By dawn, the barbarians appeared on the ridgeline. They were not the hulking, horn-helmed savages of minstrels’ tales. These were lean, weathered men and women in patchwork furs and rust-scabbed chainmail, their faces painted with ash and woad. They moved like a river of knives—silent, efficient, hungry. Their chieftain, a one-eyed woman named Skadi, rode a shaggy pony and carried a broken sword she called Bone-Father .
Aldric tried to negotiate. He walked out with a sack of silver and a salted ham. Skadi laughed—a dry, barking sound. “Silver is for merchants,” she said. “We are hunger.” She pointed her broken sword at the grain silos, the smokehouse, the blacksmith’s anvil. “These we take. The rest we burn. You have one hour to leave the old, the sick, and the stubborn. The young and the strong may run. We will not chase. We do not need slaves. We need space .” a village targeted by barbarians