[Norman Conquest 02] Winter of Discontent (53 page)

BOOK: [Norman Conquest 02] Winter of Discontent
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The short voyage of about twenty miles north from Flamborough to Scarborough was quick
ly completed
with a favourable wind filling the sail. As they sailed north they saw several
snekke
longships and
the wider
knarrer
transports,
mainly further out to sea. As they came up to the village they saw perhaps thirty
snekke
and
knarrer
drawn up bow
-
in onto the wide sandy beach.


It l
ooks like we’ve found the Danes,” commented Alan.

Sven snorted derisively and replied
,
“Lad, if there are
3,000
Danes, that means probably
1
00 ships
, maybe more. We’ve found some of them
,
but I expect most are at up at Hartlepool
at the mouth of the Tees River, where
there’s
a
good natural harbour. It’s close to the English earl’s base at Durham and the river gives them access by ship deep into Yorkshire. I think we’ve another sixty miles or so to sail yet, laddie.”

And so it proved. As they sailed further north they saw more and more of the Danish warships and transport ships, so many and on such constant courses that Alan was sure that they were wearing a track in the sea between Hartlepool and Jutland. At Hartlepool the large natural harbour, one of the best on the north-east coast, was crowded with probably close on
1
00
ships.

At Sven’s shouted command the men lowered the sail, unshipped the oars and rowed for the last few minutes of careful manoeuvring amongst the ships crowded into the harbour. Alan ordered the ship to anchor offshore and was rowed to the wharf in a small
sunnmørsfæring
four-oared rowing boat by Sven and three other Norwegians.

Once ashore he approached a fisherman who was sitting next to a small fishing boat. The old man, face weathered by years at sea and hands scarred by hauling on ropes, was mending his nets, dextrously weaving thick cord to repair the gaps torn in the net. He was happy to pass onto Alan the information as to where he may find ‘The Bull and Bear
’ t
avern, along with several recommendations as to which may the best tavern depending on whether you wished female company at a greater or lesser price, good food or a quiet place to drink good ale. None of these was ‘The Bull and Bear’, whose sole claim to fame appeared to be that it was the most expensive establishment in the town. Before entering under the sign of ‘The Bull and Bear’ Alan placed a red
woollen
cap on his head and a blue scarf about his neck before selecting a quiet small table in the corner, where he sat by himself.

He’d drained his first quart of ale and was part way through the second, needed to ‘rent’ the table, when he was approached by a very comely and buxom young lass with her long blond tresses flowing freely. “May I join you?” she asked in an arch manner and husky voice. Alan would have politely declined, but she had pulled from her sleeve a red handkerchief, the recognition signal he’d been alerted to by
Herfast
.

“By all means,” replied Alan, signalling to the barmaid for a
pint
jug of wine
and two cups
. When it arrived he
poured,
took a sip and shuddered, closing his eyes for a moment before saying
,
“I can’t recommend the wine, but the ale is reasonable. Would you like to eat? The serving-wench told me that they have roast pork and beef pies. Fine, we’ll have both. I’ll stay with the ale. You may wish to see what quality is the mead? No?” Turning to the aged serving-wench, who was wiping dirty hands on her apron as she stood waiting for an order, he instructed
,
“A quart of ale and a pint. Serves of pork and beef pie.
Fresh
bread and butter and cheese. Fruit.” He tossed her
two silver pennies
.

“I’m Gundred.
Skald
Thorkell Skalleson’s woman,” she said placing her hand on Alan’s and stroking it with an apparent fondness that was totally absent from the business-like expression in her eyes.

“My name is Alan. I’ve heard of the skills of your man as a bard, with his story of the exploits of Earl Waltheof.”

Gundred gave a laugh of genuine amusement. “Thorkell is good. He could make a shepherd look like a hero, if you paid him enough. I know not why Waltheof paid so much to have himself immortalised in poetry for his blood-thirsty deeds. He’s young, good-looking and is in fact an excellent warrior and leader.”

“Vanity, I suppose. It gets the best of many people. Now what can you tell me?”

Gundred looked about and paused as the drinks were delivered together with the pork pies and braised vegetables on wooden platters. Satisfied that the table chosen was sufficiently
private and that the buzz of conversation around them would hide anything said from unwanted ears
,
she replied
with candour
.
“Nothing that you couldn’t find out for the price of a few quarts of ale in any tavern. Edgar the Aetheling is with Cospatric, Waltheof, Maerle-Sveinn and Arknell at Durham, together with the Danish King Swein’s brother Osbjorn and his
sons Harald and Christian, the b
ishop of Aarhus. His son Cnut is here with most of the men at Hartlepool.”

“How many men?”

“Danes, about
3,500- i
t varies as the men come and go as they wish. English, about
3,000
at Durham
- m
ainly local huscarles and thegns and men from the south, about
1,000
of those. About another
4,000
from local levies that are at home at the moment.
There are 2,000
Scots camped on the Tyne River.”

“And where’s Thorkell?”

“Where you’d want him to be. Sitting at Edgar’s table in Durham, eating his fancy food and drinking his fine French wine- and listening to everything the earls and the Danes say to each other.
There’s n
o charge for what I’ve told you so far. You could’ve got that information in a few days yourself. But when he sends word
that
the Aetheling’s men are moving and where, he expects to be paid
200 g
old marks. You
are to
have somebody here every Monday, Wednesday and Friday evening at dusk. Same recognition signals. When there’s something to report I’ll make myself known. Just make sure somebody is here
for me
to report to and that you can get the message to the Norman king in time for him to act.”

Alan shook his head in disagreement. “I’m sorry, but it’s not like we’re running a carting business from the next village. Firstly, this isn’t a game. I’ve brought twenty armed men into a town controlled by the enemy. You and Thorkell are planning on selling whatever information he obtains so that
King William
can defeat the Aetheling’s forces- which means thousands will die. If any of us are caught, we die
- p
robably begging for the release of a cut throat after they’ve finished torturing us, and raping and then torturing you. Your end would not be pretty,” he said gently patting her on the cheek. He paused while the beef pies and another round of drinks were brought to the table by
the serving
-
wench.

“This is no game,” he repeated. “I can’t just bring a
snekke
longship into the harbour whenever I feel like it. Yes, it’s a Danish ship and some of our crew are Norwegians, but if we hang around like a fart in a church somebody is going to notice and start asking questions. We can’t let our men go ashore and spend the night drinking and whoring like any proper sailor does, because some idiot will get drunk and say something that puts us all into deep shit. If they stay on board that’ll also be noticed, and the men will mutiny. Have you ever spent days, and more particularly nights, crammed together with twenty others in a ship so small and so encumbered that you c
a
n’t all lie down at once, and if you did lie down you’d be lying in two or three inches of stinking bilge-water that slops around in the bottom of the ship, eating cold stale rations, cold and probably soaked in rain, when within a stone’s throw are warm taverns and welcoming bordellos? And that assumes we can get here on time. We aren’t trundling a cart two miles. We’re sailing a hundred miles through unprotected and often violent seas- in autumn when the gales start. There’s every chance that we won’t be able to
get here for a week
or more
at a time.


Next, no we won’t meet in this same cosy tavern each time. If we come back again we’ll be recognised and after the third time the local gossips will be watching both of us. And they’d see me, who they’d think of as an Englishman, go back to a ‘Danish’ longship and you ride back to Durham to the arms of a man who spends his time at the Aetheling’s table. It wouldn’t take them long to start asking difficult questions.”

He paused and took a long pull at his quart of ale before continuing. “What we’ll do is
try
to have a ship here each Monday and Thursday. We have two ships and we’ll paint the stem post- that’s the post at the front of the ship- red, and the bottom three feet of the mast blue
and leave an oar leaning against the yard. If one of them is in the harbour on the due day, or a day late, then go
to the arranged meeting place.
Also look for a rowing boat beached near the harbour steps. That’ll have a red strake painted second strake from the top. If that’s there, then it means that we’ve left the longship out of sight a little
way up the river.

“As to the t
ime
of the meetings, i
t’s getting dark just before
evening
Vespers
,
but at this time of the year dusk comes earlier very quickly
. W
e’ll make the meeting time at
afternoon Nones
, so we can get out of the harbour before dark, even in a month’s time. We’ll meet in a different place each time and set up that location at the previous meeting. Today is Monday 28
th
September, so Thursday will be the 1
st
of October. We’ll meet at St Hilda’s Church in the vestibule after the service. I’m sure that a little praying will be good for both of us. After that, and on each second visit, you’ll meet with Brand, who’s a blonde giant of a man- not that there’s any shortage of people who meet that description in a town filled with Danes. He’ll be wearing a blue kerchief on his head, sailor-fashion. You wear the same recognition signs as today. If a meeting is missed, and if the ship or rowing boat is in the harbour, go back same time next day. Otherwise for the following meeting go back to the previous meeting place whether the ships or rowing boat are there or not as something may have happened to require a change of plans.

“Remember, if you value your life, keep your mouth firmly shut and only talk to Thorkell where there is
no possibility
of you being overheard. Assume that
every
room you’re in has somebody with their ear pressed to the door- even your
bedchamber
. Develop a habit of going together for walks in the open, but don’t be silly enough to do that when it’s pissing down with rain. One mistake and you’re dead- and so am I. Now, I’ll ostentatiously hand you a small purse. We’ll leave with you hanging on my arm and groping my privates and me with a silly smirk of anticipation on my face! That should let us use this place again for a meeting in a few weeks time, if needed.”

Back on board
Havørn
the conditions were every bit as
uncomfortable
as Alan had indicated to Gundred. Sven had been absent from the rowing boat, so Alan had pulled on an oar on the passage back to the longship. Alan had thought about staying on-shore at an inn, but had decided that ‘leadership functions’ required him to share the hardships of the men. ‘At least I’ve had a decent hot meal and three quarts of ale’ he mused to himself as he stood on a storage chest and relieved himself overboard of part of the intake of fluids before adjusting his trews and
having a brief talk to his men.
As expected, they grumbled that they were sitting out in the cold, the blankets drawn about their shoulders becoming damp from the night sea air, and only having had cold smoked sausage and stale bread to eat.

“Life’s a bitch
- a
nd then you die,” said Alan with obviously mock sincerity in reply to the grumbled complaints. “Just be thankful you’re sitting here in the cold, because you are such useless bastards that when you die you’ll be sitting
nice and warm in the fires of h
ell! Now get some sleep. Unless the wind changes tomorrow, you’re going to be rowing a hundred miles into the teeth of the wind- and that exercise should warm you up nicely!”

The following day was 29
th
September. Michalemas, the Feast of St Michael. Alan had the ship rowed into the beach an hour after dawn and gave the men three hours of shore-leave with just four men
remaining
on the ship as guards. “Now listen, you bunch of degenerates! It’s seven in the morning. You have three hours to have something hot to eat, something to drink and get a fuck. Some of you may even want to attend the church services. I’m sure the whores will be working even this early in the morning
and
even on Michaelmas. If you want to do the first three, you’ll have to be damn quick. I don’t think that you can manage all four. You get back here an hour after Terce
, at mid-morning
. You go in groups of four or five. You stay quiet and cause no trouble. You have no discussions with
anybody
as to
who you are or where you are from or what you are doing. I don’t care if the Archangel Gabriel appears and asks you your name. If he does, tell him to fuck off! If anybody is late I’ll personally cut his
balls off with a blunt knife! If anybody sees Sven, make sure he’s back here by Terce, even if you have to pour him into the ship. Now get going. You’re wasting your shore-time
!

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