A King's Comrade eBook

Charles Whistler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 356 pages of information about A King's Comrade.

A King's Comrade eBook

Charles Whistler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 356 pages of information about A King's Comrade.

Nor did they.  On the other hand, as if I were one of themselves, they set me by the chief when they made a feast presently, and did not ask me questions about the country; which was what I feared.  Most likely their riders had learned all they would from others.

When it grew dark they lighted great fires along the wharves, and sat by them in their arms, drinking the Weymouth ale, and eating the Dorset fare they had taken.  The ship guards went ashore, and their places were taken by others, and I saw strong pickets passing out of the town to guard the ways into it.  Thorleif would not risk aught in the way of safeguard.  After that was done, those whose watch off it was went on board the ships, and slept under the shelter of the gunwales, wrapped in their thick sea cloaks.  They gave me one, and bade me rest on the after deck by the chiefs; and in spite of the strangeness of everything I slept dreamlessly, being tired in mind as well as in body.

Next morning things were to all seeming much the same.  The Danes had kept their word, and all was peaceful.  There being nothing more in the town left worth taking, they stowed everything carefully, and made all ready for sailing.  And then, halfway between noon and sunrise, Elfric rode back.

I did not see him, for he was not suffered to come beyond the line of outposts, and all that he had to say, of course, I did not know at the time.  One came and told Thorleif that the thane waited to speak with him, and he was gone from the ships for half an hour with Thrond.  When he came back his face was grimmer than ever, and a red scar which crossed his forehead was burning crimson.  He stayed to speak to the men on the wharves, and some order he gave was passed from one to another, and in ten minutes every man had left the wharves and had passed inland, with him at their head.

“Ho, that is it!” said one of the ship guard from the deck below me.

“What is it?” I asked, for I had been talking to the man in all friendly wise, of ship and sea and strange lands.

“Why, your folk will not pay, and so we must needs take payment for ourselves in the viking’s way.”

I said no more, nor did the man.  I think he was sorry for me; but it was not long before he called to me and pointed to the hillside above the town.  On it was a black throng of folk, slowly coming down toward us.

“Your people coming to drive us out,” he said, laughing a short laugh.

Then he and his comrades bustled about the ship, setting every loose thing in place, until the decks were clear.  In the other ships the guard were at the same work, and at last they cast off all the shore lines but one at stem and stern.  The ships might sail at the moment their men were on board if they were beaten back.

About that time the farther houses in Weymouth began to burn, and I heard the Wessex war cry rise, hoarse and savage, as the foes met.  There were more of our men coming over the hill, and it was good to me to see that the Danes, who watched as eagerly as I, waxed silent and anxious.  One said that there seemed a many folk hereabout, as if the gathering against them was more than they cared for.

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A King's Comrade from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.