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Chapter 110: The Dread of Winter

The sumr sun rose high over the smoke-silver waters of the Liffey.

Its warmth washed across the slate roofs of Dubh Linn, gilding the iron-capped towers and casting long shadows over the cobbled lanes that ran from the quays to the royal hall.

The scent of salt and fish mingled with smoke and the faint sweetness of heather, but beneath that was sothing else.

A stillness.

A hush that did not belong to sumr.

No bells rang. No horns called from the sea-facing towers. The gulls wheeled in silence. The harbor, though crowded with rchants, felt like a breath held too long.

The King stood on the balcony of his timber fort-keep, arms crossed, a goblet of watered wine forgotten in one hand.

He stared eastward; beyond the fields, beyond the bay, beyond even the wind itself. Sowhere out there was an answer he did not like.

“They haven’t returned,” ca a voice behind him.

It was Lorcán Íosa, his chief reeve, and the only man left in Dublin who still spoke the old Norse tongue without stamr or sha.

His cloak hung open at the collar. His face was drawn tight with sleeplessness.

“No longships. No market-stalls. Not a single bolt of seal-hide or bar of trade-silver has co west from the White Wolf’s ports,” the reeve said quietly.

“The ports at Hvíttrfjǫrðr and Langaness are empty. Even the old traders at Eyjafjörðr say the sea routes are dead. The whaling paths are quiet. It’s as if the east has swallowed them whole.”

“Or they’ve left the sea behind,” Sitriuc muttered.

Lorcán nodded once. “The traders from Eoforwic say the sa. No sight of the high-prowed warships. No Norse in the Christian markets. Not even in Lundenwic. They are gone.”

“But not ho,” Sitriuc said.

He turned. His eyes, pale blue, cold and sharp, held a grimness that had not been carved by peace.

“They haven’t gone to ground, Lorcán. The White Wolf does not hide. If he’s not raiding, not trading, not building ships on our shores… then he’s taken them sowhere else.”

“To the west,” Lorcán whispered.

“Vinland.”

The word struck the air like a blacksmith’s hamr. And the silence that followed was the silence of a truth long known, but unspoken.

Sitriuc paced.

“They called it a colony. A folly. The Christian kings mocked it; said it was too far, too wild, too cold. But that was a decade ago. And he is not a man to let things wither. Not him.”

He reached the table beside the hearth, where a carved wooden map sat half-finished. Lines traced shipping routes.

Markers denoted ports. But the western sea was blank, uncharted, save for a few Norse guesses and faded Skaldic tales.

“He’s built sothing there,” Sitriuc said. “A fortress. A kingdom. Maybe an empire. Maybe a war machine. But he hasn’t co back across the sea… and he’s taken the strength of the North with him.”

“And what remains here is too weak to challenge us,” Lorcán offered.

Sitriuc didn’t smile.

“Which is what terrifies . Because if he has chosen not to fight, and not to trade… then he is not idle. He is preparing.”

The fire crackled. Outside, a horn sounded; one of the harbor watchn announcing a small Irish vessel from Waterford limping in with barley.

Lorcán hesitated, then asked the question that had haunted every tongue in the hall for weeks.

“Should we call the council?”

Sitriuc scoffed.

“We already did. Last spring. And they said the sa: ‘There is no proof of war. Apparently what the White Wolf and his ravenous horde did to Connacht was not seen as our problem….'”

Lorcán clenched his jaw. “So they would have us wait until the barbarians are already at the gates, knocking it down with a battering ram?”

He looked east again; not through the window, but through ti, into the cold horizon of possibility.

“Tell the scouts to send word farther. All the way to Skye, to Mann, even to the Orkneys. I want to know if a single pale wolf shows its snout above the tide.”

Lorcán bowed slightly and turned to go.

“Lorcán,” Sitriuc said quietly, halting him.

“If the White Wolf of the North does return across the sea… it will not be for trade.”

Lorcán lingered in the doorway for a mont longer, as if the fire might offer so last reassurance. It didn’t. Only shadows danced now, tall and crooked, as if mocking the stillness in the room.

“There’s one more thing,” he said without turning. “Whispers from the Hebrides.”

Sitriuc narrowed his gaze. “Go on.”

“They say strange vessels were seen off the western isles. Not trading ships. Not war galleys. Sothing… different. Smaller, swifter. Carved like the bones of birds, silent on the tide.”

“Scouts?”

“Ghosts, maybe. But they left no bodies, only vanished herds and broken nets. The villagers speak of wolves with white eyes walking the shoreline.”

Sitriuc exhaled through his nose. He turned from the map and walked slowly to the shuttered window. He opened it.

The breeze that rolled in did not belong to sumr. It carried the cold breath of sothing older. Sothing patient.

He looked down over his city; Dublin, the proud Norse-Irish jewel of Éire. Its streets bustled still. Its markets chattered. Its people laughed beneath the banners of a peace they no longer trusted.

And yet he could already see the cracks. The way warriors now walked with their swords belted a little tighter.

The way mothers kept their children in from the fields by dusk. The way old n drank deeper than they used to.

They had not seen war in years. But they felt it coming.

Sitriuc closed the shutter and turned back to Lorcán.

“Send word To Munster. To ath. And to whatever fool now calls himself the King of Connacht’s ruins. Quietly. No banners. No declarations. Just… eyes.”

Lorcán’s brow furrowed. “And if they ask what to watch for?”

The king’s voice ca low, almost reverent.

“Watch for silence. Watch for winter in sumr.”

He paused.

“Watch for wolves.”

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