thrand interrupted him. ‘To whom should I report?’

  Arne checked his enthusiasm and looked a little awkward. He drew Thrand away from the group, out of earshot, and I followed.

  ‘It’s not like the old days, at least not yet,’ Arne told us. ‘The felag all but disintegrated after the disaster against Earl Haakon. There were so few left to continue the fellowship – only a couple of dozen who were on sick leave or had stayed behind to garrison Jomsburg, plus the handful of battle survivors. And many of them, like yourself, we never thought to see again. Of course, the others were too ashamed to return.’

 

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