Authors: Kevin Crossley-Holland
First published in Great Britain in 2012 by
Quercus
55 Baker Street
7th Floor, South Block
London
W1U 8EW
Text copyright © Kevin Crossley-Holland, 2012 Map copyright © Hemesh Alles, 2012
The moral right of Kevin Crossley-Holland to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
A CIP catalogue reference for this book is available from the British Library
eBook ISBN 978 1 78087 702 0
Print ISBN 978 1 84724 940 1
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organisations, places and events are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
You can find this and many other great books at:
www.quercusbooks.co.uk
Children's books by the same author
FICTION
The Arthur Trilogy:
The Seeing Stone
At the Crossing-Places
King of the Middle March
The Viking Sagas:
Bracelet of Bones
Scramasax
Gatty's Tale
Short!
Short Too!
Storm
Waterslain Angels
MYTH, LEGEND AND FOLK-TALE
Tales from the Old World
The Old Stories: Folk Tales from
East Anglia and the Fen Country
The Magic Lands: Folk Tales of Britain and Ireland
Outsiders
Viking! Myths of Gods and Monsters
PICTURE BOOKS
Beowolf
(illustrated by Charles Keeping)
The Ugly Duckling
(illustrated by Meilo So)
INFORMATION
King Arthur's World
for
Geoffrey Findlay
with gratitude
Halfdan | a farmer from Trondheimfjord, now a Varangian guard |
Solveig | Halfdan's daughter, aged 15 |
Harald Sigurdsson | a Viking warrior and mercenary, later King of Norway |
Snorri | a Varangian guard and storyteller |
Skarp | a Varangian guard |
Priskin | a Varangian guard |
Tamas | a Varangian guard |
Grimizo | a Varangian guard, German |
Zoe | Byzantine Empress |
Michael | Byzantine Emperor |
Maria | daughter of Theodora and niece of the Empress, aged 16 |
Leo | a Byzantine nobleman, Maria's father |
Edwin | an English diplomat |
Edith | an Englishwoman |
Nicolaus (Nico) | a Byzantine helmsman |
Vibrog | a Viking cook |
Edla | a Viking cook |
Georgios Maniakes | commander-in-chief of the Byzantine fleet |
Abu Touati | a Muslim traveller living in Sicily |
Silkisiv | a Viking camp follower (or âlioness') |
Lady Nameless | a Byzantine noblewoman |
Kata | Edith's baby |
Market stallholders in Miklagard
Palace courtiers
Maria's servants
Byzantine bishops
Varangian guards (including Bolverk, Egil, Gissur, Gorm, Karly, Turgeis and Ulf)
Greek cooks
Saracen pirates
Townspeople in Sicily
Sicilian mountain men, women and children
Abu Touati's companions
Lady Nameless's servants
Ãgir | god of the sea |
Ãolus | (Greek) king of the winds |
Aigaion | (Greek) a sea-giant |
Allah | (Arabic) chief Muslim name for God |
Asgard | world of the gods and goddesses |
Eir | goddess of healing |
Freyja | foremost Norse fertility goddess |
Hel | realm of the dead. Also the name of its monster-ruler, a daughter of Loki |
Midgard Serpent | terrifying serpent who lies in the ocean and encircles Middle Earth. Also known as Jormungand |
Njord | god of winds |
Norns | three goddesses of destiny |
Odin | foremost of the Norse gods. Also known as Allfather and the High One. God of poetry, battle and death |
Ran | wife of Ãgir, god of the sea. She dragged down men with her net and drowned them |
Snotra | wise and gentle goddess, the embodiment of self-discipline |
Thor | god of the sky and thunder, and of law and order |
Valkyries | beautiful young women who chose dead men on the battlefield and brought them back to Odin's hall, Valhalla |
Volund | a supernatural smith. His English name is Wayland Smith |
T
he man in the scarlet cloak planted himself in the middle of the aisle. He took not the least notice of the tide of people swarming all around him.
âSolva!' he bellowed. âSolva! Where are you?'
The big man looked over his left shoulder. Over his right, into the smoky stall of the silversmith. He screwed up his eyes and opened them wide.
âSolva! Solveig!'
In their wicker cages, the long-tailed parakeets screamed; little children clung to their mothers' grubby skirts; old men, half deaf, hunched their shoulders and waited for the ground to open under them.
Then the man growled like a wild boar at bay. He whirled round, his scarlet cloak ballooned and the porter right behind him tripped and spilt his whole basket of oranges.
The traders closed ranks. Shoulder to shoulder, they jam-packed the narrow aisle. No way forward. No way back.
âOut of the way!' the big man yelled.
âYou clumsy.'
âYou pay.'
âOaf!'
âViking.'
All around him the man heard insults he did and did
not understand. He reached inside his cloak and grasped the gilded hilt of his sabre. He drew it.
âLet me pass,' he demanded. Then he stooped and picked up an orange, tossed it into the air, and with a flick of his curved blade sliced it in half.
The waters opened. The tide of traders and townspeople made way and, ignoring all the jeering in his wake, the Viking advanced, long-legged and limping. Peering into each of the stalls. Now and then he stopped and anxiously called, âSolveig! Solveig!' Now and then he muttered, âEnemies ⦠enemies. You never know where enemies may be lurking.'
At the end of the aisle, the Viking glanced over his shoulder again, and then sheathed his sabre. And when he turned back, there she was! There was Solveig, steadfast, smiling, as if she had simply been waiting for him.