Now Asmund spoke from where he stood with his face in shadow, and sorrow was in his voice:
Horror came on Freda. She could not speak, she crept close to Skafloc and they stood facing the sad wise eyes of , Asmund. He said slowly while the fires flamed white around his dark shape:
The howe closed with a shattering groan. The flames sank and the moon gleamed wanly forth.
Freda moved away as if Skafloc were become a troll. Like a blind man, he stumbled towards her. A dry little sob rattled in her throat. She turned and fled from him.
“Mother,” she whispered. “Mother.”
But the howe was bare under the moon. Nor did men ever see Ailfrida again.
Daybreak stole over the sea. The sky was low and heavy, clouds hanging as if frozen above an empty white land. A few snowflakes drifted down.
Freda sat on the barrow and stared before her. She was not weeping. She wondered if she could.
Skafloc returned from sheltering the horses in a thicket. He lowered himself down beside her. His face and voice were dull as the dawn: “I love you, Freda.”
She said no word. After a while he went on: “I cannot do other than love you. What matters the chance which made us of the same blood? It means naught. I know of folk, human folk, who commonly made such marriages. Freda, come with me, forget the cursed law—”
“It is God’s law,” she said with no more tone than he. “I cannot knowingly break it. My sins are too thick already.”
“I say that a god who would come between two who have been to each other what we have been, is not one I would heed. If he dared come near me, I would send him home howling.”
“Aye—a heathen you are!” she flared. “Fosterling of soulless elves, for whom you would rouse the very dead to new anguish.” A faint colour tinged her. “Well, go back to your elves! Go back to Leea!”
He stood up when she did. He tried to take her hands, but she wrenched them free. His wide shoulders sagged.
“No hope?” he asked.
“None.” She started off. “I will seek a neighbour garth. It may be I can atone for what I did.” Suddenly she swung around to face him. “Come with me, Skafloc! Come, forget your heathendom, be christened and make your peace with God.”
He shook his head. “Not with that god.”
“But ... I love you, Skafloc, I love you too much to wish your soul anywhere than in Heaven.”
“If you love me,” he said mutedly, “stay with me. I will lay no hand on you save as-as a brother. But stay with me.”
“No,” she said. “Goodbye.”
She ran.
He followed. The snow crunched beneath their feet. When he passed and stopped in front of her, making her stop too, she saw that his lips were drawn back as if a knife were being turned within him.
“Will you not even kiss me farewell, Freda?” he asked.
“No.” He could barely hear her, and she looked away from him. “I dare not.”
Anew she fled. He stood watching her go. The light struck coppery sparks from her hair, the only colour in this grey and white world. She rounded a dump of trees and was lost to sight. He walked slowly the other way, out of the empty garth.
XXI
Within the next few days, that long cruel winter began to die. And one evening at sunset Gulban Glas Mac Grid stood atop a hill and on the south wind caught the first super-naturally faint breath of spring.
He leaned on his spear and gazed across the twilit snow that sloped down to the sea. An ember of sunset smouldered in the west. Darkness and stars rose out of the east, and thence too he saw a fisher boat coming. It was a plain mortal craft, bought or stolen from some Englishman, and he at the steering oar was flesh—and-blood human. Yet a strangeness brooded over him, and his sea-stained garments were of elven cut.
As he grounded his keel and sprang ashore, Gulban recognized him. The Irish Sidhe held mostly aloof from the rest of Faerie, but they had had traffic with Alfheim in past years and Gulban remembered the merry youth Skafloc who had been with Imric. But he had become lean and grim, more even than the fortunes of his people might warrant.
Skafloc walked up the hill toward the tall warrior-chief etched black against a sky of red and greenish-blue. Nearing, he saw it was Gulban Glas, one of the five guardians of Ulster, and hailed him.
The chief returned grave greetings, bending his golden-helmed head till the long black locks covered his cheekbones. He could not keep from shrinking a little away as he sensed the wickedness asleep in a wolfskin bundle on Skafloc’s back.
“I was told to await you,” he said.
Skafloc regarded him with weary surprise. “Have the Sidhe that many ears?” he asked.
“No,” said Gulban, “but they can tell when something of portent is nigh—and what could it concern this time save the war between elves and trolls? So we looked for an elf to come with strange-tidings, and I suppose you are that one.”
“Elf-yes!” Skafloc spat. The lines were deep in his face and his eyes were bloodshot; nor was his carelessness about the state of his garb usual in Alfheim, however desperate the times.
“Come,” said Gulban. “Lugh of the Long Hand must think this a great matter, for he has called all the Tuatha De Danaan to council in the cave of Cruachan, and the lords of other people of the Sidhe as well. But you are tired and hungry. First must you come to my house.”
“No,” said the man with a bluntness equally strange to elves. “This cannot wait, nor do I want more rest and food than I need to keep going. Take me to the council.”
The chieftain shrugged and turned away, his night-blue mantle swirling about him. He whistled, and two of the lovely light-footed horses of the Sidhe came galloping up. They snorted and shied from Skafloc.
“They like not your burden,” said Gulban.
“Nor do I,” answered Skafloc shortly. He caught a silky mane and swung into the saddle. “Now swiftly!”
Away they went, almost as fast as elf steeds, soaring over hills and dales, fields and forests, loughs and frozen rivers. In the dusk Skafloc saw some other of the Sidhe glimpse-wise: a flashing-mailed horseman with a spear of bright terror, a gnarly leprechaun at the door of his burrow, a strangely beak-like face on a gaunt cloak-wrapped man who had grey feathers for hair, a flitting shadow and a faint skirl of pipes in secret groves. The wintry air had a little mist in it, aglimmer above crusted snow. Night gathered softly. Stars blinked forth, bright as Freda’s eyes-No! Skafloc hauled his mind from such thoughts.
Erelong the riders were at the Cave of Cruachan. Four watchmen outside touched swords to brows in salutation. They took the curvetting horses, and Gulban led Skafloc inside.
Sea-green light filled the vast and rugged vaulting of the cave. Flashing stalactites hung from the roof, and shields on the walls gave back the clear glow of tapers. Though there was no fire, it was warm here, with a ghost of Ireland’s peatsmoke odour. Rushes had been spread. The soft rustle of them beneath his feet was all the sound Skafloc heard as he walked to the council table.
At its foot were the leaders of the people of Lupra, small and strong and roughly clad: Udan Mac Audain, king of the leprechauns, and Beg Mac Beg his tanist; Glomhar O’Glomrach, mighty of girth and muscled arm; the chiefs Conan Mac Rihid, Gaerku Mac Gaird, Mether Mac Mintan, and Esirt Mac Beg, clad in hides and raw gold. With such folk a mortal could feel at home.