Chapter 42: Treason in Westminster
Chapter 42: Treason in Westminster
It was a warm spring morning in London. Frost had long fled the Thames, and Cnut’s court gathered under the vaulted shadows of Westminster’s halls.
At the center knelt Asser, his cloak damp from the sea spray that had followed him all the way from the far north.
Nearly two weeks had passed since he left the island of Heimaey; two weeks of silence, of restless sleep, of questioning what he had truly seen.
He had not confirmed with absolute certainty that the fleet hailed from the far north. But all signs pointed to a transformation.
One so vast and complete that it defied reason. Someone had changed the nature of Ísland itself. Whether it was the long-lost Varangians or some greater power, Asser dared not say for certain.
And yet, he withheld nothing.
“I made landfall at Heimaey,” he began, voice level, though strained by the weight of what he would recount. “A place I have visited in years past, disguised as a merchant. The lone fishing village and the old church that once stood upon its rock… were gone.”
The murmur of uneasy voices rose behind him. Among them, the sharp whisper of fear.
Cnut leaned forward on his throne, his voice as cold as northern steel.
“Gone? Replaced by what, Asser? Speak plainly.”
Asser’s gaze faltered for a heartbeat. Then he spoke.
“It was not desolation that greeted me, sire. It was a fortress. Built of stone; Roman stone. A castra, by all rights, complete with inner walls and a harbor deep enough to conceal ships from the horizon.”
A stunned hush fell across the chamber; until the court’s marshal, Einarr, struck the pillar beside him with a resounding crack.
“Madness,” the Dane growled. “Even if we summoned all the masons of the realm, we could not build such a stronghold in a single year. And certainly not a rabble of half-starved fishermen and goat herders.”
But Cnut raised a hand, silencing the protest.
“Asser has never lied to me.”
The messenger bowed in gratitude, though unease lingered in his bones. “It was not only the walls, my king. The men guarding them… were not common folk. They bore arms and armor greater than any levy could afford; warriors of skill, formation, and discipline I have seen only in your own Huscarls. Even the knights of Normandy would seem crude in comparison.”
His words cut through the silence like a blade. And then he added, with a note of dread:
“They wore the hammer of Thor upon their chests. Not the cross. And the people, even the children, looked upon me with hatred when they realized I was Christian. It is as if the north had never been converted at all. Or worse… as if it has rejected the Cross entirely.”
The bishop at court turned pale. A wave of cold certainty settled over the room.
The Christianization of Ísland had been a symbolic victory; a distant outpost brought into the fold of Christendom. And now, it had become a beacon of apostasy. A fortress of the gods of old, watching over the sea like Heimdallr’s own post.
Cnut said nothing for a moment. Then, slowly, he turned to Einarr.
“If we were to summon the full might of our fleet, every ship we could spare, how many men could we land upon Heimaey?”
Einarr hesitated. His fingers tapped a rhythm against the hilt of his axe.
“Two hundred ships, perhaps three. Ten thousand men, with provisions to hold them a season.” He met the king’s eyes. “It would be enough to try. But if Asser speaks true… it may not be enough to succeed.”
The steward interjected, his voice indignant.
“Ten thousand men is enough to conquer any isle! Especially from a rabble of heathens! We owe it to the Church to restore order!”
Einarr’s eyes flared with contempt.
“You would throw away ten thousand lives to defend pride and prayer? If their warriors are truly more dangerous than Norman knights, and if they are dug in behind Roman walls, then Heimaey would bleed us dry. Even if we took it, we would have no strength left to face Óláfr in Norweg; or worse, the Emperor in Aachen, should he move against us.”
And there it was. The full weight of reality.
Cnut knew it well. His eyes narrowed, not with fear, but with the cold recognition of a man who sees the chessboard turn against him.
“They’ve built a watchtower in the sea,” he murmured. “One that looks not toward trade, but toward Ériu. That is where their ambitions lie. Let them test their strength there.”
He stood. His voice became iron.
“Fortify the coast. Triple our watchers in Dublin and the Irish Sea. If the White Wolf turns his gaze upon us, we shall meet him with fire. But until then… we wait.”
No one challenged the decree. No one spoke.
But all knew now the name of the storm that was rising in the far north. A ghost returned from Constantinople.
A wolf draped in snow.
—
The great hall of Westminster had emptied, its echoing stones still bearing the weight of unspoken dread. Torches hissed in their sconces. Thunder rumbled low beyond the Thames.
But in the bishop’s study, tucked within the southern transept, no candles were lit. Only a single oil lamp flickered; its flame wavering like the faith in the old man’s heart.
Bishop Leofwine’s hands trembled as he dipped the quill in ink. His parchment lay half-filled already. The words were slow to come, not from doubt; but from the enormity of the truth.
“To His Holiness, Pope John XIX, servant of Christ and Shepherd of the Faithful…”
He paused. Eyes rimmed with red scanned the hallway once more before he continued.
“…I bring grave tidings from the northern sea. The island of Ísland, long thought tamed by Christ’s light, has been reclaimed by darkness. The cross has been cast down, and the hammer raised in its place. The people speak the tongue of demons and look upon the servants of God with disdain. Worse yet, there is order to this apostasy. Discipline. Fortifications. Steel. It is not a mere pagan village that grows in the north, but a kingdom.”
He clenched the parchment’s edge, smearing a drop of ink.
“The fortress I speak of lies upon Heimaey, in the Vestmannaeyjar isles. Its men wear not the robes of monks, but mail and wolfskin. They are not led by druids or hedge-priests, but by warriors trained in Constantinople, the so-called ‘Varangians’ long thought scattered or slain.”
The pen lingered.
“His Majesty, King Cnut… does not wish this known. He has, I fear, lied to His Holiness in past correspondence; claiming the murderers of Bobbio Abbey were caught and hanged, and that the heretics who harbored them were purged. I know now this is false.”
He looked toward the empty cross above his desk, its shape swallowed by shadow.
“Should this fire spread, it will consume not only the north; but the fragile light that still flickers in these isles. I beg the Holy Father to intervene. For if Christendom does not act swiftly, the wolf shall devour the lamb.”
He sealed the letter with wax and the sigil of the bishopric, then handed it to a trusted friar with eyes like stone.
“Ride with haste to the coast. The ship to Rouen sails by dawn. No detours. No delay.”
The friar nodded once and disappeared into the dark.
Leofwine remained, the quiet stillness around him nearly deafening. And in his mind echoed the unseen face of the one who now haunted Europe’s dreams.
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