Valkyries Calling-Chapter 51: The Trial of Ice and Fang

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Chapter 51: The Trial of Ice and Fang

The sea raged, as if Njörðr himself had risen in wrath to cast Vetrúlfr into the depths of Helheim, furious that a mortal dared challenge his dominion.

Its waves thrashed the clanker-hull of the vessel. Each stir an attempt to drown its sailor. The frigid winds kissed his cheeks, a blessing bestowed by the goddess of winter, or a curse yet realized.

Winter had come in full, vast and merciless. Should he falter, even for a heartbeat, his knarr would vanish beneath the crushing grip of Jökull, entombed forever in the still tomb of the frozen sea.

Yet was the son of winter so easily broken by his father’s breath? Vetrúlfr rowed on, some say without rest, food, or fire.

He fought not only the storm and the sea, but the creeping numbness of death. Through salt-spray and shrieking gusts, through sleet that cut like seaxes and hail that struck like spears, he endured.

He braved the fury of Ægir’s realm, not as a man seeking passage, but as a wolf testing the teeth of the gods. He would not be broken, nor would he accept death. Rán had no claim over such a man.

And at long last his struggle earned victory. The jagged fjords of Grönland revealed themselves beyond the veil of snow, black stone piercing the white like the bones of a dead jötunn.

There upon the strand, cloaked in reindeer fur woven with storm-spirits, stood a figure as cold and fierce as the land itself: Brynhildr, the seiðkona of the northern wastes, walker between the worlds.

At her side stood her thrall, a silent Skrælingr girl, dark-eyed and weather-worn, bearing a gaze like those who see spirits in the fog and dream of death with open eyes.

“The gods sought to drown you,” Brynhildr said, her voice a wind-chime lost in a blizzard, “yet you endured. The first trial is passed. But if the child born of Ullr and Brigid’s bloodline is to walk Midgard, then its father must know the full price of fate.”

She turned, vanishing into the veil of Skaði’s breath. The Skrælingr lingered, her eyes fixed on Vetrúlfr as if beholding a draugr risen from the frostbitten sea. Then she, too, vanished into the storm.

Vetrúlfr gave chase, but no footstep marked the snow. Had they truly stood there? Or had the storm already consumed their presence?

It mattered little. The wind howled now like wolves at the end of the world, biting through wool and flesh alike.

The salt upon his tunic had turned to an armor of ice. If he did not find fire, shelter, life — winter would devour its son in full.

So Vetrúlfr pressed forward, forging a path across ice-choked rock and frostbitten fjord, driven not by hope, but by fury, pride, and the refusal to die on his knees.

His lashes were kissed by Skaði’s frost, his sweat cursed by Ullr, his fingers numbed and stiff as dead men’s bones.

Still, he marched. Still, he endured. The seiðkona had not returned, and no hall nor hovel rose from the snow.

But even the gods, cruel as they are, are not always deaf to boldness. Through the white haze, Vetrúlfr beheld a shadow cut into the hillside: a cave, dark and deep, like the mouth of some ancient beast.

His heart surged. He forced his way within, shivering and bloodied, eyes wide with hunger and instinct.

But nothing given by the gods is without a toll. As he crossed the threshold, he beheld it.

White as the mountain snows and vast as a longship overturned, the isbjørn stirred from its slumber.

Its eyes burned with cold flame. When it rose to its hind legs, it scraped the stone above, and its roar cracked the ice like thunder.

But Vetrúlfr did not flee. He did not cower. His soul was already a storm.

He cast aside his lamp, drew his seax, and took a warrior’s stance — the stance he had taken before emperors, before kings, before death itself.

“It is you or me, son of the ice! We are brothers born of winter, and only one of us shall leave this place. I will not die today. So it must be you!”

He charged. So did the beast.

When the silence finally came, Vetrúlfr stood bloodied, gasping, and unbroken. His body wept red, but it was not alone. The isbjørn lay dead. Its blood stained the cave like runes painted by gods.

Its tongue lolled from its jaw. Its soul had returned to Ginnungagap.

Vetrúlfr staggered back, catching his breath. Then he saw it; the missing tooth. He reached into his belt-pouch and pulled forth a fang, marked with sigils known to seers and whispered by bones.

Læknastafr, stave of healing. Veiðistafr, stave of the hunt. Together, bound by ᚢ (Ur) and ᚼ (Hagall) — strength, endurance, storm.

The tooth had guided him. Marked him. Chosen him.

“You were mighty, spirit of snow,” he said, kneeling beside the corpse. “But I was hungrier. And I thank you for your gift.”

He bowed, then worked the corpse with reverence. He rendered its fat, tanned its hide, broke its bones with ritual purpose.

Fire danced within the cave, not from wood, but from the earth’s blood itself. A hidden spring hissed in the shadows. Around it, herbs clung to the stone; roots pale and ancient, drawn from Ymir’s bones.

Vetrúlfr ate the flesh. He drank of the spring. He tore his tunic into bandages, soaked them in fat and crushed root, and wrapped his wounds like a warrior-monk in ritual rebirth.

He shaped bowls from the clay of the cave. He boiled marrow and bone. He stretched the isbjørn’s hide like a war-banner.

For many days, he healed in silence. No song, no prayer; only breath, blood, and flame.

And when he rose again, his chest bore new scars. But he stood taller.

The second trial was passed.

How the beast fell, none can say. No skald shall ever know the truth. Only Vetrúlfr — and perhaps the gods.

The source of this c𝐨ntent is fre𝒆w(e)bn(o)vel