Thorsten strolled down the hill through the market. The breeze from the fjord was laden with the smells of the stalls: fresh bread, leather, wood-shavings, dung and very dead herring. He wrinkled his nose at the last - Aelfhund the fishmonger had never been the best at keeping his wares fresh. In the heat of the late spring day, they'd be humming by noon and by dusk even the dogs wouldn't touch them. He sped up, making his way to the harbour and the cattle pens.
The harbour didn't smell much better. Cattle, fish guts and rotting seaweed combined to assault the senses, and the thin wind bit deep. But it was a smell that offered the promise of something more. The snap of the sails in the wind, and the sound of men's boastful tales as they loaded supplies onto the boat, were all anyone needed to hear to know that a raid was planned. Thorsten felt his spirits rise as he contemplated his immediate future in the belly of the boat. He knew that it would be a week or more of being alternately bored, terrified, wet and cold, but the promise of excitement and plunder at the end of it made it all worthwhile.
"Thorsten, man!" a loud voice hailed him from the water. Thorsten peered down into the belly of the boat to see Erik staring back up at him. "You're back from the high pastures already?"
Thorsten grinned down at his cousin. "What, you mean you thought I'd make the journey as slowly as you, stumpy?" he taunted.
Erik laughed good-naturedly, and made his way up onto the quayside. The two men were ill-matched - Thorsten's huge bulk dwarfed Erik's slim, bow-legged frame - but years of raiding together had bound them together closer than brothers. There was no-one Thorsten would trust more, on land or sea.
Thorsten threw his pack at his cousin, who took a step back and let out a grunt as he caught it before throwing it onto the deck. Heads together, they walked the length of the boat, finalising their plans and checking the vessel closely from prow to stern.
They set sail the next morning on the dawn tide. As they left Thorsten looked back at the receding mass of the harbour, the wheeling gulls and the green hill rising steeply behind. As he always did, he issued a silent prayer that this may not be the last time his eyes saw the grey smoke of home. Then Erik called to the steersman and the Vikings bent to their oars, singing as they pulled the slim boat out of the fjord and onto the wide ocean.
The crossing was smooth, the trade winds favouring the Vikings' boat as it made its way across the sea, heading first for the rocky Shetland islands, then picking its way down the western coast of Alba, the rich land of the Dal Raita, the painted Picts and the curious, soft-handed monks who hoarded their treasures so greedily, but guarded them so poorly. Erik, who had plundered this coast many times, took the helm as they slid through the iron grey waves. This time he followed the coast far to the south, deep into the Celtic lands, seeking a large settlement he'd spotted briefly on an earlier raid.
The lithe craft nosed slowly and silently along the rugged coastline for three days, searching for its target. The Vikings were growing restless when, at dusk on the eighth day, the light of cooking fires twinkled tantalisingly through the gloom as they passed a small inlet. They landed on a narrow pebble beach so that the boy Snorri, an experienced scout despite his youth, could follow the inlet upstream to investigate. He returned at dawn, a
satisfied look on his face as he scrambled into the boat.
"What have you for us, lad?" Erik asked, his face intent.
"There
is
a village," the boy replied. "A big one - and it seems there's to be a market, too. Looks like a good few traders here." The assembled Vikings muttered congratulations to Erik and Snorri. Traders meant wealth, and a village rabble held few terrors for the battle-hardened warriors. They pulled away from the inlet and back around the headland to prevent their untimely discovery, then, with the results of Snorri's expert reconnaissance, the Vikings planned their attack.
...
The raiders came out of the glow of the setting sun, the dragon boat dark on the waves. Shouts rang out from the watch-point on the headland as the sail came into view. The men of the village, already half-drowsed with
ale following the market, fumbled for their weapons and straggled, cursing, to the muster point, knocking aside the last stalls.
Caitlin was coming down from the forest with a brace of grouse, her bow slung on her back, when she heard the watchman's cries. She immediately looked to the sea and swore quietly at the sight of the long, black shadow approaching the beach. She started to run down the steep track to the village. As she got closer she heard the cries of men mustering, the women grabbing belongings and children, the merchants yelling for their horses, scattering their wares as they made a dash for the high road and relative safety. She ducked and scurried through the crowded streets to her own door.
"Eilidh! Eilidh!" she called. No response. The room was dark, the hearth cold. Her little sister had not been here for some time. Caitlin scowled and turned on her heel, pausing to swap her bow and arrows for a stout cudgel. The road was quieter now, the men rushing down to the shoreline to meet the invasion. She shook her head.
We should be out of here too, and into the forest. Damn that girl.
She raced like a shadow to the shore path, knowing that Eilidh would be watching the battle - and in particular, her new betrothed. Sure enough, there she was, posing proudly on an outcrop of rock above the shingle, her best cloak wrapped around her, long hair unbound and flying like a flag of war against the darkening sky.
About the only warlike thing about her, the daft mare,
Caitlin thought, uncharitably. She struggled through the heather up to her sister's lofty perch and pulled her ankle roughly.
"Ow, Cait - let GO!" came a whining voice from above.
"Get down from there!" Caitlin hissed in response. Her sister shook her head and jutted out her chin defiantly.
"I am here to show my love for my man. I am not leaving until the sea is stained by the blood of these filthy Norsemen. It would look quite wrong."
"These filthy Norsemen likely have
bows
. And they'll be in range soon, and here's you, lit by the sunset, making the most perfect target for them. How pretty do you think you'll look with an arrow sticking through your stupid stomach?"
Eilidh paused, but then shook her head. "Domnhall won't let anything happen to me. Have some faith, Caitlin."