Chapter 109: Ice Breaks
The grove was sacred.
Or at least, it had been once; before the cold followed them here, before the rivers ran red, and the songs of the old won were drowned beneath the sound of drums.
Now it was a place of war.
Smoke rose in thin, straight lines from fires choked low with pine needles. Warriors moved in silence between birch trunks, their bodies lean with hunger, their eyes like obsidian; too tired to fear, too bitter to forget.
Qaavik knelt beside a circle of stones, sharpening his knife with slow, steady strokes.
The edges were nearly worn to nothing. He could feel the steel beneath the bone handle tremble, as if it too had seen the longships in the bay.
“They co,” said a voice.
Qaavik looked up.
From the western trail, a hunting band erged: Saqqaq and Dorset alike, faces sared in ash, cloaks ragged from travel.
Among them was Tuluq, an elder-speaker of the old tongue. His legs were bound in seal-hide, his shoulders draped in a bear’s spine.
“They ca by the river,” said one of the scouts. “Not one ship. Not five. Dozens. Each with the head of a beast. Each carrying fire.”
Qaavik stood. His fingers tightened around his knife. “How many n?”
The scout shook his head, unable to say.
Another answered hoarsely: “Enough to swallow the coast. Their tents stretch longer than the river’s bend. Their ships are being pulled inland by oxen. They ca not just to kill. They ca to stay.”
A heavy silence followed. Even the wind held its breath.
Tuluq stepped forward, his voice brittle but clear. “I saw the pale one,” he said. “The giant. The one who walked with smoke and iron in Greenland. The white wolf.”
Qaavik stared at him. “You are certain?”
“I would know that cloak in any season,” Tuluq whispered. “The hide of the winter beast. The helm of iron. The eyes that do not blink even in fla.”
“He burned our villages,” spat Qilak. “He burned our gods.”
“He follows his own,” said Tuluq. “And they follow him. This is no raid. This is a migration of war.”
The n muttered among themselves. So reached for their spears. Others touched talismans of stone or carved bone, muttering protections.
“They are not like us,” one man said. “They sleep in tal skins. They carve mountains. Their arrows pierce stone. They do not feel the cold.”
Qaavik stepped into the firelight.
“They bleed.”
The n turned to him.
He held up a relic: the broken axe-head of a Norse raider from Greenland. Burned at the haft. Dried blood was still caked in the socket.
“They bleed,” he repeated. “But we must bleed them first. Not in battle. In shadow. In wind. In hunger.”
Tuluq nodded slowly. “We must beco the ice. Let them march into the forest. Let them drink from poisoned streams. Let them eat ash and splinters until they curse their own gods.”
Qaavik turned to the assembled war bands, a hundred n, perhaps more. The last sons of a dying world.
“If we break here,” he said, “then the last fire of our people dies in these woods. No songs. No drums. Only silence.”
“But if we break them…”
His hand lifted to the canopy above.
“Then we beco the winter.”
—
The smokehouse had been cleared to make room for council.
The firepit burned low in the center, its coals glowing like watchful eyes. Around it sat elders, warriors, and hunters; Vinlander n with bone ornants in their hair and flint scars on their hands.
They wore leather cured in the old ways, and suspicion even older. Behind them, the long silhouettes of Nokomis’s people stood close to the walls, pressed by uncertainty.
And standing apart from all of them, yet commanding every gaze, was him.
Vetrúlfr.
The White Wolf of Ullrsfjǫrðr. Cloaked in the pelt of his nasake, shoulders squared beneath a weather-worn cuirass of blackened leather and mail.
One hand rested on the poml of his sword; the other lifted only when he spoke.
But he did not speak their tongue.
Not yet.
So the words ca from Nokomis. asured. Clear. Carried by her voice, shaped by his.
She stood beside him; half war-chief, half translator, her braid tied high, her hand resting near the hilt of her knife.
Her painted face betrayed no emotion, but her heart burned with each sentence.
“He says… you cannot win as you are.”
There was a murmur. Sharp glances. A few scoffs.
But Vetrúlfr kept speaking, his tone calm, steady, like a tide grinding stone.
“He says; he has fought these sa people before. On the icefields of Greenland. And he did not chase them. He smothered them.”
Now there was silence.
Even the fire dared not crackle.
“They live in shadow, in snow, in silence. They strike at night, kill the weak, and then vanish. You know this. You’ve bled from it.”
A scarred old man to Nokomis’s left narrowed his eyes. His na was Ayasha, once a trader, now a half-lad chief of the valley scouts.
“What does the Wolf of the Sea know of our pain?” he rasped. “His people brought these demons to us. Burned them from their lands, and now they burn us.”
Nokomis didn’t look at him. She looked at Vetrúlfr.
He had heard. He had understood. He stepped forward.
And this ti, he spoke directly. In broken but clear Vinlander; words he had learned by listening, mimicking, respecting.
“Their pain… is mine. My sword burned their hos. My hand fed the fire. But I do not regret it.”
Gasps followed. One man stood as if to strike; but Nokomis raised her hand and held the room.
Vetrúlfr continued.
“They struck first. Killed our scouts. An butchered our farrs. We answered as wolves answer: without rcy.”
Now his voice lowered.
“But I did not chase ghosts. I built walls. Towers. Forts. I did not hunt them. I held them.”
He drew a line in the air with his finger.
Nokomis translated for him now, but she didn’t need to look at him.
“He says he built timber walls, crowned with stone. Small fortresses, like teeth in the land. From them, patrols went out; riders, scouts, fast-moving war bands. Not to find their armies, but to break their raiders before they struck.”
“He says he turned their own tactics against them. They disappeared into the woods? So did his. They raided? He razed their camps to ash. He scattered their families so far that even their spirits could not find each other.”
“He says: this is how you kill the night.”
At that, Vetrúlfr stepped back.
The fire hissed.
The villagers looked among themselves.
It was Ayasha who spoke again, quieter this ti.
“You would build your forts on our land?”
Vetrúlfr t his gaze. His words ca slowly, firm.
“Your land? And what have you done with it? You wander where the ga goes, and winter in the safest of lands. Only to begin anew with the spring. You are nomads; you have no claim to these lands. And why would I recognize it? You can’t even hold on to what little you own as is. Without , you would all die; with you will live, and grander than ever before.”
Nokomis sighed and shook her head. She knew the price she would pay the mont she sent that letter ho. And yet she did not lant it. Instead, she conveyed the cost, and its necessity to those who still did not quite understand the world they were in.
“If you want peace… then understand: peace is not a prayer. It is a fortress. Built by iron. Kept by blood. You want your children to live? Then build the walls high.”
A younger man near the rear stood. “And if they co with fire? With numbers too great?”
Vetrúlfr answered that one himself.
“Then we show them what fear looks like in the daylight.”
He turned toward the open door.
Outside, the sounds of hamrs and saws could already be heard.
His n were not waiting.
They were building.
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