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"I will take you no further," she said then. "Now I am sure that you are of the Northmen that were seen with the Saxons. You are not of us, and I shall lose you your life."
Then came the quick trot of horses, and I saw a little troop coming down the street, their arms flas.h.i.+ng in the streaks of moonlight between the houses.
"I will see you in good hands, Lady Thora," I answered. "Who are these coming?"
"It is my father," she said, and drew me back deeper into shadow.
After the hors.e.m.e.n and beside them ran men who bore planks and ropes, and it was plain that the jarl had found out his loss, and hastened to bridge the gap and cross the river.
I saw that I could keep up the pretence no longer.
"Let me walk behind you as your servant," I said. "If any heed me, I pray you make what tale you can for me."
"What can I say to you in thanks?" she cried quickly, and letting go my hand which she yet held. "If you are slain, it is my fault.
Tell me your name at least."
"Ra.n.a.ld Vemundsson, a Northman of King Alfred's," I said. "Now I am your servant--ever."
Then Thora left my side suddenly, and ran forward to meet the foremost horseman--for they were close to us--calling aloud to Osmund to stay. And he reined up and leaped from his horse with a cry of joy, and took her in his arms for a moment.
I got my cloak around me, pulling the hood over my helm, and stood in the shadow where I was. I saw the jarl lift his daughter into the saddle, and the whole troop turned to go back. The footmen cast down their burdens where each happened to be, and went quickly after them; and I was turning to go my way also, when a man came riding back towards me.
"Ho, comrade," he said, "hasten after us. Mind not the things left in the boat. There is supper ere we go."
I lifted my hand, and he turned his horse and rode away, paying no more heed to me. That was a good tale of things left that Thora had made in case I was seen to be going back to the boat.
Then I waxed light hearted enough, and thought of my other plan.
Kolgrim saw me coming, and the boat was ready.
"Have you flint and steel?" I said to the fisher as I got into the boat.
"Ay, master, and tinder moreover, dry in my cap."
"Well, then, take me to those s.h.i.+ps we saw. I have a mind to scare these Danes."
It was a heavy pull against the sea to where they lay afloat now, though it was not far. I fired all three in the cabins under the fore deck, so that, as their bows were towards the town, the light would not be seen till I was away.
Then we went swiftly back to Kolgrim, and as I mounted and rode off, the blaze flared up behind us, for the tarred timbers burned fiercely in the wind.
"That will tell Odda that the Danes are flying. And maybe it will save Wareham town from fire, for they will think we are on them. So I have spoiled Jarl Osmund's supper for him."
Then I minded that this would terrify the Lady Thora maybe, and that put me out of conceit with my doings for a moment. But it was plain that she was brave enough, for there were many things to fray her in the whole of this matter, though perhaps it was because Kolgrim stayed beyond the river that she made so sure that I was a man of King Alfred's and no friend to the Danes.
So we rode away, pleased enough with the night's work, and reached Poole in broad daylight, while the gale was slackening. Well pleased was Odda to see me back, and to hear my news.
Then he asked me what I would do next. There seemed to be no more work at sea, and yet he would have me speak with King Alfred and take some reward from him. And I told him that the season grew late, and that I would as soon stay in England for this winter as anywhere.
"What will you do next in the matter of these Danes, however?" was my question.
Then he said:
"I must chase them through the country till they are within the king's reach. He has the rest pent in Exeter, and there will be trouble if they sail out to join these. I must follow them, therefore, end send men to Alfred to warn him. Then he will know what to do. Now I would ask you to take the s.h.i.+ps back into the river Exe and join us there."
I would do that willingly, and thought that if the wind held fair after the gale ended, I might be there before he joined the king by land. But I should have to wait for a s.h.i.+ft to the eastward before sailing.
So Odda brought his men ash.o.r.e, and marched on Wareham and thence after the Danes, not meaning to fight unless some advantage showed itself, for they were too many, but to keep them from harming the country. And I waited for wind to take me westward.
Then the strange Nors.e.m.e.n left us. They had gained much booty in the Danish s.h.i.+ps, for they carried what had been won from the Saxons, and what plunder should be taken was to be their share in due for their services. They were little loss, for they were masterless vikings who might have given trouble at any time if no plunder was to be had, and I was not sorry to see them sail away to join Rolf Ganger in France.
Now these men would have followed me readily, and so I should have been very powerful at sea, or on any sh.o.r.e where I cared to land.
But Odda had made me feel so much that I was one in his counsel, and a friend whom he valued and trusted, that I had made this warfare against the Danes my own quarrel, as it were in his company. Already I had a great liking for him, and the more I heard of Alfred the king, the more I wished to see him. At the least, a man who could build s.h.i.+ps like these, having every good point of the best I knew, and better than any ever heard of before, was worth speaking with. I thought I knew somewhat of the s.h.i.+pwright's craft, and one thinks much of the wisdom of the man who is easily one's master in anything wherein one has pride.
Moreover, Alfred's men were wont to speak of him with little fear, but as if longing for his praise. And I thought that wonderful, knowing only Harald Fairhair and the dread of him.
Chapter V. Two Meetings in England.
It was not long before the s.h.i.+ft of wind that I looked for came, and at once I took all the s.h.i.+ps round to the river Exe. Odda had left me all the seamen he had, and they were enough for the short, fair pa.s.sage. We came to the haven in the river, and there heard what news there was, and it was good enough. Odda had sent well-mounted men to reach the king by roads away from the retreating Danes, and he had been ready for them. He drew off his levies from before the walls of the town, and let his enemies pa.s.s him; then he and Odda fell on their rear and drove them into Exeter, and there was holding them. It was well done; for though the host sallied from the town to meet the newcomers, they gained nothing but a share in the rout that followed when Odda closed on the rear guard and the king charged the flank.
Now we heard that as soon as we landed. And then I had my first knowledge of the ways of a Saxon levy. For no sooner were the s.h.i.+ps berthed than their crews began to leave them, making for their homes.
One or two men I caught in the act of leaving in the early morning, and spoke sharply to them, for it seemed that soon there would be s.h.i.+ps enough and not a man to tend them. Whereon they answered:
"We have done what we were called up for, and more also. Now may others take our places. What more would you have? We have won our victory, and the s.h.i.+ps are not needed for a while."
So they went, and nothing I could say would stay them. I waxed angry on that, and I thought I might as well sail for Ireland as not. There seemed no chance of doing aught here, where men would throw away what they had won of advantage.
So I went back to my own s.h.i.+p and sat under the after awning, in no good temper. Thord and Kolgrim were yet busy in and about the vessels, making all secure, and setting men to work on what needed repairing. Presently Harek the scald came and sat with me, and I grumbled to my heart's content about this Saxon carelessness and throwing away of good luck.
Many Saxons--men from camp, and freemen of the place, and some thanes--came, as one might expect, to stare at the s.h.i.+ps and their prizes. I paid no heed to them as the day went on, only wis.h.i.+ng that Odda would come and speak to me about his doings, for I had sent word to him that we were in the river. Sometimes a thane would stay and speak with me from the wharf alongside which my own s.h.i.+p was with one or two others, and they were pleasant enough, though they troubled me with over many thanks, which was Odda's fault.
However, I will say this, that if every man made as little of his own doings and as much of those of his friends as did the honest ealdorman, it were well in some ways.
By and by, while we were talking, having got through my grumble, Kolgrim came along the sh.o.r.e with some Saxon n.o.ble whom he had met; and this stranger was asking questions about each s.h.i.+p that he pa.s.sed. I suppose that Kolgrim had answered many such curious folk already; for when he came near and we could hear what he was saying, I was fain to laugh, for, as sailors will, he was telling the landsman strange things.
"What do we pull up the anchor with?" he was saying. "Why, with yonder big rope that goes from masthead to bows." and he pointed to the great mainstay of our s.h.i.+p. "One must have a long purchase, if you know what that is."
"Ah, 'tis wonderful," said the Saxon.
Then he caught my eye, and saw that I was smiling. He paid no heed to me, however, but looked long at the s.h.i.+p that lay astern of ours--one of the captured Danes. Thord had set a gang of sh.o.r.e folk to bend the sail afresh to a new yard, for the old one had been strained in the gale that came before the fight.
"What are those men doing, friend?" he asked Kolgrim directly.
"Bending a sail," answered my comrade listlessly, trusting, as it would seem, to the sea language for puzzlement enough to the landsman.
"So," said the Saxon, quite quietly. "It was in my mind that when a sail was bent to the yard it was bent with the luff to the fore end thereof."