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Chapter 102: Fires Fade, Steel Sings

Connacht,

The wind rolled dry over the ash-choked plains of Connacht, stirring soot from the blackened stumps where once stood fields of wheat and the n who tilled them.

No songbirds sang here.

No smoke rose from hearths.

No cattle lowed.

Only the crows remained; fat, bold things perched atop shattered longhouses or circling the bones of n, won, and children half-buried where the wolves had yet to scavenge.

The Norse had co and gone like a famine. Their ships vanished into the horizon moons ago, but the horror remained; carved into burnt stones, into the mories of the few who had survived.

Of the petty kings, there were none.

Vetrúlfr had slain them all; in battle or by fire.

The survivors had been marched off in chains: thralls, to vanish into the far north, into frozen places with nas no Gael dared speak aloud.

At Cruachan, the ancient seat of Connacht kingship, the throne lay cracked in two.

No voice rose in judgnt. No bard sang to the ancestors. Yet beneath the shattered hillfort, n gathered with ambition sharper than spears.

“I am of the line of Máel Ruanaid!”

“He was thrall-taken, not slain. You cannot claim inheritance over ash and chains.”

“Then who rules Connacht?”

“Whoever takes it with steel.”

So said the chieftains of Thomond, of Bréifne, of Mide; each bringing warbands across the broken borders of Connacht, eager to stake a claim in the power vacuum.

So ca as scavengers.

Others as conquerors.

None as saviors.

They found hamlets gutted, fields unsown, wells filled with corpses.

Even the cattle were gone; driven north on leashes, or burned alive in their pens when the Norse showed their fury.

The few who remained were old n too crippled to flee, or children with sallow faces and quiet mouths.

One boy, not more than ten, sat atop a cairn of skulls and watched the banners of Bréifne crest the hill.

“Who are you, child?” asked the warband’s captain.

The boy did not answer. Only pointed west, toward the sea.

“That way lies nothing but ruin.”

The boy’s voice was hollow, too calm for his years.

“That way lies the wolves. They ca in fire. They left in silence. But they’ll co again.”

By winter, the land of Connacht would no longer be ruled by its own sons.

It would be carved, seized, and renad by neighbors who saw opportunity in the corpse of a province.

But deep in the hills, the old won still whispered in prayers and in dreams, that the sea had sent sothing worse than Danes or Dubgall.

They called them The Winter-Kin.

The ones who wore no crosses.

The ones who ca not to steal… but to conquer.

And though Connacht burned alone, the fear would spread like plague; into Tara, into Armagh, into every crumbling stone church that dared toll a bell.

The scent of salt, smoke, and stone mingled in the wind that whipped through Jomsborg.

No longer the timber bastion it had once been, but sothing reborn.

Gone were the crude wooden palisades of old. In their place stood thick walls of quarried stone, set upon deep foundations, mortared with ash, li, and northern resolve.

Every block had been hauled and laid by thralls, or paid for in coin and spoils from Connacht; part of Ármóðr’s share of the spoils.

The walls bore no cross, no banner of any Christian king, only the boar’s tusk and wolf claw, sigils of old brotherhood and rising fury.

Within those walls, life thrived.

Forge fires burned day and night, shaping mail, swords, and great axes.

Thralls sowed fields beyond the harbor, while artisans and armorers returned, emboldened by Ármóðr ‘s ironclad rule.

Ships were being built; sleeker, longer, deeper in hull. Not just raiders, but warships. Carriers of hosts.

And everywhere, the n trained.

The Jomsvikings had always been fierce, but now they trained in cohorts, drilled with shieldwalls and flanking maneuvers, so carrying composite bows, others wielding tower shields in the style of Byzantium.

Ármóðr =had seen how discipline married to savagery could break any foe, and he no longer tolerated the lazy, the arrogant, or the undisciplined. He culled them.

“These walls,” he said to his huskarls one morning, “were not raised to keep death out; but to shape death within.”

The n nodded, proud.

They still rembered Connacht. They had marched beside Vetrúlfr, seen the wolf-king fell a world with torch and blade.

Ármóðr had not followed blindly. He had learned. And now he was replicating it, feeding the fire with Baltic timber, Slavic iron, and Norse will.

Inside the ad hall, now reinforced with stone pillars and heated by a massive hearth of carved black granite, Ármóðr knelt before a massive map spread over a boarhide.

Pins and carvings marked coastal towns, sea lanes, and rivers. He studied the lines with narrowed eyes.

n surrounded him; his own captains, younger Jomsvikings who now spoke in terms of campaign seasons, supply chains, and combined arms.

A raven landed on the windowsill. Ármóðr didn’t smile, but he looked to it as if it were an on.

“He builds in the west,” he murmured. “And I build in the east. They think us separate. They forget what blood has shared oaths beneath moon and fla.”

He rose, one fist clenched above the table.

“Let them co with crosses and crowns. The wolves of the north do not fight alone.”

By moonrise, ships lined the harbor once more.

Not to sail. Not yet.

But to be counted.

To show that Jomsborg was not broken.

And when the winds carried word of green banners flying in Connacht, and stone cities rising in Ísland, the na Ármóðr would be whispered alongside Vetrúlfr’s; not as a servant, but as a second blade in a two-handed strike.

The Baltic watched.

The Empire listened.

The wolves… sharpened their teeth.

And far beyond Jomsborg, past the mists of the northern seas, ships were being caulked and sails woven; not for raiding, but for invasion.

The long night was coming.

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