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Hakon began to speak again, but his words were lost against the screeching gale from the shore. There was a flurry of movement round one of the pairs of tree trunks. The two towering shafts were bowed towards each other until their tips crossed, forming a crude arch.

The Rus boats buzzed with speculation. Gleb spat angrily and his jaws clenched. A struggling, flailing man, his naked white skin clearly visible, was hoisted up and tied between the tree trunks, his arms and legs spread wide so that he looked like a huge white spider amid a rope web. The Pechenegs howls ascended and then abruptly drifted away until only a single sound floated across the water: the sound of one man screaming.

A Pecheneg sword flashed like a silver spark at the base of the nearest tree trunk. The crossed tops of the trees twitched almost imperceptibly. Then, with a terrifying suddenness, the shafts snapped apart and the white spider exploded in a burst of crimson. A torso seemed to spin slowly through the air. The trees snapped upright, each dangling one arm and one leg.

Hakon’s face was sunset-purple amid the ashen complexions of his Varangians. Without speaking, he selected his instrument; the dark little man let out an unworldly shriek until Hakon clamped one huge hand around his windpipe. In his other hand Hakon held a broad-axe polished to an antimony gleam. He turned the Pecheneg’s back towards the river-bank and laid it open with two lightning-quick strokes along either side of the spine. Before the blood could really flow, Hakon had dropped his axe and cracked open the ribs and peeled them back. With both hands he scooped into the body cavity and drew out the foaming pink lungs. He held the Pecheneg by the hair and spread the lungs like wings over writhing shoulders. The little man’s mouth spewed pink froth, and Hakon let him slump to his knees, then tore away his loincloth. He grabbed a spear and carefully probed the Pecheneg’s rectum. After several deft shoves the gory tip sprouted between the spread lungs.

Hakon seized the spear shaft with both hands and held his creation aloft like a winged battle standard. ‘The blood eagle, marmot-fuckers!’ he screamed. ‘The blood eagle, wives of dogs!’ He shook his macabre standard in fury. The blood eagle! We’ll strangle you with the cunts of your women!’

The Pechenegs on the shore had prepared another victim. The trees snapped and limbs dangled again. Hakon raised another gory standard in response. The ritual exchange continued until five Varangians held the purpling blood eagles aloft and the Pechenegs had run out of trees.

An almost palpable silence descended, as if the air had become thick with some sound-absorbing ether. One of the blood eagles twitched like a fish on a pike. Finally a group of silk-robed Pechenegs moved to the water’s edge. The vividly coloured chieftains held pinkish, hemispherical bowls in their hands. They raised the vessels and chanted a salute to the wallowing Rus ships before emptying greedy draughts into their upturned mouths.

They’re wassailing us?’ asked Haraldr numbly.

Gleb spat. ‘No. They are showing us their new drinking vessels. Cut from the skulls of our men.’

Hakon shifted his grim, fire-flecked gaze to the remaining Pecheneg. He yanked the wide-eyed little man in front of the first of the blood eagles. His dagger flashed and severed the impaled Pecheneg’s testicles. ‘We’ll fatten him with belly-oysters!’ crowed Hakon as he popped the surviving Pecheneg’s mouth open with one hand and shoved the bloody morsel down his throat with the other.

Hakon went down the row of blood eagles, harvesting each man until his dinner guest, stuffed mouth clamped shut by Hakon’s massive hand, writhed and gagged, his throat gurgling obscenely. Finally the Pecheneg’s bulging eyes mercifully closed, and he slumped, black-faced with asphyxiation, to the deck.

‘No one speaks!’ Gleb raised his hand to command silence. The ships had strung out down the river again, and the crew lolled in the late-afternoon heat. ‘Listen.’

Drugged by the torpor, Haraldr at first allowed himself the thought that they had already reached the sea. The barely audible noise, like the muffled crashing of distant waves, entranced him, and for a sharp moment his breast longed for Norway.

‘Do not sleep!’ barked Gleb.

Haraldr started, along with most of the crew.

‘That’s the name of the first of the river’s seven cataracts,’ explained Gleb. “Do not sleep.” Now we begin to game with the Dnieper.’ He eyed the descending but still white-hot sun. ‘No use starting now. The last ships wouldn’t make it through the first cataract before dark. If we set out at dawn tomorrow, we can all pass the first four cataracts before the sun sets.’ Then Gleb spat and rasped so softly that he must have been addressing only himself. ‘Of course we will be a much shorter file by then.’

The river was ice-smooth and raven-dark. Haraldr held the night watch. Occasionally a scream lifted from Hakon’s boat and pealed into the night; apparently the day’s blood had whetted Hakon’s appetites. The boat rocked in the current, a reminder of the relentless force that Haraldr knew carried him towards an inevitable reckoning.

‘Haraldr.’

Haraldr started and turned. He was relieved to see Jarl Rognvald.

The Jarl looked out over the black-onyx surface of the Dnieper for several minutes. He knew that there was little time to say what he must. ‘Haraldr, you know I have never lost my faith in the old gods.’ Haraldr nodded. ‘That does not mean that I do not believe in Kristr. I think that all the gods exist, and the only difference between them is the gifts they present to the men they favour. Now this Kristr, grant you, is probably the greater god. He is a builder. In Norway He has built roads and bridges for his priests, and a kirke in every town. You can also see what Kristr has enabled Yaroslav, no very great man, to do in Kiev. And of course Kristr has helped the Griks build Miklagardr. By that measure alone Kristr’s power is superior to any other. But sometimes I think that Kristr loves buildings more than He does men.’

Jarl Rognvald theatrically spread his hands out over the water. ‘Odin,’ he said expansively, ‘is the more generous god. The tale is told that Kristr hung from a cross for one day, in order to show men the way to Paradise. But Odin hung himself upside down from the rootless tree for nine days, waiting to snatch the mead of poetry from the depths of the Underworld. He has shared that drink with men, with those who dare to accept his gift.’ Jarl Rognvald looked intently at Haraldr, his eyes glaring in the blackness like winter ice. ‘That verse you recited on our last night in Kiev … so sharp and true, and it came as quick as a thunderbolt. It is a madness, a madness given by Odin. Just like the Battle-Rage.’

Haraldr said nothing, his thoughts smothered in fear. He had witnessed the Battle-Rage of the Berserks at Stiklestad: the Hound, the sucking nose, the red eyes. He had even worn the skin armour told of in all the tales. Yes, Haraldr reminded himself, the Rage is more than a pagan fable. It exists. And it is indeed a madness.

‘The other night in Kiev I watched you. Something held you back from striking Hakon, which took a greater valour than foolishly spilling the wine-bag courage in your veins. Perhaps even Odin himself held your arm. Well, I know it was not my hand. I think the wounds of Stiklestad have finally healed. I think that you are ready to accept a second gift from Odin, the gift of the Battle-Rage.’

‘You were with me in my last battle, Jarl.’ Haraldr’s tone was self-accusatory. ‘Would you want me beside you in your next?’

‘I could wish for no better comrade. Haven’t I taught you all I know?’

Indeed, the Jarl had. Endless hours of drills with sword, axe and spear, and swimming and wrestling and riding as well. If kingdoms were won in mock combats, Haraldr would own more subjects than the Greek Emperor. But Jarl Rognvald could not teach him the inner defences a man needed in real fights. ‘Green-wood.’ A strong arm but a weak breast.