Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 98 98: The River Severn from Vikings: Overlords of the Icy Seas, a Action novel by YonkoSlayer.

By late July, the army's training was complete.

Drawing on all the intelligence gathered, Vig laid out his campaign plan before the assembled officers:

"Gentlen, we'll march to Worcester, then follow the River Severn upstream. Our supplies will move by ship, and our destination is the capital of the Kingdom of Powys—Mathrafal."

His reputation after so many successful campaigns silenced any objections. The army marched northwest for two days until they reached the eastern bank of the Severn, near the town of Worcester.

The area was still under Æthelwulf's jurisdiction. Following royal orders, the locals had built or requisitioned fifty longships.

"Only fifty? I ordered a hundred!"

Vig's tone was sharp. Æthelwulf, standing beside him, watched in silence. The local lord, though technically his vassal, had long been lazy and disobedient—so a scolding from Vig was well deserved.

Vig gave the man two weeks to make up the shortfall in ships and supplies, then continued marching along the river. Before long, the army ca upon the Offa's Dyke.

Stretching endlessly from north to south, the earthen rampart rose about 2.5 ters high, with a 2-ter-deep trench on the western (Welsh) side. Any Welsh raiders trying to climb it would face an ascent of nearly 4.5 ters under fire.

Æthelwulf's tone swelled with pride as he explained:

"It runs from the mouth of the Dee River in the north to the mouth of the Severn in the south—one hundred and fifty miles. To build it, King Offa conscripted prisoners, peasants from his vassal states, even Welsh tribes themselves. It took twenty years to complete."

"Impressive," Vig said as he sketched the sight during lunch. "A true monunt to human determination. A sha, though—fortifications are useless without garrisons. Every watchtower we've passed lies in ruins. All of King Offa's efforts, wasted."

That careless remark struck a nerve. Æthelwulf went silent for the rest of the journey, speaking barely a word until August 1st, when the army t its first ambush.

The attack ca from the western bank—a hundred Welsh longbown stepped out of the treeline, forming a loose skirmish line across the open field, firing on the marching column on the east bank.

"Heavy crossbown, on the boats! Return fire! The rest—raise shields and keep moving!"

At over 150 ters, ordinary crossbows lost effectiveness. Vig had a hundred armored crossbown board the ships to duel the longbown across the river.

The Welsh quickly focused their aim on these n. Wave after wave of arrows hissed down, clattering against iron helms and pauldrons, the tallic din like rain on a tin roof.

After enduring several volleys, the crossbown finished reloading and fired. They crouched low, winding again, firing every half-minute with deadly precision.

Ten minutes later, on the western bank—

Each longbowman carried two quivers, thirty arrows each. Maintaining a steady rate of six arrows per minute, they had emptied both quivers within ten minutes. Their commander counted the losses: twenty longbown dead, while the enemy's fire had not slackened at all.

"These damned Norse brutes don't play fair—they're wearing iron and trading volleys with us! Withdraw! I'm not dying here!"

Grabbing their fallen comrades' bodies, the surviving Welsh lted back into the forest.

The skirmish over, Vig ordered the n to make camp. Fearing a night raid, he and Æthelwulf took turns on watch, surviving the tense night without incident.

At dawn on August 2nd, after breakfast, the Norse marched two hours further upstream and finally reached their goal.

Across the river lay broad farmlands, the terrain rising beyond into low hills. On one such slope stood a timber fortress.

Rubbing his tired eyes, Vig pointed it out to Æthelwulf.

"Mathrafal Castle—the royal seat of Powys. We've arrived."

On the far bank, eight hundred Welsh militia had gathered—three hundred longbown among them—ready to prevent the Norse from crossing.

After a few minutes of volley fire, Vig's five hundred archers and eight hundred crossbown gained total superiority. Their dense barrage forced the Welsh back from the riverbank.

"Proceed as planned. All units, embark in order!"

Under the cover of missile fire, two hundred armored huscarls crossed first, forming a shield wall to absorb the arrows raining down.

By 2 p.m., most of the army was across. Vig led three thousand n forward to attack, leaving Æthelwulf and a thousand to guard the ships.

It was high sumr—the unharvested fields were full of short weeds, the ground soft beneath the n's boots. Sweat stread beneath their helts as they trudged toward the fortress under the blazing sun.

Seeing the sea of armored soldiers, the Welsh militia lost their nerve and retreated behind the five-ter-high palisade, hoping the walls would hold against the pagan horde.

At three hundred ters, Vig ordered his flanks forward to disperse small enemy detachnts nearby. Then, a thousand archers and crossbown advanced to within a hundred ters of the fort, suppressing the defenders' longbown on the ramparts.

When the enemy's return fire finally slackened, one hundred Norsen rolled forward twenty-five wooden carts, four n to a cart.

The defenders watched, puzzled, as the carts wobbled closer—until the Norsen began hurling clay jars at the walls.

With a chorus of sharp cracks, the jars shattered, releasing the unmistakable stench of tar and resin. The defenders realized, too late, that the Vikings ant to burn the palisade.

At the king's desperate command, Welsh archers leaned over the battlents to shoot—but the Norse crossbows cut them down. Within minutes, dozens of longbown lay dead, and the attackers had thrown every jar they carried.

Then ca a final volley—fire arrows arcing through the sky. Flas raced across the oil-soaked walls.

The pitch and resin had originally been prepared for the Siege of Paris, but after peace was signed, the Vikings had taken it ho—and now used it to devastating effect at Mathrafal.

Under the scorching heat, the outer clay coating of the wall began to crumble, exposing the bare logs beneath. The defenders, panicking, rushed forward with buckets of water, only to be picked off by arrows.

Outside, Vig—sleep-deprived and half-dazed by the sun—rubbed his temple and murmured:

"Use the rest of the oil. If the wall still stands, start cutting timber for siege towers and trebuchets."

Realizing the defenders had nothing new to throw at them, he sat cross-legged in the grass, resting his head in his hand, drifting toward sleep—until Jorunn shook him awake.

"My lord! They've surrendered! There's a man with a crown waving his arms like mad!"

~~--------------------------

Patreon Advanced Chapters:

patreon/YonkoSlayer

You are reading Vikings: Overlords of the Icy Seas Chapter 98 98: The River Severn 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

The Extra's Survival cover
Same genre

The Extra's Survival

Mohitkumar ·Action

OnmywaytothejobinterviewunfortunatelyImetanaccident. Insteadofdying,Ifoundmyselfwakingupinthenovel'Dawnoflegend'whichIreadbeforedying. Iwakeupinthe...

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.