Biorn saw little of the battle, wedged in the heart of the Shield-ring.He heard the shouts of the enemy, and the clangour of blows, and the sharp intake of breath, but chiefly he heard the beating of his own heart.The ring swayed and moved as it gave before the onset or pressed to an attack of its own, and Biorn found himself stumbling over the dead."I am Biorn, and my father is King," he repeated to himself, the spell he had so often used when on the fells or the firths he had met fear.
Night came and a young moon, and still the fight continued.But the Shield-ring was growing ragged, for the men of Hightown were fighting one to eight, and these are odds that cannot last.Sometimes it would waver, and an enemy would slip inside, and before he sank dead would have sorely wounded one of Ironbeard's company.
And now Biorn could see his father, larger than human, it seemed, in the dim light, swinging his sword Tyrfing, and crooning to himself as he laid low his antagonists.At the sight a madness rose in the boy's heart.Behind in the sky clouds were banking, dark clouds like horses, with one ahead white and moontipped, the very riders he had watched with Leif from the firth shore.The Walkyries were come for the chosen, and he would fain be one of them.All fear had gone from him.His passion was to be by his father's side and strike his small blow, beside those mighty ones which Thor could not have bettered.
But even as he was thus uplifted the end came.Thorwald Thorwaldson tottered and went down, for a hurled axe had cleft him between helm and byrnie.With him fell the last hope of Hightown and the famished clan under Sunfell.The Shield-ring was no more.Biorn found himself swept back as the press of numbers overbore the little knot of sorely wounded men.Someone caught him by the arm and snatched him from the mellay into the cover of a thicket.He saw dimly that it was Leif.