PART ONE
EARTH
CHAPTER ONE
Blood dripped off the tip of his blade into the mud.
All around him the last of the winter snow was stained with it, a scarlet slush slowly melting into rivulets, mingling with the rain and the run-off from the pigsty into broad black puddles.
āItās over now,ā said Erlan Aurvandil, palming the strands of dark hair out of his eyes. His two younger companions were panting like hounds after the hunt.
āWhat do we do with these?ā Adalrik, the older twin, prodded his spear-butt at the body crumpled at his feet.
āThe groundās too hard to bury them. Drag them in there,ā Erlan said. There was a battered cattle byre huddled in one corner of the farmstead. āThen burn it down.ā He wiped his blade on his cloak before re-sheathing it in its wool-lined scabbard. His throat tasted foul. He spat into the mud. This was foul work any way you cut it.
They had come for settlement of a debt. A small debt from a small man, but Lord Osvald refused to overlook the sum. āFolk will reckon it an insult. And an insult canāt go unanswered.ā As if it were a personal slight to the Lord of the Livi that this farmsteader was beggar poor.
The man lay dead now, together with his thrall and his son. His woman had fled into the forest. All for what? A few ounces of silver? Two head of sheep? Erlan shook his head. The fool should have paid up whatever he had. But the man was stubborn and, worse, brave. He had gone for his axe. . .
And now there was this mess to clear up.
Erlan turned away in disgust as the twins reappeared in the byre doorway, their lanky frames stooping to clear the sagging lintel. Inside, the fire crackled as it went to work. Leikr still had a torch alight in his hand. He swung it over his shoulder onto the thatched roof.
āMuttonhead,ā sniggered Adalrik.
āWhat?ā his brother squawked.
āItās not going to burn in this weather, is it, dung-breath?ā Adalrik was right. Sheets of rain were slanting down from a leaden sky. The torch died at once. Leikr scowled.
They were boys, good-natured lads most of the time, with hardly sixteen winters behind them. And already they have innocent blood on their hands, he thought. āGet your gear together. Weāre moving out.ā
It was three leagues back to Osvaldās hall. Dunsgard stood on a rise above the south bank of the Dagava river, overlooking its sluggish brown waters. From this stronghold, Osvald ruled the Livi ā a tribe that had long ago settled the shores of the Gulf of Estland, which lay straight across the East Sea from SveƤland. The Livi called Osvald king. Erlan reckoned the man unworthy of the title.
It was to Dunsgard that he had sailed in the last days of autumn, turning his back on the ghosts that haunted the Uppland halls and the fame heād won at Bravik. Except that some memories were not so easily left behind. Many a night, before sleep overtook him, he heard phantom echoes of the sword-song over that blood-soaked plain. Other times, it was a gentler shade who came to torment him. Lilla, Queen of the Twin Kingdoms now, whose beauty lingered like an ache in his bones. He could still recall the taste of her, the brush of her fingertips in his palm. Wasted thoughts, all of it. She was the reward of another man now. A better man.
Erlan had left because he was a man of honour when honour was all he had left to him. That being such a man meant he was also a fool was the bitter lesson of it. Honour had left him friendless, loveless, lordless, homeless. A killer for hire, forced to accept the meat and mead of the first lord whose hall he came to, in return for his oath. Gods, he was not yet twenty winters old, yet so damn weary. As if all the blood on his hands was a load weighing him down. Blood that he had spilled in exchange for what? Bread and beer? Was that all?
His hand went absently to his chest where his silver amulet used to hang. . . At least Lilla was where she was meant to be. While she was in the world, somehow there was hope. Of what, he wasnāt sure. But so long as she lived, then so must he.
The gnarled gables of Dunsgard rose ahead of him, stone-still in the mist swirling off the Dagavaās muddy waters. The rain had stopped. A dreary dusk was closing in around the palisade that crowned the hilltop. The three riders kicked on through the gateway, crossing to the stables to dismount into a cold slop of puddles. Already the sound of revelry was leaking out from the mead-hall into the yard.
āHeās early to his ale-skin tonight,ā chuckled Leikr.
āHeās early to his ale-skin every night.ā Erlan jumped down into the mud. The old wound in his ankle jarred and sent a jolt of fire up his leg into his groin. He sucked in his breath, remembering with bitterness the lesson his father had meant to teach him as a boy. Instead heād made his son a lame-foot. A cripple for life. āHand me the sack there,ā Erlan growled irritably at Leikr. The youth tossed him the knapsack that contained the few valuables they had taken from Osvaldās debtor. A few bits of hack-silver, some cheap jewellery. It was far short of the debt the farmer owed, but it was all they had. Erlan felt no better than a thief. He tossed Leikr his reins. āIāll see you inside.ā
The mead-hall was the usual miasma of sweat and smoke and stale beer, the dirty rushes strewn about the floor unchanged for weeks, making the place reek with decay. It was a scene all too familiar to Erlan. He had spent the whole winter here, listening to the songs and stories and listless talk of the men in Osvaldās retinue. They were like caged wolves, with little to do but drink and eat and swive their way through the dark months, waiting for the spring. And none took to this winter work with more commitment than Lord Osvald himself.
Erlan flung his cloak over his shoulder and wove his way to the high table, around bodies already sunk into an ale stupor and hall-hounds coiled under the benches hoping for a scrap of mutton to reach the floor. At length he stood before Osvald, the noble King of the Livi.
His new oath-lord was slouched behind a long table scattered with the ruins of his supper. At first Osvald didnāt notice him; his nose was buried in the fulsome bosom of the bed-thrall sat astride him, his hand busy under her robes which had ridden up to reveal a pale, puckered thigh.
āMy lord?ā Words on his tongue that irked Erlan like stones in his shoe.
Osvald removed his mouth from the womanās teat and squinted past her. āErlan Aurvandil.ā He snorted. āYou took your time. Well?ā
Erlan dumped the knapsack on the table. Osvald shoved the bed-thrall off him and shooed her away with a slap to her rump. He seized the bag and tipped out its contents over the discarded platters. āIs that it?ā
āThatās all he had.ā
Osvaldās nostrils flared. āThen why the Hel didnāt you bring him here before me?ā He was still young, under thirty winters, though already he had the look of a man gone to seed. His teeth were blunt nubs of brown and yellow. His flaxen hair was thin and dull, his beard two greasy yellow braids. āIf he canāt pay, he should be taught a lesson.ā
āHe wonāt be learning any more lessons.ā
The expression on Osvaldās face changed from irritation to understanding, then wry amusement. āGo on.ā
āThey were armed. Things got. . . complicated.ā
Osvald sniggered. āYouāre a cold son of a bitch, Aurvandil. Hah! Maybe thatās why I like you.ā Abruptly he lurched to his feet and thumped his fist on the table. āGive ear, you pack of ale-washed hogs! Stir yourselves, you wastrels!ā Slowly his hirthmen fell silent and lent him a grudging ear.
āBehold, the great hero of Bravik!ā cried Osvald. Erlanās skin prickled with discomfort at the many eyes upon him. āIf the reports are to be believed, he slew nearly the whole of Sigurdās army single-handed. Including the wretched Kin-Slayer himself! It was this man who put Ringast Haraldarson on his twin throne. The King-Over-Us-All.ā His thin lips curdled into a sneer. āNo matter that but two moons before, the Wartooth and his brood of sons had been lifelong foes of this heroās oath-sworn lord.ā He gave a low chuckle. āSuch loyalty is admirable. I should mark it well.ā
Erlan turned away, now seeing Osvaldās intent. What heād said was a twisting of the truth. By the time Erlan had gone over to the Wartooth, his āoath-sworn lordā Sviggar had been murdered, and Erlan himself half-roasted alive.
āNo, no ā donāt go, hero. No need for modesty.ā Osvald gripped Erlanās shoulder. āThere is more, is there not? They say you slew a horde of monstrous fiends besides, in the freezing drifts of winter. Is it not true?ā A groan rose around the benches ā more jeer than acclaim. Erlan shrugged off Osvaldās hand, his eyes full of scorn.
āAnd still thereās more,ā laughed Osvald, enjoying Erlanās discomfort. āOne tale has it our hero journeyed into the depths of the Earth and plucked from some dark hole a highborn maid. The very maid who now sits beside our overlord as Queen of the Twin Kingdoms. We know not whether he journeyed into her dark hole!ā When the laughter had died away, Osvald wiped his lips. āAll this ā and yet the manās a cripple.ā This time the laughter had a vindictive edge to it. āYou are a marvel, Erlan Aurvandil. Truly! So drink, you puppies, drink! Drink to this hero who does honour to my hall! What hope my enemies, hey, with a man like this by my side?ā
Osvald threw back the contents of his ale-horn. A few drank without enthusiasm; most slumped back against the walls into their own thoughts or idle talk. Osvald sank into his chair, a sour grin smeared across his f...