- After facing defeat on the river, Ragnar refuses to retreat, prompting him to change his methods of attacking Paris. Count Odo's plot against Charles and Rollo backfires. Ecbert now rules Mercia, which dissatisfies Kwenthrith.
- After being defeated by Rollo, Ragnar retreats and his leadership is questioned by Harold to Lagherta. However he stops the fleet and decides to lift the ships over a cliff to bypass the French forts by land and then return to the river to attack Paris. But his true intention is to kill Rollo and he asks Yidu for more drugs. They have an argument and Yidu threatens to expose his secret about the settlement in Wessex and he drowns her. In Paris, Count Odo tells Charles hat Rollo is not trustworthy and then he meets Therese. She asks to chain him and then Roland kills Odo. Rollo is promoted by Emperor Charles to Iron Hand of Frankia. Ecbert informs Kwenthrith that he is now the new King of Mercia and she decides to stab him during the night. Will she succeed?—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Ragnar needs days of 'recuperation' and Yidu's opiate 'medicine' to recover from the blow Rollo's masterly Seine defense administered the Viking fleet, which he ordered to retreat when Bjorn urged to act. Then Ragnar instructs Floki to engineer a matching surprise: at high cliffs, the drakars are hoisted onto the cliffs and dragged over land past the Frankish forts and river chain, regaining the admiration of Harald and Halfdan. Having dispatched his offspring on pilgrimage to Rome, king Ecbert meets with the Mercian prince W. and strikes a historical deal: the 'regency council' is disposed of, forced to sign over the crown, not back to mad Kwenthrith but merged into the kingdom of Wessex, now utterly dominant in England. In Paris, count Odo pleads for the emperor to dispose of 'superfluous, unreliable' Rollo, who warns the Ragnar threat is far from over. Odo is lured by his SM mistress Therese into a trap, getting whipped and killed by his ambitious rival, Roland. In Kattegat, adulterous queen Anslaug gets insanely jealous with wandering bard-lover Harbard, who 'helps' sexually frustrated Viking girls even simultaneously.—KGF Vissers
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