Attack of the Vikings
By Tony Bradman
5/5
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About this ebook
Tony Bradman
Tony Bradman started working life in the music press. In 1979 he joined Parents magazine where he launched their highly successful children’s book pages and, in 1985, the Best Books For Babies Award. He went freelance as a children’s author in 1987 and by 1992 was among the top 20 children’s authors borrowed from UK public libraries.
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Reviews for Attack of the Vikings
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5the best book i ever read about vikings brave people
Book preview
Attack of the Vikings - Tony Bradman
This one is for Henry Treece – and Akira Kurosawa
Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war!
– William Shakespeare
Contents
Chapter OneA Loud Voice
Chapter TwoReal Weapons
Chapter ThreeFire and Sword
Chapter FourThunder Rumbling
Chapter FiveOut of the Darkness
Chapter SixTime to Die
Chapter SevenA Tool for Killing
Chapter EightStolen Dreams
Chapter NineTwo Blades
Chapter TenViking Funeral
Historical Note
Glossary
CHAPTER ONE
A Loud Voice
The red autumn sun was hanging low in the sky when Finn and his friends Egil and Njal returned to the village. They had spent most of the day in the forest, but the growling of their stomachs had finally brought them back. Egil and Njal were looking forward to their evening meal, and chattered cheerfully. Finn however was quiet, his mood darkening with each pace that took him closer to home.
‘Cheer up, Finn,’ said Egil as they passed through the gate of the stockade. As usual, the platform that ran inside it was empty of guards. ‘Why are you miserable, anyway? I wish I was going on the voyage to the Southern Isles.’
‘Fine, I’ll ask my father if you can go instead of me,’ said Finn. ‘I went last year and I told you, there’s nothing more boring. It’s a lot of sailing around from island to island, talking to other farmers and trying to persuade them to trade with us.’
‘Well, I think it sounds like fun,’ said Njal. ‘At least you get to visit somewhere different and meet new people. Nothing ever happens here.’
Njal was right about that, Finn thought. Behind them the village’s sheep, a jostling flock of bleating woolly-backs, were being herded in for the night from beyond the wall. The shepherds were a couple of very young boys, but the real work was being done by two sheepdogs that snapped at the flock like wolves. It was all too familiar, the kind of thing Finn had seen every day of his life.
He had known Egil and Njal his whole life as well. The three of them were about the same age, fourteen summers or so, and they had always been friends. Egil was short and dark and full of jokes and mischief, while Njal was pale and good-natured and had a nest of flame-coloured hair sitting on top of his bony head. Finn’s hair was light brown, and he was taller than Egil, but shorter than Njal. They wore the same kind of clothes – dun-coloured tunics, baggy leggings, and leather ankle boots.
‘My father’s going to be cross that I wasn’t here to help load the ships today,’ said Finn. They had come to an open space a spear’s throw from the forest gate, the point where their paths went different ways.
‘Will he beat you?’ said Njal, his voice full of concern.
‘I don’t think so,’ said Finn. ‘He’ll just do a lot of shouting.’
‘So what in Thor’s name are you worried about?’ said Egil. ‘A bit of yelling won’t hurt you – words aren’t swords. I take no notice when my father shouts at me.’
‘His voice isn’t as loud as my father’s,’ said Finn. But then Finn’s father, Ottar, was chief of the village, and it was useful for the most important man to have the loudest voice. Ottar sorted out arguments and disputes, and called meetings if he needed to make an announcement or explain a difficult decision. The villagers generally trusted his judgement, though usually he had to yell so they could hear him.
‘Maybe we should come with you,’ said Njal.
‘Don’t worry, I’ll be fine,’ said Finn. ‘I’ll stay out of his way.’
‘Fair enough,’ said Egil. Then he gave Finn a wicked smile. ‘And of course, if it does go badly, we’ll make sure you get a wonderful funeral, like a proper Viking.’
‘Very funny,’ said Finn. ‘See you both tomorrow... I hope!’
They separated and headed for their homes. Finn’s path to his father’s hall took him through the main part of the village, up a muddy street of log-walled houses. The settlement wasn’t large. Just fifty Norse families lived there, the houses clustered round a small bay on the coast of Alba, on land seized by Finn’s great-grandfather from the Gaelic-speaking tribe who had lived there originally. To the west of the village was the cold vastness of the Great Ocean. To the east, beyond the fields they planted with crops, was a dark, dense forest and behind that were the mountains, their high rocky peaks capped with snow. The Orkney Isles lay three days’ sailing to the north, and the Southern Isles were the same distance in the opposite direction.
The sun was finally sinking into the sea, and lamps were being lit – warm yellow pools of light spilling from doorways where mothers called to their children. Finn trudged past, the chill air full of the tang of woodsmoke from the evening cooking fires. At last he came to his father’s hall. It stood on a rise in the heart of the village and was the biggest house by far. The walls were made of sturdy pine logs,