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TLV - 02 - The Road of the Sea Horse Page 8


  She was waiting for him at the hall, and they went into the little house that was her own to be by themselves. "You were long gone," she said. "I'd begun to think the child would be born without you here."

  "He wouldn't dare," grinned Harald. "I am the king."

  Her mouth drooped. "It was lonely, though. I care not for sleeping by myself."

  "I fear you must often do so, till these wars are finished."

  "Take me with you," she begged. "You said you would."

  "You'll have a baby to look after," he reminded her.

  "Yes, so it goes," she answered sullenly. "Sometimes I wish I had been a man."

  He supposed it was only the humor of her condition, and tried to turn it by laughing. "I mind a Jew down in Miklagardh who told me one of their prayers—for the men—goes: 'I thank the Lord I was not born a woman.' " Thoughtfully: "I'd like to get some Jewish merchants here. They're an able folk, they'd liven this thick Northern blood."

  "Yes, thank your God and weave your schemes!" She burst out angrily. "And leave me behind to wipe the baby's butt while you go whoring in Denmark!"

  It was the first time she had thrown a real fit of temper at him. He found he could not bellow her down, and ended with the promise of a golden bracelet. That quieted her and brought her purring to his arms, but he was not overly pleased. Ellisif, he thought, would not have gotten into a rage for no good cause, and once angered would not be bought off by anything less than a better reason.

  Still, this was a lovely and lively woman he had here, and failing Maria ... He wondered, for the ten thousandth time, how Maria was faring.

  He had not returned too soon. The next midday Thora's pains began. She and the midwife went into the hall's bedchamber, while Harald sent a messenger off to Ulf to bid him come and be godfather.

  Meanwhile there was nothing he could do. The bishop himself was on hand to baptize the infant at once should it seem weakly, but Harald was no great friend of Bishop Grimkell in spite of giving largesse to the Church. The guardsmen sat about, talking in low voices, now and then speaking to the king but none as a brother; there was none to whom he could open his heart.

  He looked out at the gloomy winter day and thought of his daughter's birth, how he and Ulf had waited in shared pain. Why did things past always seem brighter? Then he had been little more than a roving sea king, houseless, nigh friendless, sitting in a strange land, but . . . God grant him a son!

  "You will wish to have a baptism feast, my lord?" asked his steward.

  "Yes . . . no . . . Wait till we see if . . . No, by Thor, we'll surely have a feast, tell the housefolk to start readying."

  The short day drew to its close, torches were lit and shadows leaped through the hall. Harald wondered why Elizabeth was not here, then realized that no one must have told her. Ulf would not arrive till tomorrow and . . . Was that a wailing he heard?

  He sprang to his feet. The midwife came down the stairs with the child in a blanket. Harald choked, but stood his ground, folding arms and letting the woman lay the bundle before him.

  "A boy, my lord," she said gleefully. "A fine big boy, and for a first birth it was very quick and easy."

  A boy. Stooping, he picked up the baby and held the tiny wrinkled face to his own. A sudden huge love rose in him, the creature was so small and soft and helpless, and yet shouted outraged defiances to the world. "Like a Viking landing on a strange beach," he whispered. "A wide new beach, and it shall all be yours."

  Bishop Grimkell moved up, stately in robe and mitre . "God be praised, my lord," he said, his old face breaking into a rare smile. "What will you call the prince?"

  "Magnus," said Harald.

  He had decided this months ago. It would please the people, and he who slept in Clement's church had borne it honorably.

  "Then if you wish to bear him to the cathedral—"

  "No," said Harald. "The night is cold, nor has the godfather arrived."

  "But the child may die before—"

  "He won't," said Harald shortly. "The christening will be tomorrow." Ignoring the bishop's shock, he turned and went up the stairs.

  Thora's maids had just spread the bed with clean linen. She was pale, but smiled sleepily at him. He bent and kissed her. "Well done," he said, laying the boy in her arms.

  "My own Magnus ..." Her eyes drooped, and he left her to rest.

  As he came down again, he felt a strange emptiness. He was glad, but had no one to share his joy. It wasn't the kind of pleasure that called for carousing, it was ... He knew not what.

  "Be merry," he said to the men. "Drink your prince's health. But I must go elsewhere."

  The night bit at him as he stepped outside. He felt the ground crunch underfoot, and the stars were keen above him; seldom had he seen so many. Down in the streets, houses lay dark, here and there shone a red torch gleam; the bay glimmered like steel. He shivered and rapped on the door of Elizabeth's bower; the cold wood barked his knuckles.

  She opened it herself, a yellow warmth of candlelight behind her. "Oh. I was about to go to bed."

  "I wanted you to know," he said. 'Thora has borne a boy."

  "But that is wonderful!" She drew him inside and shut the door. He saw how the room was simply furnished but how gold flung back the light from lean strange icons on the walls. "You must be very happy," she said breathlessly.

  "Yes. Yes, of course I am." He wandered over to Maria's crib and stood regarding the girl's face. "How has she been?" he asked.

  "Christ be thanked, well. She's a sweet child." Elizabeth took his arm. "And the boy?"

  "Strong and loud and very wrathful." He tilted up her chin till their eyes met. "Ellisif, would you not have wanted Maria to be a boy?"

  "I did, at first. Now I'd not change her. We have it well together, and she will give me grandchildren someday."

  "I've never understood you," he said awkwardly. "I fear you've suffered much from me."

  "This is a night to be glad," she said, though tears lay in her eyes. "It is enough that you came here, to tell me yourself; that makes me happy."

  He pulled her to him without thinking, and her lips sought his blindly. Laughing and weeping at once, she drew him toward the bed.

  4

  Harald was watching the foundation being dug for his new minster when Bishop Grimkell found him. They stood together for a while, saying naught. The sound of picks and spades was loud in the chill calm air.

  "A great work, my lord," said the bishop at last.

  "It goes well." Harald nodded. "May it bring luck to the land."

  "I wished to talk over a Church matter. Shall we seek my house?"

  Harald fell into step with him. "What is it?"

  "Word has just come that the bishop in Vingulmark is dead, God rest his soul. We must agree on a candidate for his successor and send him down to Hamburg with letters urging he be consecrated."

  "That's a long journey," said Harald. "I know of some ships making a voyage to England in spring. Let our man—and I know who it will be, the priest Thorgils Grimsson is friendly to me—let him go to Canterbury instead to take his vows."

  "My lord!" Grimkell stopped dead. "You jest!"

  "No, your reverence. Why should I?"

  "But . . . Norway belongs to the Archdiocese of Bremen and Hamburg!"

  "Yes," said Harald coldly, "and Archbishop Adalbert of Bremen, like the German emperor, is too good a friend of Svein Estridhsson. As for me, I shall cleave to our old allies, the Saxon dukes, in worldly matters, and in the ghostly—"

  "The Holy Father has appointed—"

  "Then I shall appoint otherwise," said Harald. "I do not intend this kingdom shall be ruled in any way from outside, and I will not have Svein's creatures turning the Church of my own land against me. Our bishops will be ordained in Rome, England, France—anywhere I choose—and I will select them myself."

  Grimkell set his jaws together. He might be in holy orders, but warriors had been among his fathers. "You've dared God's wrath erenow
, my lord," he said. "Those bearded priests with their heathenish Russian chants who keep the queen's chapel are bad enough. Would you now bring the ban down on yourself, perhaps on the whole country?"

  "I have thought this through, your reverence," said Harald, "and you cannot turn my will."

  "The Pope himself shall hear of it."

  "Write if you wish, but save your breath for the Mass."

  Grimkell swallowed hard. Harald laughed and took his arm. "Come, Your Reverence, we need not be at sword's point over a difference of opinion. It has ever seemed to me that God is greater than any of these narrow creeds in which men seek to pen Him. Now, to show we are friends, will you hear my confession?"

  "That is for your own chaplain," said Grimkell thinly; he knew what a fat, lazy, tolerant priest Harald had named to that task. He stood a moment, then said, "My lord, it may well be that dogma is too small to encompass God. . . . Yes, it must be, since God is infinite. Nevertheless, the canon law is His holy will for our behavior, and no good fortune comes to those who rebel. I would show you a mystery, that you may better appreciate the power of Our Father."

  Harald followed him into Clement's church, where the king took off his fur cap and signed himself. They were alone in the weaponhouse, the entryroom where men left their arms, and the building stood silent.

  Grimkell brought forth some keys on a chain. "These open up the shrine of holy Olaf," he said. "You have not yet tended the saint as Magnus did. Dare you look on him now and keep your hard heart?"

  Harald felt a stumbling in his breast; sweat was on his palms, but he answered steadily, "Let us go in."

  They said an Ave and a Paternoster before the high altar and then, reverently, the bishop drew aside the fur coverings and unlocked the great casket. Harald helped him raise the lid, heavy as death.

  There he lay, Olaf the Stout, who had been more a man than any other in his age and was now a saint. Harald had seen a few miracles himself; he knew it was no tale. One man had been stricken blind ten years ago, when his farm was ruined by blights and murrains; for a decade he had lived helpless with his brother, and then he had been led here, had shambled up to the altar and laid uncertain hands on the casket . . . and he saw.

  Olaf the Stout, Olaf the Holy, God's trusty warrior in heaven, ruled Norway more now he was dead than ever in his reckless life. Harald met him afresh after almost twenty years.

  He lay altogether still; strange to see him quiet who had been so strong and hasty; but the stillness was of a mountain, a mighty peace had come over him, and he slept with a world under his head. He wore rich clothes, spurs on his feet, a sword at his side, but the hands were folded over a crucifix. In the dim light of a few narrow windows, his face seemed little changed, drawn gaunt but with color in it; the hands had shrunk, skin pulling back from bluish nails, but the combed hair and beard still flowed thickly.

  Harald shivered and crossed himself. A faint odor wafted from the coffin: spices, herbs, like some old forgotten summer. . . . Yes, embalming, and color put on the dead skin, but it was nonetheless a wonder that the relic had endured.

  "Pater noster, qui est in coelis ..."

  When they were again outside, they walked in silence for a while. Then the bishop said quietly: "Well, my lord?"

  "I have seen bodies as well kept," answered Harald. In haste: "I mean no impiety. Remember that I fought on Olaf's side at Stiklastadh, and have ever thought of him as my patron. But the fact that he is a saint seems to me to have little to do with the question of our archbishopric."

  "Beware, my lord," said Grimkell. "Hellfire waits for the proud of heart."

  "Olaf was a proud man," said Harald. "I've never known one with more sense of his own worth—and rightly so, to be sure. Yet if I were sinning as grievously as you think, would he not have smitten me erenow? I've heard of his striking men deaf, blind, lame, dead for lesser things. No, you have shown me a miracle, but not given me a reason."

  "God help you," said the bishop. "You go out of your way to make enemies. How long do you think it can last?"

  He left the king with long strides. Harald watched him, feeling a little daunted. Then, grimly, he straightened his shoulders and went his own way.

  VI

  How Svein Was Clever

  1

  In spring Harald knew that both his queens were again with child and the house he owned would be too small before many years had passed, the more so when his court was growing in size and splendor. He ordered a new place built near the river, below the Lady Church, and told his steward to spare no cost.

  This dwelling was to be one of the finest yet seen in the North. Its buildings lay around a courtyard which was paved but in which two ancient oaks were let stand. At the north side, above the foreroom, was the hall, with a chamber overlooking the street that led to the river docks. From this a landing led to the downward stairs; and from this landing one could walk onto a gallery above yard and street, under a steep, shingled roof and past dragon-headed beams. The hall was flanked by two lesser houses, one for each of the queens, and those beyond held servants, horses, and treasure. The main entrance to the courtyard was on the south side. Some hundreds of folk could find shelter here.

  In those months Harald felt himself lucky: a son, perhaps two more boys on the way, his women happy, and the challenge to a final combat which Svein had sent.

  There was grumbling through the land when half its men were again called out. Yeoman plowed their fields wondering if they would ever come back to harvest them; men looked at hillsides and forests with a sharp knowledge that this might be their last springtime on earth. Still, the fleet was readied and gathered, and early in summer it steered by Konungahella.

  Harald stood on the foredeck of his dragon when they reached the meeting place. A light rain blurred the world; now and then the sun flung bright spears down between the clouds to glisten on wet planks. Where the Gota River met the sea, lay a cluster of fishermen's huts, dark-wooded, raindrops caught glittering in their thatch. A few people gaped from the beaches.

  "Svein is late," said Thjodholf the skald.

  Harald frowned. After the eagerness of his southward voyage, this was an empty feeling, like a puffed-up bladder pricked and hissing itself small. Harshly, he told off a few men to go ashore and find out what had happened to the Danish king.

  The ships rocked at anchor, one broad reach of hulls around the curving strand. The air held a sour smell of rain-soaked wool and a belly rumble of sullen voices. Harald sprawled on a bench, rose to pace the crowded deck, flung himself back to his seat. A long time passed before his men returned in the boat.

  "Well?" he barked.

  "We found some carles, my lord, who said they had heard the Danes were lying to south of Sealand."

  "And not coming here?"

  "They'd heard no talk of that, my lord, and surely if King Svein meant to steer hither he'd have sent folk ahead to arrange for provisions and—"

  Harald turned his back with a snarl. His voice came thickly: "Summon the chiefs. We must decide what to do."

  The captains were rowed to his dragon and came aboard: sheriffs, great landowners, Jarl Orm Eilifsson, Eindridhi Einarsson. They filled the benches together with Harald's best guardsmen; the rest of his crew he had sent ashore to make room. He stood in the bow, under the gilt snake head, and glowered at them.

  "Well," he said, "after his fine words to us, Svein Estridhsson has once more shown himself a coward. He's skulking with his levy around the islands, and the question is whether we should try to find him or go take his land while he is away."

  Eindridhi stood up. "Neither, my lord," he answered. "We came here to fight an honest war, not to play Viking. Svein cannot be fought if he does not wish to be, his rowers are as good as ours; and if we seize Denmark as was done last year, the upshot will be the same."

  Harald shook his fists in the air. "It's like trying to grasp water!" he burst out. "Boneless, strengthless, but it will not be caught. The only way is to dam it
at the source. ... I mean we should overrun Denmark though we take three years, and hold it."

  "That's no part of a man's duty, my lord," said Eindridhi. "There have been too many great levies; the land is being bled dry and with naught to show save the plunder of some wretched crofts. I, for one, am not going to follow further."

  "So you fear the Danish axes?" taunted Harald.

  "Let no man call me craven," replied Eindridhi. "But I'm fit for something besides warring."

  Harald crammed his wrath back down his throat and looked coldly at Einar Thambaskelfir's son. No mistaking his insolence; he must have a goodly host loyal to him if he dared risk an open break with the king. And in that case, what was not being plotted in his father's hall?