[King Alfred’s Viking by Charles W. Whistler]@TWC D-Link book
King Alfred’s Viking

CHAPTER IV
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Now I would ask you to take the ships back into the river Exe and join us there." I would do that willingly, and thought that if the wind held fair after the gale ended, I might be there before he joined the king by land.

But I should have to wait for a shift to the eastward before sailing.
So Odda brought his men ashore, and marched on Wareham and thence after the Danes, not meaning to fight unless some advantage showed itself, for they were too many, but to keep them from harming the country.

And I waited for wind to take me westward.
Then the strange Norsemen left us.

They had gained much booty in the Danish ships, for they carried what had been won from the Saxons, and what plunder should be taken was to be their share in due for their services.

They were little loss, for they were masterless vikings who might have given trouble at any time if no plunder was to be had, and I was not sorry to see them sail away to join Rolf Ganger in France.
Now these men would have followed me readily, and so I should have been very powerful at sea, or on any shore where I cared to land.
But Odda had made me feel so much that I was one in his counsel, and a friend whom he valued and trusted, that I had made this warfare against the Danes my own quarrel, as it were in his company.


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