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Life Weaver (ASOIAF / WORM-OC SI)

Life Weaver chapter 33 New
LW 33

As Stigr and his warg companion, Levi the leviathan, were occupied securing the Braavos trade route, Erik had no choice but to travel the old way.

Without Levi towing them along the coast, the journey north became slow and methodical. The two ships hugged the shoreline, keeping the land in sight to avoid the open sea's worst moods. Even with favorable winds, progress was limited by the realities of medieval travel which included factors like crew fatigue, shifting weather, and the need to resupply fresh water and provisions.

In theory, the galleys could sprint faster. With full sail and oars, they could reach impressive bursts of speed. In practice, sustained travel was far slower. The crews needed rest, the ships needed shelter from storms, and the coast dictated the route.

They averaged the pace of a disciplined coastal voyage, roughly eighty to one hundred and twenty kilometers a day when everything went right. It rarely did.

Since Erik did not have access to his research laboratories and controlled environments, he turned his mind to a different form of preparation.

Preserving Knowledge.

He'd brought stacks of parchment, ink, and several bound blank journals that he'd made himself. The work was slow and tedious, but he approached it with the same seriousness he would give to any experiment.

He began writing.

Not advanced theories or speculative breakthroughs. That would be dangerous without proper testing. Instead, he recorded foundational knowledge from his previous world, school-level science and engineering, the kind of information that had quietly underpinned an entire civilization.

Basic physics. Principles of leverage, pulleys, pressure, and heat transfer.
Elementary chemistry. Purification, acids and bases, simple reactions, sanitation.
Agriculture. Crop rotation, soil nutrients, irrigation, selective breeding.
Construction. Load-bearing structures, arches, concrete-like mixtures, standardized measurements.
Metallurgy. Basic smelting improvements, alloy concepts, heat treatment, and quality control.

He wrote in careful, simplified language, stripping away jargon and replacing it with analogies that a medieval student could grasp.

These are seeds, he thought. Not weapons.

He paused once, quill hovering over the page, and leaned back in his chair.

Not that I have any intention of dying, he thought with a faint, dry amusement. But it is better to be safe than sorry.

He understood better than anyone how fragile singular points of failure were. Weirstad's future could not rest solely on his continued existence. If he fell, whether to assassination, accident, or something more exotic, the knowledge had to survive him.

He imagined the future.

The first students he would choose carefully, bright minds, loyal, curious, disciplined. They would learn from these books. They would teach others. The knowledge would propagate, mutate, grow. In decades, it would be taken for granted. In centuries, it would be tradition.

He dipped his quill again.

If I die, let the world remember me not as a miracle worker… but as the beginning of an era of understanding.

It took two full weeks before White Harbor's pale stone towers finally emerged on the horizon.

The first glimpse of White Harbor came with the sun at their backs, and for a moment Erik thought the city was made of light.

Its houses were built of whitewashed stone, their walls catching the pale northern sun until the whole city seemed to gleam across the grey sea. Steeply pitched roofs of dark grey slate cut sharp angles against the sky, turning the settlement into a mosaic of light and shadow. Even from miles away, it was clear that this was no chaotic sprawl. Streets ran straight and wide, cobbled in clean lines, buildings arranged in neat, deliberate rows. Order was not imposed here. It was tradition.

Then his eyes were drawn to the weird large rock formation.

It stood upright near the harbor like a sentinel, an impossible slab of stone rising from the sea. Erik's mind supplied the name instantly from memory. Seal Rock. A natural fortress dominating the approaches to the Outer Harbor. A ringfort crowned its summit, its weathered stones bristling with crossbowmen, scorpions, and heavy spitfire ballistae. Even at a distance, he could see the silhouettes of crews manning the engines.

The stone loomed fifty feet above the waters, its surface grey-green and slick with age and salt. Seals clustered along its lower slopes and ledges, dark shapes basking in the cold sun, oblivious to the martial crown above them.

As they drew closer, the structure of the harbor itself revealed its layered logic.

White Harbor was split in two. The Outer Harbor was broad and busy with merchant vessels, fishing boats, and coastal traffic. Beyond it lay the Inner Harbor, narrower but better sheltered. Massive city walls protected one side, while on the other loomed a darker, older presence.

The Wolf's Den.

Even from the water, Erik could feel its weight. The ancient fortress squatted beside the harbor, its walls thick and dark, a stark contrast to the white city beyond. Built by the Starks centuries ago, it now served as a prison, but its design spoke of war and fear. Stone towers rose at irregular intervals, windows narrow, gates heavy. The whole structure crouched like a beast guarding its territory.

A mile-long, thirty-foot wall stretched along the jetty that separated the two harbors, punctuated by towers every hundred yards. It was not just a wall. It was a statement. White Harbor had been built to survive sieges, rebellions, and winter alike.

Houses clung to the Wolf's Den like barnacles on a hull, cramped structures pressed against ancient stone, their residents living literally in the shadow of the old Stark fortress. Generations had grown up with prison walls as their skyline.

Erik leaned on the rail, eyes moving constantly.

Defensible port. Layered fortifications. Urban planning centuries ahead of most cities. Social stratification visible in architecture.

The crews fell quiet as they passed Seal Rock, eyes drawn upward to the weapons and men watching them. For many of them, this was the first time entering a city that did not feel like a frontier or a gamble.

This was civilization with memory.

As the ships slipped into the Outer Harbor, bells rang from distant towers. Merchants shouted. Dockworkers moved with practiced precision. Banners bearing the trident and merman of House Manderly snapped in the wind.

Weirstad was new, sharp, deliberate. White Harbor was old, layered with centuries of tradition, politics, and memory. Yet it showed that the rulers of these lands were wise and cared for tier subjects. It showed Erik that White Harbor was a place that could be worthy of his efforts.

The crew gathered on deck, many of them former sellsails and newly trained locals, their expressions a mix of anticipation and unease. They carried Weirstad's finest goods in the hold, but none of that guaranteed acceptance. Cities like this had seen wonders come and go, and they had learned to be cautious.

Erik watched the harbor traffic, cogs, fishing boats, merchant vessels from the south, banners snapping in the cold wind.

First impressions decide decades, he thought.
And I have waited six months to make this one.

Erik adjusted his coat and straightened his posture as the harbor chain lowered and the ships were granted entry.

White Harbor awaited.

They entered White Harbor not as emissaries of Weirstad, but as merchants of House Moredo.

The sails bore the sigil of Belicho Moredo's trading house, stitched in bold Braavosi colors. The manifests listed Braavosi ports, Braavosi goods, Braavosi contracts. On paper, they were nothing more than another pair of merchant galleys seeking northern coin.

Belicho Moredo had been more than cooperative. He didn't have a choice in the matter.

Not that he minds it too much, Erik thought as he watched the harbor approach. Ivar reported that he is making a handsome profit warehousing and selling Weirstad's goods through his networks. Most of his problems have been resolved and the rare product only he can supply to the citizen Braavos has raised his status and clout significantly

The medicine that kept his son alive was a leash, yes, but it was a leash attached to a golden collar. Moredo was not a fool. He understood that Erik's success meant his own enrichment, and so he pulled willingly.

The deception of saying they were from Braavos was unfortunately necessary for now.

The North and the Free Folk had centuries of blood, betrayal, and raids between them. Even a whisper that these ships came from a Free Folk city would have shut doors before they could be knocked upon. Worse, it could have drawn Stark suspicion or Manderly paranoia. Erik had no intention of explaining that a new power had risen beyond the Wall with technology, magic, and ambition.

Not yet.

So they hid behind Braavos, behind coin, behind paperwork.

The ruse was easy to maintain. The crews were a mix of former sellsails who were from all over Essos and newly trained locals who had learned the accents, mannerisms, and customs of being a sailor. Anyone who looked too closely would simply see another foreign trade expedition seeking profit.

Belicho Moredo already had a warehouse and branch office established here. It would be used to sell his wares here.

The harbor chain lowered, and they guided the ships toward the docks.

A dock inspector arrived in a fur-lined cloak, flanked by two guards with Manderly tridents on their shields. He stepped aboard with the practiced confidence of a man who had seen every type of merchant lie.

"Papers," he said in clipped Common Tongue, his accent thick with the North.

Erik handed over the documents. Sealed contracts. Cargo lists. Letters of trade from House Moredo, stamped and signed in Braavos. The inspector examined them carefully, comparing seals, checking signatures, questioning the quartermaster.

They went through the holds next.

Crates were opened. Samples inspected. Steel tools, glassware, preserved foods, textiles, and small mechanical curiosities. All exotic enough to justify Braavosi origin, but not so strange as to raise suspicion of sorcery or hidden industry.

The inspector nodded slowly, interest replacing suspicion.

"Docking fee," he said.

Coin changed hands.

Then more coin, passed discreetly, folded into the inspector's palm with a casual handshake.

"Good berth," Erik said quietly. "and no surprises"

The inspector's expression did not change, but his nod was immediate.

"You'll be placed in the Inner Harbor section reserved for foreign merchants of standing," he said. "Keep your sailor in line. No one will trouble you unless you cause trouble. "

Erik inclined his head. "We never do."

The ships were guided to a prime spot along the inner docks, close enough to the city gates and merchant halls to be noticed, but far from the rougher foreign berths where theft and harassment were common.

As the gangplank was lowered and dockworkers began unloading, Erik allowed himself a small breath.

They were in.

First layer established, he thought. White Harbor sees Braavos. Next, it will see value. Then dependency. Then influence.

He stepped onto the white stone docks, the sound of the city rising around him.

White Harbor believed it was welcoming a merchant.

It had no idea it had just opened its gates to a city that intended to reshape the North.

---

Erik walked White Harbor alone.

Not truly alone as two discreet guards followed at a distance, dressed as merchants' retainers but he moved without ceremony, blending into the steady flow of dockworkers, traders, and sailors. He wanted to see the city as it was, not as it presented itself to envoys and nobles.

Whitewashed stone reflected the pale winter sun, giving the city an almost unreal brightness. The streets were wide and straight, cobbled with care, laid out with a planner's hand rather than grown chaotically over centuries like most cities he had seen in this world. Buildings stood in orderly rows, warehouses closest to the docks, merchant houses beyond, then workshops, inns, and residential quarters.

Intentional urban planning, he noted. That means long-term stability and centralized authority. Manderly influence is deep, not superficial.

He paused near a fish market overlooking the inner harbor. Dozens of stalls sold salted cod, smoked eel, crab, and river trout brought down from the White Knife. Fishermen shouted prices while middlemen negotiated bulk contracts with innkeepers and ship captains.

Food flowed into the city in predictable, organized streams.

Trade arteries are diversified. Sea, river, land routes to the south. A Resilient economy.

He watched coin change hands. Northern silver, southern gold, Braavosi bronze. Moneylenders sat at small tables near the docks, calculating exchange rates and extending short-term credit to captains who needed to unload before they could pay fees.

Financial services exist. That means merchants with influence, not just nobles.

Further inland, he observed workshops. Shipwrights repairing hulls. Tanners curing hides. Carpenters shaping beams for new ships. Blacksmiths forging nails and fittings in bulk rather than artisan pieces. This was an industrial city by medieval standards.

White Harbor is not just a port. It is a production node of the North.

He stopped near a merchant hall where banners of various houses fluttered: Manderly, Flint, Glover, Cerwyn, even a few southern houses. Representatives negotiated shipping contracts, grain imports, timber deals. Northern lords depended on this city to convert raw resources into coin and goods.

Economic choke point, Erik thought. Influence White Harbor, influence half the North.

Political power: House Manderly controls trade and naval defense. Stark oversight is distant. This city is effectively autonomous.


He walked to a quiet overlook above the harbor, where he could see Seal Rock, the harbor walls, and the fleets anchored within.

White Harbor's navy was not massive, but it was disciplined. Merchant vessels could be converted into warships. Crossbows and scorpions guarded the approaches. Chains could close the harbor in minutes.

Defensible. Hard to take by force.

He leaned against the stone railing and exhaled slowly.

Weirstad has technology, magic, and vision. White Harbor has legitimacy, networks, and history.

We don't need to conquer it. We need to become indispensable to it.


He imagined the progression.

First, exotic goods that sell better than anything else.
Then tools that increase productivity.
Then seeds, techniques, machines.
Then reliance.

Once their merchants depend on us for profit, their lords will depend on their merchants, and their politics will bend without anyone realizing it.

A gull cried overhead. Ships creaked against their moorings.

Erik watched the city with quiet satisfaction.

White Harbor was not an enemy.
It was a lever.

And levers, if placed carefully, could move kingdoms.

-------



After a few days of exploration, quiet conversations, and discreet observation, Erik finally retreated to his rented chambers with the beginnings of a plan.

He had walked the markets, listened in taverns, attended minor merchant gatherings, and when discretion allowed borrowed the senses of birds, cats, and dockside dogs to overhear conversations behind closed doors. White Harbor spoke freely when it believed itself alone. Merchants complained of tariffs. Artisans worried about guild politics. Minor nobles whispered about debts, alliances, and House Manderly's quiet dominance.

Patterns emerged.

He sat by the window, watching lanterns flicker along the harbor, and thought.

First step was the cargo delivery. That got us in, opened doors, started threads of obligation and curiosity, he reasoned. Trade is the slowest knife, but the deepest.

He tapped his fingers on the table, eyes narrowing.

The second step will be healing.

The plan was simple, almost elegant.

Like any other medieval city, White Harbor had no shortage of sick. The poor lived crowded near the docks, tanneries and slums. Many newborn children didn't survive to see their first birthday . Old wounds festered. Malnutrition left many weak and stunted. The city accepted this as inevitable.

Erik did not.

He would heal them.

At first, quietly and for free. He had already noted several beggars, dockworkers, and sickly children whose conditions were visible even to an untrained eye. He would approach discreetly, present himself as a traveling Braavosi healer with strange methods, and cure what the city believed incurable.

His price for the first would be nothing.

Only words.

Tell others, he thought. Let rumor do the work.

The poor would spread the story faster than any merchant caravan. They would speak in alleys, in taverns, in fish markets, in prayer halls. Soon, more would come seeking him out.

For them, he would charge a copper coin.

Not enough to burden, but enough to maintain appearances. A free healer was suspicious. A cheap healer was a miracle that could be believed.

He smiled faintly.

And then, the important ones.

White Harbor's wealthy had ailments of their own. Lingering injuries from hunts, infertility, chronic pain, failing eyesight, old battle scars. These were not discussed publicly, but Erik had heard enough through whispered conversations and borrowed ears.

For them, the price would be high in coin, but higher in influence.

And for everyone he healed, rich or poor, he would add something subtle. A mental nudge. A gentle inclination toward gratitude, toward protection, toward speaking well of the mysterious healer from Braavos. Nothing obvious. Nothing that could be traced. Just a bias, a warmth, a seed of loyalty.

Eventually, word will reach the Manderlys, he thought. And they will want to meet me.

House Manderly controlled White Harbor and much of the surrounding lands. They were pragmatic, wealthy, and deeply invested in the city's stability. A healer who could cure the incurable would be too valuable to ignore and too dangerous to leave unexamined.

This way, I enter their circle as an asset, not a threat.

He leaned back, eyes half-lidded.

The masses will see me as a miracle worker. The highborn will see me as a strategic resource. Both will see me positively.

And that, Erik knew, was the most powerful position anyone could hold in a city that was not their own.

-------

Dressed simply, Erik blended easily into the morning crowd.

He wore a plain green tunic, the cloth rough and well-worn, with a matching cloak that marked him as a modest traveling merchant or hedge-healer rather than a noble envoy. A leather satchel hung from his shoulder, worn and patched; its contents deliberately unremarkable to any casual glance. In his right hand he carried his trusted staff, its polished wood marked with faint carvings that could pass for decoration rather than tools.

He set out on foot, moving away from the cleaner stone streets near the New Castle and toward the crowded docks and tanners' quarters.

The air grew heavier there. Salt, rot, smoke, and wet leather clung to everything. Children ran barefoot through muddy alleys. Fishwives shouted prices. Dockhands cursed as they hauled cargo. And in the shadowed corners, the sick lingered.

Erik already knew where he was going.

The girl was coughing when Erik first saw her.

She sat on a pile of bundled nets near the tanners' quarter, wrapped in a threadbare wool cloak that did little against the damp cold. Her breaths came in rattling gasps, each one a battle. Her mother stood nearby, a gaunt dockworker with raw hands and eyes dulled by exhaustion.

Consumption. Or a winter lung rot. Either way, the city had already written the child off.

Erik approached casually trying to appear friendly.

"I am a healer," he said in a soft accent that was a mix of the Northern old tongue and Braavos. "May I look?"

The woman hesitated. "We've no coin."

"I am not asking for coin." He replied

"Then what do ye want?" She asked warily tightening her loose robes around her frail body.

"Have no fear" Erik said soothing "I ask for nothing. I do this to spread the blessings of the Old Gods"

"But I'm a follower of the seven?" She replied

"It matters not to me" Erik stated "All that are in need are welcome to the gift of healing"

Suspicion warred with desperation. Desperation won.

She knelt as Erik placed two fingers lightly on the girl's wrist, then her neck. He let his mind sink inward, not through an animal this time, but into the child's body itself. He mapped inflammation, damaged tissue, bacterial rot, immune collapse.

He rewrote it.

Cells rebuilt. Infection unraveled. Tissue healed as if rewound by months.

The girl shuddered once, then inhaled deeply. The rattle vanished. Her eyes widened.

"Ma?" she whispered.

The woman froze. Then she began to sob, clutching the girl so hard Erik worried he would need to heal bruises next.

"She's been coughing blood for two moons," she said between tears. "The maester said she wouldn't see the next."

"She will," Erik said simply.

He stood, dusted his hands and left without saying anything else

He did not need to hear the woman shouting after him. He already knew what she would do.

She would tell everyone.

------

The Dripping Gull was loud, smoky, and full of men who had seen too much sea and too little land.

Sailors clustered around ale jugs, trading lies, news, and exaggerations in equal measure.

"You hear about the healer?" a deckhand asked, eyes wide.

"Aye," a scarred oarsman snorted. "Heard he cured Old Thom's boy. Or was it Jory's cousin's pig?"

"He cured a child," the deckhand insisted. "Lung rot. Girl was coughing her soul out. Now she's running about like spring lamb."

"Aye, and I'm the Seal Rock," the oarsman scoffed. "Every city's got miracle men. Half are quacks, the other half are poisoners."

A sailor at the table leaned in. "House Moredo ship brought him," he said quietly. "Not some hedge-witch. He speaks High Valyrian proper. Carries tools I've never seen. Not magic. Something else."

"Magic's magic," the oarsman said. "If the gods wanted her healed, they'd have done it themselves."

A fisherman spat into a cup. "Tell that to her mother. Woman's been crying and praising him all day. Says he didn't even ask for silver. Just healed and walked away."

"That's how cults start," the oarsman muttered.

"Or how saints do," the deckhand shot back.

They drank in silence for a moment.

Then the fisherman added, "Dockmaster's wife sent a servant to find him today. Her knee had been bad since that winter fall. I saw her walking upright with a spring in her steps."

The table grew quieter.

"You think he's real?" the deckhand asked.

The oarsman stared into his cup. "If he keeps curing people, it won't matter what the whole bloody city will believe."

-----

In a quiet rented room across the city, Erik listened through a raven perched on a tavern beam.

He heard the doubt, the debate, the spread.

Perfect, he thought.

Rumors seeded. Curiosity growing. Skepticism keeping the story grounded. Interest climbing among the wealthy.

He leaned back in his chair, satisfied.

-----

The knock came after midnight.

Three soft raps, then a pause, then two more. Deliberate. Cautious.

Erik opened the door to find a man in dark blue livery trimmed with white thread. A silver merman clasp marked him as House Manderly. His cloak was drawn up, his face tense, eyes darting down the hallway.

"You are the healer," he said in a low voice. It was not a question.

"I am," Erik replied. "And you are very late."

The man hesitated, then stepped inside. "My name is Harwin. I serve in the New Castle. This visit does not exist."

Erik smiled faintly. "Then neither will my price."

Harwin stiffened but nodded. He turned and motioned into the corridor.

Two men emerged, carrying a covered litter. Inside, wrapped in thick blankets, lay a young man no older than twenty. His face was pale, lips tinged blue, his breathing shallow and uneven.

"Ser Osmund Manderly," Harwin said quietly. "Lord Marlon's nephew. He was injured in a riding accident three months past. The maester says the wound festered inward. He walks with pain, sleeps little, coughs blood some nights."

Erik knelt beside the litter, pulling back the blanket. He placed a hand over the young noble's chest, feeling the subtle tremors of failing tissue and slow internal decay.

The injury had never healed properly. Infection had turned into creeping organ failure.

"He will die within a moon, two at best" Erik said calmly.

Harwin's face went rigid. "The maester said four."

"He was optimistic."

Osmund stirred, eyes fluttering open. "Are you… the healer?" he whispered.

"Yes," Erik said. "And you are fortunate your family is cautious rather than proud."

Harwin swallowed.

Erik closed his eyes and worked.

He did not simply heal. He rebuilt. Bone microfractures fused perfectly. Scar tissue dissolved. Inflammation reversed. Internal bleeding ceased. The lungs cleared.

He also added something else, subtle as breath.

A sense of awe. Gratitude. A warmth toward the man before him.

Osmund gasped, then inhaled deeply. His eyes widened, and color rushed into his face.

"I… I can breathe," he said, astonished. He sat up slowly, then more confidently. "The pain. It's gone."

Harwin stared as if watching the gods descend.

Osmund looked at Erik like a man who had just been pulled back from the abyss.

"You saved me."

"Yes."

"You didn't ask for coin."

"I will."

Harwin stiffened again.

"For you," Erik said, turning to him, "one hundred gold dragons."

Harwin's eyes widened. "That—"

"Is cheap," Erik said softly. "For a Manderly heir."

Silence stretched.

Finally, Harwin nodded. "Lord Wyman will pay."

Osmund swung his legs off the litter, testing his strength. He walked, unsteady at first, then with growing confidence.

He stopped in front of Erik, then did something unexpected.

He bowed.

Not deeply. But sincerely.

"My uncle will want to meet you," he said. "He is need of healing as well"

Erik bowed in acceptance inwardly happy that everything was happening according to plan

--------

Author notes

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Last edited:
I read this all in one sitting. I'm enjoying the story, thanks!
 
Life Weaver chapter 34 New
LW 34

The room felt much more vibrant after that.

Harwin helped Osmund into a chair, still keeping an eye on him. The young knight kept flexing his hands, touching his chest, laughing under his breath like a man rediscovering his own body.

"It feels good! I thought the coughing would surely kill me," Osmund said quietly. "The maester told me to make peace with the Seven."

"My gift is a blessing from the Old gods" Erik replied. "The Seven have no hand in it"

"Interesting" Osmund muttered "Either way! I'm hale and healthy once again! No more porridge for me!"

Osmund laughed, then caught himself, studying Erik with new intensity. "My uncle will not believe this without seeing you."

"He will have your recovery and those of others in White Harbor as ample proof" Erik replied "Belicho Moredo of the merchant house Moredo will also vouch for me as I have healed his son"

Harwin cleared his throat. "Lord Raymond is cautious but age and sickness have taken a heavy toll. He might not trust sudden miracles."

"Good," Erik said. "Neither do I."

Osmund leaned forward. "He is old. He cannot walk far. His breath rattles when he sleeps. He says his heart aches."

"I will what I can do to ease his suffering," Erik said.

Harwin frowned. "You speak too plainly for a guest."

"I am a servant of the Old Gods" Erik replied "And servants should speak plainly and perform their duty or they are useless."

Silence followed that.

Outside, the wind howled off the White Knife, rattling shutters. Erik felt the city's pulse,fishmongers, sailors, guards, servants, each life a thread. Newcastle was ripe ground. Wealthy, proud, anxious about winter, desperate for advantage.

Perfect.

Osmund rose and approached him again. "You added something," he said suddenly.

Harwin stiffened. "What?"

Osmund hesitated, searching for the words. "When I woke, it felt like… like warmth. Like I had been given back more than I lost."

Erik met his gaze, unblinking. "I cured some older problems as well. A few arteries cleaned here, some insulin production restored there. They weren't that serious at the moment but they were taking a toll on your body"

Osmund nodded slowly, satisfied with that.

Harwin exhaled, tension easing, though not disappearing. "We will arrange an audience. Quietly. Tomorrow evening. You will come to the New Castle through the eastern gate. Say you are a spice trader from Braavos."

"I have been many things." Erik smiled faintly. "Tomorrow, I shall be a spice trader"

As the men prepared to leave, Harwin paused at the threshold. "If you can do this for Lord Raymond, truly do this then House Manderly will owe you more than coin."

"I do not do this merely for coin," Erik said. "My blessing is useless if it's not used for the betterment of the followers of the Old Gods."

"But we don't worship the Old Gods" Harwin asked

"The majority of people on your lands do" Erik replied "And you care for all your subject regardless of their faith. Besides, I believe in helping people without any kind of discrimination"

Harwin studied him for a long moment, weighing whether this was piety, madness, or something more dangerous.

"Are you one the fabled Green men that are spoken of in tales?" he asked carefully. "A preist of the trees?"

"I am not a priest," Erik said. "I do not preach. I simply heal and when asked explain the source of my powers"

Osmund glanced between them. "He saved my life," he said simply. "If the Old Gods sent him, then they are better than the Seven."

Harwin shot him a look, but said nothing.

Erik continued, his tone measured, almost gentle. "Many of your smallfolk pray in groves and at heart-trees because they believe something listens to their troubles and prayers. When people believe someone stands for them, they follow."

"And you would stand for them?" Harwin asked.

"I would stand for anyone who stands with me," Erik said. "Highborn or lowborn. Old Gods or Seven. Men or women. I do not discriminate."

Osmund nodded slowly, something like admiration flickering across his face again.

"You speak like a lord or a maester," he said.

"I assure you I am not," Erik corrected. "Although I do love reading books"

"Then New castle's library would be open for you to pursue during your stay here" Osmund replied "Tomorrow then"

The men departed, their footsteps echoing down the stone corridor.

Erik closed the door and leaned against it, listening to the city breathe.

White Harbor was a place where coin and creed intertwined, where merchants and lords bowed to bowed to septons. If he could become a living miracle, one that spoke of ancient roots and living forests then even the faithful of the Seven would listen. They were already quite tolerant of the Followers of the Old Gods unlike the others further south

And the smallfolk, the silent majority who still whispered prayers to trees and stones, would see him as something closer to a prophet.

Not a god but a conduit and Erik would use that like he did in Weirstad to fulfill his objectives.

He walked to the window and looked out over the dark harbor, lanterns flickering on the water like fallen stars.

Tomorrow, Lord Raymond Manderly would be given strength to live for a few more winter.

Erik intended to give him strength.

And loyalty.

And fear.

All wrapped in the gentle language of blessings.

Erik stood alone in the candlelight, hands folded behind his back.

The first thread was tied.

--------

The next day, the sky above White Harbor was clear and painfully bright.

Erik ignored his guards again.

"This is folly," one of them muttered as Erik fastened his cloak. "You walk into a lion's den without claws."

"If I carried claws," Erik replied calmly, "they would treat me like a beast. I prefer to be treated like a man."

"You forget" Erik replied as he absentmindedly warged to a sea gull and made it sit on his shoulder "I'm never alone"

He left them behind.

The New Castle gates opened to him just as Harwin had said.

"Name and business," the guard asked.

"Erik of Braavos. A spice trader," Erik said, exactly as instructed.

He was searched, politely but thoroughly, then escorted through white-stone corridors, past murals of Manderly fleets and woven banners of silver mermen on blue fields.

He smelled ink and parchment long before he reached the solar.

Lord Raymond Manderly sat behind a wide ornate desk, papers stacked in disciplined chaos. Quills, ledgers, petitions, shipping manifests, tax disputes, an endless river of duty. His nephew Osmond was also present sitting in the smaller seats nearby.

Lord Raymond was enormous even seated, flesh heavy with age and inheritance. His breathing rasped, and his fingers were thick, joints swollen, yet his hand moved steadily across parchment.

'Kinda looks like Baron Harkonnen' he thought 'Hopefully he's better than that character'

He did not look up at once.

"Close the door," he said.

The guards obeyed.

Only then did Raymond lift his eyes.

They were pale and sharp and entirely awake.

"So," he said mildly, "you are the spice trader."

Erik inclined his head. "So I claimed."

"You do not smell of spice," Raymond said. "Nor of coin. Nor of fear. Braavosi merchants usually smell of at least two out of the three."

Erik smiled faintly. "Then I am a poor merchant."

Raymond chuckled, a deep wheeze. "Or a very good liar."

He gestured to a chair. "Sit."

Erik sat.

Raymond studied him for a long moment, as if measuring the weight of his bones.

"My nephew here says you healed him," Raymond said pointing at his silent nephew "My maester says it was nothing short of a miracle. My steward says miracles are bad for the realm's stability."

Erik said nothing.

"You," Raymond continued, "dress like a green man from the folk tales, speak like a lord, and arrive claiming to be a merchant. You wear no septon's robes and my nephew says you spoke of the Old Gods."

He leaned back, hands resting on his stomach.

"Explain yourself."

Erik exhaled slowly. "Very well."

He met the lord's gaze directly.

"I am not from Braavos. I am from Weirstad."

The name meant nothing to Raymond's expression, but his eyes sharpened.

"North of the Wall," Erik continued. "Beyond the forests, beyond the clans you call wildlings. A settlement built around an old heart-tree, with stone halls and wooden palisades. A city in the making."

Raymond tapped his fingers together. "There is no city north of the Wall."

"There is now."

Silence stretched.

"And you expect me to believe the raiders and thieves of the far north have become peaceful traders?" Raymond asked mildly.

"No. I expect you to win you over with my actions. We already trade steadily with Braavos and are allied with Braavosi merchant house Modero" Erik replied. "After all actions speak louder than words"

Raymond's lips twitched.

"Continue."

"Weirstad does not wish to raid," Erik said. "Raiding is not worth it. Raiding creates enemies. Raiding kills futures, both ours and yours. My people want grain, metal, cloth, tools. Things that trade brings and raids cannot sustain."

Raymond snorted. "Many a wildling king has promised peace before marching south with torches."

"And many southern lords have marched north with banners," Erik said. "Men are men."

Raymond laughed quietly at that.

"So," Raymond said, "you pose as a merchant to walk my halls and ask me to open trade with people my banners have fought for eight thousand years."

"Yes." Eris replied

"That is quite bold." Wyan remarked

"It is simply quite necessary." Eris answered

Raymond watched him with something like approval.

"And what of your gods?" Raymond asked. "White Harbor is a city tha follows the Seven who are one. You walk my halls speaking of trees, of the Old Gods."

"I follow the Old Gods," Erik said. "So do most of your smallfolk, quietly. I have no quarrel with septs and worshippers of the Seven. I intend to grow and help other grow"

Raymond's gaze hardened slightly. "Careful. Faith is a fickle blade."

"Then let me be a handle," Erik said.

A beat.

Raymond laughed again, louder this time.

"You are an interesting man, Erik of Weirstad," he said. "And a dangerous one."

He coughed into a cloth, breath rattling. When he spoke again, his voice was softer.

"People from my house grow fat," he said. "That is our blessing and our curse. Wealth, feasts, longevity… and hearts that tire, joints that swell, lungs that drown in our own flesh. I am old, and I feel every generation of indulgence in my bones."

Erik nodded.

"My nephew says you can change that," Raymond said.

"Yes."

Raymond smiled faintly. "And what would be the cost?"

"Not gold."

"Not gold you say" Raymond hummed thoughtfully "Then what is more valuable to you than gold?"

"I want to trade with House Manderly and White Harbor" Erik replied " I want you to give us a chance to prove to the rest of the North that Weirstad may be situated north of the wall but it is a peaceful and civilized city"

Raymond raised a brow.

"I want Weirstad recognized as a trading partner, not a nest of raiders. I want White Harbor merchants allowed to sail north, and Weirstad traders allowed south. I want your word that when my people come with furs, jewels, timber, and other goods, they are met with tariffs and contracts not arrows."

Raymond folded his hands.

"And if your people raid anyway?"

"Then you close the gates and North deals with another King Beyond the Wall as it always had," Erik said. "And I lose everything.Either way you get your health vitality back"

Raymond considered that.

"You would stake your life and your city on this," he said.

"Yes."

"Why?"

"Because a city that trades does not burn its customers," Erik said. "And because I am tired of watching the north kill itself out of ignorance."

Raymond studied him for a long time.

"You ask me to trust a man from beyond the Wall," he said slowly, "when every tale my people know paints your kind as monsters."

"Monsters make poor merchants," Erik said.

Raymond's lips curved.

He looked out the window toward the harbor, ships bobbing like white birds.

"Trade," he murmured. "Profit. Influence beyond the Wall… a foothold in lands the Starks never fully tamed."

He turned back to Erik.

"You could be lying."

"Yes."

"You could be the first wave of an invasion."

"Yes."

"You could be the beginning of a new northern age of trade."

"Yes."

He laughed softly.

"I like men who admit their risks."

Raymond leaned forward, placing his thick hands on the desk.

"If you heal me and I mean truly heal me, I will grant you this experiment. Manderly ships will sail north under blue-and-white sails. Your people will be treated as merchants, not raiders. You will have my protection so long as you keep your word."

He paused.

"If you break it, I will burn Weirstad so thoroughly that even your heart-tree will beg for mercy."

Erik inclined his head. "That is fair."

Raymond studied him one last time.

"Come, green man," he said quietly and raised an arm in his direction "Let us see if your miracles are worth the risk."

Erik nodded getting up without saying anything else. He walked over to the aged sickly lord and touched him on his hand

Raymond Manderly felt the change before Erik finished.

The rasp in his lungs softened, then vanished. The dull, suffocating pressure in his chest eased, as if a great hand had released its grip on his heart. His fingers, long swollen and stiff, loosened, joints moving freely for the first time in decades. His breath came deep and full, not in short wheezing gasps but in steady, powerful draws.

The solar was utterly silent.

Raymond stared at his hands as though they belonged to another man.

"My heart," he said slowly. "It does not stumble."

"No," Erik said. "It is strong again."

The old lord pushed himself up from his chair.

He had not risen without pain in many years. At first, he moved cautiously, as if expecting the familiar protest of failing joints and tired lungs. But there was none. He straightened fully, enormous body steady, breathing calm.

He took a step. Then another.

His face changed. Not with joy, not with shock, but with something far rarer in a man like Raymond Manderly.

Calculation.

"You have given me years," he said quietly. "Thank you"

"I have but it will not last" Erik replied. "Your body is old, and your blood carries habits that stretch back generations. I repaired what was broken. Time will still take you. Just more slowly."

Raymond laughed, full and resonant, without the wheeze that had haunted him for half his life.

"Years are kingdoms, boy. Ask any dying man."

They signed the agreement that afternoon.

Raymond insisted on reading every clause himself. He sat at his desk with a quill, lips moving as he traced each line. The document mirrored the compact Erik had forged in Braavos with Belicho Moredo: mutual recognition, trade rights, fixed tariffs, arbitration rules, protection for merchants and envoys, and the right for Weirstad to establish warehouses and enclaves within White Harbor.

"This is not a merchant's contract," Raymond observed. "This is a treaty between powers."

Erik did not deny it.

When Raymond finally signed, his hand was steady.

The seal of the silver merman was pressed into warm wax.

A bridge was made.

Erik pressed further.

He walked Raymond through sketches and plans laid out on parchment. Clear tunnels that trapped heat even in winter, explained as rare membranes brought from distant eastern traders. Seeds that could grow in frost, bred in cold lands far beyond the Shivering Sea. Techniques for crop rotation, winter granaries, communal storage, and controlled livestock breeding.

"Begin small," Erik said. "One village. One estate. Let your stewards measure yields. Measure winter survival. Measure how many mouths you can feed when the snow buries the fields. If it fails, you lose little. If it succeeds, White Harbor never starves again."

Raymond understood immediately.

White Harbor was a city of pragmatic merchants, not stubborn fools. Bread and coin ruled here more surely than politics and tradition.

"If White Harbor thrives," Raymond said, "the North will follow bread and silver. Lords copy what makes coin and prosperity. Smallfolk follow what keeps them alive."

"That is why I came," Erik said. " I want to share my success with others so they too many thrive"

If White Harbor prospered, the rest of the North would imitate it. If the North prospered, winters would become hardships rather than slaughters. Population would rise. Villages would grow into towns. Towns into cities.

And all of it would trace back, quietly and inevitably, to Weirstad.

And a more populus North was part of Erik grand plans in coming decades.

Three days later, a Manderly cog slipped from the harbor under blue and white sails.

Osmund stood on the deck, armor polished, cloak snapping in the wind. He looked healthier than he had in years, his posture straight, his movements confident. With him came guards, scribes, and a pair of stewards charged with recording everything they saw. They would observe Weirstad's defenses, customs, trade practices, and the strange agricultural methods Erik claimed would reshape the North.

Some of them would stay for a season. Some for a year.

All would report back and bring back goods worth trading.

Lord Raymond watched from the harbor tower, hands clasped behind his back, the wind tugging at his heavy cloak.

"Do not disappoint me, green man," he murmured.

Erik stood beside him, eyes fixed on the darkening sea that led toward the Wall and beyond.

"We will not," he said as he too boarded his galley that soon set off and started its journey back home.

The ship vanished into the horizon, sails shrinking to pale specks against the gray.

And with it sailed the first official bridge between the North and the lands beyond the Wall.

Not forged with steel or fire, but with parchment, grain, and quiet ambition.

Erik knew what would come next.

Reports. Proof. Imitation.

And slowly, season by season, the North would change.

It would grow.

And it would remember who had taught it how.

--------

Author notes

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Life Weaver chapter 35 New
LW 35

Five years later, Weirstad celebrated.

What had once been a rough timber settlement clustered around a lonely heart-tree had grown into a city. Nearly twelve thousand people lived within its walls and outer villages, and more than half of them were children. Beyond the Wall, that fact alone would have been considered a miracle.

Children ran through the streets, chasing one another with shrill laughter. Children carried wooden tablets etched with letters. Children argued over sums scratched in charcoal. Children expected to live long enough to matter.

Lanterns hung from the branches of the great heart-tree and from wooden beams that framed the central square, their warm light painting the pale bark in gold and crimson. Long tables bowed beneath the weight of food: smoked fish from the icy sea, roasted boar, thick root stews, dark bread baked in stone ovens, berries preserved in honey, barrels of cider and ale. Musicians played fiddles and drums, and dancers spun in circles on packed earth and wooden planks.

Erik stood on a raised platform near the heart-tree and watched.

Weirstad was no longer an experiment.

Stone foundations supported timber halls. Broad cobblestone streets replaced muddy paths. Endless rows of clear plastic tunnels stretched beyond the Caldera walls in neat rows, catching the pale light even in the cold dusk, their interiors glowing with florescent vines that stored solar energy to illuminate the night. Granaries stood tall and full, guarded by both men and ledgers. Warehouses lined the docks, filled with furs, jewels, weapons, timber, and grain bound for White Harbor, Braavos, and cities even farther away.

Trading vessels arrived every month now that consisted of Manderly cogs and Braavosi merchantmen.

A group of children ran past Erik, laughing, one clutching a black painted wooden slate covered in carefully written letters. Their teacher followed, scolding them for running on festival night.

"They have examinations after the festivals," said Mara, stepping beside him. She had once been a wildling woman who knew no letters. Now she was one of teachers at Weirstad's school.

"They should be celebrating," Erik said.

"They will. After studying. Good day" she grumbled good naturedly then continued pursing her wayward students.

He watched the children having fun and for a moment allowed himself to feel something perilously close to satisfaction.

The schools had been his most time-consuming yet necessary revolution. Reading, writing, arithmetic, history, law, agriculture, and the foundations of engineering were taught to every child who could hold a charcoal stick. Most of them would go on to become literate military officer, sheriffs, craftsmen, traders, clerks, and artisans. Occasionally, a mind would appear that shone brighter than the rest. Those children were taken aside and taught more according to their inclination like administration, advanced mathematics and accounting, recordkeeping, science, runes, languages etc.

A powerful state required powerful minds, not just swords.

Outside the square, near the inner wall, another compound thrummed with quieter purpose. The Warg School.

As wargs were automatically conscripted into the Weirstad's military, the Warg school was effectively a military school that specialized in training the medieval equivalent of special forces and espionage agents. The first and second generation graduates now taught there, no longer students but disciplined men and women who had mastered warging and various aspects related to it. They wore simple green tunics bearing their sigil, an embroidered white tree. On their shoulder were their epaulets showing their military rank.

Animals moved with them like shadows: ravens perched on shoulders, wolves pacing at their heels, cats disappearing into cloaks, hawks circling overhead.

They were literate. They were trained in combat related fields. They were loyal as they were cherished and given respect for their services.

Children born with the gift were found young, trained gently but relentlessly. Control, ethics, secrecy, survival, navigation, coded writing. A raven could carry messages across continents. A cat in a lord's hall could hear whispers meant for no ears. A rat in the followers camp could follow armies unseen. A gull on a harbor mast could count ships and trace routes. A cavalry charge could be disrupted with a few wargs controlling enemies front horses. Levithan wargs served the navy not only for making their ships moving faster but also serving as an offensive and defensive option for their navy ensuring their ships were unmatched.

Others would have called them spies, scouts, assassins, naval assets.

Erik called them his watchers.

They had been seeded into major Harbor cities like White Harbor, Winterfell, Braavos, Pentos, Lys, Volantis, Dorne, Lannisport and Valyria which still existed. No one noticed a raven. Few questioned a stray cat.

As night deepened, fireworks cracked over the harbor, Erik had worked his biomancy magic and created some seeds that behaved like fireworks that the children believed to be magic. Osmund Manderly stood beside Erik, older now, broader in the shoulders, his youth replaced by something harder and more measured. He had made many trips to visit Weirstad and return to White Harbor. Now, he had come to the celebration as White Harbor's emissary. Alongside side him and visiting for the first time was a Stark from Winterfell

"You have done in five years what kings fail to do in lifetimes," Osmund said quietly.

"I had fewer enemies," Erik replied.

Osmund laughed. "You have more. They just do not know it yet."

They watched children dancing near the heart-tree, lanterns floating above them like fireflies.

"In White Harbor," Osmund continued, "the granaries are fuller than they have ever been. The plastic tunnels work. The seeds thrive. People are hopeful and they are multiplying like rabbits."

"Hope is the best thing you can give them," Erik said.

"Despair is easier."

"Yes. But hope builds empires."

Erik looked out over Weirstad. Ten thousand people. Thousands of children who would grow up not as raiders, but as civilized citizens. A literate population. A bureaucracy in its infancy. A trained intelligence network. Food security. Trade routes. Diplomatic recognition. A culture rooted in the Old Gods but structured like a state.

He had not built a tribe.

He had built a civilization. In five years.

'It's not just my powers and genius intellect that made all this happen' Erik thought 'we were extremely lucky to not have bigger problems but now we have gained the unwanted attention by this world's powers so things will have to change'

As the celebration reached its peak, Erik raised a cup and stepped forward.

"Weirstad began as a refuge," he said, his voice carrying over the crowd. "It is now a home. It will become a beacon. We will trade, we will learn, we will grow. No winter will break us. No lord will forget us. No gods will ignore us."

The crowd roared, a sound that would have been unimaginable beyond the Wall a decade earlier.

Children released lanterns into the sky, tiny lights rising into the darkness beyond the Wall. Erik watched them drift upward and thought of his watchers spread across Westeros and Essos, their eyes and ears in castles, markets, ships, and streets.

Five years was nothing.

But it had been enough to plant roots.

And once roots took hold, even kings struggled to uproot them.

--------

Three years earlier, Lotho had found an iron vein.

It was not in the forests around Weirstad, nor in the cold stony ridges near the Wall, but far to the northwest, in the hills that rose along the eastern bank of the Milkwater. Four hundred kilometers of wilderness separated the discovery from the city, a distance that would have broken most settlements beyond the Wall.

For Weirstad, it was an opportunity.

The vein was thick, dark, and rich. Lotho had known its value the moment he struck it with his pick and saw the dull red shimmer beneath the rock. Word had traveled fast, and Erik had acted faster.

Within weeks, a mining camp had become a permanent settlement.

They named it Ironhill.

The hill itself was a natural fortress, rising above the surrounding forests and marshland. From its crest, watchfires could be seen for leagues. The miners built wooden palisades around the dig site and the smelting yards, and watchtowers at the highest points. Wolves, raiders, and wandering clans avoided it. Those who did not were turned away or quietly absorbed into the workforce.

Lotho was placed in charge.

He had been a trader once, then a builder, then something closer to a governor. Ironhill was his domain, and he ruled it with pragmatic efficiency.

They dug deep into the hillside, carving galleries and shafts supported by timber frames. Water was diverted from nearby streams to power waterwheels, which in turn drove massive leather bellows. These fed the blast furnaces, towering clay-and-stone structures that roared day and night.

The furnaces ran hotter than anything the Free Folk had ever built.

The iron melted completely.

Liquid metal poured from the slag channels into molds, cooling into thick, brittle bars known as pig iron, heavy with carbon. It was crude, but it was wealth in solid form.

Every month, caravans of sledges and wagons carried pig iron south and east toward Weirstad. In the city's workshops, skilled smiths and metallurgists refined it, burning off excess carbon, folding and hammering the metal into workable steel. Tools, nails, ploughshares, knives, axes, and weapons began to flow back north and south.

Weirstad became a steel city.

Ironhill became its beating industrial heart.

1.png

The road between Weirstad and Ironhill was the hardest part.

Four hundred kilometers of forest and uneven terrain stood between Ironhill and Weirstad. Erik ordered the route cleared anyway.

Trees were felled, roots burned, soil leveled, and causeways built over wetlands. Small waystations sprang up along the route, first as camps, then as villages. What began as a supply line slowly turned into a corridor of settlement.

It would take years to complete fully, but already it had changed the land.

Merchants traveled it. Scouts patrolled it. Farmers followed it.

Civilization moved along roads.

Now, five years after Weirstad's founding and three years after Ironhill's discovery, Erik stood on the city walls and watched a convoy arrive.

Oxen strained under the weight of iron bars. Guards marched alongside. Warg-watchers circled overhead as ravens, mapping the forests for any sign of danger.

Lotho rode at the head of the caravan, dust-covered, smiling like a man who knew he was changing history.

Iron meant tools.

Tools meant agriculture.

Agriculture meant population.

Population meant power.

Erik understood that better than anyone.

Weirstad had begun as a refuge.

With Ironhill, it was becoming an industrial state.

Seeing yet another supply of iron from Ironhill made him recall what had happened almost two years ago at Ironhill. He recalled how he'd had to defend his iron supply from the Thenns

FLASHBACK

The smoke rose first.
Black coils curling from the Thenn camps at dawn, smearing the pale sky above Ironhill like a wound that refused to close.

Erik stood on the stone ramparts, hands resting on the cold granite, feeling the mountain beneath his palms. Ironhill was not just a mine or a fortress, it was the heart of Weirstad's iron. It was the the beating anvil on which their future was being forged. And now the Thenns had come to take it.

It had begun, as so many wars did, with a dispute over land.

The Thenns claimed the hills beyond their valley as ancestral territory, citing old songs, half-forgotten migrations, and the decrees of long-dead Magnars whose bones had turned to dust centuries before. In truth, the land lay far from their heartlands, beyond the ridges and forests they rarely crossed. For generations it had been wilderness—claimed in name, but never in deed. They hunted there at times, grazed herds in good seasons, but no Thenn village had ever taken root among those iron-streaked hills.

Weirstad had no such illusions. When their scouts found iron in the stone, they moved swiftly. Trees were felled, roads cut, and the town of Ironhill was raised around the mine with the quiet efficiency of people who understood permanence. Walls were built not of mud and timber, but of quarried stone. Smelters were raised. A keep crowned the central rise. What had once been empty hills became a beating industrial heart.

At first, the Thenns came to talk.

Their envoys spoke of shared land, of ancient rights, of old grievances. Erik listened, offered compromise like grazing rights, trade, access to their goods at a lowered cost. For a time, it seemed the dispute might be settled by words.

Then the Magnar learned of the scale of the iron.

Greed took him where tradition and caution had not. He demanded tribute: most of Weirstad's pig iron production, delivered annually, as the price for "permission" to remain on Thenn land. It was not negotiation. It was extortion, thinly veiled in ritual and history.

Erik refused. If he provided this much iron to them, chances were he and his people would be the first victim of the Thenns improved iron arnaments.

The talks ended not with insults, but with cold, polite finality. Both sides knew what would follow.

The Thenns marched.

They gathered their entire fighting strength, five thousand disciplined warriors, longbowmen and shielded infantry drilled to fight as an army rather than a raiding host. Giants answered their call as they were old allies and nearly fifty of them, with a dozen mammoths lumbering beside them, each beast a moving siege engine. They crossed the passes in force, banners flying, drums beating, their Magnar certain that Ironhill would fall in days.

They expected a frontier town.

Instead, they found a fortress.

In the months after the negotiations soured, Weirstad had quickly reinforced Ironhill. Additional walls had been raised, stores stockpiled, and the garrison tripled. Elk cavalry and woolly rhino riders had been camping nearby. Warg packs were already familiar with the terrain, their handlers drilled in silent coordination.

So when the Thenn host appeared on the valley floor and laid siege to Ironhill, they did not face a vulnerable mining settlement.

They faced a prepared enemy who had seen the war coming and had been waiting for it after making appropriate preparations.

Below the walls, the Thenn host stretched across the valley floor as five thousand warriors in disciplined ranks, bronze glinting on spearheads and sword edges, longbowmen already forming their lines. Unlike the scattered Free Folk raids of the past, this was an army. Shields locked. Banners raised. Drums beating in measured cadence.

And behind them stood the giants.

Fifty of them. Massive silhouettes against the morning fog, mammoths lumbering beside them, tusks wrapped in leather and iron bands, giant riders perched on their backs with crude towers lashed to the howdahs and entire tree trunk deployed as clubs. The ground trembled with every step they took.

Erik exhaled slowly.

"We hold," he said, voice calm, carrying across the wall to the gathered captains. "We break their rhythm, we seed chaos in thier ranks. We make them bleed for every yard."

He turned, cloak snapping in the wind, and looked down at his forces. Fewer than a third of the enemy with one thousand infantry lining the walls and inner terraces, five hundred elk cavalry archers waiting beyond the forested slopes, and a hundred woolly rhino riders stationed behind the eastern ridge. Hidden among the rocks and trees, the warg packs also awaited silent, hungry, and disciplined.

He had drilled them for this. For months. Ironhill was built not just to endure, but to kill.

The Thenn horns sounded.

The first assault came with arrows.

Thousands of shafts darkened the sky, their disciplined longbow volleys coming in rippling waves. Weirstad shields rose as one, overlapping in practiced formation. The arrows rattled and snapped, embedding into carbon fibre and leather shield, skittering off iron bands. A few found flesh, men cried out but the line held.

"Return fire," Erik ordered.

Weirstad archers answered, firing from murder slits and crenellations. Their arrows flew downward, steeper, faster. Thenn shields absorbed many, but men still fell, bronze helms useless against gravity and precision.

Then the giants advanced.

They moved with terrifying inevitability, mammoths trumpeting, the Thenn infantry forming around them in disciplined wedges. The giants carried massive logs and bronze-bound ladders, intent on breaking the gates and climbing the walls.

"Now," Erik murmured.

From the tree line to the north, the giant elk cavalry surged forward. Massive antlered beasts thundered through the snow-dusted ground, riders standing in their stirrups, bows already singing. They did not charge the main force. They circled.

They harried.

Arrows plunged into the flanks of the Thenn formation, punching through leather, slipping through gaps in bronze. Horses would have been cut down by pikes but the Irish elks were taller, faster, able to pivot and leap over low formations. The cavalry never lingered, never committed. It just rode in, fired, vanished into the woods.

The Thenns tried to pursue. That was their mistake.

From the eastern ridge, the ground shook again.

The woolly rhino cavalry charged.

Massive beasts with armored hides, their riders clad in thick fur and iron-studded leather, long spears braced. They hit the Thenn flank like a moving wall, scattering disciplined ranks that had never faced such creatures. Bronze spears bent. Shields shattered. Men were thrown aside like dolls.

The Thenn infantry fought back fiercely, forming hedgehog formations, stabbing at the rhinos' legs. A few beasts fell, roaring, riders crushed beneath their bulk. But every moment the Thenns held formation was a moment they were not advancing on the walls.

And Erik used that time.

On the walls, Weirstad engineers dropped weighted nets onto the giants, tangling their arms and legs. Ballistae fired massive bolts, iron-tipped, punching into mammoth hides. Boiling resin poured from above, coating ladders and siege towers in flame.

A mammoth screamed and collapsed, crushing a dozen Thenn warriors beneath it.

Then the wolves came.

Erik had not had the numbers to match the Thenn host in open battle. His infantry was too few, his cavalry precious, and every trained rider or spearman represented years of teaching, feeding, and discipline. Men were costly. Animals, even trained ones, were easier to replace.

So he had turned to the wilderness.

Over two dozen trained wargs had been sent out weeks before the Thenn army arrived, each with orders to do what only they could: dominate the packs that roamed the forests and hills around Ironhill. Wolves were plentiful in the far north, half-starved and aggressive in winter, and quick to follow any strong will that could promise blood and meat.

Through dreams and domination, fear and instinct, the wargs bent the packs to their will.

When the siege lines were being drawn and the Thenn engineers began assembling their ladders and rams, the forests began to move.

From the treeline poured wolves—lean, gray shapes flowing over the snow and scrub in silent, coordinated waves. Pack after pack joined them, answering calls they did not understand but could not resist. In the end there were more than three hundred, a living tide of fur and teeth and hunger.

The Thenns had faced wildlings, raiders, even giants in their wars. They had not faced this.

They did not howl. They did not charge in packs like wild beasts.

They moved like shadows.

Silent, low to the ground, slipping through brush and snow, guided by handlers who understood signals more than words. They bypassed infantry and went straight for commanders, horn-bearers, and anyone who looked like he was incharge.

A Thenn sergeant turned too late only to have a warg leap for his throat. Another older veteran was dragged down and torn apart.

Chaos spread.

The Thenns were disciplined, but discipline depends on command. Erik used that to sow chaos and eliminate their numerical advantage.

From the wall, he watched the battlefield shift like a living thing, Thenn wedges breaking apart, giants roaring in confusion, mammoths trampling their own infantry.

"Signal the second phase," he said.

The horns of Weirstad sounded that a low, deep call.

The gates of Ironhill opened.

Weirstad infantry poured out, not in a reckless charge, but in tight shield formations, pushing into the fractured Thenn lines. They struck where the rhinos had broken them, where elk archers had thinned them, where wargs had severed leadership.

Hit. Withdraw. Reform. Hit again.

The Thenns tried to rally, their warriors brave and stubborn, but every rally was met with arrows from unseen riders, every push countered by a rhino charge, every command undermined by shadows in the snow.

Erik watched as the Thenn banners fell, one by one. He watched them flee.

He let them go. He felt no triumph. Only the weight of necessity.

Ironhill would stand.

And the Thenns, for all their numbers, would remember this valley as a place where bronze met iron and iron did not break.

-----

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