hungry,’ I said. ‘I will watch her if you fetch food.’
Martin scrambled to his feet, wincing. I could almost feel the throb of that wounded finger, which he should have had cauterised, lest it fester and the rot spread so that his hand or even arm might need to come off. I told him so and he paled, whether at the idea of losing the limbs or having it seared with a hot iron, I did not know. Both, probably.
The woman stirred on the pallet of soft rushes and cloth, spoke again in that infuriating speech, so near to something I could understand, yet still foolishness. Her eyes opened; she saw me, stared, said nothing.
‘How do you feel?’ I asked. Nothing.
‘I am Orm,’ I said slowly and patiently, as to a child. ‘Orm,’ I added, patting my chest. ‘You?’ And I indicated her.
Her mouth moved, but nothing came. After all that babble, I thought wryly, now there is no sound at all.
Martin reappeared with two bowls of what smelled like meat stew. There was bread, fire-dried and with most of the mould cut off, and his arms were full of leather cups and a matching bottle.
The woman saw him and thrashed wildly, backing away. I held her, made soothing noises, but her wild eyes were fixed on him and she bucked and kicked until, exhausted, she couldn’t move.
‘Leave the food and go,’ I said, ‘otherwise she will be like this and no help to herself. Or Einar.’
He blanched at that name. ‘I did nothing to her,’ he bleated. But he left my bowl and cup and went.
I fed her small portions of the meat stew, which she sucked greedily, but seemed too weak to make much of. But when I looked, a fair bit of it had gone down her neck.
‘Hild,’ she said, suddenly, as I wiped gravy as gently as I could from lips whose fullness, I realised, had a lot to do with being swollen and split.
‘Hild,’ I repeated and grinned, pleased at this progress. She almost smiled, but her lips cracked open and oozed blood and she winced. Then, abruptly, she stiffened.
‘Dark,’ she said, staring at me, though I realised she couldn’t see me at all. ‘Dark. Alone. Dark. In the dark …’
Her eyes rolled up to the whites and she was gone, back into the babble. But I had understood her, saw now that she spoke some broad dialect of which I could understand one word in four. It was some form of Finn, which I had known because of Sigurd, Gudleif’s other fostri, who had come from that land.
A tear squeezed, fat and quivering, from under one eyelid and rolled down her neck. When Illugi Godi came with salves he had made for the bruises and welts, I told him what had happened and he sat back on his heels and considered, pursing his lips. A louse moved in his beard and he plucked it absently and crushed it, still thinking.
‘Well, at least Einar will have some more of this puzzle, but whether it solves anything is harder to tell,’ he mused. ‘At least he may be more pleased with you, boy.’
‘Not I with him,’ I responded and he nodded sadly.
‘Aye, he is in the wrong. Eyvind deserved better and to break an oath is a bad thing. I think he knows it, too.’
‘Perhaps the message from Odin’s raven was meant for him then,’ I offered and Illugi looked at me cautiously.
‘You have too many years for one so young,’ he muttered tersely and left, leaving the salves behind.
That night I dreamed of a white bear I couldn’t seem to avoid, one with black eyes who chased me round a wind-lashed room full of spars and sails and finally landed on my chest, a great weight, bearing down …
I woke with something warm and heavy on my body, the hut lit only by the remaining embers of the fire. I tried to sit up but a hand shot out, long and white and strong enough to shove hard on my breastbone and force me back on to the bed.
Her hair was hanging down in mad tangles, her cheekbones flaring in the red light, her eyes clear and black – black as Einar’s own, I noted. There were shadows under them and harsh lines carving the sides of that slapped-red mouth. The strong hand which fastened me to the bed had stark blue veins, proud on the pale skin.
Mesmerised, I watched her sway above me, lean down, stare into my eyes.
‘Orm,’ she said and I could not move. ‘I know what you seek. I know where the forge is. I went there, but was too big to get in, too afraid. The other … the Christ priest’s hound caught me. But I must go back. Take me back. I have to find a way to the dark … to the dark place where she is.’
And she was gone, fallen forward on to me, with no more weight than a husk and for all that it was a thump, it drove no breath out of me – just the opposite. I found myself holding her, caging her as her head lay on my chest, with the Thor hammer/cross biting into her cheek.
And I fell asleep like that, holding her – though, in the morning, she lay asleep in her own pallet and I wondered if I had dreamed it, but she woke and smiled at me and I saw that she was scarce older than I was.
And then she talked.
After I had fetched her gruel and water, I went to Einar and found him cross-legged under an awning, fixing the boss of his shield back on. Men were busy with tasks; I saw Hring, out in the faering, trying for fish at the mouth of the estuary.
I sat down opposite Einar and waited, Eventually, he deigned to look up at me, taking some rivet nails from his lips under the black waterfall of his hair.
‘The woman is called Hild,’ I told him. ‘She is a Finn and her village is two days up the coast from here. Her father was called Regin and his father before him and so on back into the dim. Every smith was called Regin and the village name is Koksalmi.’
The black eyes fixed mine. ‘How can you talk to her?’
‘One of Gudleif’s other fostris was a Finn. I learned enough from him.’
Einar stroked his moustaches and looked towards the hut. ‘What makes this Finn woman so special?’
‘She is revered because she has the blood of the old smiths,’ I went on. ‘There is no smith there now and has not been for many years. The last one made the sword for Atil, she says, and no one but her knows the way into the forge now. All those with the blood seem to know it, but of this part I am unclear. She, too, I think. It does not seem to be a secret passed on, just something that … is.’
‘Why is the forge important? Why is she?’
I nodded, having anticipated that. ‘The monk found out that this magic Christ spear he sought had been taken there long ago and sent Vigfus to see if it was still hidden there and, if so, get it. When Vigfus failed, he tried to seize Hild, seeing she was so esteemed by the villagers and hoping they would hand it over in return for her life. She fled, to the forge, I am thinking …’ I stopped, for here her tale had splintered into fragments.
‘And?’
I shrugged. ‘Something happened there. Something that drove her into the clutch of Vigfus – but something that haunts her dreams still.’
‘A fetch?’ demanded Einar.
I nodded. The restless spirit of the dead, the fetch, sometimes invaded other bodies, or walked around in their old shape until some strange design of their own had been accomplished. Everyone knew it.
‘She says she must get back to the forge. I don’t know why, but it seems if she does, she will know where the Atil sword now lies. And the hoard with it.’
Einar stroked his moustaches. He had, I noticed, shaved his cheeks and his hair was washed and nit-combed clean. I felt my own filth more as a result.
‘Interesting,’ he mused. ‘Vigfus is far behind and heading in the wrong direction, towards the god stone that is no use to him. Starkad knows only this village by name and seeks a Christ ikon that no longer exists