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From the low hills above the fjord, they watched.

A thin line of skraelingr scouts lay belly-down among grey moss and lichen, faces streaked with ash.

The sea breeze carried up to them the scents of smoke, salt, and sothing harsher; iron struck against stone.

Below, where once there had been only scattered Norse turf huts and narrow fish-drying racks, a transformation unfolded.

A great hall of stone and whale-bone now rose at the center of a sprawl of smaller longhouses, their roofs smoking steadily through high vents.

Around it, wooden palisades bristled, ring on ring, like the ribs of so monstrous beast. Each section slowly found itself being replaced by thick walls made of stone and mortar.

They could see n and won moving in lines, stacking cut stone for new walls, laying pipe-like runs of clay that dipped into the streams above.

At several points along the slope, small brick towers exhaled faint puffs of steam; baffling to the watchers, who did not know the Norse had built flue channels beneath their floors to warm the ground itself, so that even the cruelest Greenland nights would not freeze them from below.

Down closer to the water, the invaders had gouged out new docks with heavy beams. Ships lay moored there, more than the scouts had ever seen in one place.

So heavy for trade, others lean and sharp, their dragon heads turned outward like beasts scenting prey. Nets and barrels lined the piers; stacks of firewood stood taller than a man.

Further inland, where the ground sloped gently, and the streams forked, the Norse had begun to clear fields, tearing up stubborn earth with iron plows.

Small stone aqueducts traced across these patches, carrying fresh water down to feed them.

The scouts watched as columns of ard n drilled on a packed stretch of ground. They wore iron caps and carried round shields rimd with glinting nails, and their movents were quick, sure, almost casual; as if violence was simply another daily chore.

For a long ti, none of the watchers spoke. They simply lay there, chests pressed to cold rock, hearts beating quick and light.

At last, the eldest among them, face painted with black spirals, hair bound with strips of fur, whispered in their tongue:

"They do not only co to take. They co to stay. They teach the earth to wear their shape, and soon even the wind will learn their nas."

Another scout swallowed, eyes wide.

"What we have seen... it is more than hunting camps. More than the passing raids. This is... like trees putting down roots, only faster. A season, and already they raise stones, drive water where it did not wish to flow."

The elder nodded slowly.

"If we wait too long, there will be no pushing them back into the sea. This land will be theirs, and our children’s children will tell frightened stories of how we once road here."

As dusk began to bleed across the sky, staining the fjord dark purple, the scouts retreated into the low woods.

They moved quickly and quietly, hearts tight in their chests, as if the strangers’ iron and fire might suddenly reach out to catch them even here.

Behind them, Greenland glowed with torchlight and forge-fire. The watchers could not have known of aqueducts, nor hypocaustic vents, nor drill formations by na; but they understood the most important thing.

This was no longer the sa land.

And by the ti the cold moon rose over the water, Greenland was already beginning to forget it had ever been anything else.

---

They returned under the hush of night, slipping through the frost-rid trees like ghosts.

At first the guards at the edge of their broad camp lifted weapons, but then recognized the paint and furs of their kin. A low cry went up, and soon the whole hollow was stirring.

n ca forward with questions in their eyes. Won clutched small children close, listening from the edges. A fire was stoked higher, crackling to life with long, hungry tongues of fla.

There, beneath a rack of drying skins, the scouts spoke.

They described what they had seen:

walls of cut stone, higher than two n, ringed in stakes.

great houses of bone and timber, their floors warm even against Greenland’s breath.

aqueducts that bent water to their will, carrying it in strange channels over the land.

fields already scraped clear and plowed by blades of steel, sown with foreign seed.

n drilling in ranks, shields shining, iron caps bright in the sun.

ships by the dozens, their dragon heads watching the sea with cold hunger.

An uneasy groan rippled through those gathered. An elder woman covered her mouth with both hands. A young hunter stared at the dirt, knuckles white where he clutched his spear.

"They are not hunting us only for pelts and tribute," the eldest scout rasped, voice hollow. "They build to stay. They bring their own sun in their hearths, they cut stone like we cut hide. And if they are not stopped now, this land will sing their songs, not ours."

A deep, angry growl rose from among the younger warriors. One lifted his club, the head wrapped in sharpened stones.

"Then we strike first. We know the valleys and the cold. They are few still; their walls new, their hearts not yet hardened by this place. We kill them in their halls, break their stone, drive them back to the sea!"

But an old hunter shook his head, eyes bright with haunted mory.

"No. You did not see them. Their armor is thicker than any we have faced. Their walls taller. Their blades cut through bone as if through dried grass. And they do not co as re raiders; they co as kings. They build as if they are gods."

A bitter silence fell. The fire popped and cracked, sending sparks into the dark.

At last the eldest among them, his hair bound back with narrow strips of seal gut, eyes clouded but still sharp, spoke with the weight of generations.

"Then it is decided. Those who would flee will take canoes at dawn, slipping across the ice toward wider forests. Those who would stay must accept what cos: to fight with spear and cunning against a force we may never truly understand. Perhaps the gods of this land will favor us. Or perhaps we will feed it with our blood, and our children’s bones will lie beneath their stone."

No cheers answered him. Only nods, slow and grim. Families clutched together, warriors stared into the dark, seeing not night but the bright flas of foreign forges.

Sowhere beyond the ridge, a wolf howled; and a raven watched. Even that old sound now seed changed, as if it called not for them, but for the strangers who wore wolfskins and brought the winter with them.

So the skraelingr chose.

So would run. So would hide and fight.

And the land itself would decide who was rembered.

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