The first na ca out like a test.
The foreign Jarl who spoke it did not step forward far—only enough to claim the space without seeming eager. He was broad shouldered, wrapped in a heavy cloak fastened with a bronze pin shaped like a hooked fish. His beard was kept short, his hair bound tight at the back of his head, and he carried the practiced stillness of a man who had been in too many halls where a wrong word ant steel.
"Jute," he said, as if the single word explained everything that mattered. Then he added his na. "Hrothgar of the marsh coast."
The hall remained silent.
Anders sat on the bone throne and watched him with the sa calm he had given the silence before—the calm that made grown n feel they were the ones being examined.
Hrothgar’s jaw tightened. He had expected at least a nod, so ritual acknowledgnt that he had spoken. He received none.
A second Jarl stepped forward, younger, sharper in the eyes. He wore a necklace of carved bone disks and smiled as if this eting amused him.
"Sigvald," he said. "Also Jute. South shore."
The third Jute was older, heavier through the middle, with hands like a fisherman’s—thick fingers, nails cracked and stained. His gaze flicked to the bear skulls on the armrests and did not linger.
"Ragnar Juteborn," he grunted. "From the low islands."
Then the two Gotar spoke, their accents slightly different, their posture different too—less coastal swagger, more inland pride. One had hair the color of ash and a scar that pulled one corner of his mouth down permanently.
"Eirik of the Gotar," he said. "West forests."
The other was lean, long-limbed, with eyes like a hawk’s—always moving, always asuring distance.
"Hallbjorn," he added. "Gotar. River settlents."
Last ca the Germani.
He did not need to proclaim it. He carried it. His clothing was cut differently—still wool and leather, but more structured. His belt held a heavier buckle, his cloak pin was iron instead of bronze. He had a clean-shaven jaw except for a narrow strip of beard along the chin, and his hair was tied in a tight knot. He looked at the hall as a man looked at a battlefield: not with awe, but with inventory.
"I am Wulfric," he said. "From the Germani borderlands."
Six nas.
Six powers.
Six sets of eyes now fixed on the boy who did not rise for them.
Anders did not acknowledge their introductions with flattery or ceremony. He let their nas hang in the air like smoke.
Then, finally, he spoke.
"You ca far," Anders said, tone flat, neither welcoming nor hostile. "Why?"
The Jarls exchanged glances.
Hrothgar of the Jutes answered first, perhaps because he could not stand not being the first to shape the narrative.
"We ca because your walls are higher than rumor," Hrothgar said. "And because there is a ship in your bay that does not belong to this world."
He gestured subtly, as if the galleon’s shadow reached even into the hall.
"We ca because we want to know who built it."
Anders’ eyes did not blink. "You see ."
Sigvald smiled wider. "We see a child."
The word child landed like a stone thrown at a wolf.
A shift rippled through the blood-oath brothers—tiny, controlled, but present. A tightening of shoulders. Fingers settling closer to grips. Soren’s expression hardened into sothing less patient.
Freydis did not move at all. Only her eyes changed—becoming colder.
Magnus, still bandaged beneath his tunic, couldn’t help himself. He leaned slightly toward Anders and murmured, "When do we do the reward ceremony for Olav’s campaign?"
The question was quiet, but the hall was quiet enough that it carried.
Every foreign Jarl heard it.
Anders’ gaze flicked toward Magnus like a blade turning. Not angry, not harsh—just absolute.
"After," Anders said simply.
Magnus blinked. "After what?"
Anders turned his eyes back to the Jarls. "After the Jarls are dealt with."
The words were plain. The aning was not.
The foreign Jarls stiffened.
They heard it as Anders intended them to hear it: not insult, not arrogance, just the reality that they were not guests in his hall.
They were a problem to be solved.
Wulfric of the Germani narrowed his eyes. "You speak as if you killed Olav."
Anders did not correct him.
He did not deny him.
He simply let the silence answer.
Six n recalculated at once.
Because they all knew Olav.
They had all fought him.
They had all failed to break him.
Olav Einarsson Drekason had been an old thorn on the edge of every ambition. He was stubborn as frost and twice as hard to uproot. So of these Jarls had tried to force him into alliance. Others had tried to burn him out. One had tried to assassinate him and lost three n for the attempt.
Olav had endured them all.
Now he was dead.
And the boy on the bone throne had just confird it without words.
Hallbjorn, the lean Gotar, spoke carefully. "Olav was not easily taken."
Bjornulf—short, thick, and terrifyingly calm—answered for Anders, voice quiet. "He was taken."
Eirik of the Gotar scowled. "By fifteen hundred n and a rain of bolts?"
Soren smiled, and it was not friendly. "By one blade at the end."
Hrothgar leaned forward slightly. "You an to tell us you fought him?"
Anders’ eyes rested on Hrothgar. "I an to tell you he is ash now."
The word ash chilled the room.
Sigvald’s smile faltered for the first ti. He glanced sideways at the others, as if checking whether their shared understanding matched his.
Ragnar Juteborn cleared his throat. "Olav died clean?"
Anders paused—just long enough to remind them he chose what to answer.
"Yes," Anders said. "He wanted it that way."
Wulfric’s eyes flicked, sharp. "And you gave him what he wanted."
It was not praise.
It was recognition.
Anders did not respond.
Hrothgar shifted gears—posture straightening, voice gaining weight. "If you killed Olav, you have proven strength. But strength does not make a king. Age makes wisdom. Experience makes rule."
Soren’s eyes narrowed. Vidar’s jaw tightened. Freydis’ fingers tapped once against her knee—one quiet beat of contained anger.
Hrothgar continued, stepping closer now, trying to fill the space with authority.
"You sit in a seat made of bone and gold," he said, "but you are still a boy. A boy surrounded by boys. You have built walls and weapons, yes—but n like us have ruled lands while you were still suckling."
The insult was deliberate.
Anders’ blood brothers bristled, but Anders did not lift his hand this ti.
He let them speak.
Bjornulf answered, voice like a stone dropped in water. "He was training while you were still dawdling."
Sigvald laughed lightly. "Training? For what? To beco a carved idol?"
Magnus snapped, "To beco a ruler."
Ragnar Juteborn grunted. "Ruler or tyrant."
Eirik of the Gotar spoke, eyes hard. "We did not co here to bow to a child."
Hallbjorn’s gaze flicked toward the soldiers lining the hall. "But we also did not co here to die in a hall full of crossbows."
That was the first truly honest sentence spoken.
It cut through pride like steel.
Hrothgar’s lips thinned. "Do not show fear in front of them."
Hallbjorn’s eyes didn’t leave Anders. "It is not fear. It is sense."
Wulfric spoke now, voice controlled. "There are two questions here."
He held up two fingers slowly.
"First: what does Anders Skjold intend?" he said. "Second: what does Anders Skjold offer?"
Anders’ expression did not change. "Ask your questions."
Wulfric nodded once. "Do you intend to expand?"
Anders’ answer ca without hesitation. "Yes."
A murmur ran through the Jarls.
Wulfric continued. "Do you intend to turn your weapons on those who refuse you?"
Anders’ eyes sharpened slightly. "If they block what I build."
Hrothgar scoffed. "So you admit you will force submission."
Soren answered before Anders. "Submission is a gift you give yourself when you see the future. Otherwise you get taken."
Eirik of the Gotar stepped forward sharply. "Watch your tongue—"
Anders’ voice cut in for the first ti with true steel, not loud, but edged.
"Enough," Anders said.
It was a single word.
The blood brothers fell silent.
The wall soldiers did not shift, but the hall’s atmosphere tightened like a cord.
Anders leaned forward slightly, elbows resting near the bear skull armrests, rubies watching the Jarls through the skulls’ empty mouths.
"What do you want?" Anders asked again, slower now, as if carving the question into the wood of the world.
Hrothgar answered quickly, as if afraid soone else would.
"I want to know if you will submit to wiser n," he said bluntly. "If you will join a council beneath those who have already ruled."
Sigvald added, smooth and dangerous. "Or if you must be broken before you can be guided."
A soft sound ran through the hall—not laughter, not a growl, but sothing like disbelief.
Freydis finally spoke, voice calm as ice. "You ca into his hall and asked if he would kneel."
Ragnar Juteborn shifted uncomfortably. "We ca to avoid war."
Freydis’ gaze fixed on him. "Then don’t speak like war."
Eirik of the Gotar lifted his chin. "And what if we ca to join? What if we ca to trade oaths for weapons?"
Anders looked at him. "Then say it."
Hallbjorn swallowed. "If we join... do we get access to your crossbows?"
Anders’ eyes flicked to him. "Eventually."
Hallbjorn’s brows drew together. "Eventually?"
Anders’ voice remained even. "You don’t get my secrets because you stand in my hall for an hour."
Wulfric nodded faintly. "Reasonable."
Sigvald’s smile returned, but it was thinner now. "And the ship?"
Anders looked toward the bay as if he could see through walls. "The galleon?"
Sigvald’s gaze sharpened. "Yes. That beast in your water. If we join you, will we sail it? Will we raid richer lands than these coasts?"
The hunger in his voice was obvious. It drew the attention of the other Jarls, because it revealed the truth: so of them did not want peace.
They wanted permission to expand without being the first to risk it.
Anders watched them all.
He saw the divide.
Hrothgar wanted dominance over Anders.
Sigvald wanted profit through Anders.
Ragnar wanted stability.
Eirik and Hallbjorn wanted survival and leverage.
Wulfric wanted to understand the shape of the future before deciding where to stand.
Anders’ fingers tapped once against the throne arm, slow and thoughtful.
Before he could answer, the doors at the side of the hall opened.
A man entered quickly, wiping his hands on his tunic, hair dusted with sawdust. His shoulders were broad from work, his palms scarred from rope and timber. He halted only when he saw the Jarls, but even then his eyes went straight past them to Anders.
He bowed stiffly. "Lord Anders."
Anders did not look surprised. "Speak."
The boat builder swallowed, then spoke with the blunt urgency of a craftsman who understood tilines.
"The second and third galleons," he said, voice carrying in the sudden silence. "Their fras are sealed. The ballast is set. If the wind holds and the pitch cures clean... two more will be ready within days."
Within days.
The words hit the hall like a hamr blow.
The foreign Jarls went still.
Hrothgar’s face tightened. Sigvald’s smile vanished entirely. Ragnar’s eyes widened. Hallbjorn’s throat bobbed as he swallowed. Eirik of the Gotar stared as if he had misheard. Wulfric’s expression beca very calm, which was always the most dangerous reaction.
Because one galleon could be called a miracle.
Two more ant it was not a miracle.
It was a system.
It ant Anders did not have a single weapon.
He had a factory of war.
The boat builder glanced at the Jarls, sensing the tension he had walked into, then looked back to Anders. "Do you want them launched imdiately?"
Anders’ eyes never left the visitors.
"Yes," Anders said quietly. "And keep building."
The boat builder bowed again and backed out quickly, as if he had delivered a ssage to a god and wanted to be far away when the thunder answered.
The hall held its breath.
Six Jarls stood before a throne of bone and gold.
A boy sat upon it with the calm of inevitability.
And now they all understood what they had truly co to asure.
Not Anders’ strength.
Not his walls.
Not even his crossbows.
They had co to asure the speed at which the world was changing beneath their feet.
And they were already behind.
Anders leaned back in the throne, letting the bear skulls’ ruby eyes stare down the length of the hall like silent judges.
His voice was soft.
"So," he said, and the single word carried more pressure than any threat. "Now tell again—"
His gaze slid from face to face, pinning each man like a nail into wood.
"Do you wish to join," Anders asked, "or do you wish to be rembered as those who stood aside when the tide rose?"
No one answered imdiately.
Because every answer had beco dangerous.
And the cliff edge had arrived.
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