Alfgar the Dane or the Second Chronicle of Aescendune eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about Alfgar the Dane or the Second Chronicle of Aescendune.

Alfgar the Dane or the Second Chronicle of Aescendune eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about Alfgar the Dane or the Second Chronicle of Aescendune.

He was strongly, but not cruelly bound; it evidently was not intended to hurt him, only to secure him, and he could see that one of the warriors was especially charged to guard him.

Oh, how anxiously he strained the senses of sight and hearing for news from the forest party! could he but have given one warning, he would willingly have died like Bertric; all was silence—­dread silence—­the sleeping woods around gave no token of their dread inmates.

An hour and a half must have passed, when a bright light, increasing each minute in intensity, appeared through the trees—­then a loud and startling cry arose—­after which all was silence.

The light seemed to increase in extent and to have two chief centres of its brilliancy, and Alfgar guessed them to be the hall and the priory.

But no screams of distress or agony pierced the air from two hundred women and children, and Alfgar hoped, oh, so earnestly! that they might have escaped, warned in time by the theows.

With this hope he was forced to rest content, as hour after hour rolled by, and at length the footsteps of a returning party were heard.

It proved to be only a detachment of the fifty, sent to bring horses to be loaded with the spoil.  Alfgar listened intently to gain information, and heard enough to show that the Danes had been disappointed in some way, probably in their thirst for blood.

“But how could they have known we were coming?  We have marched through a hundred miles of the most desolate country we could find, and have come faster than any one could have carried the information.”

Such seemed to be the substance of the complaint of the warriors on guard, from which Alfgar felt justified in believing in the escape of the theows, and the consequent deliverance of the people, if not of the place.

Half the horses were taken to fetch the plunder, the other half left where they were, for the spot was conveniently situated, and the distance from Aescendune only about two miles.

When they had gone, Alfgar heard his guards talking together.

“What did they say, Hinguar?—­not any blood?”

“No, but plenty of plunder.”

“That is not enough, we want revenge.  Odin and Thor will not know their children; our spears should not be bright.”

“They must have been forewarned; Eric said that they had taken away a great many things.”

“Why could we not trace them?”

“Because there is no time; we are too far from the army and fleet; we must return immediately, before the country takes the alarm; remember we are only fifty.”

“Yes, but mounted upon the best horses, and the first warriors of our family; we may take some plunder, and send a few Englishmen to Niffelheim, before we get back; Anlaf would not let us stay to touch anything as we came.”

“No; all his desire was to get to this Aescendune.”

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Alfgar the Dane or the Second Chronicle of Aescendune from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.