Valkyries Calling

Chapter 190: Yaroslav the Wise


By dawn, the quays along the Dnieper were already groaning under their weight.

Ships crowded the riverbanks, fat-bellied Novgorodian traders, sleek Baltic knarrs, even the shallow craft of Khazars and Pechenegs.

Horses whickered as carts rattled over the stones, their wheels sagging with sacks of grain, bolts of wool, and barrels of fish.

But it was not the familiar produce of Rus that drew the eye, nor the furs of the north, nor the spices from the steppe.

It was steel.

Blades of rippled damascene, spearheads hard enough to crack bone, mail-shirts of such fine rivets that a boy could twist them without snapping a link.

Axes balanced to bite deep, helms that gleamed with iron rims instead of bronze.

These things, once worth their weight in silver, now poured into the city in a torrent.

From the balcony of his wooden hall, Prince Yaroslav surveyed it all.

His one good eye narrowed, beard bristling against the cold.

The cries of hawkers drifted up to him, men shouting the worth of wolf-stamped steel, holding aloft swords whose patterns shimmered like water under the morning sun.

Beside him stood Dobryna, his steward, a lean man with ink-stained fingers and a tongue sharpened by caution.

He made the sign of the cross as he watched a Khazar merchant strike sparks from one of the wolf-forged blades.

"There is no end to it, my lord," Dobryna said.

"One caravan might be fortune, two coincidence. But this tide has no ebb. Every moon more ships come. They say the smiths of the north labor day and night, their forges roaring like dragon's breath. And all stamped with that mark."

He pointed to the wolf's head carved into the steel. A symbol no trader dared remove, for it raised the price tenfold.

Yaroslav grunted. He had long heard rumors of the White Wolf, a warlord-king who had risen in the cold marshes beyond the Vistula, whose halls were said to be built upon stone and whose people lived as if every day were war.

He had dismissed the tales as pagan boasting, the kind of stories merchants spun to raise the worth of their wares.

But no tale explained the iron flowing into Kiev now.

He leaned on the railing, watching the crowd below.

Boyars pressed forward to buy helms for their retainers.

Steppe lords haggled for spearheads.

Even peasants scrimped to purchase a knife whose quality would outlast their lifetimes.

"If even the Khazars arm themselves with his steel," Yaroslav said slowly, "what then? Our levy spears will splinter like kindling against such blades. Our riders will find their mail sundered. What army will fear us when their weapons outmatch our own?"

Dobryna shifted uneasily. "Perhaps, lord, it would be wise to send envoys. To see these halls for ourselves. To know whether this wolf is smith… or king."

Yaroslav's gaze drifted northward, past the forests and the rivers in his mind's eye, to that cold and distant sea.

His lips tightened. "No man builds a river of iron by chance. He does not send scraps, but floods. This is no smith. This is a wolf building an empire, and the world fattens itself on his steel without even seeing the teeth."

That evening, Yaroslav convened his council.

The boyars filed into the smoky hall, stamping the frost from their boots, their cloaks heavy with fox and sable.

Some came already wearing the wolf-forged mail they had purchased, eager to flaunt their wealth and protection.

"My prince," one began, bowing stiffly, "you see how the trade grows. Taxes swell. Kiev has never been richer. Why not let the wolf feed us? So long as he sends his steel, we prosper."

Another nodded, raising his mead cup. "If the Germans and the Danes gnash their teeth, let them. The Rus grow fat on northern craft. Better to profit than to bleed."

But others muttered dissent.

A grey-bearded boyar with scars across his cheek spat into the rushes. "Fools. You think him a merchant? He sells us blades, aye, but only after his own men are clad head to toe in them. Do you not see? Each sword bought here is a sword that may one day be raised against us. Today he arms the Rus. Tomorrow he rules them."

The hall fell into argument, voices clashing like iron.

Yaroslav raised his hand, and silence crept back in.

His eye gleamed with cold resolve.

"I will not wait for wolves to circle my hall before I act. We will send envoys north. Not to buy, but to see. If this wolf builds a kingdom, we must know its measure."

The embassy was chosen at once: two seasoned traders who knew the Baltic routes, a priest to bless their dealings, and a young boyar named Mstislav, whose sharp tongue and sharper eyes pleased Yaroslav.

They set out with winter still clinging to the land, their sledges creaking over frozen rivers, their cargo light but rich, furs, honey, and wine.

Weeks later they reached the coast and boarded a ship bound for Ullrsfjordr. The famed capital of the White Wolf.

And there, for the first time, Rus eyes beheld what rumor had failed to capture.

Walls not of timber, but of stone, fused with lime and mortar.

Towers rising from the earth like teeth, crowned with wooden hoardings.

Quays groaning with cargo, not just of fur and fish, but of steel.

Always steel, helms, axes, swords stacked in bundles, as if the very earth had learned to birth iron.

And over it all, the white wolf's distinctive banner snapping in the wind.

The envoys were led through streets alive with foreign tongues: Norsemen, Gaels, Wends, even pale-faced traders from beyond the Rhine.

Everywhere they looked, men wore iron helms and byrnjás as common as cloaks.

Mstislav returned weeks later, weary but wide-eyed, to stand once more before Yaroslav. His words painted a picture that silenced the hall.

"My lord," he said, "I have seen it with my own eyes. The wolf's realm is no mere confederacy of raiders. It is an empire in the making. Every village is a fortress. Every hall is stone. His thralls till the earth while free men drill with spear and shield. And his forges… gods above, his forges! Day and night they burn, fed by whole forests, their anvils ringing like thunder. Men spoke of ten thousand warriors under his banners, all clad in mail finer than ours."

The boyar who had scoffed at the danger earlier now sat pale, his cup forgotten.

Dobryna pressed further. "And this wolf himself? Did you see him?"

Mstislav hesitated, then nodded. "I did. He is no mere brute. He speaks as a king, but sharper, like a priest of war. He gave the Wends gifts of steel, not coin. He does not bribe. He binds. And they follow him, not from fear alone, but because he makes them believe the cross will not swallow them if they stand at his side."

A hush fell across the chamber.

Yaroslav leaned forward, fingers steepled, his gaze unreadable.

"So. The wolf builds walls of men, and cements them with steel. And all the while his trade fills our coffers. Tell me, boy, what did you see in his eyes?"

Mstislav swallowed. "Fire. Cold fire. As if he sees every man as iron to be forged, every tribe as ore to be smelted. He will not stop, lord. He cannot stop. And if we are not with him…"

The boy trailed off. He did not need to finish.

Later, when the council had dispersed, Yaroslav walked alone upon the ramparts of Kiev.

Snow whispered against the Dnieper.

Below, the markets still roared, merchants shouting the worth of wolf-forged steel.

He stared northward, into the dark.

Already, the White Wolf's shadow stretched to Kiev, not with armies, but with trade.

With iron. With the promise of strength. The Rus had always been middlemen, bridges between steppe and sea.

But now a new bridge was rising, a bridge that threatened to make Kiev itself but a stop along another man's road.

The prince's hand tightened on the hilt of his own sword, a blade forged in Novgorod, plain and serviceable, but already dull beside the patterned steel that flooded his markets.

He whispered into the night, as if to himself.

"Perhaps we must make common cause with this wolf. Or perhaps… find the means to slay him before his fangs close around us all."

The river gave no answer.

Only the markets roared, the sound of men arming themselves with northern steel, while far beyond the forests the wolf built his empire, one blade at a time.

Yaroslav did not realize it yet, but the whispers of Perun beckoned to him from the forests of Russland.

The old gods stirred within the woodlands, within the meadows, the rivers, and the mountains.

The White Wolf did not simply bring with him steel, but the weight of a religion suppressed in Kiev for far too long.

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