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The quiet of the longhouse was broken by the soft rustle of linen. The hearth had long since gone cold. Shadows stretched over the wooden beams. Smoke from the funeral still clung faintly to the air, but here inside, all was still.
The third watch of the night had begun when Hrafn Gormsson heard the sound. After six days of absolute silence from within the longhouse, any noise would have caught his attention, but this was different. Deliberate. The soft scrape of feet against wooden planks, the creak of a sleeping bench bearing weight.
Hrafn pressed his ear against the wood, listening. The footsteps were steady now, moving with the careful precision of someone testing their own strength. He heard the soft rustle of clothing, the whisper of fabric against skin as someone dressed themselves.
His mind raced through possibilities. Perhaps one of the healers had stirred, checking on Bjorn.
But the footsteps were too sure. These were the steps of a young man, not an elderly woman.
At first, Hrafn saw only what he expected. The sleeping bench where Bjorn had lain for six days. The small table where bowls of untouched broth had been placed and removed, day after day. The stools where the healers had kept their vigil.
Hrafn's hand moved instinctively toward his weapon. He didn't know why, just a chill crawling up his spine. A wrongness, or maybe a rightness too powerful to feel safe.
Then the shadows shifted, and he saw him.
Bjorn stood near the far wall, fully dressed in his leather tunic and woolen breeches. His hair, which had grown longer during his illness, fell past his shoulders in the style of a young warrior. His face was pale but alert, his eyes bright with something, a quality that Hrafn could not immediately identify.
The young man was not looking at the door. Instead, he stood before the wall where weapons hung , a war axe with a bearded blade, a seax with a bone handle, and a shield painted. He was studying them with the intensity of a man seeing familiar things with new eyes.
Hrafn's throat went dry. In all his years of warfare, he had never felt like this.
Seeing the Young man who had slept like the dead suddenly standing awake and aware, sent chill through his veins. And he silently gulped.
The sound was enough to draw Bjorn's attention, and the boy turned to face him.
Their eyes met across the dim space, and Hrafn felt his breath catch. There was no confusion in those eyes, no disorientation that one might expect from someone awakening from a deep sleep.
"You live," Hrafn said, the words coming out as barely more than a whisper. It was a statement of fact, but also a question. The young man before him was clearly alive, but the manner of his awakening was so strange that the leader of the guards found himself doubting his own senses.
Bjorn tilted his head slightly, a gesture so reminiscent of his father. When he spoke, the voice didn't match what Hrafn expected, it was clear and strong, showing no trace of the weakness that might be expected after days of unconsciousness.
"Who says I was dead?" The words carried a slight edge, as if the boy found the question amusing or perhaps slightly insulting.
Bjorn opened his eyes.
Hrafn stepped fully into the longhouse, closing the door behind him but leaving it unlatched. The other guards were stationed outside, but they were far enough away that they would not hear a normal conversation. Still, he kept his voice low.
"You have slept for six days," he said, watching the boy's face for any reaction. "The healers said you breathed, but you would not wake. Your father has been..."
"Your father leads Kattegat now," Hrafn said carefully. "As regent, until you wake. The Thing has accepted his claim." He paused, studying the boy's reaction. He paused, gauging Bjorn's reaction. The young man gave nothing away.
"Torvald and Svein tried to stir unrest," Hrafn continued. "But they were swiftly dealt with, thanks in part to Eldar Ulfsson's support."
Bjorn raised an eyebrow, lips curling into a half-smile. "Of course he helped. No man wants his daughter widowed because her husband backed the other side., would he?"
Hrafn gave a faint grunt, either in agreement or annoyance. It was hard to tell.
"What about the others?" Bjorn asked, his tone sharper now.
"They're laying low. For now."
Bjorn nodded, unsurprised. "They're not fools like Torvald and Svein. At least rats know when to scurry."
Hrafn gave no argument. Then, after a beat, he added: "Earl Haraldson's funeral has already ended. Your father saw to it personally. It was a proper one."
Bjorn's gaze drifted toward the weapons wall. "Good." Then after a small pause. "And my sword?"
"Still in the earth where it fell. No one has been able to move it." Hrafn hesitated, then added, "Some say the gods hold it there."
Bjorn's expression changed. A slight smile played at the corners of his mouth. It was the smile of someone who understood a joke that others had missed.
"The gods," Bjorn repeated softly. "Yes, they have their own... purposes." He moved away from the wall, walking toward the fire pit with steady steps.
Hrafn saw something that reminded him of Haraldson in his prime, not the weary, bitter man of his final years, but the young ambitious warrior who tried to carve out his own destiny, but failed. This boy had that same fire, and more dangerous potential. And unlike Haraldson, this one didn't just speak of the gods, he walked with their shadow behind him.
The decision crystallized in Hrafn's mind. Hrafn had served Earl Haraldson faithfully until death claimed him. Now that service was ended, and a new chapter was beginning.
Without another word, Hrafn dropped to one knee, his sword clattering against the wooden floor as he placed both hands flat against the planks. The gesture was ancient, formal, and binding.
"I, Hrafn Gormsson, do offer my service to Bjorn Ragnarsson, rightful heir to the seat of Earl." His voice carried through the longhouse, formal and strong. "I pledge my sword, my shield, and my life to your service. I swear by Thor's hammer and Odin's spear that I will stand between you and your enemies, that I will guard your back in battle, and that I will serve you with the same loyalty I showed your predecessor."
The oath hung in the air between them, heavy with meaning. Hrafn remained on his knee, waiting for the acceptance that would bind them both.
Bjorn stepped forward and placed his hand on Hrafn's shoulder, the gesture formal but not unfriendly. "I accept your service, Hrafn Gormsson. Rise, and serve me as you served Earl Haraldson. Your men will remain under your command, but I want only the loyal ones, and your position will be honored, and your counsel will always be welcome."
Hrafn rose to his feet, feeling the weight of the moment. He had served one Earl loyally until death, and now he would serve another. The transition was complete, the bridge between past and future crossed.
"My lord," he said, testing the words. They felt right on his tongue. "What are your first commands?"
Bjorn moved to the weapons on the wall, running his fingers along the haft of the war axe. "Spread the word that I'm awake." he said softly, not looking back. "People deserve to hear it from someone they trust."
He let out a slow breath. "Once I've seen my family... we'll go to the sword. The gods have held it long enough." He turned back to Hrafn, his eyes bright with purpose. The fire was still in his eyes, but now it shared space with something else, the knowledge of just how much would be asked of him. "And then we prepare for the Thing tonight. It is time for Kattegat to have its Earl."
Outside, the wind picked up, rattling the walls of the longhouse. But inside, in the space between the old lord's death and the new lord's rise, two men had found their path forward.
And soon the news of Bjorn waking up has spread in Kategatt.
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The sun had risen high by the time the longhouse doors creaked open once more. The mist was gone, burned away by the warmth of the summer morning, and Kattegat was already awake. Smoke curled from hearths, gulls cried overhead, and the rhythm of life, footsteps, laughter and the ringing of hammers, filled the air.
Then it stopped.
The sound died in throats. Hammers froze mid-swing. Children ceased their games.
Bjorn emerged from the longhouse, his boots striking the earth with measured steps. The silver in his hair caught the sun. Half his head was silver and shimmering; the rest was still blonde, though even that seemed in slow retreat.
Lagertha walked beside him, and he could feel her eyes on him, checking for any sign of weakness. Rollo flanked his left side, nervous energy rolling off him in waves. Ragnar stayed just behind, close enough to catch him if he stumbled, far enough to let people see this was Bjorn's moment.
Three warriors of the six who guarded him followed silently behind, Hrafn among them. The other three remained inside to secure the threshold. It had been this way every hour of every day. They rotated in pairs, never leaving Bjorn unguarded.
People noticed.
A child tugged on her mother's apron, asking in a whisper that carried, "Is that really him?"
A smith paused mid-swing, wiping sweat from his brow as he stared.
From every alley, field, and dock, eyes turned.
No cries and no cheers. Just footsteps joining footsteps, following. One by one, without word or signal, they fell in behind the procession. Bjorn heard them; the soft shuffle of feet, the rustle of clothing, the quiet murmur of voices trying to stay respectful.
He walked the central path of Kattegat without speaking. He didn't acknowledge those who trailed him, though he was aware of every face, every whispered word.
They approached the center of the village. The Thing-circle. The place of judgment and oaths.
And there it was.
The sword.
Still embedded where it had fallen after the duel with Haraldson. No one had moved it. No one could.
Warriors had tried. Farmers, too. Each who touched it had been electrified, enough to leave wounds. Eventually they stopped trying.
The crowd, by now hundreds strong, formed a circle around the Thing-ground. Bjorn could hear them breathing, waiting. His own heart was beating harder now, though he kept his face calm.
He stepped ahead of his family. Ragnar's hand briefly touched his shoulder before falling away. Lagertha gave him the smallest nod. Rollo shifted on his feet, muttering something under his breath.
Bjorn approached the sword.
The steel shimmered in the light.
From the crowd, someone in the crowd whispered, "I'm not sure he will be able to pick Mjölnir's brother again"
Another voice, nervous but reverent: "Someone asked the Seer if it was forged by the same divine fire that made Thor's hammer."
"And what did he say?"
"Isn't it obvious? He said yes. Nodded three times, coughed dramatically. That means yes."
"Really?"
"Yeah. Trust me, brother. He also said my goat would return in two days. And it did."
Bjorn heard them but didn't turn. He crouched down, feeling the eyes of everyone in Kattegat on him. His fingers wrapped around the hilt. The metal was warm, not cold as he'd remembered.
He pulled and the blade slid free.
Earth parted and stone cracked with a sound like breaking bones.
Someone in the crowd gasped. A woman made a sound like a sob. But mostly there was just the quiet rush of hundreds of people drawing breath at once.
He stood, holding the sword. It was lighter than he remembered, but it felt right in his hands. The blade was unmarked. No rust. No dirt. The steel gleamed as if it had been forged that morning.
Around him, he could see faces changing. The doubt in people's eyes was fading, replaced by something else. Recognition. Maybe even relief.
He expected cheers, but there were none. only stares. And in a few of those eyes, awe was already turning to calculation.
Floki stood on the edge of the crowd, his mouth slightly open, whispering to no one, "It begins."
Then came the questions, not from one mouth but many, some were loud, some whispered, all trembling between fear and wonder.
A voice, hoarse with awe: "What did you see in the dark?"
Another, hesitant: "Will the sword guide you now?"
A woman's voice, steady as a prayer: "What name did the gods give you?"
Then a low and uncertain murmur, like someone repeating a dream aloud: "What did the gods whisper while you slept?"
"Did Odin show you the end of things?"
"Have you walked the halls of the slain?"
"Were you in Fólkvangr or Valhalla, and why did they send you back?"
The questions floated in the air. They were not shouted now, they were offered. Given. Like gifts to something sacred.
Bjorn turned slowly to face the men asking and wondering. The sword hung at his side, its weight familiar in his grip.
His eyes swept the crowd. Faces stared back — weathered, uncertain, desperate.
He looked at the faces around him, and the faces stared back, they were weathered, uncertain, desperate and hungry.
Some people he'd known his whole life, people who had watched him grow up, people who had whispered about him while he slept.
And now they looked at him as if seeing something ancient in a familiar face.
Bjorn drew breath.
Just as Bjorn opened his mouth to speak, a young and fervent voice rang, shaking with belief."Did the gods show you the way forward?"
All heads turned. A young man stood near the front, fists clenched at his sides, eyes wide with something close to worship.
"If they did..." he called out, voice shaking, "will you lead us there? Will you lead us to the gods' kingdom on earth?"
Silence swallowed the crowd. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath, waiting.
Bjorn's hand tightened around the sword's hilt. Slowly, deliberately, he raised the blade high catching the light.
"I will." His voice was low and calm, a promise forged in steel. "I will lead you to a realm even the gods will envy."
Then, with fire in his voice and as the sword climbed higher still, "For Asgard begins here."
A fisherman's wife dropped to her knees. Others followed, not in worship, but in the way people do when they suddenly understand something they'd been waiting for without knowing it.
Ragnar's gaze sharpens, a mix of pride and a shadow of worry crossing his features, Yet beneath that pride, a father senses the heavy burden Bjorn embraces.
Ragnar knew the path ahead would be cruel, lined with blood and betrayal. He knew the gods demanded more from their chosen than from any king.
And above all, he knew this truth, power corrupts.
Even Bjorn. Even the immortal.
Lagertha's eyes narrow slightly, assessing every word and movement. Her expression is calm but fierce, she believes in Bjorn, but the cold reality of power and politics tempers her hope.
She steps closer, a subtle shield at his side. Her support is fierce but protective, knowing that this declaration will stir both loyalty and rebellion. 'This is the fire we need. But the flames may burn us all.'
Rollo shifts uneasily, a mix of admiration and envy flashing across his face. Bjorn's words ignite something in him, a yearning for glory, for recognition, for power.
Athelstan's hands trembled slightly as he folded them in prayer, but his voice remained silent.
He had seen death countless times, accepted it as the natural order, the mercy of God. Yet here stood Bjorn, who should have been gone, whole and alive. And that sword… the earth splitting at its freeing, things no mortal hand could explain.
Was this the work of the Pagan gods, or something far beyond? His mind flickered to the stories of Christ, the Resurrection, the promise of salvation and miracles. Could this be a sign? A miracle? Or was it a trick, a test of his faith?
He felt the walls of his beliefs tremble.
A silent prayer escaped his lips, not for certainty, but for guidance.
'Lord, if this is Your work… reveal Your truth to me. If this is not, then grant me the strength to face what comes.'
He looked upon Bjorn not merely as a Viking ruler but as a man touched by forces that unsettled the very foundations of his faith.
A seed of doubt, mingled with awe, took root deep within him.
Among the landholding families, faces remained still, masks of measured calm, honed by years of survival in the game of power.
Their eyes followed Bjorn's every movement, every word, as one might watch a sword being drawn.
They were cautious. Waiting. Weary.
For when a young man rises to power, he rarely lets things stay the same.
Young leaders like to change things. They are restless. Ambitious. Dangerous.
Then came a low murmur from one of them, dry and skeptical: "The gods' kingdom on earth? A bold claim…"
Another voice answered, with a half-smile and a flick of irony, "Well… what did you expect?"
He paused, then continued. "He's Bjorn 'the Bold' after all."
But Bjorn raised his hand, and they quieted. He could feel the power in that gesture, the way hundreds of people obeyed without question. It was intoxicating and terrifying at the same time.
"The Thing will decide," he said. "Three days hence. Until then, my father remains regent."
Ragnar stepped forward, placing his hand on his son's shoulder. Bjorn could feel the pride radiating from him, mixed with something that might have been worry. "The Thing will only confirm what we all already know," Ragnar said, his voice carrying to every corner of the circle. "that Bjorn has returned to us."
Lagertha moved to her son's other side. When she spoke, her voice was steady, but Bjorn caught the slight tremor in it. "And we will follow."
From somewhere behind them, Floki's voice piped in, teasing, and a little too honest as usual: "Are you jealous, Ragnar? Your son is going to be more famous than you now. I told you the first time I saw him, his eyes are just like yours. That same stubborn gleam. Which means, of course... he'll try to do everything better than you."
Ragnar didn't even flinch. He tilted his head slightly, grinning with that familiar mix of mischief and melancholy. "It's annoying..."
Then he glanced sideways at Bjorn, the smile settling deeper."...in a good way."
The crowd began to disperse, but slowly and reluctantly. People lingered, wanting to witness more of this moment. Children who had been told stories of the sleeping boy now stared at the awakened man. Warriors who had doubted now saw the sword freed from its prison.
Bjorn sheathed the blade across his back. The leather scabbard fit perfectly, as if it had been waiting for this moment. He could feel the weight of it, the responsibility of Kategatt settling on his shoulders.
"Come," he said to his family, his voice quieter now. "We have much to prepare."
As they walked back toward the longhouse, the whispers began. Not the cruel gossip of doubt, but the excited murmur of anticipation. Bjorn could hear fragments of conversation, people already planning, already thinking about what came next.
The news would spread beyond Kattegat's borders before the sun set. Ships would carry word to distant shores. Traders would speak of it in foreign markets.
By evening, the story had grown in the telling. Some said the earth had split when he drew the sword. Others claimed thunder had rolled across the clear sky. A few swore they had seen ravens circling overhead, though no one else remembered birds.
As he walked home, Bjorn's thoughts circled only one thing, 'What to name the sword.'
Thank you for reading!
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See you in the next one. Sunday.