my arm ring. The Danes loved arm rings. The more a man possessed, the more he was regarded, for the rings came from success. Ragnar had Bernard Cornwell The Last Kingdom rings of silver and rings of gold, rings carved as dragons and rings inlaid with glittering stones. When he moved you could hear the rings clinking. The rings could be used as money if there were no coins. I remember watching a Dane take off an arm ring and hack it to shreds with an ax, then offer a merchant scraps of the ring until the scales showed he had paid sufficient silver. That was down in the bigger valley, in a large village where most of Ragnar's younger men had settled and where traders brought goods from Eoferwic. The incoming Danes had found a small English settlement in the valley, but they needed more space for new houses and to make it they had burned down a grove of hazels, and that was what Ragnar called the place, Synningthwait, which meant the place cleared by fire.
Doubtless the village had an English name, Bernard Cornwell The Last Kingdom but it was already being forgotten. "We're in England to stay now," Ragnar told me as we went home one day after buying supplies in Synningthwait. The road was a track pounded in the snow and our horses picked a careful path between the drifts through which the black twigs of the hedge tops just showed. I was leading the two pack horses laden with their precious bags of salt and asking Ragnar my usual questions; where swallows went in winter, why elves gave us hiccups, and why Ivar was called the Boneless. "Because he's so thin, of course,"
Ragnar said, "so that he looks as if you could roll him up like a cloak."
"Why doesn't Ubba have a nickname?"
"He does. He's called Ubba the Horrible."
He laughed, because he had made the nickname up, and I laughed because I was Bernard Cornwell The Last Kingdom happy. Ragnar liked my company and, with my long fair hair, men mistook me for his son and I liked that. Rorik should have been with us, but he was sick that day, and the women were plucking herbs and chanting spells. "He's often sick," Ragnar said, "not like Ragnar"; he meant his eldest son who helped hold on to Ivar's lands in Ireland.
"Ragnar's built like an ox," he went on,
"never gets sick! He's like you, Uhtred." He smiled, thinking of his eldest son, whom he missed. "He'll take land and thrive. But Rorik? Perhaps I shall have to give him this land. He can't go back to Denmark."
"Why not?"
"Denmark is bad land," Ragnar explained.
"It's either flat and sandy and you can't grow a fart on that sort of field, or across the water it's great steep hills with little patches Bernard Cornwell The Last Kingdom of meadow where you work like a dog and starve."
"Across the water?" I asked, and he explained that the Danes came from a country that was divided into two parts, and the two parts were surrounded by countless islands, and that the nearer part, from where he came, was very flat and very sandy, and that the other part, which lay to the east across a great sound of water, was where the mountains were. "And there are Svear there, too," he went on.
"Svear?"
"A tribe. Like us. They worship Thor and Odin, but they speak differently." He shrugged. "We get along with the Svear, and with the Norse." The Svear, the Norse, and the Danes were the Northmen, the men who went on Viking expeditions, but it was the Bernard Cornwell The Last Kingdom Danes who had come to take my land, though I did not say that to Ragnar. I had learned to hide my soul, or perhaps I was confused. Northumbrian or Dane? Which was I? What did I want to be?
"Suppose," I asked, "that the rest of the English do not want us to stay here." I used the wordus deliberately.
He laughed at that. "The English can want what they like! But you saw what happened at Yorvik." That was how the Danes pronounced Eoferwic. For some reason they found that name difficult, so they said Yorvik instead. "Who was the bravest English fighter