“I tell you,” cried the man at the table, “it is Hilda, daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar. I have been in his hall. It is she!”
The women of the north, commonly, do not veil themselves.
“How were you taken?” asked Svein Blue Tooth.
“By trickery, my Jarl,” said she. “In my own compartments was I taken, braceleted and hooded.”
“How were you conveyed past guards?” asked the Blue Tooth.
“From the window of my compartments, braceleted and hooded, late at night, helpless, in darkness. I was hurled into the sea, more than a hundred feet below. A boat was waiting. Like a fish I was retrieved and made prisoner, forced to lie on my belly in the boat, like a common maid. My captors followed.”
There was a great cheer from the men in the hall, both those of Ivar Forkbeard and those of Svein Blue Tooth.
“You poor, miserable girl,” cried Bera.
“It could happen to any female,” said Hilda, “even you, great lady.”
“Men are beasts,” Bera cried. She regarded Ivar, and me, and his men, with fury. “Shame be upon you, you beasts!” she cried.
“Svein Blue Tooth, Jarl of Torvaldsland, meet Hilda, daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar,” said Ivar. “Hilda, daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar, meet Svein Blue Tooth, Jarl of Torvaldsland.”
Hilda inclined her head in deference to the Jarl.
There was another great cheer in the hall.
“Poor girl,” cried Bera, “how you must have suffered!”
Hilda lowered her head. She did not respond to Bera. I thought she smiled.
“Never had I thought to have Hilda, daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar, stand prisoner before me, before the high seat of my house,” said Svein Blue Tooth.
“Before you I stand more than prisoner, my Jarl,” said she.
“I do not understand,” said Svein Blue Tooth.
She did not raise her head.
“You need not address me as your Jarl, my dear,” said Svein Blue Tooth. “I am not your Jarl.”
“But every free man is my Jarl,” she said. “You see, my Jarl,” said she, lifting her head proudly and pulling her rich, glistening robes some inches down upon her shoulders, “I wear the collar of Ivar Forkbeard.”
The collar of black iron, with its heavy hinge, its riveted closure, its projecting ring of iron, for a chain or padlock, showed black, heavy, against the whiteness of her lovely throat.
“You have dared to collar the daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar!” cried Bera to Ivar Forkbeard.
“My master does what he pleases, Lady,” said Hilda.
I wondered what Bera would say if she knew that Hilda had been put at the oar, and taught to heel; that she had been whipped, and taught to obey; that she had been caressed, and taught to respond.
“Silence, Bond-maid!” cried Bera.
Hilda put down her head.
“To think,” cried Bera, “that I expressed solicitude for a collar-girl!”
Hilda dared not speak. For a bond-maid to speak in such a situation might be to invite a sentence of death. She shuddered.
In fury, Bera, lifting her skirt from about her ankles, took her way from the long table, retiring to her own quarters.
“You collared her!” laughed Svein Blue Tooth.
“Of course,” said the Forkbeard.
“Superb!” laughed Svein Blue Tooth, rubbing his hands together.
“Lift your head, Wench,” he said. His attitude toward Hilda had changed, completely.
She did so.
She had a beautiful face, blue eyes, long, loose blond hair.
“Is she pretty?” asked Svein Blue Tooth.
“Remove your slippers,” said the Forkbeard.
The girl did so. She stepped from them. She did not wear stockings. Roughly the Forkbeard, then, his hands at her shoulders, tore away the robes of concealment.
The men, and the bond-maids, cried out with pleasure, with admiration.
Hilda stood proudly, her head high, amidst the heaped gold, jewels, sapphires, in the dirt about her feet. She had been branded. It had been done by the hand of Ivar Forkbeard himself, before dawn, some days ago, shortly before the ship had left for the thing. She had been carried weeping, over his shoulder, her brand fresh, aboard his ship, The collar, too, before the brand, that very morning, had been closed about her neck, and riveted shut.
I observed the brand. She was now only another girl whose belly lay beneath the sword, a property-girl, a collargirl, a slave, a bond-maid.
The eyes of Svein Blue Tooth, and those of his men, glistened as they feasted upon her bared beauty.
“It seems,” said Svein Blue Tooth, “that the wergild has been well met.”
“Yes,” said the Forkbeard, “it might seem so.”
“In the morning I shall proclaim the lifting of your outlawry,” said the Blue Tooth.
I relaxed. It seemed we would come alive, after all, out of the hall of the Blue Tooth. I had only feared some treachery, or trickery, upon his part, some northern trick. Yet he had now, before his men, spoken. And I knew him, by this time, to be one who stood with his word, and stood well with it, and proudly. His word was to him as his land, and his sword, as his honor and his ship; it would be kept; it would be neither demeaned nor broken.
“I think there is some mistake,” said Ivar Forkbeard.
Inwardly I groaned.
“How is that?” asked the Blue Tooth.
“How is it that the wergild is met?” asked Ivar Forkbeard.
The Blue Tooth looked puzzled. He pointed to the jewels, the gold, the girl. “You have that here wherewith to meet the wergild,” said he.
“That is true,” said the Forkbeard. Then he drew himselfup to a not inconsiderable full height. “But who has told you that I choose to meet it?”
Suddenly the men in the hall, both those of the Forkbeard and of Svein Blue Tooth, began to cheer. I, too, was on my feet among them. None of us had suspected it, and yet it was what one should have expected of such a man as the Forkbeard. Never in the north had there been such a coup of honor! Though it might mean the death of us all, those who followed the Forkbeard, and that of perhaps hundreds of the men of Svein Blue Tooth, we cheered. My heart bounded, my blood raced. I struck, again and again, my left shoulder with the palm of my right hand. I heard swords clashing against the sides of plates, spear blades clattering on shields, and ringing, one against the other.
Slowly Svein Blue Tooth rose to his feet. He was livid with rage.
There was not a man in the hall but knew that his kinsman, a distant cousin, Finn Broadbelt, whom the Forkbeard had slain, had fallen in fair duel, and that wergild should not have been levied; and there was not a man in that hall but knew that the Blue Tooth had decreed, even were such justified, a wergild to the deed of the Forkbeard whose conditions were outrageous, deliberately formulated to preclude their satisfaction, a wergild contrived to make impossible the meeting of its own terms, a wergild the intent of which was, in its spitefulness, to condemn the Forkbeard to perpetual outlawry. Then, to the astonishment of all Torvaldsland, and most to that of Svein Blue Tooth, the Forkbeard, redoubtable, after earning six talmits in the contests, delivered to his hall the very wergild no man had supposed it possible to pay, and had then, arrogantly, before the high seat of the Blue Tooth itself, refused to pay!
“In this land,” said Ivar Forkbeard, “rather than accept pardon at the hands of such a Jarl, one such as you, Svein Blue Tooth, I make what choice a free man must. I choose the sleen, the forest and the sea!”
Svein Blue Tooth regarded him.
“I do not pay the wergild,” said the Forkbeard. “I choose to remain outlaw.”
Once again there was much cheering. I clapped the Forkbeard about the shoulders. Gorm, and Ottar, too, stood with him, and his other men. Hilda knelt at his feet, among the gold, the jewels, her lips pressed to his furred boots. “My Jarl! My Jarl!” she wept.
Then there was silence in that high-roofed hall.
All eyes turned to Svein Blue Tooth.
He stood before the high seat of his house, standlng before the long table; behind him, on each side, were the high-seat pillars of his house.
He prepared to speak. Suddenly he lifted his head. I, too, and several of the others, at the same time, detected it. It was smoke. “The hall is afire!” cried one man. Flames, above and behind us, crept at the southeast corner of the interior roof, above and, as we faced it, to the right of the doors. Smoke, too, began to drift in from one of the side rooms. We saw something move within it.
“What is going on?” cried a man at one of the tables.
The doors behind us, both of them, great, carved doors, suddenly thrust open.
In the doorway, silhouetted against flames behind them, we saw great, black, shaggy figures.
Then one leapt within the hall. In one hand it carried a gigantic ax, whose handle was perhaps eight feet long, whose blade, from tip to tip, might have been better than two feet in length; on its other arm it carried a great, round, iron shield, double strapped; it lifted it, and the ax; its arms were incredibly long, perhaps some seven feet in length; about its left arm was a spiral band of gold; it was the Kur which had addressed the assembly.
It threw back its head and opened its jaws, eyes blazing, and uttered the blood roar of the aroused Kur; then it bent over, regarding us, shoulders hunched, its cIaws leaping from its soft, furred sheaths; it then laid its ears back flat against the sides of its great head.
No one could move.
Then, other Kurii behind it, crowding about it, past it, it shrieked, lips drawn back, with a hideous sound, which, somehow, from its lips and mien, and mostly from its eyes, I took to be a sign of pleasure, of anticipation; I would learn later that this sound is instinctively uttered by Kurii when they are preparing to take blood. This cry, like a stimulus, acted upon the others, as well; almost instantly, with the velocity that the stranger signal can course through a pack of urts, this shriek was picked up by