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Chapter 111: The Great Northern Empire

Once, the land beyond the western sea was spoken of only in hushed tones — as a curiosity, a ghost story, a sailor’s lie.

But now… now it had a na.

The Great Northern Empire.

Not Vinland. Not Markland. Not the half-whispered shores of Skraeling legends. But The Great Northern Empire also known by as the Land of Winter, or Vetrland, carved from the marrow of a new age by wolves who ca not to trade, but to build.

And build they had.

In just four winters, the empire of the White Wolf had risen like a sword from the soil. Where once there had been only scattered Norse settlents clinging to the coast, now there were stone keeps, walled towns, and paved roadways that stretched like veins through the forests and fields.

From Ullrsfjǫrðr, the capital; with its great hall carved atop a fortified mound, built with foundations of granite and ironwood.

Roads of crushed basalt and li spread outward in all directions. No longer the mud-rutted goat trails of old, but standard Roman roads, built with the precision Vetrúlfr had studied in the scrolls of Constantinople and Cairo.

Over icy rivers now rose arched stone bridges, so capped with battlents, others adorned with statues of wolves, ravens, or runic gods rendered in a syncretic style that was neither Christian nor pagan; but distinctly Vetrulfr’s.

Aqueducts, raised on native stone and reinforced with brick from kilns fired inland, carried clean water from the upland springs to the coastal cities.

From there, hypocaustic flue chambers ran beneath public halls, bathhouses, and private hos, venting warmth even in the deepest frost.

In Reykjavik, the city-ring built near the coast, public baths of heated marble buzzed with life; a fusion of Norse, Greek, and Persian ideals.

Wealthy chieftains soaked beside scribes from Arnia, or traders from al-Andalus, while emissaries from Rus or Miklagarðr observed in wary awe.

And trade; gods, the trade.

From the fields of the southern valleys ca barley, millet, rye, and beans, grown not by wandering guesswork but by the rotational crop thods Vetrúlfr’s scribes had translated from Arnian monasteries and Islamic treatises.

Terracing, controlled irrigation, and companion planting fed tens of thousands. Bee-keepers gathered honey in hives designed after Byzantine models.

Goats and horses bred for endurance were kept in managed pens beneath sloped thatch roofs engineered for winter heat retention.

rchant caravans crossed the inland roadways beneath the protection of mounted patrols; each a cohort in itself, wearing the leather lallar and iron mail they had beco so known for.

Outward from Mjǫllvikl a new harbor city built on the southeastern fjord, sailed timber-hulled knarrs with broad decks and deep holds.

So bore Baltic amber, or weapons forged in the empire’s highland furnaces. Others carried inked vellum scrolls, treaties and tos copied in the scriptoria that Vetrúlfr had built beside every temple and palace.

And the people?

They ca by the hundreds, then by the thousands.

Dispossessed Saxons and Danes. Broken Norse families fleeing blood feuds. Slavs who had known only war. Gaels who refused to kneel to the cross. And the Baltic peoples whose way of life was under threat on all sides.

Each was given land to till and law to protect them, provided they swore the oath: loyalty to the Wolf and his Word.

This was a refuge for the old ways of Europe, its old gods, its old laws, its old customs. Still drew breath in this realm.

Defiant against frost, steel, and cross alike, they gathered, and rebuilt that which was taken from them.

And all of it; every bridge and aqueduct, every paved road and harvest field, every sword arm and scrawled na, owed its place to one thing:

A man who saw empire not as inheritance, but as deed.

A man who had crossed the edge of the world with nothing but will.

Vetrúlfr. King. Warrior. Founder.

And now, Emperor in all but na.

The son of Ullr had built an empire from scratch. And now he was in the far western world, beyond the scope of maps, where only sagas existed to guide him.

Fighting, slaying, conquering. Vinland would soon join the others as a part of this Great Northern Empire.

It was simply a matter of ti.

The longships ca not in conquest, nor in raid, but heavy with silence and steel.

Forty in all; low in the water, burdened with mailed n and their mories. Their sails bore no king’s sigil, only the faded dye of Byzantium, sun-bleached and tattered.

The prows cut through the morning fog like blades through linen, and above them flew no banners, only the black crows of the fjord, spiraling as if to herald a reckoning long delayed.

Atop the bluffs of Ullrsfjǫrðr, the watchn lit the iron braziers, their firelight dancing in disbelief.

Word spread quickly through the streets and up into the hall of blackwood and stone, the hall of the White Wolf, though he was not there to greet them.

The harbor filled with warriors.

They disembarked without fanfare, without song. Their helms were of Eastern make, their shields rimd in eastern steel. Their swords forged in the style of their ancestors but from constantinople’s hearths.

They had seen too much. So wept silently upon kneeling to kiss the earth. Others gripped the timber docks with white knuckles, as though to swear silently: we are ho again.

They had co for one man.

Not the emperor Constantine, who let eunuchs and flatterers guide the empire. Not the sycophants of the court, who mistook wine for wisdom and pleasure for power.

They had co for Vetrúlfr, the Winter Wolf, their forr captain, the son of Ullr, the man who had led eighty loyal n through the palace gates after Basil’s death. Taking their promised coin, and their longship ho.

They were the ones who had stayed behind, bound to Basil’s mory and oaths of service.

But Byzantium no longer recognized strength as its law. The new emperor had squandered what Basil built; his borders cracked, his legions mutinied, and the Varangians beca little more than ornantal guards in a decaying palace.

So they left.

“Where is he?” one of them asked; a scarred man nad Hákon Drengr, once Vetrúlfr’s shield-bearer. His voice cracked not from fear, but fury restrained.

A steward answered from the steps of the great hall. “He sails in the west. Across the whale-road. To Vinland.”

Murmurs passed through the ranks.

“And his throne?”

“Unchallenged,” the steward said, lifting his chin. “And well kept, in trust. By his will.”

There was silence. Then a single sound:

Steel unsheathing.

Hákon drew his sword, its hilt wrapped in oxblood leather; and knelt, driving the blade point-down into the ground. One by one, the others followed, swords drawn and knuckles white, until a forest of steel rose around the longhouse steps.

One oath.

A second ti.

For the sa man.

“For the Captain of Captains,” Hákon said aloud, voice like gravel and frost.

“For the White Wolf!” they answered.

“For Vetrúlfr!”

The fjord echoed with their cry, not as rcenaries, not as wanderers; but as exiles turned brothers, who had cast aside gold for a chance to follow greatness again.

And though Vetrúlfr stood far across the sea, in a land of red forests and stone-eyed enemies, his shadow still ruled here.

And his wolves had returned.

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