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Chapter 162: The King Rides North

London’s gates swung wide, and for the first ti in months, King Cnut rode out beneath open sky.

His cloak of wolfskin and gilded helm glead in the March sun, casting away the whispers of cowardice that had dogged him since the wolves landed.

His household huskarlar followed like an iron tide, shields painted with crosses and dragons alike.

Their presence sent a single ssage to the realm: the King himself now rode to war.

At Oxford, he climbed the steps of the stone church and spoke not as a monarch, but as a war-leader.

“Your barns are empty, your hos burned, and yet you still stand here, breathing. That is enough. Take up spear and shield. Let the wolves know rcia is not yet theirs.”

The fyrd roared, striking spearheads against shields until sparks flew. n who had been on the verge of fleeing now prepared to march.

At Northampton, in the ad-hall of Earl Leofric, Cnut dined with grim nobles. They spoke of shortages, of fear, of Vetrúlfr’s cavalry ghosts.

Cnut rose, slamming his cup against the table.

“I do not beg you. I command you. By oath, by title, and by the blood you owe to this crown. Muster your n. Tomorrow, we march together.”

And though the lords muttered, they obeyed.

Further east, at Norwich, the East Anglian thegns knelt before him in the old Roman forum. Cnut rode among them, speaking in Danish to so, in English to others.

“They call King of nothing. Prove them wrong. Stand with , and the wolves will break themselves against us like waves against stone.”

The East Anglians lifted their spears, chanting his na.

Winchester, the heart of Wessex, the mood was colder. mories of Alfred and Edward weighed heavy, and so whispered that Cnut was but another Dane co to plunder.

Here he walked among the levies on foot, clasping calloused hands, speaking softly.

“Not for ,” he said, “but for your fathers’ graves. For your children’s hos. This land is not theirs. It is yours. If we do not hold it, we lose all.”

Even the most reluctant could not ignore the truth. Wessex bent its neck once more.

So it went, from shire to shire, borough to borough.

In Kent, he invoked the sanctity of Canterbury, warning that if the wolves reached that holy place, no cross in Christendom would be safe.

In East Anglia, he promised land and plunder to those who stood firm.

Across the Midlands, he rode through burned villages, swearing vengeance and lifting broken spirits.

By the ti Cnut returned to his war-camp, the army that followed him was no longer a patchwork of scattered fyrds.

It was England itself, drawn up beneath his banners, cross and dragon together, sworn to stand against the northern tide.

And though he knew in his heart that Vetrúlfr’s shadow still outpaced him, Cnut at last bore the weight of a kingdom at his back.

The Norse camp lay scattered across the rcian fields, a sea of tents and watchfires glowing faintly in the cold spring air.

Horses stamped their hooves, their tack glinting silver in the starlight, while the low hum of n’s voices carried with the smoke.

Vetrúlfr sat apart, upon a flat stone near the edge of the encampnt.

Before him, in the firelight, his damascene blade glead with a shimr like flowing water.

He worked the steel slowly, cloth and oil in hand, each pass restoring its luster until the runes along its fuller caught the pale moon.

Scouts returned in silence, bowing before speaking. One knelt, breath steaming.

“My King… Cnut rides. From London he’s rallied his jarls. Not only English fyrds, but Danes, Norwegians, even Swedes march beneath his banner. His hosts swell by the day. They no longer gather pieceal, but united.”

Murmurs rippled among the gathered jarls, n like Gunnarr and Ármodr.

So shifted uneasily, others clenched fists on axe-hafts. The ntion of a united Christendom would have chilled lesser kings.

But not Vetrúlfr.

He only smiled, cold and sharp, eyes never leaving the mirror-bright steel in his lap.

“So Duncan will have his hands full,” he said at last, voice steady as iron. “Cnut has thrown his strength northward to et him.”

He rose to his full height, the wolfskin cloak stirring behind him in the breeze. He slid the blade into its scabbard with a whispering hiss.

“And while the Dane blunts his sword against Alba’s shieldwall, we will strike elsewhere. His lands are vast. His holds fat. His people weary.”

He looked to Gunnarr, to Ármodr, to every man listening in the firelight. His voice dropped, cruel and sure.

“Ready the Svinfylking. Their ti has co. We will break their walls as easily as their will. Let them think themselves safe behind timber and stone. We will show them that no gate is strong enough to bar the wolves of the north.”

A howl rose among his hirdn, answered by the stamping of hooves and the clash of spears on shields.

Above them, the moon cast its pale blessing. And in that cold light, Vetrúlfr’s calm was more terrible than fury itself.

The marble of Aachen’s imperial hall still bore the faint echo of Charlemagne’s age, its pillars rising proud though the banners now hung with Conrad’s eagle instead of the old Frankish standard.

Torches flickered along the walls, casting light across the gilded throne where Emperor Conrad II sat, flanked by his bishops and dukes.

The news from the north had arrived three days earlier. Reports of the White Wolf and his Scots allies tearing through rcia.

Of Cnut, forced from London at last, riding out to confront them.

One of Conrad’s advisors, Duke Giselbert of Lotharingia, bowed low and spoke:

“My Emperor, the north burns. Cnut calls upon Christendom, but what has he ever given us? His claim on Danish marches has never been released, and he has hindered our envoys in Schleswig. Why should we bleed for him now?”

Another voice rose, Bishop Hermann of Cologne, wringing his hands.

“Because the Wolf is more than Denmark, my lord. He is a pagan scourge. He has raised an empire where there was only ice and wilderness. Iceland, Greenland, and rumors of lands beyond. Nas once spoken only in sagas are now strongholds. Should he march further south, he will not stop at England.”

Murmurs rippled through the court. So nodded grimly, others scoffed.

Conrad raised a hand, silencing them. His face was stern, unreadable.

“The White Wolf is a problem, yes,” he said at length.

“But a problem for Cnut, not for us. Let him spend his strength on the Scots and these pagans. If he falters, his Danish holdings weaken. And when Denmark weakens…”

He let the words hang. The lords needed no reminder of his ambitions in the marches.

Still, Bishop Hermann pressed forward.

“But if Cnut falls, and the Wolf grows stronger still? He will not stop at Albion. He will seek plunder elsewhere. Our coasts are rich, our towns fat with grain. Even now, so whisper that rchants in Bren and Hamburg have already dealt with his traders in secret.”

At that, Conrad frowned. He drumd his fingers against the arm of his throne.

“rchants are like crows. They peck wherever carrion lies. Let them. Grain is cheap, coin flows. So long as no army crosses our borders, I will not be drawn into Cnut’s quarrel.”

He leaned forward, voice hard.

“Rember this, all of you: the Empire is not Ro reborn. We do not march at the Pope’s command. We do not waste blood for the vanity of kings across the sea. Until the Wolf bares his fangs at us, our swords remain sheathed.”

The court bowed, so relieved, others doubtful.

The great bronze doors shut with a hollow echo, leaving Bishop Hermann standing in the colonnade.

His breath misted in the chill air, but it was not the cold that furrowed his brow.

The imperial steward, a thin, sharp-eyed man nad Otto, approached, bowing lightly. “My lord Bishop… you seem troubled.”

Hermann exhaled slowly, folding his hands behind his back. “Troubled? Aye. The Emperor speaks of grain and borders while the north rises in fire. He forgets what the Franks forgot when the old raids began, that wolves do not stay where they are fed. They hunt where they please.”

Otto glanced toward the shadowed courtyard, lowering his voice. “You fear the Wolf of the North will march here as he has upon England?”

The bishop’s eyes darkened. “I fear our negligence will invite him. Already Ro wrings its hands, and England bleeds. Ériu has already been plucked clean by the wolves. Ti and again, Christendom has taken the threat of heathens lightly. Each ti it ends the sa, villages afla, monasteries sacked, the faithful slaughtered. And yet our Emperor thinks himself immune.”

He turned toward the dim outline of Charlemagne’s chapel, voice rising with conviction.

“When the White Wolf cos, and he will, it will not be England’s folly or Denmark’s ambition that he proves false. It will be our own arrogance.”

Otto said nothing. He only crossed himself, as though to ward off the on in the bishop’s words.

And the bells of Aachen tolled, heavy and mournful, as if to give his fears a voice.

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