Collaboration between Igraine and idlehands
Mid morning, Trelleborg
“Freya?” Sigrid called again for the housewoman, pushing the door open more. The kitchen appeared empty, the fire had also burned down to ash and dishes and food were scattered all over. She felt her scalp crawl, something was very wrong.
Beyond the table there was a noise and Freya stood up, turning to look at Sigrid. She opened her mouth and snarled, her eyes dead and blank, her hair hung in bloody clumps rather than the neatly coiled braid. Sigrid swore and reached for the door that had swung open just as a movement caught her eye. To her left another figure lurched at her, the Saxon slave woman that worked in the kitchen. The slave turned draugr lunged at her and she spun to face her, wielding the broomstick as she would her spear.
Sigrid jabbed the draugr in the throat with the blunted end of the stick and pulled back, swinging upward to crack it across it’s face. The blows slowed the creature but it only allowed her time to back out of the doorway, catching a glimpse of Freya and more slaves turned draugr rising up to come for the living flesh they craved.
“Get back!” she shouted, “Draugr!”
Ramming the broom as hard as she could against the draugr’s stomach caused the thing to lurch backward and gave her enough time to snatch the door closed. The door rattled as the draugr on the other side clawed at it. Sigrid stared at it for a moment, gathering her thoughts. She had lost the broomstick but there were tables still.
“Boys, help me drag this table,” she began to push a heavy wooden table.
The sounds grew louder behind the door and slowly began to creak inward. The bolt was inside the door, so that the kitchen could be locked from the inside, in case of invasion. Raudr set Dagny down who whimpered and started to cry when she heard the fear in her mother’s voice. The boys pushed with her and slammed the table up against the door.
“Quick, grab chairs, anything pile it on,” she shouted, moving quickly to snatch up a bench seat.
Eyja did not need to be told twice, shoving a heavy chair with a screech across the floors to the makeshift barricade against the kitchen door. For whatever alarm may have been in Sigrid’s voice and shouted commands, the little girl found courage there too, and she didn’t scream like she had in the road.
That didn’t mean she wasn’t scared - not even close. But this time Raudr didn't have to save her from being scared stiff, and she pushed chairs and benches and anything she could lay her small hands on, to add to the growing barricade of hall furniture.
That, and being quick helped keep the thought from raising its ugly head, who it was behind that door - who wasn't really “them” anymore. Loker was gone with Raudr and Ranulf’s Fadir, and she was glad. But Freya had been really nice to her and Svala. Kind of stern of course, but she was in charge so that was all right. And the pretty woman Edithyld who milled the grain - she had the prettiest smile hid like sunshine behind a cloud. But it was Gaeth who made Edithyld’s smile shine, and even laugh whenever he walked by - probably a few more times than was strictly necessary - just making the most hilariously awful and funny faces when Freya wasn't looking…
Eyja frowned mightily and snatched at another chair. With a grunt of effort, the little girl tried to lift it up all on her own, toward the top of their makeshift barrier.
He felt as if his eyes had just closed when he heard a woman shout. Einnar woke with a start, his head lolling to the side as he squinted. It was still light, he must have dozed off after the bottle of mead. Thor’s balls he muttered, rolling off the bed with a thump. His long dark hair was a stringy mess, his clothes still the same mud crusted tunic and pants he had worn on the search. He pushed himself up from the floor and when he put weight on his left foot he yelped with pain.
Einnar limped to the door, opening it and listening, he could hear nothing but the sounds of someone moving furniture. He reached for his hunting spear to use as a crutch and considered going out or not. He had ignored the call to arms by Loker, he was in no shape to fight. Exhausted, hurt, and admittedly, a bit drunk. All he wanted was sleep and his bed beckoned him. When he heard another shout, he cocked his head, listening and his sharp ears picked up the dreaded sound of the draugr moans. Faint, but it was unmistakable.
“Odin's shriveled cock,” he grumbled, glancing up, “All I wanted was to sleep for a few hours.”
Einnar picked up his bow and arrows, slinging them over his chest and held the spear, limping out of his room and down the passage toward the main dining hall. He sighed heavily when he spotted the woman and children piling things up by the door and he shuffled closer, his steps unsteady from both his bad ankle and the strong mead.
Eyja’s head turned over her shoulder as she fought to get that chair up to a height she really wasn’t going to make on her own, not without help. “Ranulf,” she panted, her gaze sweeping over the swiftly emptying hall, “Can you - “
Eyja screamed. Loud and long, eyes wide with terror as the filthy, disheveled creature shambled into the hall from behind them!
”DRAUGR! Miss Sigrid, DRAUGR!” The heavy wooden chair slammed to the ground with a crash as Eyja lost her tentative grip, pointing in horror toward the stumbling, mud-covered thing slowly advancing on them.
Einnar’s head snapped up when he heard the little girl scream and he instantly regretted it. His head pounded, a throbbing drum behind his eyes. The word cut through the discomfort and he could see her wide clear eyes staring at him. Behind him, his brain sent out the message that his body was slow to respond to and he clumsily turned around, nearly falling over.
“Fuck, draugr! Where?” he rasped out, holding the spear awkwardly, trying to keep his balance. He looked around him wildly, but saw nothing and turned back to the girl, his red rimmed eyes narrowing.
“Oh… “ Eyja bit her lip, a bit thrown for a moment. Draugr don’t talk. Draugr don’t act like they hear you.
Uh oh.
“Umm… Never mind… “ Her cheeks a bright scarlet red from far more than effort, Eyja sheepishly turned back to the chair she’d dropped so spectacularly, and began manhandling it back up toward the top again.
Sigrid heard the girl’s cry and turned sharply, her eyes snapping to Einnar. She breathed a sigh of relief, recognizing that the disheveled man was not draugr.
“We need help, bring your spear,” she demanded, “The kitchen is full of draugr.”
As if to emphasize her point the door rattled again as the hungry creatures pulled and clawed at it. Einnar blinked and hobbled over toward her. She could smell the mead and frowned, her green eyes sparking and she reached out for the spear.
“You’re in no condition to fight, give me that.” She snatched it from him and he stumbled, hopping on one foot.
“Hey! You got them trapped yeah?” he looked at the door piled with furniture dubiously. “I doubt that’ll hold for long, the draugr might be stupid but they’re persistent and strong.”
Sigrid raised an eyebrow at him, gripping the hunting spear, “What is your name?”
“Einnar...the Huntsman,” he muttered, leaving off his last name out of habit. “Who are you and these...little ones.”
He belched and hobbled to the nearest bench that was still upright on the floor. Einnar sat down heavily and slung his bow from his shoulder and an arrow from the quiver.
“I’m Sigrid, wife of Thegn Ragnar Ragnarsson and you’re drunk,” she glared at him, “Fine time for that. And you think you’ll use that bow? You’re likely to hit one of us as the draugr.”
He looked at her blankly and snorted, “Is that supposed to impress me? Keep your titles and your little silver box. They won’t protect you from what’s behind that door, lady.”
Sigrid hefted the spear, turning it with a practiced flourish, “Neither will you. Stay put if you like, your blundering about won’t help us.”
Raudr and Ranulf looked at the man warily and the younger of the two picked up his whimpering little sister. Dagny pushed at him, wailing for her mother, reaching out to her in a desperate attempt for her attention.
“Hush, baby, Madir’s busy,” she said softly, edging around the pile of furniture and she could see where the door now was opened a few inches and pale grasping fingers reached out.
“Boys, Eyja,” Sigrid said in a low voice, “We’ll need to keep pushing this barricade up, they’re persistent.”
“Told you,” Einnar replied, rubbing his eyes, “Bring the babe over here, I can at least keep her quiet.”
Sigrid glared at him. “What do you know of handling a child?"
“Calm down,” he grumbled, “A crying baby is something I can manage, how hard can it be? Just keep those things penned up there.”
Einnar stretched his bad leg out and Ranulf looked at his mother who finally gave a nod of consent. Dagny crying was a distraction for them and lure for the draugr.
“I can watch her, Miss Sigrid,” Eyja said softly, her wide, pale eyes glancing the back and forth between the grown-ups with a growing, worried frown. She felt bad enough, calling the stinking muddy lame man a draugr. But with all the sniping when the people they’d come to know only yesterday had turned into the monsters in the kitchen trying to eat them? It was a lot more than the little girl could stomach right now.
Besides, playmates could do things that big brothers and complete strangers could not in a thousand years, like keep a frightened, crying little girl quietly and happily occupied for a few crucial minutes.
Eyja reached for Dagny, still unhappily squirming in her brother’s arms, taking the smaller girl’s little hand in her own easily. And with all the sweetly nonjudgmental innocence of a child, she turned to look at the aggrieved Einnar with apologetic eyes. “Besides, you’re a lot bigger than me, even if you don’t walk too well. Miss Sigrid could probably use that bench you’re sitting on - and I’ve seen lots of drunk men since we arrived. They lean against stuff really, really good!” she urged the huntsman encouragingly.
Einnar huffed and limped toward the pile of furniture, muttering something about mouthy children. He looked over at Sigrid who watched the door apprehensively. The door was shuddering under the force beyond it, creaking on the iron hinges as it pulled backward, reaching fingers clasping around the side.
He spoke in a low voice, still slurred with mead, “They’ll get through you know. Never seen something so determined as a draugr and they have no fear.”
“Shh, you’ll frighten the children,” Sigrid hissed, her jaw tense, her knuckles white as she gripped the spear.
Einnar gave her a sardonic crooked smile, “Sure, the children...”
“Quiet. Help me push these up.”
She turned to put her hip into the table when the door screeched in protest, the sound of popping wood made Sigrid look up in surprise and horror. The kitchen door sagged inward, the draugr clamoring against their makeshift barrier. It would not stand long and she grabbed Einnar by the sleeve.
“Quick, take the children somewhere safe, lock yourselves in a room,” she ordered, turning briefly to her children and Eyja. “Go with Einnar, now.”
“But Madir!” Raudr cried out.
“Don’t argue with me, do as I say,” Sigrid said sternly, her eyes like stone. “I will hold them as long as I can.”
Ranulf felt his throat tighten and he looked at Dagny in Eyja’s arms and back to Sigrid. She stood tall, fierce, and beautiful, and he did not want her to die.
“Madir...
Einnar stood up, unslinging his bow, “I can help.
“I need you to get these children to safety, that is how you can help. Gods know what is happening at the healing house and beyond the Hall. Get them out of here now!” Sigrid ordered, looking at the faces of each of her children, at the daughter of Hallerna. For them she would stand against the overwhelming odds, she would face certain death if it meant the children had a chance at life. "Einnar the Huntsman, if you fail, I will pull your lungs through your back!"
Nothing was said that if he failed it meant she had failed and would be dead or worse, become one of the draugr. The huntsman saw there was no changing her mind and he put his hand on Raudr’s shoulder as he tried to go to Sigrid, forcing him to turn. He muttered to them, “We do as your Madir says.”
Hobbling as quickly as he could, he lead the children away from the crumbling barricade of furniture. The Jarl’s room was the most secure as it held the treasure of Trelleborg, such that it was. He hustled them in, barring the door behind them and leaned against it, his head resting against the wood. Einnar felt a wave of guilt, leaving that woman to almost certain death. He should be the one out there, it was a man's place to protect those weaker and yet here he was, hiding with the children. Too drunk and broken down to be of any use. Einnar grit his teeth, biting back the bile of his shame.
Sigrid brought her spear up as the first draugr clamored over the fallen chairs, lunging toward her. He had been a slave, she noted his collar around his decaying neck and when he got close enough she jabbed the iron tip deep into his throat. She shoved with all her might, pinning him to the floor, severing the spinal cord. He spasmed and she slashed back and forth, then yanked it free as the head lolled back, hanging on by only a few strands of skin and sinew. She faced another slave draugr, the Saxon woman with curls of dark gold hair now in disarray around her torn face. Sigrid spun the spear upward and brought it down against the lunging creature.
The spear head slashed her chest open to the bone but it did nothing to deter the draugr’s approach and Sigrid swung the spear back around, stabbing toward it’s face. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw the last of the chairs fall and two more draugr climb over the table. The one that had once been Freya and another slave who she did not recognize came towards her. Strands of her long red hair worked loose, clinging to her neck and face as she backed up, swinging the long wooden spear defensively to keep them at bay.
Sigrid kept the spear in motion, sweeping it as fast as she could to keep them away and to prevent them from grabbing at the sharp end as they had little regard for injury. She saw yet another draugr come out and she felt her heart sink. They were closing in, four against one and even though the draugr were rather dimwitted it seemed, they were strong, impervious to pain and fiercely determined to feed upon living flesh. If she could hold out until help came, if it ever came. Sigrid sent a plea to Thor to lend him her strength that she might die a glorious death and preserve the tender lives of those hiding in the room beyond the hall.