Dubh-Linn: A Novel of Viking Age Ireland (The Norsemen Saga Book 2) (19 page)

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Authors: James L. Nelson

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Sea Stories, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Historical, #Thrillers

BOOK: Dubh-Linn: A Novel of Viking Age Ireland (The Norsemen Saga Book 2)
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Chapter Twenty-Two

 

 

 

 

 

Now, folk-warder, befit thee well

the red-gold rings, and the ruler’s daughter;

hale shalt, hero, hold these twain…

                                        The First Lay of Helgi the Hunding-Slayer

 

 

 

 

 

Mud sucking at his shoes, Arinbjorn stepped carefully over the flats on which
Black Raven
had been drawn up. The ship was sitting proud on the rollers, propped vertical by timbers under the bilge and stripped of her rig and oars and other semi-permanent equipment. From somewhere aft he could hear the screech of a plank being ripped free of the sternpost, the clench nails that held it to its fellow plank protesting as they straightened. He picked up his pace. Beside him, Bolli Thorvaldsson tried to keep up, but with a stride a third shorter than Arinbjorn’s it was a struggle.

  “Hold there!” Arinbjorn called. “Hold!” He had blithely told the shipwrights to do whatever was needed to make
Black Raven
seaworthy, sure that he had wealth enough to pay. But Thorgrim’s words, his observation concerning the shipwright’s ability to find work equal to Arinbjorn’s ability to pay, had really found their mark as Arinbjorn realized the raid on Cloyne had not been as profitable as he thought. Now he wanted to make certain that the shipwrights did not do to him what he and his fellow Vikings had done to Cloyne and any number of other Irish towns.

  Arinbjorn and Bolli came around the after end of the ship. One of the ship carpenters was there, a heavy iron in his hand, the butt end of the plank sticking out at an odd angle where he had levered it away from the frame. Another, big, young, not so bright looking, his apprentice no doubt, stood by a few feet away with a hammer in his hand. He looked like Thor, or, more correctly, a mockery of Thor.

  “What are you about?” Arinbjorn demanded. Even as the words left his mouth he realized it was a mistake to sound so indignant before he knew if the fellow was doing needed work or not. But it was too late.

  “Getting at the rot under this strake,” the shipwright said. “And what concern is it of yours? Who are you?”

  “Arinbjorn Thoruson,” Arinbjorn replied, with as much haughty dignity as he could muster. Bolli stepped behind the shipwright, a dagger in his hand, looking for all the world as if he was going to kill the man, though in truth they would wait to get the shipwright’s bill before they considered that option. Instead, Bolli began poking at the wood of the sternpost and the strake with the weapon’s needle point. The apprentice did not move.

  “Don’t look too rotten to me,” Bolli reported.

  The shipwright renewed his grip on the iron bar and turned toward Bolli. “You a ship carpenter, then? Look, why don’t you go back to your grave digging or cleaning privies or whatever by Thor’s arse you do and leave an honest man to his work?”

  This was not going as Arinbjorn wanted, and it was only getting worse, and Bolli was not helping. Arinbjorn liked to have an ally, a second. He had intended Thorgrim Night Wolf for that office, as his advisor and assistant, had guessed there was status to be had by having a man such as Night Wolf answer to him, but that had not worked out so well. Thorgrim was too independent by far. But Bolli’s fortunes were on the wane, his ship
Odin’s Eye
too worn out to go to sea again, his men largely deserting him. He was eager to associate himself with Arinbjorn and would do Arinbjorn’s bidding. Now Arinbjorn had to hope he did not prove himself an even bigger liability that Thorgrim.

  The two men, Bolli and the shipwright, stared at one another, and then Bolli grunted through his hedge of beard and stepped away. Arinbjorn saw the shipwright relax his grip on the heavy tool. The apprentice’s body seemed to sag with the release of tension.

 
No, Bolli is not so great a problem as Thorgrim,
Arinbjorn thought. Thorgrim had been a problem for Arinbjorn at Cloyne and he still was, a bigger problem than even Thorgrim himself appreciated. The Night Wolf had come out of Cloyne a great hero, but only because he had ignored Arinbjorn’s direct order. A generous offer of three shares for Thorgrim and Harald, two for the others, had bought Thorgrim’s discretion. But the price was high, and the take at Cloyne had not been spectacular. The number of slaves they had captured drove their price in the market down.
Black Raven
required work and others needed paying. Olaf the White would have his take. In short, Arinbjorn could not afford to pay Thorgrim what he had promised.

  Thorgrim might protest that he did not care about the gold and silver, but Arinbjorn had no doubt that would change if the promise was withdrawn.

 
Damn him, damn him…
Arinbjorn thought, his frustration mounting. Thorgrim was apparently looking only for a way home, but now this new opportunity had come up, brought to him by that shapely little Irish princess the way a thrall brings drinking horns in a mead hall, one that could change everything for Arinbjorn. Could he afford to pass it up? What would Thorgrim do when Arinbjorn informed him they would not, in fact, be sailing for Norway soon?

  “So you want me to get on with this or not?” the shipwright asked.

  “Huh?” Arinbjorn said. “Oh…”

  He recollected himself, coughed and went on. “The situation is thus. I thought I could spare a few weeks for you to set things right, but an… opportunity has come up, and I will need the ship swimming again in three days. Four at the outside.”

  “Opportunity, is it?” The shipwright perked up at that. Every man in Dubh-linn, despite his professed calling, was keeping a weather eye out for that one raid that would make his fortune.

  “Can’t really talk about it now,” Arinbjorn said. “We’ve only just stumbled upon it.” He meant to diffuse the shipwright’s interest, but he could see his vague answer was having the opposite effect. But perhaps he could use that. “I need you to just get done what you can, have her ready to sail in the next few days,” Arinbjorn went on. “Just coastal sailing. Then maybe I can let you in on what we have planned.”

  “Two days. Three days, latest, she’ll be ready for whatever you can send at her,” the shipwright said with a smile.

 
Yesterday you said it was two weeks it would take you, you thieving bastard,
Arinbjorn thought, but he just smiled and said, “Good, then.”

  He and Bolli trudged back through the mud, back up to the plank road and the cluster of homes and workshops. “Will you ask Iron-skull to come on this raid?” Bolli asked once he and Arinbjorn were on firmer footing.

  “Iron-skull? I don’t know….” It had only been a day since Harald had brought Brigit to him, a day to digest all the possibilities and implications of this new twist of his destiny. Brigit, by her account, was the true heir to the throne of Tara, but a pretender sat on it now, in a seat none too secure. If Arinbjorn and the army he assembled could topple the pretender, put her on the throne, then the wealth of Tara would be theirs. She did not care about that. Rents, taxes, she would build the kingdom’s fortune back up quickly enough, as long as the throne was hers.

  It was an alliance. And why not? The Northmen had been in Dubh-linn for nearly twenty years. They were not strangers to Ireland, they were part of the land now, a contending power. That woman who had translated, Almaith, was married to a Norse blacksmith, and many other men in the longphort had Irish wives, half-breed children. The Irish came every day to trade. Norse, Irish, the distinction was blurring.

  Which led Arinbjorn to the next logical thought.
Why should this Brigit rule alone? If she and I conquer Tara together, should we not rule Tara together?
That part had formed slowly in his mind, like a ship coming out of a fog.

  A fog. That was right. His mind had been like a fog. A fog formed by his desire for her; immediate, powerful, as impossible to ignore as thirst.

  No sooner had she swept into his room then he had been her slave, her fool. She was beautiful, proud, bordering on haughty, commanding. It was laughable to see that idiot Harald Thorgrimson panting over her, as if she would have any business with a boy such as that. She had come looking for a man, and she had found one in him.

  “Not Thorgrim, though?” Bolli asked.

“What?”

  “Thorgrim. Night Wolf. You won’t ask him on the raid?”

  “Oh. Yes, certainly I’ll ask him. Him and his boy. They’ve proved themselves good men in a fight.”

  Bolli grunted, said no more.
Of course Thorgrim is coming, you fool
, Arinbjorn thought. Harald was apparently Brigit’s connection to the men of Dubh-linn, though how that had happened, Arinbjorn could not imagine. Harald would not be left behind, and Thorgrim would not let his son go off a-viking without him. Which was fine. Arinbjorn was moving men around like pieces on a game board. As he positioned himself to sit on Tara’s throne, to lie in Brigit’s bed, so he positioned Thorgrim and Harald to be on the field of battle with him, where men died brutal deaths and often times no one saw it happen, and thus Arinbjorn might be rid of them.

 
Not so long ago a Dane, Thorgils, set himself up as king of the Irish people,
Arinbjorn reminded himself.

 
And the Irish people drowned him…

  Thorgils was a fool, then. I am not a fool.

 

Thorgrim Night Wolf was angry, more angry than he could recall having ever been, blazing in red hot fury. Harald wanted to talk to him in private. He took him away from Jokul’s house, led him down by the banks of the river, and now Thorgrim saw why. He understood. In fact, he understood a great deal more than he had even an hour before.

  His back was turned toward his son and he was looking out at the darkening sky to the east, but he was not seeing that, or anything. He needed to speak, and he was wrestling to get command of his voice, to get to a place where he could open his mouth and trust what would come out.

  He turned on Harald, his cloak making a sweeping motion as he spun around. “You went to Arinbjorn? Behind my back? Arinbjorn? Do you have any notion of what an untrustworthy snake that man is?”

  Harald stood like a tree, arms at his side, not a flicker of fear in his face, and in some far off place in Thorgrim’s mind he was proud.

  “Arinbjorn is a snake? Well,
you
seem to have plenty of business with him!” Harald returned.

  Thorgrim could hear the note of uncertainty, but only someone who knew Harald very well would have recognized it. Two years ago, even a year ago, Harald would have crumbled by now under Thorgrim’s gaze, if they had every come to this point. Which they would not have done. Because Harald would never have stood up to his father in this way.

  “I use Arinbjorn to my ends. Our ends. And now you have undone it all! Do not think you can play in these affairs of men? You are a boy!”

  “I am not a boy, by all the gods! If there’s a…I can see a chance, one when it’s worth taking! You would never be party to this. I know enough of the affairs of men to know that. So I went to someone who might! Someone who commands men, and a ship, which you do not!”

  That last hit home. Thorgrim felt the blow. But, as in a brawl with fists or weapons, he was too angry to be slowed by it. “If you are not a boy, than you are a fool of a man! Arinbjorn was our way home, and now you have distracted him with this Irish nonsense! You think there is anything to be gained staying in this wretched place? Can’t you see that what you have done will keep us from our home that much longer?”
  “It’s you who wants to go home! Not me! Did you ever ask if I want to go with you? If I want to return to that farm, forsaken by Odin, and those stinking animals? Did you? My grandfather has chosen to stay here and maybe I do, too!”

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