The Dragon Hammer (Wulf's Saga Book 1) (36 page)

Read The Dragon Hammer (Wulf's Saga Book 1) Online

Authors: Tony Daniel

Tags: #Fables, #Legends, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Norse, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #Myths

BOOK: The Dragon Hammer (Wulf's Saga Book 1)
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Chapter Forty-Seven:
The Victory

Grer was standing in the rain on the spot where he’d killed the man when the bell cord dropped and hit him on top of his head. He looked up and saw Rainer’s face barely poking out from the belfry cupola. Rainer had thrown down the cut end of the bell rope. It was a three-twist hemp rope, and the end was already starting to fray. Grer tied his tool bag to it. He gave the rope a tug.

Seemed tight.

Grer pulled himself up the rope with his hands until he was above the shrubbery. Then he put his feet against the cathedral and began walking his way up. Twice the sandstone grit rolled under the soles of his new boots and his feet slid off. He slammed into the side of the cathedral. Even with his forge-made muscles, climbing up the belltower was one of the hardest things he’d ever done.

When he pulled himself over the balustrade and into the belfry, he was breathing in gasps. His arms felt as if they’d been beaten like a rug.

“How was it down there?” Rainer asked.

“Nothing I couldn’t handle. Pull up the tools!”

Rainer nodded. He began to quickly lift the bag of tools toward them. “So, how are we going to do this?”

“Rainer, have you even looked to see if it’s in there?”

Rainer shook head. “No. I mean, what if it’s not?”

“Okay. I’m going to need you to tilt the bell so I can get to it,” Grer said. “Grab that bell wheel and turn the yoke. It’s yon iron wheel you cut the rope from.”

Rainer turned it. Nothing happened.

“Put your back into it, man,” Grer said.

Rainer strained harder and slowly spun the bell wheel, which turned the yoke the bell was attached to. The bell gave a low clanking sound as the clapper came to rest against the inside of the bell.

Grer pulled the wheel-lock lever. The stopper clicked into place.

“All right, I think you can let go now,” he said to Rainer.

The Elder Bell was on its side.

Grer had a look.

What a beautiful piece of iron, Grer thought.

The clapper was attached to a staple. The staple bar was likely held in by a cotter pin, and that would be the first thing to remove if he was going to take the bell apart.

The interior was different from the outside. It was polished, and it seemed to shine from its own light. The clapper—

“How do you like that?” Grer said.

“What?” asked Rainer, his voice trembling.

“Well,” said Grer, “looks like somebody put a hammer in this bell.”

The gnomes charged out of the woods almost as fast as their arrows flew. There were hundreds. They moved like a living carpet, low to the ground. It was a carpet that bristled with sharp and pointy weapons.

Some rode kalter ponies, but most were on foot. They moved at the pace of a fast-walking man. They didn’t speed up and they didn’t slow down—even when they hit the Sandhavener lines.

The Sandhaven soldiers were taken by surprise. They didn’t lower their shields, and the gnomes swept under them, stabbing at the joints between greaves and cuirasses. Slicing upward to cut the arteries that led from groins to legs.

Men fell screaming, clutching at their private parts. And when they did, more gnomes were on them, stabbing, hacking, and killing. Some they ganged up on and drowned in rain puddles.

The gnome forces did not stop coming out of the woods for a long time.

There must be thousands of them, Wulf thought. Had the whole village of Glockendorf been converted to soldiers?

Looking closer, Wulf saw that this was maybe true. The gnome women fought alongside their men.

The rain slackened.

The clumps of Sandhaveners that had been pushing ahead broke first. These men rushed into the ranks of their advancing countrymen. Panic started to spread back through the ranks.

Wulf could see it happening. The shields falling out of place as this man or another turned to run. The line was unable to join back together, leaving big gaps that the mark’s forces charged into and split apart like a wedge.

The gnomes kept marching. They were like a living organism, like a deadly ant swarm. They were so small it didn’t seem they could do much good. They couldn’t individually. But when they fought together, they were unstoppable. They overtook the enemy who had broken and fled and hunted each down individually. Men collapsed into the mud and died.

Behind the gnomes came the human and Tier forces of the mark. They marched forward raggedly, but holding together. It was enough.

We are winning, Wulf thought. We have to. If we don’t, we’ll be dead.

We’re going to break their bones, cut their throats and make them bleed.

We’re going to take back Raukenrose.

Raukenrose. My family.

Saeunn.

Wulf spurred his horse. He had his sword out, ready.

He was scared. He was repulsed by the death and the waste of people’s lives.

But charging into danger, not away from it? That was a good thing.

Fighting like a madman when the stakes were life and death? It felt right.

Blood and bones, he thought. I expected that. But I didn’t expect to
like
war.

I do.

Jager had never believed that all was lost. But there was no denying the treeline was getting closer and his men were getting tired. He done a lot to keep them going. Making sure water was brought up. Getting a whole rank of buffalo men—ones that hadn’t cut and run, but had fought like furies—to send up a huge chorus of bellows for encouragement. And killing more humans than he’d ever
seen
in his life before this day.

At the moment, he was dealing with a Sandhavener officer. The Sandhavener was double Jager’s size. The fight was brutal. Jager parried a blow with a buckler he’d picked up moments ago from
another
man he’d killed. Then Jager struck with his feline speed and ripped out the Sandhavener’s left groin. When the man fell, Jager leaped on top of him and put a sword through the gap in the man’s helmet. He pushed through until he struck the metal on the helmet’s back side.

Something as small as Jager and almost as quick ran up to his right. Jager glanced over. It was a gnome. Another was on his left. The two pushed past in an organized unit, flowing around him like a stream around a rock, and were soon cutting into the Sandhaveners in front of him.

Jager stood up and worked his way over to Knudsson. The bear man was fighting nearby, but Jager pulled him back from the line.

“Them gnomes move like a bloody wind from Helheim,” Knudsson said. “Almost pity the Haveners.”

“Yep,” Jager said. “Give me a boost.”

He climbed back up and balanced on the bear man’s shoulders. Over the heads of the soldiers in front of him, Jager saw—

By Sturmer, if that ain’t the town wall, Jager thought. We’re no more than fifty paces from it.

Then something more disturbing. A fully armored Sandhavener on a horse also in plate was pushing through the line directly in front of him and Knudsson.

“Trouble on the way,” Jager said.

“Wish I had my bow and a bodkin-headed shaft,” Knudsson said. “I’d take ’im down at this range even through steel.”

The horseman headed straight for them. Jager considered. The armor was slowing the horse. There was an exposed spot on the breast above either leg.

“Think you can handle the animal?” he asked the bear man.

“Reckon so.”

Knudsson readied his spear. Just before the horseman reached them, he kicked in his heels and speeded the horse. He lowered his weapon, a halberd.

Knudsson ducked and thrust his spear at the horse. Jager pounced. The halberd passed between them without striking.

Jager crashed into the horseman. The man was driven back in his saddle, but did not fall. He did drop his halberd. But this also freed up his fist. He smashed a steel-reinforced glove into Jager’s face. The man’s knuckles partly caught the side of Jager’s helm, but the rest of his fist connected with Jager’s cheek, smashing it into the bobcat man’s teeth. Blood filled Jager’s mouth.

Jager drew back his sword, but the man reached for him with his other hand and grabbed him around the neck. He started to choke Jager, shaking him back and forth. Jager gagged on his own blood. He felt his windpipe closing down. He reached for his neck with his free hand and tried to pry away the choke hold. No good.

Then the man let out a cry of surprise and lurched sideways, taking Jager with him. Knudsson had brought the horse down. Jager twisted as he fell and the man’s hand came loose from Jager’s neck. But the Sandhavener was quick, too. He landed with crushing weight on top of Jager. The bobcat man howled in pain. He still had hold of his sword somehow, and he desperately tried to position it to stab into the man’s side. Made the thrust.

And it glanced off armor.

The man sat up. Now he got two hands around Jager’s neck. He squeezed. Jager struggled furiously, but the world started to go dark.

Suddenly, the squeezing lessened. Jager looked up at something strange. A long tongue seemed to have stuck out from the Sandhavener’s mouth. A pointed tongue. Then Jager realized it was the tip of a dagger. Someone had run the man’s head through from the rear. Which was no mean feat, because the man wore a full helmet with a grima noseguard.

The tongue slid back in, the dagger was withdrawn. The Sandhavener fell to the side. Jager looked up to see a human, a young man. He wore a green and blue jerkin over a gray linen shirt. Jager recognized him immediately. He’d seen him while the human had passed among the troops at Bear Hall.

It was Lord Wulf von Dunstig.

The nobleman looked down at his knife.

“Good steel my smith forged,” he said. “Right through the back of the helm.”

Lord Wulf sheathed the dagger. On his other side was a sword, also hanging in a scabbard.

Funny the nobleman had used the dagger instead of the sword, Jager thought. He must think it the better weapon.

The lord reached out a hand to help Jager up. Jager took it.

Knudsson was nearby working his spear out of the horse. It had gone in deep. Lord Wulf’s own horse was standing patiently to the rear of them toward the woods.

Jager stood beside his lord. He came about to the height of Lord Wulf’s navel.

They gazed toward the fighting several paces in front of them.

“We’re winning,” the young lord said.

“That we are, m’lord,” Jager replied. “Thanks to them gnomes.”

“And to you for holding on so long, Captain.”

“My boys fought hard,” Jager replied. “And we’re still fighting.”

Lord Wulf nodded.

Knudsson gave a loud grunt and pulled his spear completely free of the horse. It was still alive and faintly struggling. The bear man put a boot on the horse’s neck. This was hard for the bear man. He had been a stable hand in Brullen, and practically worshipped the horses he cared for there. He killed the horse with a quick thrust through the eye, looking away at the last moment so he didn’t have to see the horse’s death throes.

“Our left flank has reached the wall,” Lord Wulf said. He pointed to a spot Jager wasn’t tall enough to see. “I want to cut off that gate.” He pointed to their right. Jager could see the eastern guardhouse standing tall above the heads of the fighting men.

“We have to keep them from escaping through the gate. Herd them together.”

Jager considered. “Yep, m’lord. It’ll take some doing, but we can.” He turned to Knudsson. “Let’s wheel ’em left, Odis. Push for the wall on the right.”

Knudsson nodded. “All right, Captain,” he said. “We’ll make it so they don’t have nowheres to go.”

“You stay here and just watch us do it, m’lord,” Jager said. “You should tend to your horse there.”

Lord Wulf shook his head. “My horse can take care of itself,” he said. He shot Jager a savage smile and pointed toward the fighting with his sword. “
That’s
where I belong. And that’s where I’m going.” In that moment Jager believed he would follow this boy lord anywhere, even into the pit of Helheim. “Now let’s finish this, Captain.”

Jager nodded, and Lord Wulf charged toward the fight.

Jager raised his own sword and followed his liege lord back into the scrum of battle.

Chapter Forty-Eight:
The Sorrow

“I need Ravenelle.”

I never thought I’d hear myself say it, Wulf thought, she’s been so prickly for so long. But I’ve got to find her before we go in.

Now it was not bear men who were hemming him in. There was a new set of guards in tow. They were four centaurs armed with deadly looking longbows. Wulf rode back to the supply wagons, looking for Ravenelle. Instead he saw Ursel nursing a beaver man’s shoulder wound.

She motioned for him to stay on his horse. “We’ll talk later, m’lord,” she said. “I’m a bit busy right now.”

“I understand,” said Wulf. “Have you seen the princess?”

“She was with the ambulances when I last saw her. The body carts.”

“She’s not—”

“No, she’s alive. She was helping sort out the living.”

Wulf breathed a sigh of relief. He had to ask several of the teamsters, but he finally got pointed in the right direction. He rode to the north.

He came to the train of ambulance wagons and rode along it. There were a lot of dead Tier. Flies were already settling on the bodies in a cloud, and the smell, like raw meat in a butcher shop, was very strong.

He found Ravenelle about halfway down the line of wagons. She was walking beside one of the wagons with bodies in it as it moved along at a slow pace. A horse, the one Ravenelle had ridden to Bear Hall, was tied to the rear of the wagon and was plodding behind.

Ravenelle saw Wulf and his bear men, and motioned to the driver to hold up.

Wulf was about to speak sharply to her about going off by herself when she might be needed very soon inside the township. But he saw sadness on her face. He climbed down from his horse and stood beside her. The centaurs kept back, but scanned the nearby country. Their bows were strung. Archers didn’t string their bows unless they thought they might use them. Carrying them around strung tight at all times ruined the bow wood.

“I’m coming back to town,” she said. “I was about to leave, it’s only…I didn’t want him to be alone.”

Ravenelle put her hand on one of the bodies placed near the edge of the wagon. Wulf was confused for a moment, but then he saw the wispy beard and the small horns sticking out from curly brown hair.

It was Grim.

“Oh, no,” Wulf said. “He was…I thought he’d be safe with the wagons. I ordered him to stay back, but…How?”

“Some Sandhavener men on horses circled and got into the supply train,” Ravenelle replied. “We fought them off, but…I’m sorry, von Dunstig, I really am.”

Wulf put his hands on the faun’s shoulders and gazed at his still face. There was a piece of burlap cloth covering his goatlike lower parts. Wulf lifted it up briefly and saw a terrible wound to the groin where the leg met the hip. The brown hair of his rump and leg was matted with still-wet blood.

“He died fighting for us. He and Ursel Keiler with some of the buffalo-man teamsters,” Ravenelle went on. “He saved my life. Others, too.” She looked down at the faun, shook her head. “A lot of people.”

Wulf glanced at Ravenelle. A blood red tear rolled down her cheek. There were red trails that others had left on her skin.

He drew back from Grim and put a hand around her shoulder. After a moment, the buffalo driver shook his reins. The wagon with Grim and the other faun dead trundled on toward the tobacco fields north of town. There the dead fauns would be placed on pyres set up in a cleared spot ringed with huge stone pillars. Wulf had seen it before, but only from a distance. This was the sacred place where fauns burned their dead.

Wulf thought about offering a prayer to Ostern, the female divine being the fauns most revered, but found he couldn’t do that. Grim had been quiet and not very expressive, but he had never once failed or abandoned Wulf. The prayer should be authentic. Wulf wasn’t sure who he believed in anymore.

The divine beings, maybe? Should he pray to Tretz? He would feel stupid doing that after so many years thinking it was nonsense.

So he ended up bowing his head as he held on to Ravenelle and speaking to no god or divinity in particular, but to all of them. He used a form he’d heard before at the funerals of veterans.

“Let us be worthy of Grim’s sacrifice,” he said. Those words, too, sounded hollow, and he felt his own tears welling, choking off any words that didn’t seem real.

Finally Ravenelle spoke. “Go on, von Dunstig. It isn’t stupid.”

He stood silent a moment longer, watching the wagon go. This reminded him of something in
Tjark’s Saga
, when Hefni, the old duke’s son, fell in the fight to win the valley. “Let Shenandoah hold him in her arms,” Wulf said. He paused a moment then spoke the rest of the stanza. “To live again in the Never and Forever.”

“You are such a barbarian,” Ravenelle said, but she was crying again, and she buried her head against his right shoulder and stained yet another spot on his tabard red with her tears.

They rode back to the eastern gate of Raukenrose as fast as they could. When they got there, Earl Keiler was off his horse, standing near the eastern-gate entrance. A Sandhavener with a truce flag was speaking to the earl. Suddenly Ravenelle stiffened on her horse beside him and pulled up. Wulf did, too.

“That’s one of Rask’s Hundred,” she said. “I can feel his mind.”

“Can you get in?”

“He’s one of mine now. Do you want me to?”

Wulf considered. “No, not yet. But can you find out if he’s telling the truth without his knowing it?”

“Not usually.” Ravenelle paused for a moment, concentrating on the man. She nodded. “He’s weak. His thoughts are leaking,” she said. There was a wisp of a wicked smile on her face. “Yes, he won’t know I’m listening in.”

Wulf handed the reins to one of the guards and got down from his horse. He and Ravenelle walked over to hear what was being said between the earl and the soldier.

“—in Allfather Square.” There was the drawn out “a” in “Allfather” marking the man’s accent as coming from the Chesapeake Tidewater.

Earl Keiler glanced over to Wulf.

“Messenger from Trigvi,” he said. “He wants to meet us. Discuss terms.”

It’s the end of a fight. You’ve got your opponent beaten and desperate. That hadn’t happened to him very often in the ring. But it happened to Rainer all the time.

What would Rainer do?

“Finish it off. Don’t mess around,” Rainer would say. “If you waste time ragging them, they might try something that works.”

Wulf shrugged.

“The terms are simple. Unconditional surrender,” he said.

The soldier made a grimacing expression that might have been meant as a smile. “I hope we can come to a more honorable arrangement,” he said.

“No,” Wulf said. “Tell him. And tell the other.”

“What ‘other’ are you talking about?” said the soldier.

“The draugar,” Wulf said. “Wuten.”

The other paused, as if searching for words. His face grew pale.

Scared to death.

“Unconditional surrender,” Wulf said. “Tell Wuten. He’s the real commander here. Tell him I’ll meet him in Allfather Square.”

The other stepped back, made a slight bow. “Prince Trigvi will be there,” he said.

“Prince Trigvi can go to cold hell,” Wulf said. “It’s the draugar who needs to be at the square.” Wulf pointed toward the gate entrance. “Please get out of my sight.”

He looked over to Ravenelle, and the two watched as the man went through the gate back into the town.

“Is he going to do it?” Wulf asked her.

“He’ll do it,” she said, “but he’s absolutely terrified. And not of you.”

Wulf breathed out the tension he’d been holding in. “I’m terrified too,” he said. “But I’m getting used to it.”

Once again, Keiler went into a coughing fit. This time it did not go away. After being doubled over, he sank to his knees.

From somewhere nearby, Ursel ran from the crowd of soldiers. She knelt next to Keiler and put an arm around his neck to comfort him.

He said something to her, and Ursel motioned Wulf to come over. He knelt down beside her. There was a pool of blood the earl had coughed up on the ground below him.

“Has he ever been like this?” Wulf asked Ursel.

“Not for months,” Ursel said. “He was getting better, but the strain of the past few days has done this, I’m sure.”

“Will he get better?”

“It will take weeks.”

“We don’t have weeks,” Wulf said. “We have one watch, at most.”

Keiler gestured for Wulf to come closer.

“You’ll have to go without me,” Keiler whispered.

“I need you, Earl,” Wulf stammered.

“No,” Keiler coughed again. More blood poured from his mouth.

“His lungs are bleeding,” Ursel said. “He will drown in his own blood if he doesn’t rest.”

Keiler reached over and grabbed Wulf’s arm. He pulled Wulf even closer. “You can do this,” he whispered. “But take Tolas.”

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