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The snows had begun to crack and run, slipping from the black stone walls of Nottingham’s keep like lting wax.

Ice still clung in jagged teeth along the battlents, but the ground below was softening, mud where once had been iron frost, rivulets where there had been silence.

The gates creaked open.

From the shadow of the fortress, Vetrúlfr strode forth.

His wolfskin cloak dragged against the thawing earth, matted with the filth of winter, yet his armor glead as though the frost itself had polished it.

The helm beneath his arm caught the pale sunlight, its iron shimring with wave-like lines.

Behind him, a horn sounded, a deep, rolling note that shook ravens from their roosts.

n poured from the keep and its winter camp.

Mail rattled, shields clattered, hooves struck the softened ground as horses were led from their pens.

They had endured the long dark: leaner, yes, but harder, sharper. Wolves starved in winter only grew hungrier for spring.

Vetrúlfr raised his hand, and silence fell. Only the drip of thawing ice answered him.

"n of the North," he called, voice carrying over the muddy yard and the awakening hills beyond.

"Winter is broken. The land wakes, and so must we."

He lifted Gramr, the great blade. Runes caught the morning sun, flaring with fire against the grey sky.

"We endured behind these walls while our foes withered. They froze while we feasted on English grain. They starved while our hearths smoked with fat and ale. Now the rivers run free again, and with them, our ships will prowl once more!"

The yard thundered with spears on shields. Vetrúlfr’s grin cut like steel.

"Cnut and Duncan withered in their camps while we grew strong. The ti of hunger is over. Now is the ti of the sword. Follow to victory!"

He thrust the blade skyward. The wolfskin flared at his shoulders. The n roared in unison:

"ÚLLR! ÚLLR! ÚLLR!"

War banners unfurled along the ramparts, ochre on earthen brown, the wolf’s head snarling against the pale sky. Gunnarr rode up beside him, helm strapped, eyes grim with eagerness.

"Where first, lord? The rivers? The towns?"

Vetrúlfr’s smirk was cold and certain.

"Everywhere. Let no priest think his church safe. Let no king think his crown secure. This spring belongs to us."

The horns sounded again. The gates yawned wide.

And the wolves spilled into the thawing world.

Within a fortnight, the countryside was ablaze.

Vetrúlfr did not march in one host but loosed his bands like fire across dry brush.

One column struck eastward, seizing the river fords and burning storehouses at Newark.

Another swept west, cutting into the edges of Staffordshire, driving off cattle, breaking mills, and putting torch to barns heavy with what little grain remained.

Priests were dragged from their chapels; so ransod, others nailed screaming to their own doors as warnings.

Those who resisted were silenced with steel. Yet the wolves did not linger. Before levies could gather, they vanished again, back into the forest, back to their mounts, gone downriver on sleek hulls as if the land itself had carried them away.

By month’s end, scouts returned to Cnut with the sa broken words:

"They are everywhere... from horseback... from the rivers... the forests... they vanish before we can strike."

Each report gnawed at the army more than hunger.

The English king had endured his own crucible.

On the far side of the river from Nottingham, his camp had been a charnel ground. The frost was crueler in the open fields than in any stone hall.

Tents collapsed beneath snow. n wrapped themselves in cloaks stiff with ice, huddled shoulder to shoulder like cattle penned for slaughter.

Their grain stores had spoiled by Yule.

Black mold consud what little had been saved, and when at was gone, levy-n gnawed leather and roots scraped from frozen fields.

Frostbite claid toes and fingers. Fevers burned unchecked. By midwinter the surgeons stacked corpses higher than the palisade stakes.

Cnut himself walked among them, his beard white with ri, cloak patched and torn. He prayed with his priests, shared what food remained, spoke of spring salvation.

But even his presence could not mask the hollow look in the n’s eyes.

Now, with the thaw, humiliation replaced frostbite. Mud swallowed their boots. Flooded graves sent bones into the river.

And the fires of Nottingham burned bright with feasting. Rumors spread: the Northn did not sicken, did not freeze. So whispered it was witchcraft.

Others swore the wolves of Ullr were not n at all.

Cnut listened in silence. At last he bowed his head into his hands and muttered:

"They are not wolves. Not even n. They are ghosts. And ghosts cannot be hunted."

Then ca worse tidings.

From the south, scouts brought word of Duncan of Scotland. His banners, the red lion rampant on white, marched already into rcia.

His n had returned north and wintered in their highland halls, where cattle and barley stores kept hunger at bay.

Now they pressed south, tall spears bristling, drums echoing across the borders.

The news fell like a hamr on Cnut’s council. Jarls shouted, accusing each other’s n of cowardice.

But the king knew the truth: the wolves and the lion were converging.

He summoned what remained of his host.

n stumbled from tents, faces hollow, beards ragged, cloaks eaten by frost.

They shivered not from cold but from fever. The fields around camp were bare, stripped of fodder, trampled to sludge by months of boots.

Still, they gathered.

Cnut stood before them, his own fra diminished but his eyes burning.

Housecarls flanked him, scarred n with axes as tall as a man. Behind them, Saxon levies and weary Danes, many no more than boys.

"Duncan marches," Cnut called, voice raw. "The wolves howl still, and now they bring the lion. Will you let them carve our land like carrion? Or will you stand with , with England, with the Cross that binds us all?"

For a heartbeat, silence. Then axes thumped shields. Hollow, but loud. A roar grew from weakness and desperation.

The horns sounded. Banners unfurled in the muddy wind.

Priests lifted their crosses high, chanting Latin over the ranks as they filed into column.

Frozen, tired, starving, still, they marched.

And in the distance, beyond the spring haze, the drums of Scotland beat closer.

The clash ca swift and brutal.

From the rise above the riverbank, Vetrúlfr reined his horse and watched the fields churn into chaos.

His army of wolves lie behind him. Eager, ravenous, with only the rim of their shields to bite upon as the leader of their pack watched and waited for the opportune mont to strike.

Below, King Duncan’s spearn advanced in steady ranks, shields locked, the lion banner snapping red against the pale sky.

Their drums beat like thunder over the mud, a steady rhythm that carried strength into every step.

Across from them, Cnut’s line sagged.

Hollow-eyed Saxon levies clutched spears too heavy for their wasted arms.

The Danes and housecarls held firr, axes braced in grim silence, but their numbers were thinned by frost and famine.

The banners of England drooped like rags in the damp wind.

The two hosts t with a crack of wood and steel.

The rcian levies shattered first, spears slipping, shields splintering under the weight of Scots pressing forward.

Duncan himself rode behind the line, shouting in Gaelic, his presence a living banner.

Wherever his voice carried, his n drove harder, their formation a wall of iron.

Cnut’s housecarls fought like cornered beasts, axes biting deep, shields ringing like anvils.

For a ti, the English king’s defiance steadied the line.

His voice carried even above the din: "Stand for England! Stand for the Cross!" And n did, for a heartbeat longer than hunger and fear should have allowed.

Vetrúlfr’s grin was sharp as a blade.

From his vantage, he saw what neither king below could yet see: the wolves closing in.

His longships had slipped silently downriver in the night, their oars muffled, their sails furled until the signal ca.

Now their keels slid onto the muddy banks behind the English host. At the sa ti, his horsen, shadows on the horizon, swept down in a wide arc, banners whipping like stormclouds.

"They fight with courage," Vetrúlfr muttered, eyes fixed on the lee below. "The lion’s claws are sharp. The cross still steels them... but they are cornered beasts all the sa."

Gunnarr spat into the mud beside him. "Shall we loose the trap, lord?"

Vetrúlfr’s gaze lingered on the battlefield a mont longer.

Cnut’s line was bending, Duncan’s drums pressing, the air already thick with the iron stink of blood.

He could see the English king himself in the fray, tall, broad, axe flashing, fighting like a man who knew the crown on his brow hung by a thread.

At last, Vetrúlfr’s smile widened.

"Let them spend themselves a little more. The wolf grows fat when the hound and the lion tear at each other. Then we close, and the king of England dies."

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