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For the first ti in many winters, Vetrúlfr did not wake to the sound of sails or steel.

No horns blew at dawn.

No rider burst through the gates bearing tidings of conquest or treachery.

No drums beat along the fjord’s edge to rouse n for war.

Only the quiet murmurs of a waking city, Ullrsfjǫrðr, capital of the North, greeted him.

His hall had grown colder in peaceti.

The great hearth still burned, but the fire no longer roared with the fury of returning heroes.

It crackled slowly now, like an old story being retold, softer each ti.

At the head of the hall, upon a seat carved from the black stone quarried beneath the fjord, wrapped in furs and shadow, sat Vetrúlfr, no longer draped in the armor of war, but in the mantle of kingship.

A circlet of Damascus steel encircled his brow. Not ostentatious. Not imperial. rely symbolic.

The wolf that had hunted the world now ruled it.

Below him, a long line of n stretched through the hall.

Freeholders, jarls, rchants, all freen were permitted to speak their grievances when summoned.

They brought disputes over land, over stolen livestock, over marriages, debts, boundaries, and broken oaths.

And Vetrúlfr listened.

Not as a tyrant. Not as a god.

But as a man who bore the weight of judgnt like a blade, sharpened by wisdom, tempered by blood.

A blacksmith and his neighbor bickered over a property line disrupted by a winter landslide.

Vetrúlfr rose, ordering the stone marker to be reset where it had stood for a century before the hill collapsed.

Neither party was satisfied, but both accepted it.

A woman claid her husband had beaten her during the last snowfall.

Vetrúlfr heard her story, then the husband’s defense.

He asked questions no other king would ask, then turned to Brynhildr, sitting silently behind the high seat.

Her nod confird it. The woman spoke the truth.

Vetrúlfr stood and removed the husband’s left hand.

"The next strike you raise against one who bears your children will be with the other," he said coldly. "If there is a next."

No one challenged the ruling.

An old man accused his son of stealing from his winter stores.

The son admitted it, but only to feed his sickly wife. Vetrúlfr leaned forward, studying both n before decreeing:

"You will return what you stole in work and timber. But your father will not withhold what is owed to blood."

Justice. Cold as the snowdrifts outside, but just.

By midday, Roisín appeared in the high seat beside him, babe in arms.

Eithne trailed quietly behind, eyes downcast but smiling faintly.

Brynhildr remained behind the throne, her presence like the ghost of prophecy, watching all, speaking little.

And still, the people ca.

And still he ruled.

For he had carved an empire from the wilderness. Forged a court in a land where no throne had stood before.

And now, for once, he ruled it.

Not as a tyrant. Not as a warrior.

But as High King.

---

The wind howled against the longhouse timbers, fluting through the stonework like so ancient voice denied a body.

But within the throne hall, only coals crackled in the hearth, a low amber glow painting the hall in shades of rust and mory.

Most had retired.

The jarls, the warriors, even Roisín and her sons were asleep.

Only Vetrúlfr remained by the fire, seated not upon his throne but on a lower bench beside it, the damascene circlet set aside, replaced with a fur hood drawn low over his brow.

In his hand was a carved drinking horn, untouched, filled earlier by one of the attendants and long since cooled.

Footsteps echoed.

He did not turn.

Brynhildr moved like smoke, a shadow draped in wool and wisdom.

She carried no staff, wore no crown, yet when she stood beside him, there was no question who the queen of the dusk was.

"You rule like a proper king now," she said softly, seating herself beside him. "Just as your father would have wanted."

He didn’t et her eyes. "I thought you said Ullr was a hunter. Not a king."

"He was both," she answered. "As are you."

They sat in silence for a mont, not an awkward one.

The kind born of shared blood and older truths.

"I never knew ruling would be harder than conquering,"

Vetrúlfr muttered at last, staring into the embers.

"When I was at sea, I knew what I was. What had to be done. One raid to the next. One city to break, one lord to sha."

"And now?" Brynhildr asked.

He exhaled slowly.

"Now I weigh stolen goats against broken vows. Now I carve laws instead of skulls. I wake to whispers of grain prices and river crossings. And I... I almost miss the taste of salt in my mouth."

Brynhildr gave a quiet laugh. "You were never ant to sit still forever."

He half-smiled, but it faded when she leaned in just a touch, and spoke in a tone both amused and pointed:

"And yet... in every land you’ve claid, from Greenland to Vinland, you’ve built her shrine."

He turned his head slightly.

"The sea-witch," she said. "Ran. The drowned goddess. The net-weaver. There’s even talk that in so harbors, her idols stand taller than Ullr’s or Thor’s."

His fingers tensed slightly on the horn.

"You build temples to the goddess who drags sailors down... yet you command a fleet that’s never lost a ship since Greenland."

He said nothing.

Brynhildr studied his silence for a long mont, then raised a knowing brow.

"Did you see her again?"

He didn’t answer right away. For a mont, it seed as though he might.

But then he simply said, low and distant:

"If it keeps my ships from sinking... I’ll do it."

Brynhildr smiled faintly. "Superstition doesn’t suit a king, you know."

Vetrúlfr’s gaze hardened toward the flas. "Then let be a superstitious one. I’ve fought ghosts before. I’d rather keep so of them on my side."

Brynhildr placed a hand on his shoulder. "As long as you don’t forget who built this hearth."

"I won’t," he said.

But as the flas cracked and whispered, he couldn’t help but wonder:

Was she still watching out there beneath the black waves?

And if so... was it loyalty she showed him?

Or ownership?

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