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The clash on the southern knoll was like two stags locking antlers.

Duncan’s Scots, raw-boned and broad-shouldered, ca on with a roar, their round shields beaten with the flats of their swords to summon courage and fear alike.

They crashed into the line of Cnut’s earls, n from Denmark, Norway, even a scattering of Swedes and Saxons pressed into service.

The field beca a grinding press of n and shields, the front ranks shoving forward until the rim of one board locked against another.

There was no grace in it, no cunning maneuver. The line surged and trembled like a timber wall against the tide.

Spears thrust through gaps, swords jabbed between shield-rims, axes rose and fell in blind arcs.

One Scot drove his blade through a Dane’s thigh, only to be hewn down himself by a hamring axe.

A man’s scream was drowned in the din, his body swallowed under trampling boots before his soul left him.

The Scots were well-fed and fierce, their king at their back spurring them on.

The Danes were mixed, so hardened huscarls who fought like wolves, others green levies who clutched their spears with shaking hands.

In the crush of the shield wall, the difference between seasoned warrior and farmhand blurred into the sa red spray of blood.

The lines heaved forward, broke, re-ford, broke again. Small knots of n spilled out of the press, hacking wildly before being dragged back or cut down.

Shields split. Spears splintered. The ground turned slick with mud and entrails.

From the ridge above, Vetrulfr stood, cloak of wolf-skin stirring in the wind. His pale face was cast in cold disdain as he watched the spectacle below.

Smoke still rose in the distance from the villages his n had put to the torch, black fingers of ruin clawing at the grey sky.

He spat into the grass.

"Look at them," he muttered, voice heavy with contempt.

"They line up with shields and stab one another like cattle penned for slaughter. No thought. No rhythm. Just walls of flesh, grinding until one collapses."

His lieutenants lingered nearby, watching in silence.

Vetrulfr’s ice-blue eyes narrowed as the Scottish line buckled, then steadied, then lurched forward again.

"So primitive... so foolish. War is the hunt of gods and wolves, not this, this mud-soaked butchery. They spend themselves for nothing, and call it valor."

Beside him, Gunnarr folded his arms, weathered face calm beneath the rim of his helm.

"They did not train in Miklagard as we did," he said evenly.

"Nor did they pass those lessons on to their legions. This is how war is fought in this side of the world. Ever since Ro fell, you know this as well as I."

Vetrulfr’s eyes lingered on the shield walls below, watching n fight and die like cattle. He exhaled slowly, as though he pitied them.

"Aye. But knowing it does not make the sight any less... pathetic. I think it is ti we intervened, let them feel the sting of a couched lance... n of the North! Let us show this cattle how fierce the bite of wolves are!"

The knoll shook with the sound of iron-shod hooves as Vetrulfr gave the signal.

His white wolf-pelt flared behind him like a ghost’s banner as he lowered his spear, the Wolf Cross thudding faintly against his lallar vest.

The Danes, locked in their press of shields and hacking blades, never saw it coming.

Their war cries drowned beneath the thunder of hooves, the drumming cadence rolling over the hill like a storm.

For a heartbeat, the clash between Saxon and Dane seed to pause, both sides turning to the rising dust behind the Danish rear.

Then the Norse lances struck.

Wood shattered, n scread. The couched spears tore through the shield-wall like splinters, smashing bodies into the mud.

Horses slamd into n with the weight of boulders, snapping bones beneath steel-shod hooves.

A swirl of white wolfskin marked where Vetrulfr drove his lance straight through a Danish standard-bearer, pinning the man like prey before ripping the shaft free with a snarl.

Gunnarr rode at his flank, axe sweeping down to carve a man’s helt in two.

The wolf-warriors behind them struck with rciless precision, trained in standards once used within the drill-fields of Miklagard, no wild rush, but a spear-straight charge, each rider’s lance aligned, each horse held tight in discipline until the mont of collision.

The Danish line buckled.

n who had monts ago roared defiance now crumbled beneath the mailed tide, their formation unraveling in blood and panic.

So threw themselves at the ground to escape trampling; others turned to flee, only to be ridden down.

On the ridge, the Scots raised a ragged cheer at the sight of their foes collapsing under the northern charge.

Vetrulfr reined in amidst the carnage, his spear dripping red. His pale eyes surveyed the field, calm amid the storm. "See how easily the cattle scatter when wolves descend," he said coldly. "This... is war. Not their pitiful butchery."

King Duncan stood upon the ridge, watching in stunned disbelief as the Danish line folded in on itself like rotten timber struck with an axe.

One mont, Cnut’s earls were pressing, their shield wall pushing the Scots back step by bloody step; the next, the thunder of hooves and the glitter of steel-tipped lances ripped them apart from behind.

The Norse riders did not fight like raiders.

They did not dismount and grapple like common sea-thieves. No, they crashed through the Danes like the mailed legions of so forgotten age.

Lances couched, shields locked, steeds armored and disciplined, they struck with a precision Duncan had never witnessed in all his years of war.

n were flung like straw; shield walls shattered; panic spread as if carried on the very wind.

He felt his chest tighten, not with fear, but with awe. Turning to his captains, his voice rose over the clamor.

"By God’s holy light, what manner of warriors are these? I had thought no man could bring so many horses across the whale-road... yet here they ride, as though bred upon our own hills!"

The captains could only nod, their faces pale with mingled dread and admiration.

Below, the enemy host buckled like a bow bent past breaking, their order consud by terror as the horsen wheeled again, spears red and voices howling like wolves in the night.

Duncan crossed himself, though his eyes never left the sight.

"Allies, they call themselves, but they fight as kings. Were it not for their hand, today would have ended in ruin. Mark them well, my lords... for I would sooner have them at my table than at my throat."

---

Word of the northern disaster traveled south like wildfire.

By the ti it reached Cnut, he was seated in council at Winchester, poring over maps and directing the strengthening of the burhs along the Thas.

The mont the news was uttered aloud, the utter collapse of his northern earls’ host, the rout of thousands by horsen "gleaming like bronze demons", the hall fell into an uneasy silence.

Cnut’s jaw tightened, his hand clenching around the arm of his chair. He dismissed no one, but the stillness in the chamber was heavier than iron.

"So," he said at last, his voice low, "the wolves of the north strike sooner than expected."

His eyes flicked to his commanders, asuring their fear. "Not Scots alone, no. They speak of mailed riders, of eastern-trained warriors, of a host that fights as Ro once did. These are not re raiders on horseback, but cataphracts! Who among you can tell how such horsen ca to Britain unseen?"

None answered.

Cnut rose to his feet and slamd his hand upon the table.

"It matters not. What is done, is done. The north is lost, for now. But England is not. The Thas is the spine of my realm. Fortify the crossings. Call every levy south. Winchester, London, Canterbury, all must be made ready to bleed for this kingdom."

He leaned over the map, his finger stabbing at the southern coast.

"If they think England will crumble like so Frankish borderland, they are mistaken. Here, we shall gather our strength. Here, we will break them, or England will burn with us."

The councilors exchanged grim looks. Cnut, ever pragmatic, wasted no breath on mourning the fallen earls.

Their deaths bought him ti, and he would use it. ssengers were dispatched, ships readied, walls strengthened.

South of the Humber, England steeled itself for invasion.

Cnut, though, knew in his marrow that this would not be a war of raids and counter-raids. This would be a reckoning. Scots and Norsen joined, bolstered by warriors out of the East. He whispered to himself as the lords shuffled from the hall:

"If these riders are Ro reborn, then I shall be Carthage, unyielding... or broken."

On the windowsill of his keep, a Raven perched. Watching almost mockingly as the English tried their best to rally a defense.

It cawed and cawed, its tone filled with ridicule, before taking flight towards the North.

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