we were part of his father's army bound for the Khazar city of Sarkel to siege it.
I told him this and he nodded. 'I remember Einar. I have heard how he betrayed my brother Jaropolk and vanished into the steppe in search of some treasure. I hear he died there.'
'True, great. prince,' I said, feeling the slow slide of sweat down my back. 'The years have flowed like the Dnepr under all that.'
'Rare is it to have laughter from my prisons,' he answered, after a short pause to make it seem as if he considered his words carefully. He played the prince well at twelve.
'Rare it is,' I countered, sweating more and desperate, for I knew our lives rode on how gold-browed my words were now, 'to have a tale to laugh at.'
'I told it,' interrupted Olaf and I cursed the little rat. 'Would you like to hear it?'
I closed my eyes with the horror of it, while Vladmir, back-footed by this surprise stroke, wanted to turn and look to his Uncle Dobrynya, but had enough prince in him to resist it. That and boyish curiosity made him command Olaf to tell it.
'There was once a good Slav from Lord Novgorod the Great,' Olaf began, while my belly flipped over and my mouth dried so much my tongue almost choked me.
'We shall call him Vladimir.'
And he told the whole tale, only it wasn't a priest, it was an uncle called Dobrynya and, at every new stanza of it, I felt the wolf-hot breath of the Valkyrie wash closer and closer.
Then, at the end of it, while Vladimir hid his grins behind his hand, I saw Dobrynya smiling through his salted-black spade of a beard and felt a moment of light. A chance. There was a chance. Then I saw Sigurd, who was frowning above his silver nose and that was enough to drive my hopes deeper than the pit prison.
'What name do you have, boy?' demanded Sigurd so harshly that both Vladimir and Dobrynya looked at him in surprise. 'Olaf, lord.'
'And your father's name?'
I closed my eyes, for Olaf would never reveal that. The silence stretched.
'Was it Tryggve, by any chance?' growled Sigurd and I blinked as Olaf jerked.
'And your mother was called Astrid,' he said, softer now and again Olaf jerked again like a speared whale. Then the truth of it smacked me like snow from a roof — Sigurd. Olafs lost uncle.
'You know this boy, Sigurd Axebitten?' asked Dobrynya and the
'I believe he is my nephew, who was being sent to me for safety after his father was slain. Some raiders kidnapped him and his mother and
'We freed him,' I interrupted hurriedly. 'Klerkon it was — the man little Olaf here killed. He had been mistreated, chained up, beaten, his mother was cruelly. .'
I tailed off, realizing the whole story, the final tug of that ring, unearthing the whole glorious sword of it.
King Tryggve Olafsson, of Viken and Vmgulmark, grandson of Harald Fairhair of Norway. Not a king really, but enough of a mighty jarl — a
Aye, there was a woman. Gunnhild, the fearsome witch who could nurse night-wolves with the bile that she held in her breast. Who could chew grindstones to powder when she gnashed her teeth on a matter. She had searched out what she called 'the brat' all over Norway, determined to end the line and make her sons safe. Everyone thought she had done so since the boy and his mother and foster-father Lousebeard — properly known as Thorolf, I now remembered — had simply gone from every view and, in the end, from every lip and mind.
Now here was the truth of it, standing in this pine-smelling hall, frowning uncertainly up at the man with a silver nose who claimed to be his uncle.
I looked at the boy, pulled up as tall as he could, his chin jutting. A knife slipped between his ribs at any point would have been worth more than his own weight in gold to Gunnhild. Half the men who crewed the Elk would have done it in an eyeblink — the other half would have hoisted him on their shoulders and gone off to claim him king.
'Then we cannot kill him, surely,' Vladimir said in a shocked voice. 'Not a prince of the Norways, a nephew of Sigurd Axebitten.'
Dobrynya said nothing, though he looked at Sigurd, then at us, then at Olaf. I almost hoiked my guts up there and then, for you could see it written on his face, like a birch-bark account.
No, they couldn't stick a stake up little Olafs arse — but the
So Vladimir started with one of the thrall women, to see if the
They took us all out to witness their sharp judgement on the thrall woman, Danica.
While his skilled men worked with their stake, I looked up to where little Prince Vladimir stood. Today he was a fine-looking prince, in brocaded breeks and silk shirt, his dark-blue coat hemmed in red and with gold at the cuffs, wearing an over-robe of the same colour decorated with gold and fastened with a ruby clasp. Topping all this was a sable cap crowned with silver and the great crushing weight of an eagle-headed gold torc screaming on his chest. His two pillars were with him. And nestling under the embrace of Sigurd's comforting hand on his shoulder was Olaf, who had found his lost uncle.
At the end of it, both Dobrynya and Sigurd inclined their heads to the beards of the
Martin waved his hand in front of his chest in that Christ-sign they use to ward off evil and even Finn and Kvasir looked stone grim when the guards prodded us back to the pit. The other thrall woman was dissolving into snot and tears and had to be carried by Thordis and Thorgunna.
Finn gave a bitter laugh, the only laugh left of the ones which had floated us out of the pit prison to this moment. 'Little turd,' he muttered, glancing bitterly back at Crowbone, safe beside his new uncle.
In the dark of the pit I still heard laughter and knew who it was, though I did not know what he had to laugh at. It had seemed to me as if Odin was steering me, like a wind-driven
'I will not die a nithing death on a stake like that,' Finn growled and Kvasir agreed. In the fetid dark they started on a plan to break.free and fight until they were killed, with decent weapons in their fists. The women said nothing and Martin muttered prayers.
'Are you with us, Jon Asanes?' asked Kvasir and I heard the trembling answer.
'Yes-but I am not much of a fighter.'
'Orm?' growled Finn. I said nothing and wished he would stop yapping; there was something strange, a sound. . 'Odin's bones, boy, you are our jarl. Will you lead us?'
It was laughter, pealing and rolling like distant chimes.
Odin. .
'Perhaps his bowels have turned to water,' growled Finn and Kvasir snarled at him to watch his tongue, but he was uncertain and added that it might be that my thought-cage had warped a little.
'Bells,' I said, recognizing the sound. 'Bells.'
It was. Chimes, rich and deep, tumbling like water down a cliff face.
I could not see their faces in the dark, but I could feel them look one to the other and back to me. Bells in Novgorod meant something momentous and there was a stirring in me, a hackle-raise that let me know Odin had passed close by.
As the dawn emptied thick silver light down the shaft of the pit — our last dawn in this world, I was thinking