Veln ap Mawr listened to the speech from the bearded warlord from the ranks behind, enchained by his powerful voice. Not even when a rebellious voice among the saved challenged it did it waver. Hidden behind the broader backs of the older men, Veln stood invisible. His short and scrawny frame, clotted ashen hair and skin sickly from malnourishment did not separate him from the rest, but it was the azure blue eyes that were full of life and clarity, and yet not able to comprehend what had happened. During the fight, Veln had shivered and pushed himself against the metal bars as cries around him drowned into scream and gurgle of death. He breathed their pain and washed into their suffering, and was stung by the anger of betrayal, and Veln noticed the ocean waves of emotion had hit him harder than usual. For a boy that had lost his family in a single moment of bloodshed by the wilder roads, it was still unnatural and very unfortunate that the death of others had such a profound effect on him. He finally stepped forward as the man on the horse commanded his people to start freeing them of the ropes that cut deep into their wrists. Most of the men push shoulder and elbow to get aligned with the beautiful Norse woman, so Veln felt he should know his place and steer aside. Around him there were soft words of gratitude, women sobbed and able men made promises that were to be confirmed later. Veln felt someone shove him from behind to keep pace and not lose himself in the moment. Finally, his time had come and he winced when he stood in front of a short but powerfully built man with a hairy face chiseled of savagery and in a bulky coat of mail that shone under the light that made it through the high trees. The man was silent and with the weary expression of toil on his face, save for a few nods to the people who eagerly expressed their gratitude. Veln finally met eye to eye with his liberator and was lost to words. The man held a seax like it were a hunting knife, turned downwards to cut through rope. His hands were as thick as hooves, and coated with a webbed specks of dry blood. In a moment, Veln's cold fingers that had almost lost sense of touch from the tight grip of ropes met with the hard skin of the man's hands. As the metal cut into rope-like it were gushing arteries of human flesh, so pain speared like blinding white lightning through Veln's chest and impaled into his head, stealing of him all sense of sight and sound and smell. The ice and snow are bitter cold against Veln's skin. He's alone in the woods, but up ahead he can hear the grunting snorts of a great creature as it labours and struggles. The light draws Veln inexorably on, and he sees a vast black boar covered in thick bristles of fur. The monstrous beast has been led into the drifts and stranded to die. Out of the shadows between the trees on the far side of the giant pig steps a man bearing a spear. It is Veln's liberator and the thickset man plunges the weapon into the side of the boar, spilling bright red blood onto the snow. Veln winced like an old wound has reopened inside him and instinct drew him away from the blade. The large armored man raised his eyes off the rope to looked at him, unsure if he had cut into the boy's flesh. Veln suddenly felt ashamed of himself drawing so much attention to himself. He rubbed his free hands and stumbled back. "Yr ysbryd baedd mawr." Veln spoke away, moved by the vision and still impaled by an invisible phantom of that spear. He thought he whispered to himself only, but he did not. Like many times before, Veln had no idea where the words came from. "Rydych chi'n ei ladd dro ar ôl tro, ond mae bob amser yn dod yn ôl." "The great boar spirit." // "You slay it again and again, but it always comes back."