Degmar pointed to a sessile oak a short distance off the track. Halfway up its height gaped a great split in its trunk. ‘That was struck by lightning when I was a boy. It’s where my friends and I used to meet. I can find it with my eyes closed, in the dark, the fog or the snow.’
Tullus was already directing his men to the base of the tree. ‘Off with your armour, quiet as you can.’ There had been no sign of any auxiliaries for some time, but this was one of the riskiest parts of their mission. To be found divesting themselves of their kit by their own kind would rouse the suspicions of an idiot.
To his relief, they stripped down to their tunics without interruption. The only equipment left to each man was his belt, sword and dagger. Degmar took them to a nearby boggy patch, where everyone applied a generous covering of mud to a comrade’s arms, legs and face. That done, they dogged his footsteps once more. He walked a great deal slower now, stopping often to listen and stare into the darkness.
A pleasant smell of wood smoke hung in the still air, an indication that they were drawing nearer to the village. Tullus had just made out the outline of a building when Degmar halted again. He whispered into Tullus’ ear, ‘I’ve guided us to the closest point to my parents’ house, but we will have to enter the settlement now. Everyone has a dog. One is sure to bark when it hears us, and that could rouse the rest.’
‘And if the villagers wake?’ Tullus was picturing the scores of warriors they would face if the place came to life.
The gloom couldn’t conceal Degmar’s smile. ‘I have a trick up my sleeve. Games will have been held here yesterday to honour a local goddess, and there was a feast last night. Everyone will have been pissed out of their heads by the time it finished. Donar willing, they’re all unconscious. If they do wake, they’re more likely to give their dog a kick than to look around.’
Tullus’ tension eased a fraction, and he twisted around to pass the information on to Piso, who was next in line. He gave the order for each man to unsheathe his dagger. ‘Ready,’ he said to Degmar, who also had a knife in his fist. What an ugly reality that was, thought Tullus. He’s prepared to kill his own kind to save his family.
Taking a parallel course to the length of the first longhouse, Degmar led off. They had gone halfway when a surprised ruffff went up. Another followed, and soon the dog was barking fit to burst. A dog in the next house joined in. Degmar froze; so did everyone. Fixing his gaze on the house’s door, Tullus waited, dry-mouthed. Ten heartbeats thumped by, then twenty. A muffled voice growled something; the dog’s barking lessened a little, but continued. Heavy footsteps echoed within; there was a thud and a curse as a person’s shin collided with something solid. Another, meatier thud was followed at once by a chorus of yelps. Muttering to himself, the dog’s owner tramped back to bed, farted loudly and fell silent.
Relieved and amused, Tullus waited until the second dog calmed down before signalling Degmar to continue. They padded onward, their hobs picking up clods of mud in the frequent vegetable patches. The group skirted around two more houses without disturbing their inhabitants, animal or human. Degmar revealed to Tullus that the next longhouse belonged to his parents, and the one after that to his older sister. He had just finished speaking when a dog inside his parents’ home began to yap. ‘Wait here,’ Degmar hissed. ‘I won’t be long.’
You’d better not be, thought Tullus, his stomach knotting. He ordered Piso and the rest up against the wall – the better not to be seen – and to keep a sharp eye out. He did the same. The darkness didn’t stop him from feeling as exposed as a naked bather who walks through the wrong door to find himself on the street outside the bathhouse.
His alarm grew at the sight, fifty paces away in an open space, of tables and benches with the figures of sleeping men sprawled everywhere between them. Hoping that Degmar had been right about the amount of drinking that would have gone on, Tullus watched the slumbering men with bated breath. No one stirred, and after a few moments, the dog quietened inside the house. It knew Degmar, Tullus presumed, but he didn’t let down his guard even a little. Eyes roving from side to side, his dagger ready, Tullus watched the feasting area, and the two nearby longhouses. He waited. Counted his heartbeat so that he knew how long Degmar had been gone.
Twenty beats went by. Tullus had almost reached fifty when a stifled exclamation came from within. He tensed, but instead of an outcry, muted voices began a conversation. Degmar had found his parents, it seemed. Fresh worry consumed Tullus. What if Degmar’s mother or father decided to warn the entire village? A few cries for help would rouse their neighbours, drunk or not. ‘Be ready to retreat on my order,’ he hissed to Piso.
At a hundred heartbeats, Tullus began to wonder whether Degmar had any chance of persuading his parents to leave. Tullus’ men’s nerves were jangling too: they were shifting about, and jumping at the slightest sound. The longer they stood here, the more chance there was of being seen.
Off to Tullus’ right, a door banged open. He spun, knife at the ready. A tall figure staggered out from the longhouse opposite – not the one belonging to Degmar’s sister. A loud belch broke the silence, and the figure – a man – weaved a few steps towards Tullus and the rest. Muttering to himself the way only the drunk can, the man tugged at his garments. A moment later, a stream of urine arched into the air; there was a simultaneous sigh of relief. The man pissed for so long – sixty heartbeats at least – that Tullus wondered if he’d ever stop. In the end his bladder had been emptied, however, and he shrugged himself back into his trousers.
Degmar, unknowing, chose that moment to walk outside, leading several others.
Inebriated or not, the man saw them at once. He called out in German. Degmar tensed and hissed something back. His answer wasn’t satisfactory, because the man asked another question, and took several steps towards Degmar, who told him – Tullus thought – to piss off. The man ignored this advice, and repeated what he’d said. Degmar flicked his hand in a clear gesture for the man to leave. The only response he got was another, louder demand.
Tullus’ mind raced. If he did nothing, the man would raise the alarm. That was, if others hadn’t been woken already. Or he could kill him, and hope that that didn’t set Degmar’s parents to screaming. The second option was best, he decided, indicating that Piso should follow him.
In ten steps Tullus was close enough to see that the man was much younger than he, and more heavyset. The man was more plastered than a drunkard on the feast of Bacchus, however, and he did nothing but gape as Tullus swept towards him like a vengeful spirit. His last words – another question of some kind – were muffled as Tullus’ fingers wrapped around his mouth and his throat was sliced open. Trying to avoid the gouts of blood, Piso stabbed him twice in the chest for good measure.
Even as he lowered the man’s corpse to the ground, Tullus’ eyes were sweeping over the house he’d come out of, and across the sleeping revellers. There was no sign of anyone else emerging, and no one stirred by the tables and benches. How long could their luck hold? Tullus wondered. He hurried to Degmar, who had one man and two women with him – his parents and one of his sisters, Tullus presumed.
‘He’s no loss,’ revealed Degmar before Tullus had to explain himself. ‘The prick was forever trying to steal my mother’s hens. If he wasn’t at that, he was propositioning my youngest sister.’
The filthy looks that Degmar’s family were giving Tullus showed they didn’t feel the same way about what he’d done.
‘My father,’ whispered Degmar, pointing at a shorter, older version of himself, who glowered even more, and muttered a curse. ‘My mother.’ A fine-boned woman with long hair met Tullus’ glance with icy disdain. ‘My youngest sister.’ The last of the three, an attractive woman in a dark cloak, sniffed and turned away.