Font Size
15px

Chapter 131: The Harbor of Kings

Ullrsfjörðr no longer whispered of empire; it roared.

Once a humble fjord nestled beneath the icy cliffs of the Westfjords, it had grown into the heart of a power whose pulse now beat across oceans.

Where once only fishing skiffs bobbed in the tide, now stood a harbor unmatched by any north of Miklagarðr.

The stone piers jutted into the fjord like the ribs of a leviathan, fortified and arched with Norse ingenuity and Eastern precision.

Each was wide enough for a dozen ox-carts, paved with basalt bricks and lined with oiled wooden beams polished by generations of boots and sea spray.

Along these mighty docks, one hundred warships were moored.

Not scattered. Not hidden. Aligned.

Each bore the mark of its king.

The hulls were stained a rich earthen brown, lacquered and sealed with oil to resist salt and ice alike.

Ochre-painted Vegvísir runes marked their sails and figureheads, binding wind and spirit to the cause of their voyage.

Their sails were dyed from local bark and trade-born dyes, a warm, ruddy hue that burned like autumn leaves in the morning sun.

Every ship, from the smallest karvi to the mighty drakkar, bore bronze-gilded figureheads: wolves with snarling jaws, ravens with wings outstretched, bears roaring skyward, or serpents coiled as if mid-strike.

Even the most modest knarr had such a headpiece, shaped by the hands of masters and mounted with reverence.

Each ship mounted shields along its rails, round, iron-rimd, painted with the sa ochre symbol, a fleet bound by vision, not just war.

And at the edge of the dock, upon the wind-swept rise overlooking it all, stood Vetrúlfr.

He gazed out at his fleet in silence, clad not in armor but a thick wolf-fur cloak.

The wind toyed with the pale strands of his hair and the hem of his mantle, but he stood unmoving. The sea mist curled around him like a second skin.

Beside him, a long horn rested against the stones. He had not blown it in years. But its call, when it ca, would summon all of this… every ship, every warrior, every promise carved in iron and blood.

Beneath the harbor’s quieter rows lay fifty knarrs, rounder and deeper in the belly, built not for war but for trade.

They bore wide decks for goods, lowered keels for the open sea, and crews of seasoned rchants sworn to his law.

Their routes stretched from Vinland to the Baltic, from the silver rivers of Kiev to the stormy straits of Alba and Eire. Silk, steel, grain, and salt flowed through their hulls.

So carried emissaries. Others carried ons.

“It is ready,” ca a voice behind him.

Gormr, stout and gray-bearded, stepped forward with a nod of reverence. “The shipwrights count every hull seaworthy. Every sail nded. The stores are stocked. The oaths are made.”

Vetrúlfr did not nod. He only watched.

“Not yet,” he said at last. “Let them rest another season. Let the world forget the sound of our sails… then let them hear it again all at once.”

The sun rose slowly over the masts, lighting a hundred gilded prows until they glead like fire.

This was not a fleet for raiding.

This was the navy of a kingdom.

A kingdom prepared to challenge the world.

The wind off the fjord whipped Vetrúlfr’s cloak as he and Gormr ascended from the harbor and made their way down the stone steps into the long colonnade that bordered the lower keep.

The cries of gulls faded behind them, replaced by the low murmur of forges and hamr-blows echoing from the smithies below.

Torchlight flickered along the carved wolf totems that adorned each pillar, casting snarling shadows across the walls.

“You never said why now,” Gormr finally said, falling into step beside his king. “Why England? Why Cnut? There are softer targets. Richer ones. Were we not going to raid Dublin? Before honor called east to Vinland that is? Why have you suddenly changed your mind?”

Vetrúlfr didn’t answer at once. His eyes were fixed ahead, on the towering bronze doors that led to the hall of shields, a war chamber lined with the battle-banners of every campaign they had fought.

“Because he made it personal,” Vetrúlfr said at last.

They stepped into the hall, the warmth of the braziers chasing away the chill. Gormr paused, glancing up at the vaulted ceiling.

Shields from every hold in the empire hung there, arranged in a spiral, each one etched with nas of the dead.

Vetrúlfr moved toward the center, where a great stone table rested, carved in the likeness of the world as they knew it. His gauntleted hand traced the northern coasts of Britannia.

“He thought I would forget,” Vetrúlfr continued. “That I would be so focused on the west, that I would not rember what he did to the Isle of Man.”

Gormr stiffened. He rembered the missives. The butchery. The razing of innocent villages and the massacre of their people.

“He slaughtered the innocent to make a statent,” Vetrúlfr said. “Claid vengeance for a monastery in Bobbio. Claid justice for Ro. Yet because he could not find where we wintered, he struck at those who could not defend themselves.”

He turned to Gormr then, eyes ice-cold.

“I have not forgotten. And now I receive word that his envoys have arrived in my lands seeking trade for grain…. It is an insult to the mory of those slain. And I won’t abide it!”

Gormr gave a slow nod. “Then next sumr, we sail for England?”

Vetrúlfr placed a carved iron marker on the southern coast of the Isle of Man.

“Not just sail. We burn our nas into their mory. We remind the world that the North has not been idle. That we have not forgotten our dead.”

He looked back at Gormr, voice low.

“The gods keep their oaths. So do I.”

Gormr grinned, feral and full of old pride. “Then we shall give them a sumr to rember.”

Outside, the fjord winds howled louder.

The sea was listening.

You are reading Valkyries Calling Chapter 131: The Harbor of Kings on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Re: Blood and Iron cover
Same author

Re: Blood and Iron

Zentmeister ·Action

SynopsisKarlWagnerisadisgruntledmiddle-agedinstructorattheBundeswehrCommandandStaffCollege.HefindshimselfconcernedaboutthedirectionwhichtheGermanna...

The Winter Tyrant cover
Same author

The Winter Tyrant

Zentmeister ·Fantasy

In2026,theworldfrozeoverinanapocalypticiceage.DeanWinters,amanstrugglingtosurvive,isbetrayedbyhislover,hisbestfriend,andtheverygrouphekeptalive.Lef...

Iron Dynasty cover
Similar genre

Iron Dynasty

Snail Carrying Home ·Historical

Atop-secretexperimentalexplosiontransportsXiaoMingtoaparallelworldresemblingancienttimes.Inthishostileland,heisthemostunfavoredprince,giventhemostb...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.