This story is a prequel to Broken Souls about a Viking named Bothvar that takes place in a fantasy world called Aratheon that a few writers and myself have been working on (Phoenix Cinders, Scarlet Rose, Wolf Hunt, and Lion Heart). Bothvar is the male protagonist from Broken Souls. I'll post a separate story featuring the prequel to the female protagonist in Broken Souls, Lura. Any and all characters who participate in sex are adults of legal age. And I own the rights to this story so don't try to steal it. There's a lot of build-up and background story until we get to the sex which happens when the character is an adult, but the beginning is just earlier on when he's growing up in his village. Being a Viking, there's a bit of violence.
Chapter: 1
It was a hard season when my father and his men returned from the war defeated. Vandil, the Southern Tyrant king, defeated and killed our King Teowulf. He marched upon his throne in Chillshore and captured it, leaving it in the hands of the Southern Tyrants. They're usurpers. My father and the rest of the clans fled back to their Strongholds and villages, hidden from the Southerners and preparing for an attack that never came.
Our town spent the entire summer season building up our defenses and looking out for a battle that never came. We lacked the resources we normally have that never came to be. Walls were built by the Builder clan with spikes and towers for archers. Father had a barricade and armory built.
By the time winter arrived, without raiding we didn't have the resources we needed and many people died because of it. Fortunately, my family and friends all survived. We were blessed by the gods. Our clan has always been faithful servants of the gods. When spring finally came, my father and his men were eager to get out to sea, leaving my mother in charge. All of us - my older brother, Thorkel, my younger brother, Thormar, and myself - were free to do as we pleased without the rigorous routines my father enforces on us, as long as we continue to learn our crafts. My younger sister, Svala, and my youngest brother, Bodvar, are far too young to join us, and this would be my older brother's last summer as a boy before he joins my father on raids as he becomes a man. He's excited about it, but I will miss having Thorkel around.
Father makes us spend much of our free time learning crafts. He tells us we'll never know when we need to know it, for it could save our lives. Most crafts seem to be tedious and time-consuming. Some are not quite manly, but we're forced to learn it anyway. Like how to stitch clothing. Or how to weave and to cook. Women's tasks if you ask me. We also learn how to fletch, chop trees and split wood, build fires and houses, and gather herbs, which is far more difficult than I ever imagined. So many herbs. And it's hard to tell which ones will kill you and which ones will cure some strange illness. My Aunt Sigvor, my mother's older sister, was quite thorough in teaching us what to look for in herbs and how to test whether they are poisonous or actually help with sickness. Most of the time, she just uses them on animals to see what happens. She is our town's Wise One. The one everyone goes to for their illnesses, sicknesses, or any other herbal remedy or concoction. I've even seen a man come to her needing something for his wife's bum because he stuck... Well, I don't need to go into detail about that. Some things I will never understand.
We spend a lot of time chopping wood. I think it's slave work and I don't like it, but regardless, father won't budge. Eventually, he tells us that chopping wood is a good way to develop our swing with an ax and build our strength. Same with cutting trees. However, father is always criticizing the way we swing our axes. Always telling us we're doing it wrong and we need to use our legs more. I don't understand. How can you swing an ax with your legs? Eventually, he explains that the power behind the swing comes from our legs. It starts in our legs and moves up our body to our arms. You bend your knees to start, but as you bring your ax above your shoulder, you straighten your legs out in a stretch. Then, when you bring the ax down, you bring it with the full force of your body and end in a crouch position. Like a squat, not as much as if you were taking a shit, but with your knees should be slightly bent. If done right, your full body should be used.
By far my favorite skills are those we learn from the dwarf, Aldam Bronzehammer. He's a grumpy, bald dwarf with a thick, long, braided, auburn beard that hangs down to his belt and stays tucked under his apron. The dwarf is thick with muscle, which he has forged with his hammer and pickaxe. He's got dark iron skin that looks like metal. He teaches us many skills. How to prospect ore, how to mine it, how to smelt it, and how to forge it into tools and weapons. Of course, to a dwarf, weapons are just tools of the killing sort. The body is the true weapon. And I find swinging a pickaxe is much like swinging a wood chopping ax. You do the same motion, and Aldam is quick to criticize.
We spend much of our youth with the dwarf. He grumbles much of the time, complaining about our efforts, but I can tell he enjoys our company. We travel with him up the mountains, finding coal and iron. There's plenty of it, along with some strange glowing mushrooms and glowing ore. Aldam tells us we are not ready for the glowing ore, it's too heavy for us. That ore is for experts, and the mushrooms will turn your skin dark but have many benefits such as healing and increasing your senses. It is hard work, mining the raw materials we need, and it takes all three of us to push and pull the cart down the mountain full of the ore. Once we get back to his little shop, we have to refine it and get all the crude from it. We run it through water several times to get the dirt off, and then we heat it up with charcoal and pound it with a hammer to get rid of the slag.
"Put your balls into it. Swing that bloody hammer with all your body," the dwarf yells as we beat on the heated metal. We spend much of our time pounding the iron with our hammers. He makes us switch hands so we don't make one side too much stronger than the other.
After we've refined it, then we get to make something out of it. Of course, it's not always the stuff we want to make, like weapons. Most of the time, its nails, hammers and ax heads, knives, cooking pots and pans, horseshoes, belt buckles, chisels, and other boring tools. He shows us how to make moldings for them, which is hard in and of itself. Thorkel always tries to engrave the same symbol on everything he works on and owns. I think it's supposed to be a hammer, but I don't know for sure. "Why do you put that on everything?" I ask scratching my head.
Thorkel looks at me with an eyebrow raised. "Do you really have to ask? It's Thunar's hammer! You know... Mjolnir. It gives me protection."
"Oooh. I see," I say, wide-eyed. The name Mjollnir and Thunar ring inside my head for some reason. As if I've heard those names many times before. "I'm going to do it, too."
"Now you're just copying me," Thorkel says with a sigh.
Aldam sighs. "You call that a hammer? Looks like a goat turd."
I laugh, and then Aldam looks at my work. "Boy, do you not know your head from your arse? Because that ax head looks like you took a shit on the anvil and beat it into a bloody lump."
Both Thorkel and Thormar laugh. Aldam turns on both of them, and his eyes dart to Thormar's work. "What kind of horse hoof are you looking at? That shoe looks like it'd fit on a ram's arse rather than the hoof of a horse."
Don't even think about asking him a question to which he thinks you should know the answer, which is something Thormar does constantly.
"Can iron be made any stronger?" my annoying little brother asks.
"Does a bear shit in the woods?" the dwarf asks.
"I suppose it does. But I guess it could also shit in a cave or a river. Or maybe in the mountains," Thormar replies.
And of course, Aldam drags his hand down his face. And without surprise, Thorkel slaps Thormar up on the backside of his head. "Do you ever shut up, brother?"
"Hey! I was just asking," Thormar replies. I feel like we have this very same conversation three or four times a day.
"You can make steel out of iron with coal that burns hot enough. We call it coke. There's this stuff in the air we breathe that we need in order to live. They call it oxygen and then the stuff you breathe out that these plants need is called carbon dioxide. Which is made of carbon and oxygen. The carbon part is what we need to turn iron into steel. Fires breathe it as well. To make steel, bars of wrought iron are layered with powdered charcoal in stone boxes and heated. After about 168 hours, the iron would absorb the carbon in the charcoal. Repeated heating would distribute carbon more evenly and the result, after cooling, was blister steel. Of course, this method is archaic and old. We no longer use it. Of course, we don't really use steel much either since we have Nedraetium and can purify it."
"We dwarves are never content. We always find a way to better things," Aldam says, puffing out his chest. "We found that the metal could be melted in clay crucibles and refined with a special flux to remove slag that the old process left behind. That's how we came up with cast steel. Of course, that method is pig shit compared to the new method of making steel."