Skafloc’s knuckles stood white on his sword haft. And yet, he could not help thinking at the back of his mind, was this worse than what Imric had done to the troll-woman, and to how many others? Was Freda-was the White Christ of whom she had told a little-not right in saying that wrongs only led to more wrongs and thus at last to Ragnarok; that the time was overpast when pride and vengefulness give way to love and forgiveness, which were not unmanly but in truth the hardest things a man could undertake?
Yet Imric had fostered him, and Alfheim was his land, . and what was the reason he must not know of his human birth-? He dug the tip of the sax fiercely into the wall.
A noise drifted faintly down, shouting of voice and clatter of feet. “An alarm,” breathed Leea.
“Belike they found the guard I had to kill.” Skafloc dug harder. The cement scraped slowly from the stone.
“Were you seen entering?” she demanded.
“I may have been glimpsed in eagle shape.” Skafloc’s tool snapped. He cursed and dug on with the broken blade.
“Valgard is shrewd enough, if he hears about that eagle, to think this may be no ordinary killing. If he sends men to ransack the castle, and they find us-Hurry!”
The racket above beat on their ears, less loud than the scrape of metal on stone or an ages-old dripping of water.
Skafloc got the blade into a crack and heaved. Once-twice-thrice, and the stone crashed out!
He reached into the niche beyond. His hands shook as he brought forth the sword.
Earth clung damp to the halves of the broad blade. It had been two-edged, and so huge and heavy that only the strongest of men could readily wield it. However long buried, it had not rusted, nor had the edges lost their razor sharpness. Guard, haft, and pommel shone golden, with a coiling dragon shape engraved so that they made its tail, body, and head; the bright rivets were like a hoard on which it lay. Runes that Skafloc could not read went down the dark blade. He had the feeling that the mightiest of these were hidden on the tang.
“The weapon of the gods.” He held it with awe. “The hope of Alfheim—”
“Hope?” Leea stepped back, hands raised as if to fend something off. “I wonder! Now that we have the thing, I wonder.”
“What mean you?”
“Can you not sense it? The power and hunger locked in that steel, held by those unknown runes. The sword may be from the gods, but it is not of them. There is a curse on it, Skafloc. It will bring the bane of all within its reach.” She shivered with a cold not that of the dungeon. “I think ... Skafloc, I think it were best if you walled that sword up again.”
“What other hope have we?” He wrapped the pieces in his cloak and took the bundle under one arm. “Let us flee.”
Unwillingly, Leea led him to a stair. “This will be tricky,” she said. “We can scarce avoid being seen. Let me speak for both of us.”
“No, that would be dangerous for you afterwards, unless you go off with me.”
She swung around, her face alight. “You care about me?
“Why, of course, as about the whole of Alfheim.”
“And ... Freda?”
“For her I care more than for the whole rest of the world, gods and men and Faerie together. I love her.”
Leea turned forward again. Her voice fell colourless: “I will be able to save myself. I can always tell Valgard you forced or tricked me.”
They came out on the first floor. It was a bustle of scuttling guards, uproar and confusion. “Hold!” bawled a troll when he saw them.
Leea’s countenance flared like fire-gleam off ice. “Would you halt the earl?” she asked.
“Pardon-your pardon, lord,” stammered the troll. “ ’Twas only that-I saw you but a moment ago, lord—”
They went out into the courtyard. Every nerve in Skafloc shrieked that he should run, every muscle was knotted in expectancy of the cry that would mean he was found out. Run, run! He shook with the task of walking slowly.
Few trolls were outside. The first white streaks of the hated dawn were in the east. It was very cold.
Leea stopped at the west gate and signed that it should be opened. She looked into Skafloc’s eyes with a withdrawn blind gaze.
“From here you must make your own way,” she said softly. “Know you what to do?”
“Somehow,” he answered, “I must find the giant Bolverk and make him bring it form anew for me.”
“Bolverk-evil-worker-his very name is a warning. I have begun to guess what sword this is and why no dwarf would dare reforge it.” Leea shook her head. “I know that stubborn set to your jaw, Skafloc. Not all the hosts of hell shall stop you—only death, or the loss of your will to fight. But what of your dear Freda on this quest?” She sneered the last words.
“She will come along, though I will try to persuade her to shelter.” Skafloc smiled in pride and love. The dim dawn-light touched his hair with frosty gold. “We are not to be parted.”
“No-o-o. However, as to finding the giant, who can tell you the way?”
Skafloc’s face bleakened. “It is not a good thing to do,” he said, “but I can raise a dead man. The dead know many things, and Imric taught me the charms to wring speech from diem.”
“Yet it is a desperate deed, for the dead hate that breaking of their timeless sleep, and wreak vengeance for it. Can you stand against a ghost?”
“I must try. I think my magic will be too strong for it to strike at me.”
“Perhaps not at you, but—” Leea paused before going on slyly: “That would not be as terrible a revenge anyway as what it could work through-say-Freda.”
She watched the blood drain from his cheeks and lips. Her own went whiter. “Do you care for the girl that much?” she whispered.
“Aye. More,” he said thickly. “You are right, Leea. I cannot risk it. Better Alfheim should fall than-than—”
“No, wait! I was going to give you a plan. But I would ask you one thing first.”
“Hurry, Leea, hurry!”
“Only one thing. If Freda should leave you—no, no, do not stop to tell me she won’t, I merely ask-if she should, what would you do?”
“I know not. I cannot dream of that.”
“Perhaps-win the war and come back here? Become elf again?”
“Belike. I know not. Hurry, Leea!”
She smiled her cat-smile. Her eyes rested dreamy upon him. “I was simply going to say this,” she told him, “that instead of raising just any dead man, call on those who would be glad to help you and whose own revenge you would be working. Has not Freda a whole family, slain by Valgard? Raise them, Skafloc!”
For a moment he stood moveless. Then he dropped the sword-bundle, swept Leea into his arms, and kissed her with numbing power. Grabbing anew the burden, he sprang through the gate and rushed into the forest.
Leea stared after him, fingers on her tingling lips. If she was right about what sword that was, the same thing was about to happen that had happened aforetime. She began to laugh.
Valgard learned that his likeness had been seen within the castle. His leman, looking dazed and atremble, said forlornly that, something had cast a spell on her while she slept, so that she remembered naught. But there were tracks in the snow, and the troll hounds could follow dimmer trails than this.
At sunset, the earl led his warriors on horseback in pursuit.
Freda stood in her thicket, staring through the bare moon-ghostly woods towards Elfheugh.
She was cold on this second night of her waiting, so cold that it had long since passed feeling and become like a part of herself. She had huddled in the shelter among the horses, but they were cool and elfly, not the warm sweet-smelling beasts of home. Strangely, it was the thought of Orm’s horses that brought her loneliness back to her. She felt as if she were the last living creature in a world of nothing but moonlight and snow.
She dared not weep. Skafloc, Skafloc! Lived he yet?
A rising wind blew clouds ever thicker across the sky, so that the moon seemed to flee great black dragons which swallowed it and spewed it briefly back out. The wind wailed and roared around her, whipping her garb, sinking teeth into her flesh. Hoo, hoo, it sang, blowing a sudden sheet of snowdrift before it, white under the moon, hoo, halloo, hunting you!