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The silence after the boat builder’s words did not feel like quiet.

It felt like the whole hall had leaned forward to listen to the shape of the future.

Six foreign Jarls stood in the center of Skjoldvik’s throne room, each one asuring the distance between himself and the boy on the bone throne, each one recalculating what pride cost when walls were this high and ships were built like storms.

Anders did not move.

He sat back against antlers fused with silver and gold, the bear skulls on the armrests staring forward with ruby eyes that did not blink. His blood-oath brothers held their places like the points of a spear around him—close enough to be a warning, disciplined enough to be a statent. Freydis sat beside Anders, not ornant, not hostage, not prize—simply there, calm as cold water, her gaze fixed on the Jarls like she was weighing them the sa way Anders was.

The soldiers lining the hall were still. They wore the quiet confidence of n who had marched out and returned with victory still drying on their hands. They watched the Jarls the way wolves watched strangers near a den: not eager, not nervous—just ready.

A man could feel the weight of all those eyes.

Then it happened.

A sound, soft and familiar to no one but Anders.

A chi—clean as struck tal.

His spine tightened by instinct alone, though his face did not change. The hall saw nothing: no flinch, no widening of eyes. To the Jarls, he remained motionless.

But inside his own sight, the world split.

A pale blue light unfolded in the air before him, as clear as a winter sky, letters forming in a language only he could read.

MISSION ISSUED: SUBJUGATE THE SIX JARLS

Beneath it, the terms:

REWARD: NEW SKILL UNLOCKED 25 POINTS TO EACH STAT

FAILURE: −15 POINTS TO EACH STAT LINE

Anders did not blink.

He had learned long ago that the system did not negotiate. It did not ask politely. It did not care that these were not beasts in the woods or a single stubborn old Jarl at the edge of his reach.

It cared about outco.

It cared about the shaping of a saga.

He could almost feel Odin’s hand in it—cold, distant, certain. A god’s design did not require comfort.

Anders exhaled slowly through his nose, letting that breath carry away the smallest edge of frustration.

Fine.

His mind hardened—not into rage, not into cruelty—but into decision.

This was not a hall for endless words. If he let them speak now, the room would fracture into pride and posturing, into threats and counter-threats. Soone would misstep. Soone would force a line. And then blood would spill not because it needed to, but because soone wanted to prove he could.

Anders had no interest in being dragged by another man’s insecurity.

He would set the terms.

He would fra the conflict in the only language Vikings respected more than gold.

Honor.

Before any of the Jarls could speak again, before Hrothgar could try to reclaim dominance with age and insult, before Sigvald could smile his way into opportunism, before Wulfric could dissect intent like a surgeon—

Anders stood.

The scrape of his boots against the hall’s floor was quiet, but it cut through the air like a blade being drawn.

His blood-oath brothers shifted—not stepping forward, not spreading out—just tightening into readiness the way a bowstring tightens when the hand grips the wood. The soldiers along the walls did not move, but their attention snapped sharper, the hall itself seeming to narrow around Anders’ posture.

The foreign Jarls felt it.

They had already seen him sitting—calm, unmoving, a boy made ominous by silence.

Standing, he looked taller than he should have been. Not because he had grown, but because the hall suddenly belonged to him in a different way. The throne behind him beca backdrop instead of source. He could have been standing in mud outside with no crown at all and the sa gravity would have followed him.

Anders stepped down from the dais and walked forward until he stood on the floor level with them.

Not too close.

Close enough.

He stopped in the center of the hall, where every eye could reach him.

He did not smile.

He did not glare.

He spoke as if he had already decided the outco, and his words were simply the path to reach it.

"Why not," Anders said, voice even, "a little round of challenge."

The Jarls blinked. The sentence was so casual it almost felt wrong in the tension that had built.

Anders continued without pause, as if the thought was obvious.

"My n against yours," he said, gesturing once—not at his soldiers lining the walls, but at the blood-brothers and the disciplined fighters who belonged to Skjoldvik’s core. "And against each of you."

A flicker ran through the foreign Jarls—surprise, disbelief, a surge of pride at being offered sothing that sounded like respect.

Anders lifted one hand slightly, palm open, as if calming an animal.

"For fun and honor," he added. "No more. No less."

Hrothgar’s eyes narrowed. "You would challenge Jarls in your hall?"

"I would offer you a way to speak with your bodies instead of your mouths," Anders replied calmly. "Because your mouths are already lying."

A sharp breath escaped soone—one of the foreign retinues, maybe, or one of Anders’ own n pleased by the bluntness.

Sigvald’s smile returned, quick and hungry. "A boy wants to duel six Jarls."

Anders turned his gaze to Sigvald and held it.

"A lord," Anders corrected softly.

Sigvald’s smile twitched—half irritation, half excitent.

Ragnar Juteborn cleared his throat, trying to sound reasonable. "And what would this prove?"

Anders’ eyes slid across them all like a asuring line.

"It proves rit," he said. "It proves courage. It proves whether you ca here with spine or only with a story."

Eirik of the Gotar’s jaw tightened. "And if one of us beats you?"

A murmur rose among Anders’ blood brothers like the first stir of a storm. Bjornulf’s shoulders tensed. Vidar’s eyes flared. Soren’s expression sharpened into sothing cold.

Anders lifted his hand—not high, not dramatic—just enough.

The murmur died instantly.

He didn’t look back at his brothers when he did it.

He didn’t need to.

He answered Eirik with a voice that did not rise.

"Then you beat ," Anders said. "And the sky doesn’t fall. But you’ll have stood in my yard, under my walls, and you’ll know what you’re truly asuring."

Hallbjorn, the lean Gotar, studied Anders as if looking for the trick. "And if you beat us?"

Anders’ answer ca like a stone dropping into still water.

"Then you stop pretending you ca here to make kneel."

Wulfric of the Germani watched him, calm in a way that suggested he understood the structure being built around them.

"This is a test," Wulfric said.

"Yes," Anders replied simply.

Hrothgar stepped forward half a pace, trying to reclaim the hall with volu. "You think we cannot refuse?"

Anders tilted his head slightly.

"You can refuse," he said.

The words hung there, almost gentle.

Then he added, "And every man in this room will rember your refusal longer than they rember your na."

Hrothgar’s face flushed.

That was the trap. Not steel. Not threat. Reputation.

Vikings could stomach pain. They could stomach death. They could even stomach loss, if it was honorable.

They could not stomach being rembered as afraid.

Sigvald laughed lightly, trying to make it seem like he had chosen this rather than been cornered into it.

"A challenge," Sigvald said, voice bright. "Good. Better than words."

Ragnar Juteborn nodded slowly. "Fighting proves rit when honor is at stake."

Eirik of the Gotar’s gaze flicked to the soldiers along the wall—so many, so disciplined—and then to Anders’ bone throne behind him.

He spoke through tightened teeth. "We will not be mocked as cowards."

Hallbjorn exhaled, almost relieved. "Then we accept."

Wulfric didn’t smile, but sothing in his eyes shifted—recognition that Anders had seized the initiative cleanly.

"We accept," Wulfric said.

Hrothgar hesitated one heartbeat too long.

Anders didn’t move.

Didn’t pressure.

Just waited.

The hall waited with him.

The pressure of that waiting—of being the only man standing outside the current—finally forced Hrothgar’s pride to choose.

He spat one short word. "Fine."

Anders nodded once, as if that had been settled from the start.

"Good," he said.

He turned slightly, not away from them, but enough to address the hall as a whole.

"Then we feast," Anders said, voice carrying now, not loud but firm enough to reach the walls. "Because I have warriors that deserve their honor."

A low approving sound rolled through the soldiers—contained, respectful, but real.

Anders continued, and his tone shifted—not into softness, but into sothing that felt like ritual.

"And we will need sacrifices for a ceremony," he said, "to honor the fallen."

The foreign Jarls stiffened at the word, but Anders’ gaze held them in place.

He was not speaking of cruelty.

He was speaking of tradition.

Of the old language of death and gods, of blood poured as an offering not to indulge hunger, but to mark a crossing.

"To honor Olav," Anders said, and for the first ti the hall felt the echo of the old Jarl’s na like a shadow passing over fla. "And his n."

Sowhere along the wall, a few soldiers made a small sign—fist to chest, head bowed—simple, respectful.

Anders’ voice did not mock.

It did not gloat.

"I wished he would have joined ," Anders said, the sentence landing heavy because it sounded true. "Instead, he beca a stepping stone that I had to break."

Silence followed that.

Not hostile.

Reflective.

Even the foreign Jarls—n who had fought Olav, n who had failed to remove him—could understand the weight of it.

It was not the sadness of weakness.

It was the frustration of inevitability.

Anders looked at the Jarls again.

"You ca here to asure ," he said. "Now you will be asured."

Sigvald’s grin flashed. "And your n will fight ours?"

"They will," Anders said. "And you will see what discipline looks like when it stops being a word."

Hrothgar bristled. "Your n are fanatics."

Anders’ eyes narrowed slightly.

"No," he said. "They’re faithful."

That quiet correction hit harder than a shout.

Because faith could not be bribed.

The Jarls began speaking over one another then—questions and conditions, the instinct to control creeping back in.

"What weapons—"

"Do we bring shields—"

"Do we fight to blood or yield—"

"Are you trying to—"

Anders lifted a hand again.

The hall snapped silent like a whip.

He spoke into the quiet as if laying stones into place.

"We fight with wood and blunted iron where we must," Anders said, "and with steel where honor demands. No murder in sport. No coward’s strikes. Yield is respected. A man who yields lives to rember the lesson."

He glanced at Sigvald as he said it, and Sigvald’s smile thinned, understanding the warning beneath the rule.

"And for my fights," Anders continued, "I will decide the weapon."

Eirik of the Gotar frowned. "You’ll choose to favor yourself."

Anders’ eyes were steady. "I’ll choose to make it honest."

Wulfric leaned his head a fraction. "And after?"

Anders’ gaze slid to Wulfric. "After, you will have clarity."

Wulfric’s mouth twitched. "Clarity about what?"

Anders’ answer ca quiet.

"About whether you belong in what I’m building," he said. "Or whether you will be in the way."

No threat.

Just fact.

Anders turned his head slightly toward Sten, who had stood silent through the entire exchange like an anvil waiting for the hamr.

"Send ssengers," Anders said.

Sten’s eyes sharpened. "To whom?"

"To every Jarl who has sworn," Anders replied. "To every man who thinks our walls are a rumor. Tell them to co witness rit."

Sten nodded once, already turning.

Anders added, "Bring their champions if they wish. Let them see what it ans to stand beneath Skjoldvik’s banners."

Sten’s mouth twitched with approval, and he barked a short order. n moved imdiately—quiet, fast, efficient—slipping out of the hall like arrows loosed.

The foreign Jarls watched this with a different kind of unease.

Not fear of violence.

Fear of organization.

Because organization ant Anders could summon a gathering of power the way other n summoned a feast.

Magnus leaned toward Anders again, unable to contain the ache of unfinished ritual. "And the reward ceremony?"

Anders didn’t glare this ti. He softened just a fraction—only enough to show Magnus he had been heard.

"After," Anders said again, but now the word carried reassurance instead of dismissal. "Your honor will not be forgotten."

Magnus swallowed and nodded, satisfied.

Freydis finally shifted, leaning slightly toward Anders, voice low enough that only he and perhaps the closest blood brothers could hear.

"They will try to cheat," she murmured.

Anders’ eyes didn’t move from the Jarls. "Let them try."

Freydis’ mouth tightened. "And if they hurt your n?"

Anders’ voice remained calm. "Then they’ll learn why the rules exist."

Hrothgar heard none of it, but he felt the change. He lifted his chin, trying one last ti to regain control.

"And if we win?" he demanded. "If your n fall? If you fall?"

Anders looked at him for a long mont, then answered with sothing that made the question feel childish.

"Then you will have won honestly in my yard," Anders said. "And you will walk away knowing I honored you with the chance."

His gaze sharpened.

"And if you lose," Anders added, "you will still walk away. Because I am not here to slaughter n for pride. I am here to build sothing that outlives pride."

That sentence struck different.

Even Hrothgar faltered under it.

Because Anders wasn’t speaking like a raider.

He was speaking like a ruler who already saw beyond this room.

Anders turned slightly and addressed the hall again, his voice now carrying the certainty of a proclamation.

"Tonight," he said, "you rest. You eat. You rember the dead. Tomorrow, we asure worth."

The soldiers lining the walls answered not with cheers, but with a unified strike of fist to chest—one clean sound, like a door closing.

The foreign Jarls flinched at the unity of it.

Anders held the Jarls in his gaze a final ti.

"You will not leave Skjoldvik before the challenges," he said. Not an order shouted. A statent that assud compliance.

Wulfric nodded slowly. "We will stay."

Sigvald smiled again—hunger returning. "I look forward to it."

Hallbjorn’s throat bobbed. "So do I."

Ragnar Juteborn grunted. "May the gods judge fairly."

Anders’ eyes flicked to him. "They will."

Hrothgar did not speak, but he didn’t leave either.

Sten stepped forward now, finally taking the space that had been Anders’ alone, and gestured toward the side doors.

"Guests will be housed," Sten said. "Fed. Guarded. Respected—if they respect."

The Jarls began to move, escorted out with the careful politeness of n being handled like loaded weapons.

As they left, Anders remained standing in the center of the hall, listening to the fading steps, feeling the montum he had just redirected.

Behind his eyes, the blue screen still hovered for a heartbeat longer, waiting as if the system itself wanted to see whether he would hesitate.

Anders did not.

The screen faded.

He turned to his blood brothers, to Freydis, to Erik and Astrid, and for a mont the iron mask loosened.

"We do this clean," Anders said quietly.

Soren nodded. "We will."

Bjornulf grinned, brief and fierce. "Let them co."

Magnus shifted his bandage, eyes bright. "And then the ceremony."

"Yes," Anders said, voice gentler now. "Then the ceremony."

Astrid’s gaze held his face, and in her eyes was the old fear of a mother watching her child stand in front of n who wanted to test him.

Anders looked back at her, and sothing in his expression promised he understood that fear and would not waste it.

Erik’s hand ca down on Anders’ shoulder—heavy, proud, anchoring.

"You are moving fast," Erik murmured.

Anders’ eyes slid toward the hall’s great doors, toward the city beyond, toward the bay where the galleon waited, and toward the future that had begun to pull at the edges of their world like a tide.

"I have to," Anders said.

And then, louder, to Sten as he returned: "Make sure the ssengers ride before the sun drops."

Sten nodded. "They’re already gone."

Outside the throne hall, Skjoldvik began to shift into preparation.

n carried fresh timbers to the yard to mark circles. Smiths checked blunted edges and strengthened practice weapons. Crossbow racks were inspected, bolts counted, targets repaired. The city humd—not with panic, but with anticipation.

And on the roads leading outward, riders thundered toward pledged Jarls with words that would travel faster than any spear.

Co witness rit.

Co see what has been built.

Co see whether the old way survives the new.

Anders stood a mont longer beneath the antlers and bear skulls, feeling the hall’s heat and the weight of everything he had set in motion.

He had offered honor to avoid imdiate blood.

But he knew what the system demanded.

Subjugation.

Not necessarily slaughter.

Not tyranny.

But submission to a single gravity.

He looked toward the dark, distant horizon only he could truly imagine.

Tomorrow would look like a tournant.

But it would decide the shape of a kingdom.

And the world, already shifting beneath their feet, would not stop moving just because n wished it would.

It would only move faster now—because Anders had told it to.

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