Search This Blog

Monday, December 18, 2023

King Hakon VII, of Norway - The First Day

            King Hakon, the seventh of his name, was alone in his council chamber.

He was busy examining maps of his holdings in Europe and America, the fine details their topography as they had been etched in bass relief and positioned on modular tables that he could configure at will.

The king ran his fingers lightly over their surfaces, brushing the contours of the arctic circle, from Norway to Greenland and Iceland, from the Canadian Rockies to Alaska and the Aleutian Islands.

His holdings were vast, greater than any king in the history of the Scandinavian people, and he knew that if he wanted to keep them for his heirs, if he was to establish a dynasty that would endure, there was much work to do…and it fell to him to see it done.

Hakon’s people had been migrating into Alaska, which he had purchased from the Russians in exchange for military support for the Nicholas the Second, the last Romanoff Czar, in his war with the Bolsheviks.

The Norwegians and the Russians, the Vikings and the Rus, were natural allies, and together they had squeezed Finland and Sweden, securing stability and independence for themselves even while Hakon fomented an age of Norwegian ascendancy that was fueled by Alaskan Gold.

At the end of the Great War, with the help Hakon and Nicholas, the German Kaiser had taken possession of Canada; now Germans and Austrians, Poles and Czechs were flooding into Hudson Bay and settling the Canadian interior.

Seizing control of the Canadian provinces had been the Kaisers aim from the outset of the war in France, and at the end of it, when the English and French had finally sued for peace, the Kaiser demanded their holdings in the great northern frontier in exchange for a relative degree of autonomy in the government of their respective nations.

Hakon was not keen on these developments, but he had seen them coming for years, and he advocated policies that allowed his own people to push east into Canada, from Alaska to Winnipeg, across a vast landscape that had been largely ignored by Europeans.

Tall mountains, covered in glaciers, marked the border of his domain; but the Canadian interior was wide open and impossible to police or defend by ordinary means, and the Norwegians were eager to control as much of it as they could, before any conflict arose with Kaiser Wilhem the Second, who had seized the mantle of the Hapsburg monarchy, and now, though a Lutheran, was the titular head of the Holy Roman Empire, along with all of their vassal states, which now included Great Britan and France.

Today, Hakon had received word from Winnipeg concerning an old comrade of his from the war for independence he had waged against Seden in his youth. The message concerned his friend Bjorn Elmquist, who had been smuggled across the border of the United States, from Minnesota into Canada, and he was in desperate condition.

Bjorn had received a blow to the head with an axe…delivered by his wife. It should have killed him, but it didn’t…yet the attending physician wrote that it almost certainly would, given time; meanwhile his friend was paralyzed and had lost the ability to speak.

The message included the request that Hakon give his friend succor; the party making the request believed that Bjorn would recover, even though the physician indicated that the man would remain in a permanent vegetative state...at best.

Hakon believed that Bjorn’s associates, the Magnusson sisters and Karl Thorrson, whom he knew and considered to be degenerates, though dangerous people…were merely grifting; Thorrson had also fought in the wars, alongside Hakon and Bjorn, and had been a capable soldier, but he neither liked nor trusted him the giant-man.

Nevertheless, he wrote an order to the doctor, instructing him to provide for Bjorn in Winnipeg until his death from natural causes. Bjorn had sacrificed much for me during the war and he deserves to be taken care of, the King thought. If Thorrson is grifting, I will not begrudge him taking something for himself.

Hakon stared intently at the map of Minnesota and the border it shared with the Lakota Confederacy along the Minnesota and Red Rivers.

He stared so intently at the base relief he thought he could see his canal being dug between the two rivers, anticipating the trade that would be flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico to Hudson Bay, into the great cities he intended to build throughout the tundra, it was then that it first occurred to him that the Magnusson sister’s might be of some use along the way. 

Buy Now on Amazon

https://www.amazon.com/Sid-Gateaux/e/B08334SCMW/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1?author-follow=B08334SCMW&&fbclid=IwAR06PNhV-WiaCEVRR9wxRfysASwqR4-vGyqdYy85awrgwh9pVCFG96HtlaQ