“You like him, though,” says Kwimu desperately. “You laughed at the way he tricked the warriors. See—Fox approves!” Fox twists his head and licks Kwimu’s hand suddenly, as though to encourage him. Kwimu hardly dares to go on, but the words come anyway, forcing their way up from deep inside him, like a spring of water that has to bubble out. “He might become your son, Nujj. My brother.”
Sinumkw looks at him. His chest rises and falls in a sigh. “Well, we can try. Perhaps the cub is young enough to tame. Don’t be surprised if he bites you.”
They turn, for the slope ahead is too steep to descend, and it will be necessary to go back into the woods and find another way down. Kwimu casts a backward glance at the burning vessel, and is in time to see it tip up and slide neatly backwards under the water. The snarling serpent head vanishes last, and then it’s as though it has never existed, except for the smoke drifting higher and higher, a fading stain against the sky.
The other jipijka’m is already out of the bay and turning up the gulf towards the open sea; and from this distance it looks more like a serpent than ever—a living serpent, swimming quietly away through the haze.
Down on the shingle, nine-year-old Ottar, young son of Thorolf the Seafarer, stands knee-deep in the cold waves. Tears pour down his cheeks. He’s alone, orphaned, desperate, stranded in this horrible place on the wrong side of the world. He hears a shout from the beach behind him. He turns, his heart leaping in wild, unbelieving hope. Somehow it’s going to be all right—it’s been a bad dream or an even worse joke—and he won’t even be angry. He’s going to run to whoever it is, and cling to them, and sob until the sobbing turns into laughter.
And then he sees. His mouth goes dry. Coming towards him on the rising ground between him and the houses are two terrible figures. Their long hair is as black as pitch, and tied with coloured strings. Their clothes are daubed with magic signs. Furs dangle from their belts. They are both carrying bows. But the frightening thing—the really frightening thing about them—is that you can’t see their expressions at all. Half of their faces are covered in black paint, the other half in red. Their eyes glitter white and black.
“Skraelings!” Ottar whispers. “Dirty Skraelings!”
He prepares to die.
The green sea wrapped itself round Peer Ulfsson’s waist, and rose to his chest with a slopping sound. “Yow!” he yelled. As the wave plunged past he sucked in his breath, and bent quickly to look through the water.
There! In the heaving, brown-green glimmer he saw it: the hammer he’d dropped, lying on the stones. He groped with his arm, his fingers closed on the handle, and the next wave swept past his ears and knocked him over. There was a dizzy moment of being rolled backwards in a freezing froth of bubbles and sand. He struggled up, spluttering but brandishing the hammer in triumph.
“Got it!”
“So I see.” Bjørn’s face was one wide grin. “If you’d tied it to your wrist like I told you, you wouldn’t have had to do that. Get dressed; you look like a plucked chicken.”
Peer laughed through chattering teeth. He bounded back to shore and dragged his discarded jerkin over his head, fighting wet arms through the sleeves. It fell in warm folds almost to his knees, and he hugged his arms across his chest. “Aaah, that’s better. I’ll leave my breeches till I’ve dried off a bit…What’s that? Who’s shouting?”
Torn by the wind, an alarmed cry had reached his ears. He couldn’t make out the words. Up on the jetty Bjørn stiffened, shading his eyes to look down the fjord. “It’s Harald. He’s seen a ship.Yes—there’s a strange ship coming.”
Peer jumped up beside Bjørn, noticing with pride how firm and solid the jetty was. The two of them had been building it for almost a month now, in between their other work, and in Peer’s opinion it made the tiny beach at Trollsvik look like a proper harbour. It was a stout plank walkway between a double row of posts. Bjørn’s new faering, or fishing boat, bobbed beside it.
He joined Bjørn at the unfinished end, where the last few planks waited to be nailed down. It was late afternoon, the tide flowing in. Out where the shining fjord met the pale spring sky he saw a large, reddish sail, square-on, and the thin line of an upthrust prow like the neck of a snail. A big ship running into Trollsvik before the wind.
“Who is it?” he blurted.
Bjørn didn’t take his eyes off the ship. “I don’t know. Don’t know the sail. Could be raiders. Best not take chances. Run for help, Peer. Tell everyone you can.”
A lonely little village like Trollsvik could expect no mercy from a shipful of Viking raiders if they took the place by surprise. The best thing was to meet them with a show of force. Peer turned without argument. Then he saw a scatter of people hurrying over the dunes. “Look, Harald’s raised the alarm already. Here he comes, with Snorri and Einar…”
“Hey, Harald!” Bjørn bawled at the top of his voice. “Whose ship is that?”
A bandy-legged man with straggling grey hair raised an arm in reply as he puffed across the shingle and climbed painfully on to the jetty. “No idea,” he wheezed, bending double to catch his breath. “I was cleaning my nets—looked up and saw it. Shouted at you and ran for the others.You don’t know it, either?”
“Not me,” said Bjørn. Peer looked at the ship—already much closer—then back at the little crowd. Most of the men had snatched up some kind of weapon. Snorri One-Eye carried a pitchfork, and old Thorkell came hobbling along with a hoe, using the handle as a walking stick. Einar had a harpoon. Snorri’s fierce, grey-haired wife Gerd came limping after him over the stones, clutching a wicked-looking knife. Even Einar’s two little boys had begun piling up big round stones to throw at the visitors. Peer wondered if he should join them.Then he realised he was holding a weapon already. His hammer.
He hefted it. It was long-handled and heavy. The dull iron head had one flat end for banging big nails in. The other end tapered to a sharp wedge. When he swung it, it seemed to pull his hand after it. As if it wanted to strike.
Could I really hit anyone with this? He imagined it smashing into someone’s head, and sucked a wincing breath.
The neighbours were arguing. “No need to fear!” yelled Gerd, lowering her knife. “See the dragonhead? That’s Thorolf’s ship, that is, the old Long Serpent that Ralf Eiriksson sailed on.”
“It never is!” Snorri turned on his wife. “Thorolf’s been gone two years now, went off to Vinland.”
“So what?” Gerd was undaunted. “He can come back, can’t he?”
“Fool of a woman,” Snorri shouted. “That’s not his ship, I say!”
“How d’you know?” Gerd shrilled.
“Because this one’s as broad in the beam as you are, that’s why—the Long Serpent was narrower…”
“That isn’t the Long Serpent, ” said Peer. “I should know. My father helped to build her.”
“This ship looks like a trader,” Einar said. “Built for cargo, not war.”
“That’s all very well, Einar. Plenty of traders turn into raiders when it suits them—doesn’t mean her crew won’t fight.”
“What do you think, Bjørn?” asked Peer in a low voice.
Bjørn gave him an odd glance, half-humorous, half-sympathetic. “I don’t know, Peer. Let’s just put on a good show and hope they’re friendly.”
Peer stood unhappily clutching his hammer. The ship was so close now that he could see the sea-stains on the ochre-red sail. The hull was painted in faded red and black stripes. A man stood in the bows, just behind the upward swoop of its tall dragon-neck.
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