Blood Will Follow (30 page)

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Authors: Snorri Kristjansson

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BOOK: Blood Will Follow
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Epilogue

SKANE,
SOUTHWEST
SWEDEN

DECEMBER,
AD
996

The burning twigs crackled and snapped in the center of a faint circle of light and heat. Cold mist drifted in over freezing ground and over the piles of leaves that had drifted against thick tree trunks. Above the treetops the vast black winter night stretched endlessly, dotted by white points, snowflakes that would never fall.

Audun sat on a rock, wrapped in an assortment of rags. “Did you do that thing? Home?” he said.

“Yes,” Ulfar said. Leaning up against a big trunk, he was almost invisible in the shadows.

“How did it go?”

“I’m alive,” Ulfar said.

“So not too bad,” Audun said after a moment’s pause.

“Not too bad,” Ulfar agreed.

Audun sat still for a while, looking into the fire. “What now, then?” he said.

“Valgard killed Geiri. He’s with King Olav’s army. We’re going up north to kill him.”

Another pause. “Oh.” Then, after a while, “Where, exactly? And how many men does he have? And how are we going to do it?”

Ulfar emerged from the shadows and came to sit down by the fire. “No idea,” he said.

Audun noticed the shift in the darkness; Ulfar smelled the blood. They both jumped when the dead deer landed with a thud at the edge of the light.

A familiar voice spoke from the darkness. “The bony bit on your arm’s your elbow. The one you were sitting on is your ass.” The glade was suddenly alive with quiet, soft movement. Silent, hardened, gray-haired men emerged from the trees all around them. Five, ten, twenty, thirty. They made no move, drew no weapons.

Two men walked through the group. One of them held a big ax.

The other one grinned at Ulfar through a thick white beard and stuck a curved dagger in his belt. “Sounds to me like you’re going to need some help, son.”

THE END

Blood Will Follow

Dramatis Personae

V
ALGARD’S
STORY

Valgard
     Deceptive herbalist

Finn
     Loyal lieutenant

Hakon
     Troublesome Trondheim tyrant

King Olav
     His Kingliness

Jorn
     Prince of the Dales, King Olav’s right-hand man

Runar
     Jorn’s stuttering helper

Botolf
     Tall, dark, and deadly Chieftain of the South

Skeggi
     Brawny bundle of sadism

Sigurd
     Chieftain of Stenvik, imprisoned

Sven
     Adviser to Sigurd, imprisoned

Gunnar
     Commander of Stenvik in Finn’s absence

Ormslev “Bug-eye”
     Botolf’s stoic and lardy trek-master

Kverulf
     Botolf’s man; not too sharp on judgment

Skapti
     Botolf’s lieutenant

A
UDUN’S
STORY

Audun
     Cursed blacksmith berserker

Fjölnir
     Aging farmer with one bad eye

Breki
     Caravan leader

Bjorn
     Breki’s brother

Ivar
     Man in charge at the Sands

Hrutur
     Rugged sea captain

Skakki
     Useless blacksmith

Johan Aagard
     Bulky, bothersome beau

Helga of Ovregard
     Handsome woman with a dark past

Streak
     Helga’s horse

Ustain
     Forkbeard’s recruiter

Jomar
     Forkbeard’s man

Thormund
     Aging horse thief, reluctant soldier

Mouthpiece
     Nervous, verbose, all-too-keen, and would-be honorable soldier

Boy
     Mute boy

Olgeir
     Sea captain and commander of ten, suspiciously familiar accent

U
LFAR’S
STORY

Ulfar
     Dashing hero, leading man, and potentially cursed warrior

Anneli
     Just a small-town girl

Torulf
     Young gallant

Jaki and Jarli
     Torulf’s brothers, older and less gallant

Gestumblindi
     Wandering mercenary recruiter with one bad eye

Gisli
     Turnip farmer, not overly wise

Helgi
     Gisli’s idiot cousin

Hedin
     Greedy merchant and boat-owner

Goran
     Grizzled caravan guard

Heidrek
     Young, cheerful caravan guard

Regin
     Surly caravan guard

Ingimar
     Caravan owner and merchant

Arnar
     Burly man of huge beard and few words

Prince Karle
     White on the outside, black on the inside; owes Ulfar for a broken arm; Cousin to King Jolawer

Galti
     Prince Karle’s henchman

Hrodgeir
     Galti’s servant

Alfgeir Bjorne
     King Jolawer’s right-hand man, Geiri’s father, Ulfar’s uncle

King Jolawer Scot
     Son of Erik the Victorious, king before his time

Greta
     Former flame of Ulfar’s; not happy to see him

Ivar
     Greta’s brother; even less happy to see Ulfar

Lord Alfrith
     A chieftain in the field

His Merry Men
     Not merry at all

Acknowledgments

As usual, this has not been a solitary enterprise. If it weren’t for super-agent Geraldine Cooke, it wouldn’t even be an “enterprise.” This doubly counts for editor, publisher, and all-round wonder woman Jo Fletcher, who not only publishes my merry Vikings but also makes my writing look approximately 93 percent better (numbers = truth = science). My fledgling writer’s soul would be crushed but for the tender ministrations of Nicola Budd, Tim Kershaw, and Andrew Turner, key cogs in the lean, mean publishing machine that is Jo Fletcher Books.

I owe thanks to the good people of Southbank International School—first and foremost librarians extraordinaire Christine Joshi and Ian Herne, who have given me enough encouragement and research for a football team’s worth of writers—but also every single student who has stopped me in the corridors, asked “how the book is going,” read the thing, and complimented me on the horrifically inappropriate swearing. You know who you are. I sincerely hope that none of you are actually intending to read this one, because it’s a fair bit worse.

To my dearest friends who read and even liked the first one—I am still stunned, frankly, by the reception. Thank you for putting up with me before, during, and after. I would promise to make more sense and tell shorter stories in the future, but we all know that’s not happening.

To Dagbjört at Nexus Books in Reykjavík for giving me my first-ever book launch—thank you. To kings of Viking Metal Skálmöld for the credits and the music.

To Nick Bain, who taught me to write. Technically, all of this is your fault.

To my mother, father, and brother—you are still the most terrifying readers I’ve ever met. Without you, this wolf would be a poodle.

And finally, most and always—to my wife, Morag. You are probably the most patient woman in the world, and I love you dearly.

Snorri Kristjansson

Hitchin, Hertfordshire

March 2014

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