Valkyries Calling
Chapter 101: Alliances Forged, Empires Wane

Chapter 101: Alliances Forged, Empires Wane

The banners of the empire stirred faintly in the high windows of the Pfalzkapelle, sunlight splintering off polished stone and gilt.

Beneath the domed ceiling where emperors had once prayed for eternal glory, Conrad II sat upon the throne of Charlemagne.

It was cold in Aachen that morning. Cold, and quiet.

Scrolls lay stacked upon a marble table, held down by the weight of a carved iron seal.

They bore the marks of riders from the corners of the realm; Saxony, Swabia, Lombardy, Lorraine, and beyond.

Chancellor Gebhard read aloud, voice steady but grim.

“To His Imperial Majesty, Conrad of Franconia, Emperor by the Grace of God; we write to confirm the elevation of Robert of Normandy. The boy Richard has taken the tonsure. The papacy has accepted the change. Rouen stands behind its new duke.”

Conrad said nothing. He merely leaned forward, eyes narrow beneath the weight of the crown.

“Continue,” he said.

Another scroll was drawn open.

“From Denmark: King Cnut has formally bound Norway beneath his banners. The Jarls of Trondheim and Bergen have sworn fealty. He now rules Denmark, England, and Norway as one crown.”

The room fell still. The lords standing behind the throne exchanged glances.

And then the last letter; smaller, rougher. The ink blurred by sea weather and age, but unmistakably real.

“From Dorestad, traders bring word of the far north: Færeyjar, Vestmannaeyjar, Ísland and now Grœnland; are all ruled by the same pagan. They say his name is Vetrúlfr. He permits no crosses to be raised. His cities are stonework, his ships iron-ribbed, his warriors armored like Byzantines and speak in runes. They call him a High King. Some call him a god or the son of one.”

Conrad stood, the weight of iron and velvet settling across his shoulders. His voice was low.

“Cnut to the north. Robert to the west. A heretic empire rising in the seas. And all matter of savages on my eastern border….”

He paced the mosaic floor slowly, boots striking the likeness of Christ enthroned beneath him; a reminder of holy rule, now shaken by smoke, steel, and silence from the north.

“They were once scattered peoples. Raiders. Savages. Yet now they raise fortresses. Breed war horses. Bend the sea to their banners and the land to their will. The Pope tells us it is wind and rumor. But I see the shape of a storm.”

His hand tightened into a fist.

“We are surrounded. And if war is to come, it must come on our terms; not theirs.”

One by one, the dukes and bishops stepped forward, the old nobility of Germany, of Lorraine, of Swabia. Some with caution in their eyes. Some with the glint of steel already flashing in their thoughts.

“What would you have of us, Kaiser?” asked Duke Hermann of Swabia.

“Raise levies. Fortify border castles. Secure oaths from the lesser lords. The Saxon marches must hold firm. And send riders to Burgundy and Milan. We will not wait until the sea brings wolves to our shores.”

He turned to the windows, watching pale clouds drift beyond Aachen’s rooftops.

“If God has chosen me to wear this crown,” he said softly, “then let Him grant me the strength to defend it. We shall not be Rome watching the barbarians at the gates. We shall be the hammer, not the anvil.”

And so, beneath the shadow of Charlemagne’s tomb, the Holy Roman Empire began to stir.

Spring had only begun to churn; but the Emperor had heard the howling in the wind.

The tide rolled slowly against the quays of Dubh Linn, where longships and currachs bobbed side by side, their hulls painted with dragon heads or woven prayers to Saint Brigid.

In the great hall of the Dubgall kings, firelight flickered against carved oak beams, and the banners of Norse and Gael alike hung together.

A stag upon green, a black raven on white, the red hand of Ulaid tattered and half-burned from old wars.

King Sitriuc sat upon a raised stone dais, one hand upon the hilt of his sword, the other upon the armrest carved with Jörmungandr knotwork.

He was old now, his beard streaked with iron and snow, but his eyes were still sharp with the cunning that had kept his kingdom intact through decades of blood.

Before him knelt envoys from Leinster, Meath, and even distant Munster; kings and chieftains seeking arbitration over cattle raids, dowries, and slanders.

It was a mockery of High Kingship, yet none dared claim that title now, not since Connacht burned.

Not since the wolves came.

A bard from Brega whispered to another as a priest offered blessings upon a negotiated marriage.

“There is no High King,” the bard said, voice bitter. “There are only kings with fewer enemies than others.”

“And what of Dublin?”

“Dublin bends like ash to the wind. Viking gold buys peace for now. But the fire will return.”

The hall fell quiet as a new guest arrived; a Norseman draped in gray wool, bearing a carved box of Icelandic silver.

He bowed low to Sitriuc.

“From High King Vetrúlfr Úllarson,” he said. “Gifts. And a map.”

Gasps broke out. A warrior spat into the rushes. A druid murmured a prayer.

Sitriuc unwrapped the box. Inside lay a ring of bone and gold, carved with runes foreign even to Norse eyes, and a map inked upon vellum; showing the whole of Ériu, with Dublin marked in the center, circled in red.

“He honors us,” Sitriuc said dryly. “Or warns us.”

Later, as the court emptied, Sitriuc sat with his eldest son, Amlaíb, beside the hearth.

“He does not seek our destruction,” the old king said. “Not yet. But he is watching. Like a winter wolf on the ridge. We are meat to him. Or kin. I do not know which.”

Amlaíb frowned. “We should raise the fleet. Rally the north.”

Sitriuc shook his head slowly.

“We are not like the Norse of Iceland. They have made themselves anew. Their gods are old, but their minds are sharpened. We raid and drink and squabble over sheep. They pave roads with stone. They breed horses like kings. They wear armor thicker than our pride.”

He paused, staring into the fire.

“And the Gaels who think the Norse of Dubh Linn are their allies, or their vassals they will learn soon enough. We are not Norse enough for Ísland. And not Gaelic enough for Tara.”

Outside, the gulls screamed overhead. And in the harbor, a Norse merchant ship raised sail; heading north, toward the frostbitten empire of the sea-kings.

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