“O my imprudence! I should have waited for Lentulus and a greater force. Will he never come? But, if he come, the fault of this defeat is not his, but mine. He will be acquitted, and I am left alone to account to Cæsar for a lost eagle of a legion!”
He smote upon his breast and again he walked onward, downcast and gloomy. Once more he spoke, with exceeding bitterness:
“How shall I answer for the loss of the trireme here in the bay? Will not all men say that I kept no watch?”
He stepped upon the rampart and stood still. Near at hand were the ruins of the Saxon village, but they had ceased smoking and lay black and bare as witnesses of the ruthless blow which he had smitten upon the Northmen of the Saxon shore. Beyond were fields which would not be cultivated this season as formerly. There were many corpses yet unburied, for the slayers had spared none save boys and girls for the slave market. The very young, the very old, even the middle-aged women, had been slain, and the fighting men had fallen with their weapons in their hands. The prisoners were guarded in a kind of pen at the left, and they were many.
“Petronius,” shouted the centurion to an officer of rank, “take with thee ten and slay all. We have no conveyance for them. Let not one escape.”
One order was as another to a Roman soldier, and Petronius answered not, but marched away into the camp, seeking his ten who with him were to butcher the prisoners.
“I am dishonored!” said the centurion. “Fate and fortune are against me. I can give no reason for the loss of the trireme. I will go down to the shades.”
Slowly he drew his short-bladed, heavy gladius from its sheath. He looked at it, trying its edge, and he said:
“Thou hast been with me through many battles, O sword! Thou hast drunk the blood of more lives than I can count. Be thou true to me now, for all else is lost.”
Then he knelt upon the rampart and placed the hilt firmly in the earth, the blade point leaning toward him. He braced himself and cast his weight with force. A gasp, a shudder, a struggle of strong limbs, and Petronius was in command of the Roman camp, for his superior officer was dead.
There were many screams at the prison pen, but afterward all was quiet, and Petronius returned, to be told of this new misfortune which had befallen.
“Keep ye good watch,” he said, “lest the Britons take us unawares. There is more than one trireme yet to come. But now we will raise the funeral pile of him who lieth here, for he died in all honor.”
Orders were given and the soldiers brought much wood, but they came and went in silence, for their fates were dark before them.
So was it with the camp of the Romans; but at the camp of the Saxons, at the cove and spring, there was high feasting, for they found the wild boar well roasted and the venison was abundant. They needed but harps and harpers, for the spirit of song came upon all singers, and it was a day of triumph. Not even the older vikings could say that they had ever heard of the taking of a Roman warship in this wise.
“Some have the sea kings rammed to sinking,” they said. “Some have they driven ashore and some have they burned; but the Romans themselves ever burn any keel that they are leaving. Hael to The Sword, the victor!”
“The smiters of my kindred have themselves been smitten,” said Olaf, the son of Hakon, but he sat with a fierce fire burning in his eyes and his seax lay bare at his side.
“We have smitten them upon the sea,” said Ulric the Jarl, “but not yet upon the land. I may not yet leave Britain. Not until I have kept the counsel of Hilda and my promise to my father at his tomb.”
“Do as thou hast said,” replied Olaf, “lest evil fortune come to thee. But go thou now and look at the trireme. Is she not thine, to do with as thou wilt?”
“I will go,” said Ulric, and with him went only Knud the Bear, by his ordering.
First went they upon The Sword, for she was nearer, and she was now lashed side by side with the trireme. High above the low bulwarks of the ship from the Northland arose the strong sides of the war vessel of Cæsar, and her greater force in fight or in rough seas was evident. Ulric looked and he thought of the sayings of Olaf, the son of Hakon, for a shrewd suggestion sprouteth in the mind of a wise man like a seed sown in a garden.
“Truly we were overcrowded,” said Ulric, standing upon the fore deck of The Sword. “We are thrice too many souls for so small a ship as this. There was too little room for provisions or for sleeping. There is none at all for the storage of spoils. The men will not brook the burning of the shares which may fall to them. They like not my hard ruling even thus far.”
“O jarl,” said Knud, “what sayest thou? Let us not burn good plunder. What good to win it if we carry it not home with us? I would now go on board the trireme.”
“Come,” said Ulric, and they climbed up over her high bulwark, noting how thick it was and well joined together. Thus they passed from stem to stern and in and out of cabins, examining all things—the oars, the ropes, and the sails.
“She is provided for a long voyage,” said the jarl. “Sawest thou ever such armor and such store of weapons? We may need them in the southern seas.”
“That will we,” replied Knud; “but I am an old seaman and I was thinking of yonder sails. There are twain. They are of strongly woven stuff—not skins, like our sail. They will save much rowing. There are good anchors also. Thou sayest well, we are too many in The Sword.”
Yet she seemed very beautiful as she lay at the side of the trireme, and the jarl remembered how his heart had gone out to her while she was building. She had borne him well, also, and she had proved herself. What might he do with the vessel that he loved? He went on board of her again and he stood by the hammer of Thor on the fore deck.
“What thinkest thou?” asked Knud. “What if I—for I am a smith—put now the anvil and the hammer on the fore deck of the trireme? Will she not then be The Sword? Will not Thor and Odin go with her?”
“Do even as thou hast said!” loudly exclaimed Ulric. “So the gods go with us what matter for a wooden keel?”
But his heart smote him sorely.
“I would,” he thought, “that I might have speech with Hilda. I will go on shore and question Olaf. He is old.”
Old was he and crafty, for already he had been saying many things to the vikings. He had told them of keels overwhelmed in the storms of the southern seas, or crushed by the rams of Roman warships. He had spoken of hungers and thirsts because of lack of room for provisions, and of fights lost because there were no more arrows to shoot or spears to throw. The young men heard him eagerly, and even the old warriors listened with care. They also called to mind such things and told of them, and all who chose to look could see the difference in size between the two vessels that floated in the cove.
* * *
CHAPTER X. The Great Sacrifice of the Druids.
IN THE DEEP FOREST stood Olaf, the son of Hakon, and before him stood a tall, venerable man clad in a robe of white which came down to his feet, whereon were sandals. On his head was naught save abundant gray hair and a circlet of beaten gold. On his arms were heavy rings of gold, deeply graven, and in his hand was a long white wand, gold tipped.
“Thou and thy Saxon friends have done well,” he said in the Latin tongue. “But I like not this message from their jarl.”
“He doth but ask of thee, O high priest,” replied Olaf, “that he, who is not as another man, but is of the sons of the gods of the North, may reverence thy gods for the aid they have given him by sea and land, and that he may be present at the great sacrifice, as becometh him. If he may so do, he will give thee a thing the like of which thou hast never seen hitherto, and he will smite for thee the Romans.”
“Cometh he then from Odin?” asked the Druid.
“From Odin,” said Olaf; “and of higher rank than he is none among the Saxons.”
“He is not a king,” said the Druid, “but I know of jarls and of their pedigrees. The Romans at thy village are this day smitten by the Britons and we need not his sword.
Well is it, however, for him to give a gift. Let him see to it that his offering be right precious. It is a day’s journey to the sacred place. He may not come down to the valley of the gods, but he may stand upon the hill, among the oaks, and afterward I will receive his token.”
“So be it, O high priest,” said Olaf, and he turned away, as did also the Druid.
“Cunning is he,” muttered Olaf, as he walked. “But in us also is there prudence and the jarl will be guided in the matter. I think he will not fall into this trap of the Britons. They plotted against us before the Romans came, and gladly would they see Saxon blood upon the stones of sacrifice.”
So said he to the jarl at the camp late in the day, and Ulric listened, pondering.
“Olaf,” he said, after a silence, “Wulf the Skater hath returned from looking at thy place. No other trireme hath arrived, but even while he was watching did the Britons swarm over the palisades. The Romans were too few to guard their lines, and it was in vain for them to resist a multitude. Thy vengeance is complete.”
“The gods have done this,” said Olaf. “But what wilt thou do in this other matter?”
“I will leave a strong guard with the ship,” said the jarl, “but with the greater number I will go to look upon the sacrifices. Thou wilt guide by a road they know not, and we will defeat their cunning.”
“They would not strike thee, I think,” said Olaf, “until after the sacrifices. This is their reverence to their gods.”
“I would I knew,” said Ulric, “the name of one of their gods. I will not sacrifice to one to whom I may not speak. He is a breath.”
“Thou mayest not enter the sacred valley,” said Olaf; “but I have somewhat more to tell thee. Now do I know what is the name of thy captured trireme.”
“The hammer of Thor is on her deck at this hour,” said the jarl. “She is no longer Roman. But whose is that gilded shape under her beak? It seemeth a woman wearing a helmet.”
“The Druid told me,” said Olaf. “She is Minerva. She is to the Romans as are the Nornir. She is both wise and crafty, being a saga woman, and there are runes concerning her.”
“She is, then, not of the sea,” said the jarl. “I think she will not contend with Thor. It were ill fortune to disturb her, seeing she hath delivered to us the ship; but we must give to it the name of The Sword or Odin were justly angry, for we gave our keel to him.
“Thou hast decided well,” said Olaf; “but if so, then there must remain one keel only, not twain. It was commanded thee to burn one ship in Britain, and thou mayest not break thy word to the dead and to the gods.”
“That will I not,” said Ulric; “but now we must speedily prepare this expedition.”
Wise had been the work of the tongue of Olaf, for now came the vikings to Ulric to speak concerning The Sword and the trireme, so that this which was to be done appeared not as by his ordering, but as the counsel of all.
“Thou doest well,” they told him, “to yield to us in this matter. We will have a larger ship. We will have room for our plunder. We care not overmuch for thy small keel, and we will burn her at the seaside. Thou art our jarl in battle, but thou mayest not rule in all things.”
Nevertheless, they agreed with him all the more readily concerning the sacrifices, and those who were to go and those who were to stay by the ships were chosen by lot lest any should accuse the jarl of unfairness; for it was hoped that here was to be fighting. Not yet had there been any division of the spoils because all agreed to wait until a more convenient season, or even until the end of the voyage.
“They whom the valkyrias do not name,” said one, “may apportion whatever may then be found in the ship. There will be fewer weapons, perchance, and fewer men.”
In the dawn of the next day did the jarl lead out his men, and in the dusk did the march end. High and round-topped was the hill in the forest to which Olaf guided them, and below was a narrow valley, bare of trees. There was yet light to see that in the middle of the valley were many great stones. Some of these stood upright in a wide circle, like the burial stones of the North peoples, but much larger. Other stones, long and weighty, lay flat, upheld a little from the ground by bowlders under them at either end.
“They are stones of sacrifice,” said Olaf. “On them do they slay both cattle and men. But seest thou the cages?”
“Penthouses of wood I see,” said Ulric. “Very large, but of one story and roofed flatly. On the roofs and against the sides are heaps of wood. What are these?”
“Wait till thou seest,” said Olaf. “Their shape on the ground is as the body and the arms and the legs of a man, and there is a meaning in it known to the Druids. They make this wooden man of sacrifice, and they fill him full of men and women and children that he may feast. They have made many war captives and they have condemned many for evil-doing or for speaking against the Druids.”
“Great fires are lighting around the valley and near the stones,” remarked Tostig the Red. “I have seen many men slain upon stones. It is the right place to slay them, where the gods can see all. We shall have a rare treat. But there are hundreds of Britons. They wear little clothing.”
“They paint themselves blue, instead,” said Olaf. “But it keepeth not out either the cold or a spear point.”
More and more numerous grew the throngs in the valley, coming out from under the trees beyond. Not among them, but walking through them in a procession, came scores at a time of the white-robed Druids, bearing no arms, but leading with them human beings of both sexes, arm-fettered, defenseless, making no resistance. There was a loud sound of harping and chanting as the processions drew near the flat stones.
Behind each of these stood a Druid with a large knife, and before him, stone by stone, was laid a victim. Then fell the knives in quick succession, with a twanging of harps and a shout, but the Northmen saw no great difference between this offering and such as they had witnessed elsewhere. As the firelight brightened, however, they could discern that the walls of the wooden man in the middle were open, with wide crevices, through which might be seen the naked forms of those who were shut in. They were even crowded, and they uttered loud cries as they saw torches placed against the heaps of wood surrounding the pen.
“Dry wood,” said Knud the Bear. “See how it kindleth! A hot fire! These are to be burned for their god? He is a bad one. I like it not. The Romans do well to kill these Druids. I would slay them myself.”
So said all the vikings, and had there been more of them, they might have vented their anger at this thing. It was not good, even for a god, but the throngs of Britons were well armed, after their fashion, and Ulric’s men were but few in comparison.
“We would not mind four or five to one,” he said, “but we could not slay such a multitude. The fires burn terribly! It is not at all like kindly slaying with a sword.”
“A cut on a man’s neck is nothing,” said Tostig. “He falleth and that is an end. I hope to fall by a sword some day.”
The shrieks and cries of agony were dreadful, rising above the twanging of the harps and the chanting of the Druids. There was no help for any of these who were doomed. Among them, said some of the vikings, must be all the Roman prisoners if any had been taken. The burning roofs fell in and so did the red blazings of the side walls. Nor did the swarms of the Britons cease to yell with the pleasure of cruelty while they gazed upon the frantic struggles of these victims.
“We have seen enough,” said Olaf, at last. “O jarl, we have far to go. I hope we may again strike the Romans shortly, but I care not much if good Saxon spears find many marks among the Druids. It would require a host of Saxons to hold this island, killing them all, but I am one who will go back to the North and come again, bringing stout slayers with me.”
“Some of the white-robed ones come in this direction even now,” responded the jarl. “Behind them are spearmen. They must not find us upon this hill, but the woods are overdark to march in.”
“After we are well covered,” said Olaf, “w
e may kindle torches, but the way by which I lead you is plain and wide, for the war chariots of the British kings have made it in the old days. The Romans now prevent them from having any chariots within their dominions, but there are free tribes beyond their borders. Come!”
“On!” said the jarl. “This hill was to have been their trap. They seek to march around that they may cut off our going. On!”
Swiftly marched the Saxons for a while, but the darkness of the forest was dense, and now they halted to kindle torches.
“The Druids and their men carried many and bright ones,” said Ulric, “so that we saw them enter the woods, but we are too far now for them to discern our own.”
After this there were pauses for resting, but the vikings marched on until the dawn. Then went they forward again, fasting, but at the noon they were greeted by the shouts of the men who held the palisades at the spring.
“O Tostig the Red,” responded the jarl, “hath all been well with thee and with the camp?”
“Hael, O jarl!” said Tostig. “All is well. We have seen Britons at a distance among the trees, but none came near for speech. I think they are not overfriendly.”
“That are they not, but treacherous,” said Ulric. “But now let there be roasting and eating and sleeping, and then we shall have new matters upon our hands. We have seen things that are worth telling around a fire in the winter evenings. I like not these gods of the Britons. They are evil-minded.”
Many were busy at the fires with venison and with fishes which had been caught, but they who had remained at the camp were cooks for the weary men who could tell of this sacrifice of the Druids. As for the jarl, he ate and drank and then he went on board The Sword and lay down to sleep upon the after deck, saying little to any man, and Tostig the Red came and sat down by him.
Ulric the Jarl Page 8