Viking Boy (6 page)

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Authors: Tony Bradman

BOOK: Viking Boy
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“You know what to do, Hogni, you miserable wretch,” growled Rurik. “And hurry up. I don’t want to be near you for any longer than I have to.”

“The feeling is mutual, you backstabber,” growled the smith. He held up the metal with a pair of tongs, and Gunnar saw it was shaped into a ring that wasn’t quite closed. “So it’s lucky for you this one is nearly ready.”

There was hatred in the exchange, but for all Gunnar cared they could kill each other on the spot – and Orm and everybody else who worked for him. All he wanted to think about was escape. He was sure he could outrun Rurik and the guards, although he wouldn’t get far with his hands tied. He strained against the binding, but sensed that he was being studied. Rurik was staring at him.

“Nothing to say, boy? At this point new slaves are usually weeping for their mothers and begging to be set free. You just seem to be thinking.”

“I’ve got plenty to think about,” said Gunnar. “What will happen to me?”

“The pig Hogni here will fit you with a nice, shiny thrall ring to go round your neck,” said Rurik. “Then Orm will put you up for sale. He buys and sells slaves, and he’s the richest man in town, which is why he’s called the King of Kaupang even though he doesn’t have a drop of royal blood in that fat body of his. After you’ve been sold you’d better just hope for a kindly master.”

The smith dipped the thrall ring into a bucket of water. There was a great hissing noise and clouds of white steam. He took it out again and approached Gunnar, pulling it open so he could slip it round the boy’s neck.

Gunnar had a feeling this was probably his last chance. “When are you going to untie my wrists?” he asked Rurik. “I can’t feel my hands any more.”

Rurik smiled and shrugged. “We can’t have that now, can we?” he said. He unsheathed the dagger on his belt and cut through the bindings.

As soon as Gunnar’s hands were free he stepped over to the wall and grabbed the shovel. He swung it round by the shaft and smashed the flat of the wide blade into the smith’s face. There was a dull
clang
and the crunching noise of bone breaking, and Hogni staggered back, toppling over the anvil, crashing down behind it in a terrific clattering of tools and thrall rings. Gunnar threw the shovel aside and dashed out of the smithy, listening for the clamour of pursuit.

But all he could hear was the sound of Rurik roaring with laughter.

E
IGHT
A S
ILVER
A
RM
R
ING

T
HE GUARDS CAUGHT
him before he’d run ten paces. Gunnar struggled and kicked and cursed, but they pinned him down in the foul mud of the courtyard. “Hey, Rurik, what do you want us to do with him?” yelled the older guard.


Do
with him, Thorkel?” Rurik said, walking over to them. “Why, slap him on the back and tell him what a good lad he is! That boy has just given me the biggest laugh I’ve had in years.
Clang!
And Hogni went flying.”

“What in Odin’s name are you talking about, Rurik?” Thorkel said, frowning. He had piercing blue eyes, grey hair tied in a ponytail, and wore a thick brown tunic. A decent-looking sword in a wooden scabbard rode on his hip.

“The boy smashed Hogni’s face with a shovel,” said Rurik. “Maybe it’s made him look better. It couldn’t have made him any uglier, could it?”

Thorkel smiled at him and shook his head. “I’m not sure Hogni agrees,” he said, nodding at the smithy. Gunnar strained to look round. The smith was striding towards them, blood running from his nose.

“I’ll kill him, I swear,” Hogni growled. “I’ll strangle the little swine!”

There was a sudden hiss of steel. Hogni stopped instantly and fell silent. The point of Rurik’s sword was resting on the soft white skin of his throat.

“Orm wouldn’t be very happy with me if I allowed you to kill a slave before he had a chance to make a profit on him,” Rurik said quietly. “So on your way, Hogni, or I’ll let the boy have another go at you.”

The guards sniggered, and Hogni scowled. “One day, Rurik, I’m going to cut your heart out and eat it,” he snarled, and stomped back to his smithy.

“So then, Rurik,” said Thorkel. “Is the boy for the pens, or what?”

“No, I don’t think so.” Rurik rubbed his chin and stared after Hogni thoughtfully. “Come on, boy, we’re going to see Orm again.”

Rurik pulled a confused Gunnar to his feet and marched him into the hall once more. Orm stared coldly from his seat at the warrior and the boy.

“It’s your lucky day, Orm,” said Rurik. “I’ve decided I need a slave, so you won’t have to go to the trouble of putting this one on the auction block.”

Gunnar turned to look at him, wondering what could be going through the big man’s mind. He had expected Rurik to tell Orm what had just happened, and for Orm to order a beating for him. Or something worse.

“Is that so?” said Orm. He seemed surprised too. “What’s brought this on? I’ve never known you buy a slave before. I doubt you can pay my price.”

“I can,” said Rurik. “This should be enough.”

Rurik took a thick silver arm ring from under one sleeve of his byrnie. He tossed it to Orm, and the fat man caught it. He raised his gaze to Rurik and smiled. “You’re right, this will do nicely,” he said. “The boy is yours.”

Rurik nodded and pushed Gunnar out of the hall. Then he strode off down a nearby alley, keeping the boy moving ahead. Soon they came to a hut and went inside. A ring of hearth stones stood in the middle, a fur-covered bracken bed against one wall, a wooden chest against the other.

“Don’t be worried, boy,” said Rurik. He eased his sword belt over his head and tossed it on the bed. Then he kneeled by the hearth and poked at the ashes with a bit of kindling. “I’m not going to eat you. Make yourself at home.”

“This is not my home,” said Gunnar. “And I will never be your slave.”

For a moment Gunnar thought Rurik hadn’t heard. The big man blew onto the ashes in the hearth and a red glow appeared that he fed with more kindling. “What’s your name?” Rurik said eventually. “At least tell me that.”

“Gunnar.” Yellow flames were starting to flicker over the wood.

“Just Gunnar?” Rurik sat with his back against the chest and crossed his legs. “Suit yourself. And I don’t suppose you’re going to tell me how you ended up being sold as a slave by Gauk of the Silver Tongue, are you?”

Gunnar shrugged. “There’s nothing to tell.”

“There’s always a story to tell, and I can probably guess some of yours. Your clothes are of fine quality, but they’re stained with blood. So you’re of good family, but something bad must have happened. Am I right?”

“Maybe,” said Gunnar.

“You’re a tough one, I’ll give you that.” Rurik grinned. “And you’re a fighter. That’s what I like about you.”

“So let me go,” Gunnar said quickly. “I swear I’ll find the money to pay you back. But I can’t be your slave. I can’t stay here.”

Rurik’s grin vanished. “Listen, boy. Until today you might have thought you were free, but this was always going to be your fate, foretold by the Norns.”

That same image of three ancient women in ragged black clothes filled Gunnar’s mind again. He remembered Brunhild talking of them too, and he suddenly felt angry. “What have they got to do with me? I’ve heard them mentioned in old stories, but I don’t even know who they are.”

“They know you,” said Rurik. “Some call them the Norns, others the Three Sisters. They sit at the foot of the great tree Yggdrasil and weave a web in which each thread is a life – its past, present and future. They decide all that will happen from the day we’re born to the day they cut our threads – and we die.”

Gunnar wondered if it was true. Had he always been doomed to see his home burned and Father murdered, and to end up a slave? If so, there was no point fighting against it, and he might as well give up any idea of bringing Father back from Valhalla and saving Mother. But a new thought occurred to him and he spoke it out loud before he could catch himself. “What if this isn’t my
final
fate? What if my fate will lead me to other things?”

“Perhaps it will,” said Rurik. “
My
fate has brought me to this stinking hole. You might find your way to somewhere else, but for now you’re my slave, and you’d better get used to the idea. As fates go, it’s not that bad.”

“Really?” Gunnar scowled at him. “How did you work that out?”

“I’ll be a kindly master. I won’t beat you or make you work too hard.”

“But you’ve never bought a slave before. Why did you buy
me
?”

“I thought it would be worth it just to see Hogni’s face when he finds out I’ve bought you, and that you’re going to be around all the time…”

Gunnar’s heart sank – he was to be Rurik’s means of tormenting the smith. His presence in Kaupang would be a constant reminder to everyone that Hogni’s nose had been flattened by a mere slave boy. So not only was he stuck here when he should be on his way to Valhalla, he was caught in a feud between two violent men. “Why do you hate each other?” he asked.

“I played a prank on Hogni one evening when I was bored, and he didn’t like it,” sighed Rurik. “Harsh words were spoken, threats were made.”

Gunnar frowned, hardly able to believe that was all there was to it. “And what if I still say no to being a slave?” he said, looking Rurik in the eye. “What if I refuse to accept it’s my fate, and try to escape again the first chance I get?”

“So you’re stubborn too. Well then, I’d better show you.”

Rurik picked up his sword belt and put it on again, then ducked out through the hut’s door, beckoning Gunnar to follow. The sky was darkening over the town, the air growing colder. Rurik’s stride was long and his left hand rested easily on his sword hilt, and most people quickly got out of his way.

“This will do,” said Rurik at last. “We can see them from here.”

They had arrived on the quayside. The tide had ebbed and many of the ships were tilted onto their sides, the setting sun casting deep shadows. Gulls swooped and squawked, and a mud-and-sea smell filled Gunnar’s nostrils. But there was another odour too, something foul and disturbing.

“See what?” he asked, looking round at Rurik. The big man said nothing. He nodded at a couple of posts stuck in the mud twenty paces from the quayside, a pair of roughly trimmed logs the height of a man.

Now Gunnar understood where the stench was coming from. A dead body was tied to each post, the flesh puffy and green, white bones poking through sodden rags that had once been clothes.

“That’s what happens to slaves who try to escape,” said Rurik. “They soon get caught – the locals and most of the ship crews know it doesn’t pay to make an enemy of Orm. Once they’re returned, he has them tied to the posts at low tide and lets the sea kill them. It’s not a good death, or a quick one.”

Gunnar stared at the posts, then lifted his gaze to the open sea. The Land of Ice and Fire was somewhere across those waves…

N
INE
F
RIENDS AND
E
NEMIES

T
HERE WAS STILL
the matter of Gunnar’s thrall ring to be settled. Orm heard about what had happened and sent another of his men to Rurik’s hut with a message. Gunnar was to have a ring fitted by Hogni, and that was the end of it.

“Come on, boy,” said Rurik. “You’ll have to swallow your pride.”

Night had fallen by the time they entered the courtyard again, the smithy’s forge casting the only light. The guards crowded round the front of the smithy, laughing and nudging one another, clearly hoping for more entertainment. Rurik pushed through, pulling Gunnar along behind him. Hogni looked up from his anvil, and Gunnar saw that his face was bruised and swollen.

“You’ve got some gall coming in here, Rurik,” he growled, glaring at them. “Unless you’ve brought the boy back so I can kill him after all.”

“No, Hogni, that’s not what’s going to happen,” Rurik answered. “We’re here because Orm says the boy must have a thrall ring like the other slaves. And as he belongs to me now, just make sure you don’t do him any harm.”

“What are you talking about?” muttered Hogni, looking confused.

“I bought the boy from Orm,” said Rurik with a grin. “Cost me a silver arm ring. But it was worth it just to know he’ll be protecting me from you.”

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