EXCERPTS FROM THE
RHYMER AND
THE RAVENS,
the first volume of Nordic-Celtic historical
fantasy
trilogy by Jodie Forrest
Tomas would sometimes consider, in later years, whether there were any chance that his Fate might have been different. Yet only upon occasions of the greatest rarity would he so wonder, when gripped by a black and somber mood, perhaps, or perhaps when drifting through the gates that link wakefulness to sleep--or Elfland to other realms. For Tomas had grown to understand, far better than most mortals, that to questions about Fate there are no true answers. There are only, sometimes, reasons.
PROLOGUE: TOMAS AND SIGRUN
In the kingdom of Vestfold, in what would become southern Norway, early in the month of sowing-tide, 871 A.D., Christian reckoning.
A jab in Tomas's ribs. Another
jab,
and the insistent push of a small warm hand. There was rustling, then
muffled
thumps, as of furs tossed from the bed-closet. Cold air struck his bare
shoulders.
"Wake up, Tomas!"
Sigrun Bjornsdottir's voice. The
flower
of the court: Sigrun of the swaying walk and the thick amber braids
that
fell, when unbound, to the deep curves at her hips. Of the frozen blue
eyes that had followed Tomas of late, when her husband Torbrand's
attention
turned elsewhere.
Ah, yes: Earl Torbrand himself was
elsewhere these several days past, errand-riding for King Harald. More
than Sigrun's eyes had thawed. Tomas sat up and reached for her.
She cuffed his arms away. "The
bondmaid
says Torbrand's home early. Get out!"
Tomas slid out of bed and into his
clothes. Should Sigrun be found with a lover, Torbrand could kill them
both without legal reprisals, most likely. And would probably kill them
regardless. Tomas yanked his soft leather boots on, grabbed for his
harp.
"Take this." Sigrun clapped a
runestick
into his hands; it was carved with verses he'd written her.
"Don't you want it?"
"You know I can't read, Tomas.
Take
it and go!" It was evidence. If adultery were proved, the full weight
of
the law would fall upon Sigrun.
Tomas gripped her wrist in the
darkness.
"Come with me."
"Where? Are you mad?" She jerked
her
arm free.
"Any court in the North--"
"Would welcome your poems, but
that
old horse of yours won't get us far." The flintiness of her tone came
as
a shock; he would have wagered his flute that she'd leave with him.
"Torbrand
would track us with all of his men. Now go! Do you want to die?"
On the following afternoon, in
the
main hall of his father Sigtrygg's longhouse, Tomas said carefully:
"No,
I don't want to die." Sigrun's refusal still smarted, but that wasn't
the
worst of it.
"One would think otherwise." The
earl
Sigtrygg's brooding blue gaze was remote. Straight-backed as always,
his
wheat-colored hair scarcely touched by the years that had etched grim
lines
about his eyes and mouth, Sigtrygg sat upon his high seat of carved
wood.
Tomas stood before him. Smoke rose, thick and greasy, from the low,
stone-lined
central hearthfire and the tallow lamps to pool at the one opening in
the
arched and sloping roof. Fickle light played against the empty sleeping
benches that lined the walls, peopling the room with shadows. Before
this
discussion, Sigtrygg's latest wife, thralls and concubines had all been
dismissed, along with his numerous progeny. All but Tomas and his
half-brother
Olaf, Sigtrygg's oldest legitimate son and heir.
Standing beside Tomas, Olaf's
heavy
features were immobile; his eyes, not one whit less hostile than usual,
were level and clear. None of his berserker rage, not here in his
father's
hall. Still, a pulse beat at the side of his throat, no more muscular
than
Sigtrygg's own. Tomas had inherited none of that breadth of chest. Olaf
said, "If Torbrand brings a complaint and starts a feud over it, our
whole
household could die. Down to the last child."
King Harald's law-court, where
such
accusations were brought, convened in a few days' time. Blood-feuds
often
began when the injured parties believed themselves insufficiently
avenged.
"Rumor gives out that Torbrand has
little evidence," said Sigtrygg coolly. "But he may well lodge a
complaint.
He's a prideful man, Tomas, and a hard one to cross."
Tomas nodded, and considered the
facts.
Just before Torbrand's return, one
of his slaves, riding a little ahead, had seen a tall blond man leave
the
earl's longhouse. Although nothing was found missing, the man carried
something
flat and angular wrapped in cloth. Despite the lateness of Torbrand's
unexpected
arrival, he found his young wife Sigrun, who'd unaccountably dismissed
her bondmaids for the night, bridling and disheveled in a disordered
chamber.
Before Torbrand's thralls were silenced, these intriguing scraps of
information
had made the rounds of the court.
Tomas knew, additionally, that
there'd
been no time for Sigrun to bathe, to change the bed linens... If
Torbrand
had deduced the cause of his wife's disarray and beaten her, Tomas
couldn't
blame the unfortunate woman for whatever she might have said. Spurned
or
not, he felt a little sick: at least he wasn't legally bound to his
accuser.
It would help his case that
perhaps
half the men in Vestfold were tall and blond, though few matched
Tomas's
height and fairness. And that cloth-wrapped object could have been many
things other than the harp of a skald.
Popular sentiment could run as
easily
for as against him. The favored new poet at King Harald's court, Tomas
had excited attention and envy before now. Others had noticed Sigrun's
growing awareness of him. Some of those others, Olaf among them, had
already
tried and failed to attract her chilly regard.
"The sworn word of Torbrand's
slave
would not weigh so much as that of Tomas. He's a free man," said Olaf
now,
watching Tomas steadily. "Still, his word weighs less than if he'd been
born free."
Sigtrygg stirred in his chair and
made no reply, as Tomas met Olaf's unwavering blue-eyed stare with a
grey-eyed
one of his own. His long-dead mother had been a Welsh concubine, taken
prisoner during one of Sigtrygg's raids in Waleis. Tomas might well
have
remained a thrall himself except that Sigtrygg, ambitious to number a
court
poet among his sons, took notice of Tomas's musical gifts, and freed
him.
For which act Olaf bore him a
grudge,
chronic and venomous, though Olaf as the firstborn son would inherit
the
vast majority of Sigtrygg's estate nonetheless. Tomas would receive
little
if anything; too many freeborn and legitimate sons preceded him.
But at court, now, a skald could
win
prestige and gold, should his minstrelsy please the King. Courtiers
would
also pay a poet handsomely to chronicle their exploits at home and over
the sea--if the poet were alive and at court.
Banishment was not at issue here.
Not caught in the act, Tomas would be fined at the most. But Torbrand's
sense of humiliation might prompt him to step outside the law and
murder
Tomas on his own. In that event, a blood-feud would follow, if
Sigtrygg's
household cared to preserve its honor.
With a deepening of the
crow's-feet
about his eyes, Sigtrygg considered his sons. "Olaf. Do you still
propose
to go a-viking within the week?"
Turning his gaze to his father,
Olaf
nodded.
"Hire Tomas to go and write of
your
raids. By the time you return, tempers will have cooled somewhat at
court.
Where Tomas should plan to recite his finest work yet," said Sigtrygg
dryly.
Sail south with Olaf and his
berserkers?
Twinges plucked at the muscles along Tomas's spine; he'd sooner take
his
chances here with Torbrand. Olaf dared not lay violent hands on his own
brother with so many witnesses in the crew. Still, something about that
journey felt ominous indeed...
"He hasn't the stomach for it. Let
him contend with his own trouble here in Vestfold, if you please, my
lord,"
said Olaf. His tone was respectful enough, but a knot worked in his
jawline.
Sigtrygg studied his heir without
expression.
There followed a taut silence
which
Olaf, shifting his weight, broke at last: "Tomas must learn some
restraint;
he's overfond of women."
A corner of Sigtrygg's mouth
twitched.
"No more than you or I, Olaf. He just has more skill with them."
Olaf went rigid, then swallowed.
Very
slowly, he let out his breath.
"And less sense about their
husbands,"
said Sigtrygg to Tomas, his voice now deadly soft. "Torbrand's coveted
my lands since we were both your age, and he stands next to me in
Harald's
trust. Are you a fool, boy? If you'd create such an enemy, you'd bestfindthe
stomach for it." He glanced at Olaf. "Take him with you. It's as easy
to
disown a son as to acknowledge one."
Olaf's eyes widened. In one sudden
motion, Sigtrygg rose and struck the flat of his powerful hand across
his
heir's face. "Get out, the pair of you, and leave Torbrand to me. Don't
let me set eyes on you again until you've returned from the South." A
hard
stare at Tomas. "With something to sing about."
CHAPTER ONE: THE FIRST OF MAY, 871 A.D.
"Shall I take the figureheads
down
now?" Tomas asked Olaf.
They stood on a raised deck at the
bow of the Brilliant Dragon, Olaf's longship, as it
glided
up the River Saefren that divided Waleis from Wessex. Murky water
slapped
the clinker-built hull, but the long wooden oars, in skilled hands,
made
remarkably little sound. Olaf's raiding party had just lowered the mast
and lifted their iron-rimmed wooden shields from the timber rail. Axes,
spears, swordhilts and the ringshirts of wealthier men gleamed in the
waxing
light of dawn. From a village on the Welsh side of the river,
hearthfire
smoke smudged a paling marsh-scented sky.
The rowers nearest Tomas tilted
their
heads at his question. Oddi, the navigator, looked particularly somber.
"I'd have taken them down before now," he muttered. "I saw an Elf in
Gotland
knock holes in the hull of a ship that docked with its dragons on. And
the land-spirits like it no more than the Elves do."
Ignoring Oddi, Olaf and most of
his
berserker guard scowled at Tomas. Both in Vestfold and on board ship,
he'd
chanted verses in their honor, and they bore him no personal malice.
But
now two or three men chewed their lips and eyed him with mindless ire
as
he stared back at Olaf.
In a voice that wouldn't carry to
the shore, Olaf said, "I'm not taking them down. We may not be the only
Norse in these waters; Ivar the Boneless sails to Dubhlinn with slaves
from hereabouts. But I needn't explain the slave traffic to you."
Tomas gave a curt shake of his
head.
"Closer to shore," Olaf told the
oarsmen
after scanning the narrowing channel. "If our dragons offend any Elves,
so be it. I'm more wary of Ivar. And the Welsh are your greatest
concern."
The last remark was a reference to
the nerves that they both knew were splintering Tomas's midsection. Of
Sigtrygg's household, Tomas had shown the least enthusiasm for weapons
training, much of which Olaf gave him. With a shrug, Tomas glanced at
the
crew: little enough tension there, though others besides himself made
their
first journey beyond the North. Almost all the men were veterans of
several
viking expeditions, undertaken for adventure or as likely for gain.
Divided
inheritance of the scant fringes of arable land that edged the fjords
inspired
fierce competition. Odin might well favor their raiding party; every
man
aboard worshipped the Lord of Battle, though not all so fanatically as
the berserkers. Some of the crew invoked Odin for His other powers.
A man named Egil caught Tomas's
eye.
But for poverty, Egil would captain a ship of his own and could do so
yet.
Grinning, he jerked his chin at Olaf's massive back; the two disliked
each
other heartily. "Don't trouble yourself about Tomas. He turns white at
hog-slaughter, but Odin grants more than one gift. The Poet-Lord's hand
lies upon him," Egil said loudly.
Olaf gave no sign that he'd heard.
Egil rubbed his sun-bleached beard
and said, as if the idea had just occurred to him, "Perhaps Odin gave
some
of His magic to Tomas. That would explain Sigrun--"
Guffaws from the crew.
Olaf rounded on them. "Enough!
D'you
want to be heard?"
Egil subsided, his face bland and
earnest. As the longship eased closer to the bank, Tomas peered into
the
thick knots of trees crowding the shore, then eyed the dragon
figureheads.
What manner of Elf did they risk provoking in Waleis?
This foreign country, unknown
people
and strange lone dying god were the land, kin and deity of Tomas's
mother.
She had taught him to speak Welsh, and the English of the Saxon realms
that bordered Waleis. When Tomas was a child, she often talked about
her
god from Nazareth.
"Odin hung on the World-Tree to
receive
knowledge of the Runes, and He survived too," Tomas would say.
She would smile. "It is not the
same.
But tell me a tale, for I have told you one."
Now Tomas unclenched his hands and
examined them. Shaped like hers. She gave him his first harp lessons;
he
had her grey eyes.
The chiseled dragon-head knifed
into
the riverbank, and Olaf shouldered past him. "Move."
With a strip of leather, Tomas
hastily
tied his long hair at the nape of his neck. Hair like his father's,
paler
than freshly split birch wood, thick and almost straight. He caught up
his shield.
Among the mossy trees and
reed-choked
silty underbrush, none of the Norse perceived the tall graceful figure,
dressed in dark green, who had marked their passage up the Saefren. Who
had tracked them, listening judiciously to their talk, and now watched
them come ashore.
With Olaf and his guard leading,
some
thirty men disembarked, raised a shield-wall overhead and filed
silently
down a damp shadowy path carpeted in moss. On the wooded trail they met
a short tanned boy who carried a basket and reeked of marsh salt and
fish.
After a panicked struggle, the youth went limp. First in Welsh, then in
English, he begged the strangers not to kill him. No one but Tomas
understood
a word.
The berserkers, some now racked
with
tremors from head to foot, strangled the boy. Then, as an offering to
Odin,
they hung the body from the nearest sturdy tree. It was the last event
of that morning that Tomas would remember clearly.
Market day, it must be, or the day
of a fair: the village's main square was trodden into pockmarked mud.
Roaring,
the Norse sprang into the small crowd. The villagers scattered,
overturned
stalls, dodged terrified livestock and flung barrels and benches into
the
path of the approaching Norse. Surprised, underarmed and demoralized,
most
of the Welsh fled or were gutted as the raiders advanced towards the
Nazarene
temple, which promised trappings of gold and silver, and perhaps
refugees.
Gripped by the worst nausea of his
life, his shoulders braced against a wall, Tomas stood and stared. He
had
grown up with stories of the rage, fearless, bloody and ecstatic, that
Odin granted some of His worshippers. At the whim of the god, that
violent
trance possessed and deserted them, and for its sake they were at once
revered, scorned and shunned. But Tomas had never seen berserkers fully
transported. He could neither lose himself in their fury nor join the
rest
of the crew in their cooler but efficient slaughter, all bolstered by
the
faith that if they died in battle, Odin would welcome them to Valholl.
Bellowing, a Norseman churned
through
the mud past Tomas. The man's face was livid and contorted on one side,
slack on the other, and his mouth bled from gnawing his gaudily painted
shield--Egil's shield. During the voyage, Egil had sometimes looked at
Tomas's harp and asked questions about how it was tuned. Now his
red-veined
gaze speared a point directly before him. With a howl, he swung his axe
at a wounded man in his path.
Tomas shut his eyes. He heard
babbling,
a pulpy thud and an aborted groan. Bending double, he retched into the
mud.
When he straightened up, having
made
no conscious decision, he ran towards the Saefren. He jumped over
bodies,
slipped on objects he didn't care to examine, dodged Norse and Welsh
alike.
Twice he stumbled but he kept moving. Once he heard Olaf roaring at
him,
calling his name.
A peculiar tingling in the air
began
to intrude on his attention, while at the edge of his vision, something
oppressive and crackling hovered. Storm clouds? He glanced overhead.
Swirling, incandescent lines of
energy
seared the sky. It was a Rune: Perthro, the Web of Fate.
Ankle-deep in mud, Tomas halted.
The
air, although vibrant, was eerily still as the Fate-Rune throbbed above
the trees. It was drawn with absolute, transfixing symmetry. He gaped
at
the long vertical slash, then at the two V-shaped lines that reached to
the right from either end of the vertical: two cones, mirroring each
other.
The Nornir, the three Fates, must
have sketched their Rune in the sky. Was the omen meant for the village
or the raiders--or for Tomas, because he was deserting? He had learned
the Runes by rote, as both alphabet and oracle, so well that shock
could
not drive the knowledge from him. Perthro signified: "The seeker cannot
comprehend the fateful flow of events, because his own lot numbers
among
those cast."
Never had he experienced such a
vision,
though skalds of Odin often did. He was abandoning a battle, but Odin's
hand must lie upon him still--or the hands of the Nornir. A tremor
shook
him, just as the Rune blazed.
Three enormous women, grey of face
and eye, their snarled ashen hair frothing down their backs,
materialized
in the sky next to Perthro. They stood around a tremendous loom, across
which stretched heddle rods made of ash-wood spears. Arrows served as
the
shuttles, and the dripping crimson warp was weighted with severed heads.
Tomas bit his knuckles to stifle a
moan. The Nornir wove the Fates of men and women--what if they looked
down
and saw him? He ached to run but he could scarcely breathe, and
achieved
only a painful limping gait as he peered overhead.
The Nornir--Urd, Verdandi and
Skuld--walked
to and fro before their loom, throwing the shuttle-arrows through the
bloody
sheds and beating the weft upwards. Sharper than ice-coated trees
against
a midwinter sky, the grisly weights were etched against the dawn.
Stumbling
along with his face turned towards the sky, Tomas saw the loom as
distinctly
as he might have seen the full Moon, with the Moon's creamy glow. But
now
he could focus on only one of the Nornir. Her two sisters moved in a
billowy
haze like fog rising above water. The one that he could still see must
be Urd, she who wove the thread of that-which-has-become. Verdandi and
Skuld, that-which-is-becoming and that-which-shall-become, were
shrouded
from his vision now.
When he reached the footpath to
the
river, he clutched at a willow tree for support. Urd, bending her
solemn
face to her work, trudged past the dangling heads. One head rotated
slowly
towards Tomas; its blind, swollen eyes met his. The last thread of his
reason broke.
He raced down the path to the
Saefren
and turned north at the river without slackening speed. Breathing in
labored
gulps of air, he ran until his chest burned, ran until his legs grew
leaden,
ran until smudged spots collided before his eyes.
When he came to a tributary of the
Saefren that bore off to the west, he veered away from the main body of
the river. His new path along the tributary's bank was narrower and
more
winding, forcing him to slow his pace and taking him past quieter
backwaters.
By one such almost-pool there
towered
a vast oak tree; its branches scraped gnarled and ponderous arcs across
the sky. He sprinted for the shaded clearing beneath the oak, where its
leafy mass blocked the Sun. At last he collapsed in a huddle between
the
great tree and the Saefren. Calm brown water was the last he saw before
unconsciousness took him.
Even before Tomas opened his
eyes,
they felt scratchy and dry. He fished a sharp toothy stone from beneath
his ribs and sat up. His vision clouded, and he leaned against the
hulking
tree trunk. When he could see again, he glanced nervously overhead.
The Sun flared in a glazed blue
sky.
Mid-afternoon, probably, on the
day
of the raid. He shook his head to banish the memory of the Nornir and
their
loom. Moving with the painstaking caution of an old man, he crept down
to the water to wash.
Soon, wearing only his trousers,
he
perched on the riverbank. His scrubbed and drying jerkin hung from a
branch
of the oak. Beneath the tree lay his boots, beside his belt and short
knife.
He'd lost his sword, round wooden shield and leather helmet during his
flight from the village.
Cool and quiet, the river bathed
Tomas's
feet. He stared into the mute and undemanding water, water that didn't
wash away what those feet had done. They had run from their first raid.
And were there a chance to do it
over,
he would run again. Sigtrygg and Olaf were right: Tomas hadn't the
stomach
for it. Nor any shame about that. He simply was not like them.
After a while he said aloud,
"Odin,
Your battle-face is too fierce for me, and I fear You might take back
Your
other gifts. I may have no right to petition You now, but please, I
cannot
lose poetry."
To have music but lose words...
Woe
for him that Odin ruled both verse and war. Tomas waited, but the
All-father
made no answer.
Return to the ship was out of the
question. Olaf would certainly beat a deserter and quite possibly kill
him. Tomas was in Waleis to stay for a while. Warily, he glanced up and
down the riverbank. Any surviving villagers would cheerfully kill him
as
well.
But they needn't know he'd sailed
here with a raiding party. He spoke Welsh like a native. Not all the
Norse
who traveled to Waleis came a-viking; there were plenty of merchants.
Perhaps
he could find passage back to the North, though not to Vestfold. In the
meantime he could claim to be a trader. Better yet: a bard. His mother
had taught him every song and story she knew.
But his harp was back on the ship.
Still, he could locate a large
town,
recite there for coins and buy a harp or a flute. Or make them, with
the
right wood and tools. Or a lute, a fiddle, a drum. They used other
instruments
here that he'd never played, but he could learn.
Consult the Runes? They hung in a
small pouch at his belt, left under the oak.
No, not just yet. Not while he sat
on this mossy bank, calf-deep in the soothing river. How calm it was in
this sheltered spot. He could see his own reflection in the water, his
tousled hair freed from its lost leather tie, his bare chest and arms.
His own reflection, and another.
Someone
stood on the bank not far behind him.
But he'd heard no one at all. His
throat constricted as he studied the water.
His observer was slender and tall,
with long hair or a veil. Probably a woman. Then the figure stirred,
and
Tomas saw the reflected curves of a waist and hips that could only
belong
to a woman.
"I mean you no harm, my lady," he
said politely in Welsh and, as an afterthought, in English. "I'm going
to stand up now." Moving slowly, hoping not to alarm her, Tomas pulled
his feet from the water, rose and turned around.
He stared in amazement.
The woman's close-fitting silky
tunic
and divided skirt were a rich deep ivy green, embroidered with beryl
stones.
Black waves of tangled hair fell past her waist. Like ice-glazed bone,
her skin was smooth and luminous, set off by the shining dark hair that
formed a widow's peak on her pale forehead. Her pointed chin would
easily
fit the palm of Tomas's hand. High-bridged and long, her nose was
perfectly
straight. Beneath it, the deep coral of her mouth was lush and
startling.
Light moved in her heavy-lidded, enormous grey eyes. Set in a cat-like
slant, they were thickly lashed in black.
No ordinary woman, this. Her eyes
were too large, too tilted. All the angles and proportions of her face
were slightly--yet exquisitely--wrong. Her mouth, for instance, was
wider
than it should be. But it looked soft, pliant...
Gazing straight into Tomas's eyes,
she smiled.
He inhaled sharply. She could not
possibly have intended that her smile be so enticing. Blood began
pounding
in his ears; his body urged him forward. Yet an even deeper instinct
made
him edge a few paces away. He did not think that she was human.
His mother's beliefs flooded back
to him. Could it be? He'd just abandoned Odin. He dropped down to one
knee
and asked cautiously in Welsh, "Are you the Queen of Heaven?"
"No, Tomas." The woman's voice was
warm and speculative, with an aromatic, briny resonance that made him
want
to hear more. "That name does not belong to me."
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