Valkyries Calling-Chapter 56: Branúlfr: Heir to the North

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Chapter 56: Branúlfr: Heir to the North

The union of frost and flame had come to Ullrsfjörðr. And it had come in the form of a baby boy.

The infant bore his mother’s ember-red hair and his father’s piercing frost born gaze. He was silent, still; save for the quiet breath in his lungs, and the eyes that wandered like a watchful wolf.

One might have mistaken him for a spirit-child, so serene he lay in his mother’s arms, yet the flicker of his gaze belied the storm beneath.

Vetrúlfr had walked the halls of his keep for days, his thoughts circling like ravens. He had turned over names like stones in his mind. None felt true. None had weight. Until, one night, the wind whispered it through the rafters like a secret carried from the gods.

Branúlfr.

When Róisín finally stirred from her exhausted rest, she found Vetrúlfr already at her side. He knelt before the bed, eyes fixed on the child pressed to her breast, his expression caught somewhere between awe and burden.

"You have come to a decision?" she asked, voice gentle.

Vetrúlfr nodded. He reached to cradle the boy’s head, the fierce stillness in the child matching his own.

"The boy will be named Branúlfr," he said, voice low as a vow. "He is the wolf of Brigid, and the frost-son of Ullr. Born of flame and snow. And with his birth, I swear this: before I pass through the gates of Odinn’s hall, he will have a kingdom worthy of saga to inherit."

He raised from his knelt position, standing proudly above his wife and newborn son. His voice booming like the thunder as he proclaimed his oath for all to witness, both gods and men.

"I will forge it through fire and ice, in the crucible of the North. Let the world know that the blood of Ullr and Brigid flows as one," he murmured, voice low and reverent. "The gods do not weave such threads without reason. His path will shake the earth.""

Róisín smiled softly, her strength fading, but her pride radiant. She had waited for this moment; not the birth, not the breath, but the name spoken by the man who would raise him.

Brynhildr entered only once Róisín had succumbed to sleep. With hands hardened by war and warmed by wisdom, she took the child and cradled him against her shoulder.

"We will keep him safe," she said, more to the room than to Vetrúlfr. "I will tend to him, and the Skrælingr girl shall serve at my side as his shadow."

Vetrúlfr pressed a kiss to his wife’s brow, whispered words only the gods heard, and left the chamber without further speech. The child had arrived. His duties had only just begun.

He withdrew to his private chamber, but sleep eluded him. The sword at his side, the one he had drawn from the sea, not the blade he had forged in Damascus; would not be still.

Though he had tried to entomb it in a chest, his hands betrayed him. It followed him, clung to him. It wanted to be drawn. To be wielded.

And so it remained at his side, a relic of an age before memory, its rune pulsing faintly beneath the scabbard leather: ᛚ — Laguz. The mystery of water. Of what lies beneath.

Vetrúlfr turned from the blade and unfurled a map upon his oak-hewn table. His eyes searched the lands of Ériu. A name caught his gaze. ƒгeeweɓn૦vel.com

Athenry.

So that was where the boastful Gaelic king had come from. The place was marked with Latin script. A proud little fort scratched into the vellum. Vetrúlfr reached out and tapped it once. Twice. Thrice.

"You came for Róisín... I will know why," he growled. "And I will bleed you dry until your secrets spill from your throat."

He rolled the map and set it aside, then reached for parchment. One letter became two. Then ten. By candlelight, he wrote deep into the night; the ink running black and heavy with intent. Each message was a spark.

He summoned every Thegn. Every Jarl. Every sworn sword. His fleet, now fifty ships strong, would rise again.

The greatest host of Northmen since the days of Ragnar Loðbrók would sail. No longer mere fishermen or petty raiders; these were warriors trained in the east, armored in lamellar and brynja, wielders of fire and blood.

The Christian world had not yet woken. Their churches whispered of peace.

But Vetrúlfr would show them a different sermon.

And Athenry? That was but the beginning.

The final letter he penned was to an old ally, one he had not met in flesh since their first encounter, but whose thoughts had traveled the sea more often than most ships.

The time had come. Let Ragnarok begin.

---

Ármóðr stood atop the cold stone battlements of Jómsborg, watching the harbor burn.

The siege had raged for weeks. Olaf of Norway had sent his host to crush the heathens once and for all. Jómsborg had stood, defiant. Its walls bled, but did not buckle.

Yet the ships burning now were not Jómsborg’s. They were Olaf’s.

It had taken only one vessel to unleash it. A single clay urn cast into the heart of Olaf’s fleet. And then the sea caught fire.

Men leapt into the waves, hoping for salvation. But the flames followed. The water did not quench it; it fed it. Screams filled the fjord, and still the blaze danced across tide and timber.

Beside Ármóðr stood a younger warrior, pale with awe. "This is Vetrúlfr’s tar?"

Ármóðr did not reply at first. He watched, stunned, as men burned upon water, as iron warped and flesh peeled beneath the flames.

When he spoke, his voice was low. Grave.

"If this is not the flame of Surtr... then what fire burns in this world more fiercely?"

In the distance, the sea roared. As if it, too, had found its god.

And in that sound, as the sky darkened with smoke, a new saga was born.

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