The yard did not empty after the first wave.
If anything, it tightened.
Warriors who had stepped back now lingered closer, speaking in low voices, eyes no longer drifting but fixed—asuring. Anders felt the change imdiately. The earlier atmosphere of curiosity and shared testing had sharpened into sothing more deliberate.
Interest had beco intent.
It began, as many turning points did, with a tool.
The crossbow lay resting on its stand near the archery circle, unstrung now, its simple lines drawing eyes again and again. n approached it not with awe, but with caution—like hunters circling an unfamiliar animal.
One knelt, running his fingers along the tiller.
Another lifted it carefully, testing the weight.
"This isn’t built for draw," a veteran archer muttered, pulling the string back experintally. "Feels light."
"But it doesn’t wander," another replied, squinting down the length. "Look at the groove. Straight as a spear shaft."
A third man worked the trigger, eyebrows rising. "Gods. That’s clean."
Anders watched from a short distance away, arms loose at his sides, saying nothing. He did not hover. He did not explain.
Let them find it themselves.
Fergus Redbeard was among them now, beard shifting as he bent to examine the chanism more closely. He glanced up at Anders, amusent dancing in his eyes.
"Underpowered," Fergus said aloud, voice carrying. "Compared to a war bow."
Anders nodded once. "Yes."
A few n glanced between them, surprised by the easy agreent.
Fergus cocked an eyebrow. "You don’t defend it?"
"I don’t need to," Anders replied. "It does what it was built to do."
"And that is?"
Anders took a few steps closer, resting one hand lightly on the crossbow—not possessive, just present.
"It hits where you aim," he said. "Every ti. And it teaches faster."
A murmur rippled through the group.
"Faster," one of the Jarls repeated thoughtfully. "You an a boy could use it."
"And a farr," Anders said. "Or a sailor. Or soone who hasn’t pulled a bow since they were six."
Silence followed—not hostile, but calculating.
That was when the first Jarl spoke plainly.
"I want to test you," he said.
The voice belonged to Jarl Torvik of the southern ridges, a thickset man with braided gray hair and eyes like wet stone. He stepped forward into the open space, folding his arms.
"Not the tool," Torvik continued. "You."
Several heads turned at once.
Anders inclined his head slightly. "How?"
Torvik shrugged. "Sword and shield. Or grappling. Your choice."
Before Anders could answer, another voice cut in.
"Or my man," said Jarl Hreinn, tall and lean, his scarred champion stepping half a pace forward behind him. "If you prefer."
The yard stilled.
This was different from before.
These were not volunteers stepping forward out of curiosity or respect. These were proxies of authority—challenges issued not by warriors, but by leaders.
Anders felt the weight of the mont settle on his shoulders like a cloak he hadn’t asked for.
He exhaled slowly.
Before responding, he raised one hand—not to silence them, but to steady the mont.
"There’s sothing I should remind everyone of," Anders said.
The yard leaned in.
"I am five years old."
The words landed strangely—not as a plea, not as an excuse, but as a fact.
A few n laughed nervously. Others frowned. Fergus Redbeard’s smile sharpened.
Anders continued, unbothered. "I don’t say that to avoid this. I say it so there’s no confusion later."
He looked directly at Torvik, then at Hreinn.
"I will accept any challenge offered today," Anders said calmly. "From any man willing to step into the circle with ."
A pause.
"But I will not be shad for winning," he added. "And I will not be shad for losing."
That quieted the yard more effectively than any shout.
"And," Anders finished, "no one leaves this yard diminished unless they choose to fight dishonorably."
Sten shifted at the edge of the circle, arms crossed, expression unreadable.
Erik felt sothing in his chest tighten—not fear, but recognition. This was no longer about proving strength. This was Anders setting terms.
Torvik studied Anders for a long mont.
Then he nodded once. "Fair."
Hreinn smiled thinly. "My champion will go first."
The man stepped forward at once—taller than Anders by more than a head, thick through the shoulders, expression carefully blank. He carried himself like soone used to being watched.
Anders turned toward the sword-and-shield circle.
"Then we begin there," he said.
He picked up his shield, tested the grip, and stepped inside the stones.
The champion followed.
This ti, the crowd did not murmur.
They watched.
The champion did not rush.
That alone earned him Anders’ respect.
He entered the circle with a asured pace, shield raised but not aggressive, sword angled just enough to threaten without committing. His stance was orthodox—trained by n who valued survivability over flair. He had learned to wait for mistakes rather than force them.
Good, Anders thought. This will be clean.
They circled once, frost crunching beneath their boots. The crowd leaned closer, breath fogging in the cold air. Anders felt the shift again—that tightening of attention where n stopped hoping to be entertained and started wanting answers.
The champion struck first.
A heavy downward cut, shield forward, ant to test Anders’ base and remind him of the difference in mass between a grown man and a child. Anders t it squarely, shield braced, knees bent, letting the force travel into the ground instead of his arms.
Wood rang sharply.
The champion followed imdiately, pressing the advantage, driving forward with a second strike and a shield bash ant to collapse Anders’ space.
Anders gave him ground—half a step, then another—never hurried, never panicked. He let the champion believe the pressure was working.
It was not.
On the third step, Anders pivoted.
He slipped inside the champion’s guard, shield turned just enough to redirect the bash past his shoulder. At the sa mont, he stepped across the man’s lead foot—not striking it, just occupying the space it needed to move.
The champion adjusted too late.
Anders’ shield rose and locked against the man’s chest, not smashing, just there. His sword ca up under the champion’s arm, blade flat, pressed tight to ribs where a sharpened edge would have ended the fight instantly.
"Hold," Anders said calmly.
The champion froze.
Sten’s voice cut in at once. "Enough."
The man stepped back, breathing hard, eyes wide—not from pain, but realization. He looked down at Anders, then at the position they’d been in, and shook his head once.
"Well fought," he said, sincere.
Anders inclined his head. "Thank you for stepping in."
The champion left the circle to a low murmur of approval. No cheers. No jeers. Just acknowledgnt.
Jarl Hreinn’s smile had vanished.
Jarl Torvik stepped forward without waiting. "My turn," he said.
A ripple moved through the yard.
Sten’s head turned sharply. "Jarl—"
Torvik raised a hand. "I know the risk."
He removed his cloak, handed it to one of his n, and picked up a shield. The sword he chose was lighter than the champion’s—balanced, well-used.
Anders watched him carefully. Torvik’s movents were economical, unshowy. This was a man who had fought enough not to confuse spectacle with victory.
They faced each other.
"You don’t need to do this," Anders said quietly.
Torvik smiled faintly. "Yes," he replied. "I do."
They began.
Torvik fought differently from the others. Where the champion had pressed, Torvik tested. Short strikes. Feints ant to draw reactions. He circled patiently, probing Anders’ timing, watching for patterns.
Anders let him see so.
He blocked high twice. Gave ground once. Let Torvik think he’d found a rhythm.
Then he broke it.
A sudden change of pace—Anders stepped into Torvik’s next feint, shield snapping up hard enough to disrupt balance but not injure. His sword followed imdiately, tapping Torvik’s shoulder twice in quick succession.
Tap. Tap.
A clear count.
The crowd murmured.
Torvik laughed—a short, genuine bark—and lowered his sword. "Enough."
He stepped back, breathing hard but smiling openly now. "You don’t fight like a child."
Anders t his gaze evenly. "No."
Torvik studied him for a long mont, then nodded once. "That will matter."
He left the circle without further comnt.
The yard buzzed now—low, constant, electric. Warriors whispered. Jarls leaned together, voices tight with calculation.
That was when Fergus Redbeard stepped forward.
The murmurs stilled instantly.
"I won’t fight you," Fergus said, voice carrying easily. "Not today."
A few n looked surprised.
"But," Fergus continued, "I want to see your crossbow used under pressure."
He gestured to one of his n—a tall, lean warrior with scars along his jaw. "You. Take the bow."
The man hesitated, then nodded and moved toward the archery circle.
Anders followed.
The moving targets had been reset, planks swaying gently now, cords creaking softly. Fergus folded his arms, watching closely.
"Hit the center," Fergus said to his man. "Twice."
The warrior took the crossbow, tested the weight, frowned slightly, then set his stance. He waited for the targets to align, then loosed.
The bolt struck just off-center.
A miss by hunting standards. A hit by war’s.
He loosed again.
Closer this ti.
Fergus grunted. "Adequate."
Anders stepped forward. "May I?"
Fergus inclined his head.
Anders took the crossbow, checked the string, then waited.
He did not rush.
The targets crossed paths, separated, swung wide.
Anders loosed.
The bolt struck dead center.
He reset without comnt, waited again, and loosed a second bolt—this one hitting the other target cleanly despite its wider swing.
The yard went very quiet.
Fergus exhaled slowly. "Consistency," he said. "That’s the difference."
"Yes," Anders replied. "And training ti."
Fergus studied him intently now. "You could arm a fleet with this."
"And teach them to use it in weeks instead of years," Anders said.
"That frightens people," Fergus said.
Anders t his gaze. "It should."
A few Jarls exchanged looks.
The system flickered faintly at the edge of Anders’ vision—not text, not instruction. Just presence.
Still asuring, he thought.
The final challenges ca quickly after that—shorter bouts, fewer words. Anders fought three more n in the sword circle, accepted a grappling challenge from a stocky warrior who nearly caught him before Anders turned leverage against him, and corrected an archer’s stance with a few quiet words that imdiately improved his aim.
By the ti the sun climbed higher, the yard felt... spent.
Satisfied.
Anders stood in the center again, chest rising and falling steadily. Sweat stead off his clothes in the cold air.
He did not raise his arms.
He did not speak.
He simply waited.
One by one, the Jarls approached—not together, not formally, but inevitably.
Torvik spoke first. "You’ve proven enough."
Hreinn nodded reluctantly. "More than enough."
Fergus Redbeard smiled thinly. "You’ve made a problem I’d rather be part of than opposed to."
Anders listened.
When they finished, he inclined his head once. "Then I would ask sothing in return."
They paused.
"Not here," Anders said. "Not in the yard."
He gestured toward the longhouse behind him. "With my father. And Sten. Briefly."
A beat.
Then Fergus chuckled. "A council," he said. "Of course."
Anders exhaled slowly.
The system flickered again—just once.
Not complete.
Not failed.
Approaching.
The yard did not erupt when Anders spoke.
That, more than anything, told him how completely the tone had changed.
n did not cheer. They did not shout approval or protest. They shifted their weight. They looked at one another. Warriors who monts earlier had been eager now asured the space with quieter eyes, replaying movents, decisions, monts where advantage had slipped through their fingers.
This was no longer about who had won.
It was about what had been revealed.
Sten stepped forward, boots crunching softly in the frost-hardened earth. His voice carried easily without rising.
"You’ve had your tests," he said. "The yard’s done."
No one argued.
Shields were lowered. Swords returned to belts. Axes were slung without ceremony. Fergus Redbeard’s n complied as readily as any, their discipline as notable as their silence.
Anders remained where he was.
He did not lift his arms. He did not claim the center again. He simply stood, breathing slow and steady, letting the ache settle deeper into muscle and bone.
The system hovered at the edge of his awareness—present, insistent, unfinished.
Not yet, he thought.
Erik approached him then, stopping just close enough that their shoulders nearly touched.
"You held them," Erik said quietly.
"I didn’t try to," Anders replied.
Erik’s mouth curved faintly. "That’s why it worked."
Around them, the Jarls gathered—not in a formal ring, not yet—but close enough that words might be exchanged if anyone chose to speak first. Torvik studied Anders openly now, no pretense of indifference left. Hreinn’s expression was tight, thoughtful. Fergus Redbeard’s eyes glead with sothing between amusent and calculation.
"Well," Fergus said at last, breaking the silence. "That was... instructive."
Anders t his gaze. "It was ant to be."
Torvik nodded once. "You didn’t sha anyone."
"And you didn’t ask permission," Hreinn added.
"No," Anders agreed. "I asked participation."
That earned him a few low chuckles—not mocking, but impressed.
Fergus folded his arms. "You’re going to make people uncomfortable," he said. "n don’t like being shown paths they didn’t choose themselves."
"I didn’t choose for them," Anders replied evenly. "They stepped in."
Silence followed that—thick, weighted.
One by one, the Jarls began to step back. Not retreating. Not conceding. Simply withdrawing to consider what they had seen. Warriors followed, voices low now, the earlier edge replaced with sothing far more dangerous than bravado.
Thought.
Sten watched them go, jaw set. "They’ll talk."
"They should," Anders said.
Erik rested a hand briefly on Anders’ shoulder. "You didn’t take anything from them today."
Anders nodded. "I let them see."
The yard emptied slowly.
By the ti only a handful of villagers remained, the frost had lted beneath trampled earth, leaving dark patches where effort had been spent. Anders looked around once more at the circles he had drawn, now scuffed and broken by use.
The system flickered faintly again—no words, no resolution.
Pending.
Anders exhaled.
This was not the end of the test.
It was the mont before it changed shape.
Tomorrow—or soon—the Jarls would want more than demonstration. They would want direction. They would want terms. They would want to know whether what they had witnessed could be used.
Anders turned toward the longhouse, shoulders squaring as the weight settled fully at last.
Not yet, he thought.
But soon.
The yard emptied the way storms did—slowly at first, then all at once.
Warriors drifted away in small clusters, voices low, words chosen carefully. So laughed, but the sound rang thinner than before. Others walked in silence, hands flexing unconsciously as if still feeling the weight of shield or the mory of a grip broken cleanly and without cruelty.
The circles Anders had drawn were no longer circles.
They were scuffed, broken shapes now—lines erased by feet, stones kicked aside, earth darkened by sweat and effort. Evidence of sothing that had happened and could not be undone.
Anders stood at the center of it for a long mont after most had gone.
He felt the ache fully now.
Not sharp pain—nothing injured—but the deep, settling soreness of effort spent honestly. His arms felt heavy. His legs trembled faintly when he shifted his weight. He welcod it. Pain like this grounded him more than any system notice ever could.
Sten approached first once the last of the visiting warriors had cleared the yard.
He did not clap Anders on the back or laugh or praise him loudly. Instead, he crouched and picked up one of the stones that had marked the sword-and-shield circle, turning it over in his massive hand.
"You didn’t humiliate anyone," Sten said at last.
Anders nodded. "I tried not to."
"That’s harder than breaking bones," Sten continued. "Most n don’t know how to stop once they’ve started winning."
He looked up at Anders then, eyes sharp and serious. "They’ll rember that."
"I hope so."
Sten stood, stretching his back with a quiet groan. "So will hate you for it."
"I know."
"And so," Sten said, "will follow you because of it."
He did not wait for an answer before walking away.
Erik remained.
He had watched everything without stepping in, without raising his voice once. Now he stood just outside the yard, arms folded, expression unreadable.
When Anders finally walked toward him, Erik studied his son carefully—from flushed cheeks to sweat-darkened collar to the way Anders’ steps favored no injury.
"You’re exhausted," Erik said.
"Yes."
Erik nodded. "Good."
They walked together toward the longhouse, not speaking at first. The village felt different now. Doors were open. People watched them pass—not openly staring, but not hiding it either.
This wasn’t awe.
It was recalibration.
At the threshold of the longhouse, Erik stopped. He placed both hands on Anders’ shoulders and leaned down so their foreheads nearly touched.
"You didn’t win today," Erik said quietly.
Anders frowned slightly. "I know."
"You changed sothing," Erik continued. "That’s heavier."
Anders swallowed. "I didn’t an to rush it."
Erik smiled faintly. "None of us ever do."
Inside, Astrid was waiting.
She had watched from a distance, refusing to hover, refusing to interfere—but now she crossed the space between them quickly and pulled Anders into a fierce embrace that surprised him with its strength.
"You scared ," she said into his hair.
"I didn’t get hurt," Anders replied gently.
"That’s not what I ant," Astrid said, pulling back to look at his face. Her eyes searched him—not for wounds, but for sothing deeper. "You stood where n stand."
Anders nodded once. "I had to."
Astrid’s lips pressed together. Then she reached up and wiped dirt from his cheek with her thumb, the gesture grounding him more than any praise.
"Co," she said. "Sit. Eat. Before you fall over."
Later, as the village settled back into routine and the yard lay empty under the rising sun, Fergus Redbeard stood with his n near the edge of the road.
One of them spoke cautiously. "Should we be worried?"
Fergus considered the question longer than expected.
"Yes," he said finally. "But not yet."
He mounted his horse and looked back once toward the village.
"That boy," Fergus murmured, "isn’t trying to conquer anyone."
"Then what is he doing?" the man asked.
Fergus smiled, humorless and sharp. "He’s making it very hard for anyone else to."
Back in the longhouse, Anders sat alone for a mont after everyone else had gone about their business.
The system hovered again—quiet, unresolved.
No reward.
No penalty.
Just pressure.
Anders closed his eyes and let the fatigue wash through him.
Not done, he thought.
Not today.
But soon.
He opened his eyes, staring at the firelight dancing along the beams overhead, and for the first ti since waking before dawn, allowed himself one small, honest thought:
I really did want more ti.
Then he stood anyway.
Because ti, he was learning, did not belong to those who waited.
Reviews
All reviews (0)