Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 209 209: Hastings from Vikings: Overlords of the Icy Seas, a Action novel by YonkoSlayer.

On March 4, Gunnar's army arrived in the Hastings region. The coastline was sparsely populated; the largest fishing village had only a little over fifty households and a crude wooden pier.

After confirming that the area was suitable for landing, Gunnar ordered his soldiers to fell timber and build additional piers, while dispatching ships back to Calais to deliver ssages.

The next day, he left five hundred n behind to construct a camp and port facilities, and led the rest of his forces north along the road.

By midday, the Frankish army halted before a river. Captured fishern called it the Rother River. It was about fifteen ters wide and spanned by a stone bridge connecting the north and south banks.

"Look—there's the Sussex lord's castle."

At the northern end of the stone bridge stood a moderately sized castle. Its outermost defense was a wooden palisade roughly five ters high; inside it stood a six-ter stone wall, and at the center rose the keep. Atop the keep flew Earl Orm's banner—a black stag on a white field.

To block enemies advancing from the sea, Ragnar and the forr chancellor Pascal had specifically ordered Orm to build a wooden fort here, which was later gradually converted into a stone castle.

Ulf's family castle in Dover had been built for the sa reason, likewise at Ragnar and Pascal's direction—to buy ti should continental enemies land on England's southern coast.

"The tis have changed," Gunnar muttered. "The nobles are all busy building castles now. Defensive strength has skyrocketed. Life is getting harder and harder for Viking raiders."

Viking pirates relied mainly on light infantry and, in most cases, could not stand up to regular armies. They survived by striking quickly before local forces could assemble. As castles proliferated, suitable targets for raiding grew fewer and fewer. Worse still, British nobles had learned to use stirrups and couched-lance charges, importing tall, docile warhorses from the Continent—giving them crushing superiority over poorly equipped Viking raiders.

After a mont's thought, Gunnar reached a bleak conclusion: the small-scale raids of a hundred n or so were becoming obsolete. The decades-long age of rampant piracy was nearing its end.

Surrounded by shield-bearing guards, he approached the south bank of the Rother and called out loudly:

"Orm! Old friend—on account of our past friendship, let cross the river. You will be richly rewarded afterward."

From atop the palisade, Orm stared down coldly. He loathed this traitor who had converted to a foreign faith and slaughtered his comrades. If not for Gunnar, Ragnar's main force would not have been defeated, and Orm's two sons would not have ended up with one dead and the other crippled.

"Loose!"

The defenders raised their already-cocked crossbows and fired. The guards on the south bank hurriedly raised their shields, blocking this utterly dishonorable volley. One bolt slipped through a gap and struck Gunnar's shoulder—piercing his gold-embroidered red brocade cloak before being stopped by the mail beneath, causing no injury.

An attempted parley answered with an arrow—Gunnar flew into a rage. He imdiately ordered his n to build trebuchets and erect a wooden bridge on the eastern side.

During this ti, Orm had archers harass the Frankish troops and personally joined in hurling insults at Gunnar. The two had known each other for over twenty years and were well aware of each other's secrets and sore spots.

"Orm, you were always a brainless fool," Gunnar shouted. "Rember twenty years ago when we raided East Anglia? Everyone bolted as soon as the alarm was raised—everyone except you. You got stuck in the village and hid in a pigsty for a whole day. When you finally rejoined us, no one dared stand near you."

Orm roared back, "Gunnar, you're a piece of shit! Rember that lover of yours—the tall one nad Sunberg? She'd rather run off with a slave than live with you. You searched everywhere for her, even went begging shamans for guidance. You looked so stupid we laughed ourselves sick!"

After a long exchange, Gunnar finally snapped.

"Keep barking while you can! When I take that stone fortress, I'll chop your crippled son into mince—worse than how his brother died. Let's see what you have to say then!"

Three days later, more than two thousand soldiers arrived from Londinium—half conscripted militia, half fully armored royal guards.

Gunnar recalled bitterly that he himself had been the first commander of the Royal Guard. He had personally built this army—and now, inevitably, he would personally destroy it. Was this fate's cruel joke?

With the reinforcents in place, even more archers fired on the Frankish troops, desperately trying to stop the construction of the bridge. But the crossing sites were not limited to one location. In the end, Gunnar erected a bridge ten miles west, crossed the Rother there, and led his infantry onto the northern bank.

"Send word to Hastings. Order the cavalry to join us—every last one they can spare."

"Yes, sir."

The ssenger rode back toward the beach. The original fishing village was gone, replaced by a vast, noisy temporary harbor. At the periter stood a hastily built fence; inside were scattered tents and supplies.

To the south, four piers extended into the sea, accommodating the massive, unwieldy cogs. The sky was leaden gray. Warhorses were dragged and whipped off the decks by rough soldiers, trembling as they stepped onto the slick planks. They whinnied in panic, their bodies shuddering from the terror of the long sea crossing.

Nearby, shallow-draft longships ran straight up onto the beach. Urged on by their officers, soldiers leapt into thigh-deep icy water, slogging through slippery mud toward land as their armor clanged with heavy, muffled impacts.

The cavalry commander, Charles, had grown up in Frankish lands—this was his first ti setting foot in Britannia. Upon hearing the duke's orders, he hesitated and pointed at the horsen leading their mounts along the beach.

"The horses aren't accustod to rocking. They're exhausted and won't be combat-ready for a while—at least not until tomorrow."

At the sa ti, Oleg, commander of the Royal Guard, was bidding Orm farewell.

"Our n captured a prisoner while crossing the river," he said. "According to him, Gunnar brought two thousand cavalry. The wooden bridge is finished—the horsen could cross at any mont. We can't stay here."

The two thousand soldiers under Oleg were the only mobile force left to the crown. They could not be squandered at Hastings. His plan was to retreat to Londinium and use the wide Thas River and stone walls to buy ti.

Orm frowned but did not argue.

"Go," he said. "I'll stay here. Whether I live or die is in the hands of the gods."

With the Royal Guard preparing to withdraw, morale in the castle collapsed. Orm did not forcibly stop them. Servants and civilians were allowed to leave; soldiers could also withdraw after handing over their equipnt.

In the end, Rother Castle was left with only Orm, his wife, his la younger son, and one hundred and thirty volunteers—soldiers and civilians alike.

On March 10, Frankish cavalry crossed the wooden bridge but failed to catch the retreating Royal Guard. Gunnar did not waste ti or manpower on Rother Castle. He left five hundred n behind to maintain the siege and led the rest of his army straight toward Londinium.

—------------------------------

Pat reon Advance Chapters: patreon/YonkoSlayer

You are reading Vikings: Overlords of the Icy Seas Chapter 209 209: Hastings on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Same genre

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

Lord of the Truth cover
Same genre

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.