alcove.
âI havenât seen anything like him either,â the old man said. âHe wasnât at all friendly when he arrivedâtried to peck out my eyesâbut I soon put him straight with a fear-spell. We have an uneasy truce now. He needs my help, and Iâll only give it if he behaves.â
âIâd like to learn a fear-spell,â said Thorgil, spearing a morsel of stew meat with her knife.
âI wouldnât dream of teaching it to you,â the Bard said. âYouâd terrorize the village every time you got into a snit.â
The albatross clacked his beak. Jack held out a chunk of meat at armâs length, and the bird seized it before retreating back into the shadows.
âHe trusts you,â the old man said approvingly. âThatâs very interesting. Your powers have grown since you lost your staff.â
Jack concentrated on his food. It still upset him to think about the staff. Heâd cut it from a branch of Yggdrassil. It had been a true bardâs staff, except that heâd had no time to learn its powers. Heâd lain it across the barrier between life and Unlife to lift a curse from Din Guardi. Now it was gone, ashes on the wind.
âThat deed opened a door into the unseen world for you,â the Bard said, correctly guessing what was on Jackâs mind. âSacrifice, done rightly, is stronger than magic.â
âNorthmen sacrifice thralls,â Thorgil said. âI never saw it do
them
any good.â
âIâm not talking about the slaughter of hapless slaves. Iâm speaking of a man who lays down his life so that others may live, or a woman who starves herself to keep food in her childrenâs mouths.â
âYou sound like one of those mewling Christians,â sneered the shield maiden. Jack raised his hand to caution silence. The Bard was slow to anger, but you didnât want to push him too far.
âI wouldnât dismiss Christians so readily, Thorgil Small-Brain,â the old man said. âThey may seem weak, and some of them are certainly rogues, but they have prevailed in situations that would slow the blood of the bravest hero.â
âTheyâre only fit to pull dung carts,â Thorgil said carelessly. âThe future belongs to the strong.â
âThat belief is why Northmen are going to disappear.â
âDisappear!â Thorgil sprang to her feet. âMy people will never be defeated! Our fame will never die!â
For an instant the hearth flames blazed and the shadow behind the Bard loomed. Thorgil sank to the floor, her eyes wide and frightened. The albatross moaned, and Jack was suddenly clammy with sweat. Then the flames subsided. The Bard was a kindly old man again, normal-size and a bit frail.
âGood fear-spell,â murmured Jack.
âThank you,â said the old man. âI learned that one from a sea hag in the Orkney Islands.â
The shield maiden struggled to a sitting position with as much grace as she could manage. Her eyes shot daggers at the Bard.
He continued, ignoring her. âMany strange things have been happening: the Wild Hunt, the loss of Gog and Magog, the arrival of Seafarer, that cry from the sea.â
âYou heard it too, sir?â Jack said.
âI could hardly miss it. I was on the cliff watching waves,â the Bard said. âI was rather hoping to find another albatross. The cry came from directly below, and I was about to climb down to investigate when I saw a creature poke its head out of the water. It was as long as a Northman ship with a huge tail curled beneath it.â
âA sea serpent?â cried Jack.
âA much rarer being. It was a Pictish beast.â
âNow I know weâre in for bad luck,â Jack said.
âFor shame,â the old man scolded. âNot everything Pictish is bad. At any rate, this beast seemed drawn to whatever screamed. It made straight for shore, and I ran for my
Nikita Storm, Bessie Hucow, Mystique Vixen