Valkyries Calling -
Chapter 103: Caer Nemeton
Chapter 103: Caer Nemeton
Ynys Rós, the Isle of Thorns
Mist clung low over the waters surrounding Ynys Rós, veiling the isle in a gray shroud that smelled faintly of salt, peat, and elder bark.
Even the sea seemed to hush in its presence, its waves softened by superstition.
Where once stood a scattered grove and crumbling stone huts, there now rose a great ringfort of oak and granite, fused with living root and shaped stone.
The Caer Nemeton, the College of the Druids, had been reborn.
Tall palisades interwoven with hawthorn and rowan bristled outward, each branch sacred and bound in ogham-etched iron.
Inside the ringfort, life thrived in silence. Students, some boys and girls, others grizzled wanderers and widows who had seen too much of war, sat in stone amphitheaters beneath open sky.
They listened as an elder, his beard streaked with ash and gold, recited not spells but memory; the names of rivers, the songs of the stars, the ways of root and rot, of healing and hexing, of peace and war.
To forget, he said, was death. To remember was to cast a spell stronger than iron.
At the center of the Caer, built upon a ley-crossing marked with an obsidian stone older than Rome, rose the Tower of the Thorn, its black branches reaching into the mist like claws of a dreaming god.
From the high chamber of the Tower of the Thorn, Roisín stood wrapped in a cloak of green-dyed wool and wolf-pelt, her fiery hair braided with wildflowers and bone beads.
Upon her brow rested a circlet of woven silverthorn, pulsing faintly where its roots touched her skin.
She was young, yet bore the air of ages; a daughter of Brigid, born of the flame and chosen by the old gods to rekindle memory in a world gone mad with steel.
Beside her stood her husband, tall and silent as a standing stone;Vetrúlfr, the White Wolf of the North, the Son of Winter.
His gaze was colder than the wind off the sea, yet it softened as he looked down at the small figure between them: a boy not yet three winters old, wrapped in furs too large for his frame, clutching a carved branch like a scepter.
Their child.
A son born of frost and fire, of blood spilled in both conquest and sacred rite.
Below them, the groves of Ynys Rós stretched wide and green, shaped by careful hands and ancient memory.
Circle upon circle of sacred trees; oak, yew, ash, birch. Surrounded the College like shields of the earth. The air smelled of wet moss, ironbark, and the smoke of peat fires.
And watchful they were.
From the gates and shadows moved the Guardians; not druids, but Norsemen. Chosen not for zeal, but for their restraint.
Veterans of far wars, they had laid down the sword for the stave and spear. Men who once broke cities now guarded trees. Their oath was simple: spill no blood unless it feeds the roots.
These men wore the hide of a red stag. They had forsworn all killing in this sacred place. Others bore wolf tattoos and vine-sleeves branded into weathered skin.
They trained not to dominate, but to protect. And any who approached Ynys Rós with fire in their hearts found cold steel waiting in silence.
From her high perch, Roisín watched as students moved between the grove circles, some chanting, others collecting herbs, others still weaving sigils into song.
The College lived. It breathed with the rhythm of the old world.
She turned to her husband.
“It thrives,” she said softly, voice like wind through reeds.
“Aye,” Vetrúlfr replied, his eyes on the horizon. “But the wind is shifting.”
Roisín nodded, her gaze falling to the forests of Albion, unseen beyond the sea mists but always listening.
“There will be war,” she said. “Steel and fire will come for the roots of the world.”
Her son looked up, wide-eyed. Though he was not yet old enough to speak his thoughts, his silent gaze said all hat was needed.
“Will they burn the trees?”
Roisín hugged the child tightly, her tone motherly, almost divinely so.
“Not while your heart still beats. You carry the memory of gods.”
And then she rose, turning once more to the land.
The mist that crowned the isle thickened, curling around the towers, clinging to the hawthorn walls like a blessing… or a ward.
For years Roisín had dreaded the idea of her husband marching off to war. But she knew now, after all they had built together in this land, and all others that flew the earthen banners of the ochre Vegvísir.
There could be no peace without steel in hand.
Now she looked to her husband, her King, her rock. And gazed upon him with a steely gaze. She knew soon enough the winds would call him to war once more. It was inevitable.
Yet she clung to him tightly, resting her head on his broad chest, knowing that until that day came. She would enjoy every moment together with him and their son as a family.
Later that evening, as twilight turned the mist to silver, Roisín walked the grove alone.
Her bare feet kissed the mossy soil with reverence. The trees whispered above her, ash and elder, yew and thorn; all older than the crowns of kings.
By the sacred spring at the grove’s heart, she knelt and dipped her fingers in the cold water, then gently pressed them to her son’s brow as he toddled beside her.
“A blessing for the root,” she whispered. “And for the branch yet growing.”
The child smiled, unaware of the weight resting upon such a small brow.
Behind her, Vetrúlfr stood in silence, a sentinel against the coming dark.
Above them, a raven passed across the moon, and the wind stirred the leaves in low, whispering tongues.
Some said the gods were dead.
But on Ynys Rós, the gods were listening.
And their chosen had begun to remember their names.
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