amulet.'
He gripped it in his little fist and grinned, all fear gone. I felt a surge then, something seidr. Perhaps Redbeard was in the amulet after all.
Finn and others had wanted to raise a stone to Ivar, but there were none suitable and no master-carver of runes within a thousand miles — in fact, in all my days I met only one such myself and I doubt whether there were a hundred in all the world then. Fewer now.
In the end, they dragged off Short Eldgrim, who made the least mistakes with runes, took him into Antioch and had him mark Ivar's name on the door pillars of one of the churches, while the priests wagged their beards and threatened to call the Watch.
As Finn said, the least the Christ-men could do for Ivar, who had been dipped in water with the rest of us and died a straw death, was mark his name on one of their god houses. They had enough of them, after all.
I reminded them that if the Christ wouldn't take him, Hel would and her hall was like herself, half foul, half fair. Those who died of sickness or age ended up on the brightly bedecked benches of Helheim.
It was at the pyre that we faced up to Starkad again, when he and his men came, supposedly to give polite honour to the dead Ivar. We stared at each other across the oil-slick wood, two packs of wolfhounds barely leashed by the presence of Ivar's fetch and the trouble a fight would cause.
Another one gone,' Starkad observed, caressing the hilt of the sabre as if it was a woman's thigh. 'If this goes on, there won't be enough of you left to bother anyone.'
`You seem a little diminished yourself, Starkad,' I launched back at him, trying not to look at his fingers tracing the runes I had scratched on the hilt. 'But we gave your dead on Patmos a decent send-off, in the old style, with the
Starkad twitched a smile. 'Soon the Strategos will have word from Leo Balantes on Cyprus,' he snarled.
'Then it may be that we will have it all back and more.'
`Perhaps the Basileus will have word before that,' I answered sweetly. 'I am sure he knows Choniates'
finest hand in a letter that mentions your name and a package that will have your eyes out, you and all your crew.'
There was muttering behind him at that, but he ignored it and forced a smile. 'There is no need for this,'
he said. 'My quarrel is not with you and Jan Brand could be persuaded to help deflect any blow at you from Cyprus. We should be oarmates, for I understand you have as little regard for the Hammaburg monk as I do.
I did not know this before, so perhaps we were pulling oars on the wrong stroke. I am prepared to overlook the lie you told about the monk coming to Serkland, for I have since discovered it was true — though you did not know that.'
I tried not to blink at that one; he had a deal of clever, had Starkad, and ways of weaselling out the truth that knocked you off balance.
`Hand back that sword you stole,' I said, which was all I could think of.
He cocked his head like a curious bird. 'You put great store by this blade,' he mused thoughtfully. 'A good blade and valuable, but still.
`Will you trade?' I asked and he did not need to ask for what. He laughed instead.
`Why should I? Before long I will have what you took on Cyprus — and if the Greeks don't gather you up and blind you for it, then I will come for you myself. I have the protection of Jarl Brand, remember; you have no one.'
`Does Jarl Brand know you are King Harald's man?' I asked him and saw the blood in his eye at that.
'What will Bluetooth think of you swearing also to Jarl Brand? You take an oath too lightly to be now swearing peace to us.'
`For all that,' he answered thickly, 'peace is what I offer.'
I could not turn round, but I knew the eyes were skewering me and two of the deepest daggers in my shoulder blades belonged to Botolf. Deeper still were the eyes of those who could not see, kept in the dark and shackled. The weight of the invisible jarl torc, that other rune serpent round my neck, was crushing.
`Peace?' I replied sharply and paused. 'Why? Some of you are still alive.'
There were rumbling chuckles at that from behind me and Starkad whirled in a flare of red cloak and stalked off while the ranks of his men closed round him, looking darkly at us as they went.
The Oathsworn came round me, banging my shoulders and laughing. Botolf, rumbling with pleasure like some giant's cat, announced that he had seldom heard as gold-browed an exchange as that and others agreed. I did, too, when my knees stopped twitching. I thanked the gods for baggy Rus breeks.
`Well,' growled Finn, 'that settles matters. He will not trade, so we will have to take it from him.'
Back at the wadmal camp, hunkered round the pitfire and watching the black feathers of Ivar's fire thread the sky, Kvasir and Finn, whom I had appointed battle captains, agreed that the only thing left to do was seek out Starkad and fight him. What no one had an answer to was the problem of what to do with the container, for Starkad was right in that: as soon as he arrived, Red Boots would swoop on us.
`We could find out where Starkad sleeps and take him at night. That way we will offset his numbers a little,' Radoslav declared.
Finn curled a lip at him. 'At night? That would mean it was murder and not red war.'
I explained it to Radoslay. Any killing done in the night was considered murder, even if we decently covered the body and immediately reported the matter.
`Hardly matters,' muttered Kvasir. `Jarl Brand will have our heads, even if we win. Even if only one man is left standing, he will have his head.'
I was sure that man would be either Finn or Kvasir, but was equally sure that it would not be a Dane. The Danes knew the sabre was valuable and why and had sworn our Oath, same as everyone else, but I still did not feel they would charge into a sure-death fight over it. The chance for unimaginable wealth was lure enough to keep them with me — that and the Oath they swore — but this? This was something else entirely.
There was other talk, too, as Finn prepared
While we watched with interest and drooled, we spoke of Red Boots and the Roman army he was bringing. Few of us could understand what riches or benefit could be got from conquering a land as dun-coloured as this — especially as this was the latest of many wars between the Great City and the
I spoke with that soldier, Zifus,' Brother John declared, sniffing Finn's pot appreciatively. 'He told me that the Basileus has promised God to bring His Word to the heathens. This is a Holy War.'
I knew all our wars were blessed by the gods of the North, who supported one side or the other depending on how well disposed they were to your offerings. I did not know what the Greeks meant by Holy War, but wanted no part of it. I learned — too late — that it meant a land-ravager war, where everyone was killed and everything burned. Since the
We were drooling at the smell of Finn's cooking when up strolled Svala, as silencing to the talk as a hand on your mouth. She looked round us all, almost sadly, and I was the only one who met her eye, though I was sweating as I did so.
Kleggi the Dane opened his mouth to offer something witty, but she looked at him and he snapped it shut.
Short Eldgrim glared at her, but while his scarred face carried no fears for the likes of her, no one dared even move to ward against evil as she crossed and hunkered down beside me, dressed simply now, her hair in coiled braids. I had never seen these hard men so cowed.
`Now you know,' she said, 'and I am sad for it, since you seem afraid of me.'
`You are the third