Authors: Gabriel J Klein
âForgive you?' Caz thrust the spear to within a hand's breadth of the old man's heart. âI'll never forgive you, but if the God wills that you should see the rune, so be it, even if it strikes you blind.'
Sir Jonas peered eagerly at the head of the weapon. The smooth surfaces were dark and cold.
âI can't see it,' he wailed despairingly. âThe Will of the God is turned against me.'
âI can't see it either,' said Alan.
The old man wept, begging Caz, âPlease tell me what you can see.'
âI'll show you.' Caz pointed the spear to where the snow was untrammelled and glistening. Using the heat of the weapon, he drew the outline of a rune that they had never seen before â two short lines angled and joined at the apex, a single line descending from the centre point and fletched with one downward stroke to the right of the halfway point, a second, smaller stroke beneath it at the quarter point from the base and joined at right angles to the first.
âIt's the Rune of Geirr, the Rune of the Spear,' he said, âand the first is the Rune of VÃg, the Battle Rune of the Chosen.'
Tears came into Alan's eyes. He knelt wonderingly, touching the steaming lines in the bare earth. âIt's so simple, just so simple.'
âAnd potentially so powerful,' whispered the old man.
âOnly when the third is won,' said Caz. âYou know they won't work until then.'
Sir Jonas held his head in his hands. âI saw nothing of it at the Tree. At the last, all vision was denied me.' The blue eye looked up at Caz, pleading and fearful. âYou are, and always were, our only hope, my boy,' he said sadly. âI see that now, too late. Let Guardian Armourer and Defender of Thunderslea bear witness. I name you Guardian Horsemaster. I am no longer worthy to bear the title.'
âNo, you are not,' agreed Caz. There was no pity in his eyes, only contempt for the pathetic figure cowering at his feet. âOf all that you have done this night, your betrayal of Freyja was the worst.'
The old man nodded, weeping. âIt is my deepest wish that I may earn your forgiveness.'
âThen pray that she lives!'
A great gout of heavy snow from high in the branches of the old tree came crashing down and obliterated the outline of the rune. Alan put his arm around Sir Jonas and lifted him to his feet. âWe must get the Master and the mare home before we find ourselves buried up here.'
They braced themselves to walk the Medustig. Caz arranged Alan's cloak over Freyja's withers and across her quarters. He tore a long length from his own cloak and fastened one end around her neck to steady her as she stumbled after Kyri across the clearing. Their progress was slow. They entered the tunnel and Alan stopped to transfer the guttering flame of one torch to another fresh one from the rack. Left momentarily without support, Sir Jonas lost his balance and fell on his face.
âI have no strength in my legs,â he gasped.
Alan was immediately at his side, giving him more water and supporting him as he tried to stand, but the old man's legs were useless. Kyri's great eyes were luminous in the torchlight. She nudged at Caz's arm, whickering softly.
He spoke through clenched teeth. âShe says he's to ride.'
The astounded old man was lifted up onto her back. Caz unhooked the bent fingers clutching at her shining mane.
âTrust her to carry you,' he said curtly. âIt will be the first and the last time. Make the most of it.'
âI am humbled,' whispered Sir Jonas.
âShe's wise and forgives more easily that I do. Be grateful.'
Alan led the way with the torch. Freyja kept close to Kyri with Caz walking beside her, whispering words of love and encouragement with every step. When they drew level with the warm current of air and the promise of fire, food and rest in the cave, Alan looked back at Freyja.
âHow's she doing?' he asked. âDoes she need a break?'
Caz shook his head. âWe must go on. Once she goes down she'll sleep all day, maybe longer. We must get her rugged and settled before any of the others come and find we're not in the yard.'
Jemima was ready to leave for work as soon as it was light. Maddie came into the kitchen to find the fire lit, the kettle boiling and the cats already fed. Sara and Jasper were eating breakfast.
âYou're all up early,' she said.
Jemima pulled on her boots. âI'm going up to the house to make the breakfast.'
âI thought Caz was on duty this morning.'
Jasper made phone signs with his fingers at his ear. Jemima nodded.
âI always do the breakfast on Saturday,' she said. âYou stay here, Ma. We won't need you until after ten o'clock.'
The morning was crisp and clear. The sun was rising into a peach-coloured sky, shot with gold over the white, gleaming fields and hills. She walked as fast as she could, stamping her feet every now and again to thaw out her toes. She hurried up the slope to the gate, red-cheeked and breathless, anxiety hammering her every heartbeat. Instinctively, she came straight to Freyja's box, crying out when she saw the mare laid in the straw, âShe can't be dead too! What happened?'
Caz put his finger to his lips. âKeep your voice down. Nothing's happened. She's not dead. She's just asleep. Come and see. She's okay.'
He hoped she wouldn't notice the damaged partition between Rúna's and Nanna's boxes. It has been straightened but it was still undeniably badly cracked.
Jemima crept over the straw to Freyja. She felt her neck and touched her nose and her ears. âWhy is she so fast asleep at this time of the morning?'
âShe's just tired. We were out late last night. It was hard going in the snow.'
âBut Kyri's okay.'
âKyri can take it.'
Jemima eyed her brother suspiciously. âThis is what happened two years ago on the party morning when Bryn died.'
âNo it isn't. Freyja's not dead.'
âBut she's asleep just like she was then.'
Caz shrugged. âCoincidence.'
They heard footsteps. Alan appeared at the stable door. âCaz, I need a quick word.'
Caz got up slowly, motioning to Jemima to take his place beside Freyja in the straw. âStay with her until I get back.'
They walked quickly towards the house. Alan looked exhausted and nervous. âThe Master's in a bad way.'
âWell, we know that.'
âNo, it's bad now, really bad.'
âWhat's going on?'
âI got him upstairs to his room. He was babbling a lot about the fight and the hounds, and how the Valkyrs were waiting at Thunderslea to take him to World Tree. He said that all the others were being marked for the Spear but not him.'
âOnly the chosen take the Bite of the Spear,' Caz said quietly.
âAnd evidently he wasn't chosen.'
âNo. Did he say anything else?'
Alan pushed open the front door. âHe didn't have a chance. I was helping him get himself sorted out when he fell on the floor in some kind of a fit. He's been out cold ever since and I can't rouse him.'
âHave you called the ambulance?'
âI can't, not this time. Come and have a look at him and tell me what you think.'
Sir Jonas lay in the middle of the four-poster bed. His lips were swollen and bruised where he had bitten into them. Alan turned back the collar of the nightshirt. The marks of the chains were livid purple-red around the old man's neck. The skin looked as though it had been deeply and selectively burned.
Alan pulled back the bedcovers. âAll the wounds you came back with faded away in a matter of minutes, but not so for him. It's the same all over him. They haven't even begun to lose colour.'
Caz folded his arms, looking down at the wrecked body on the bed. âThey won't fade. They will always be there.'
Alan looked aghast. âSurely not as bad as this?'
âTraitors are branded.'
Alan covered up the old man and sat down wearily on the edge of the bed. âDaisy and John'll be here any minute and I've called Charles. He's bringing down his doctor friend. He's going to be asking a lot of questions. Can I repeat what I've just told you?'
Caz nodded. âTell him what you know. That'll be good enough.'
âThe hounds and the fight and what you've just said as well?'
âYes, all of it, as you know it. It will keep him off my back.'
âThe Master's not going to pull out of this, is he?'
âNo. He'll come round later but he won't die, perhaps not for a long time.'
Alan sighed. âThis is going to be hard.'
âAs it was meant to be.'
âThe chains were still on him when he came back. I saw them break up and crumble away. When I picked him up, he told me he was condemned to know every weakness, every degradation of body and torment of mind. Every moment of the rest of his days will count as an age as he dies slowly in the straw. “The shields were black, Mister Alan,” he said. I've never seen anybody that terrified.' Alan looked up at Caz. âWhat colour were they for you?'
âThey were red.'
âDid the Valkyrs really reject him?'
âThey did.'
âSo you saw them? They were really there this time?'
Caz nodded again. âI think they were always there in one form or another, and yes, this time I saw them for what they truly are.'
âAre they beautiful, like the Master always said?'
âBeautiful, and terrible, as they are meant to be.'
Alan put his hand to his heart. There were tears in his eyes. âHow I pray I'll see them for myself one day.'
Caz rested a hand on his shoulder. âYou will.'
Left alone in the loose box with Freyja, Jemima stroked her neck, listening to her steady breathing.
âNo, you're not going to die,' she whispered, âbut whatever goes on here on winter solstice night, has happened again. Caz isn't so messed up this time but he's different. Everything's different but I can't work out how.'
Kyri was standing on the other side of the partition, watching Freyja. Jemima got up and went to her, stroking her great head and combing her fingers through her mane, separating each silken strand.
âYou're so beautiful, Kyri,' she murmured. âBut the problem is that you're too beautiful. You're always so clean and perfect, no matter where you've been or what you've been doing, and that's not normal for a horse. You never get muddy and you don't need a rug. I don't think I've seen you get down in the field for a roll since you were a baby.' She looked into the luminous depths of the blue-black eyes. âWhat are you really, Kyri? Or maybe I should say, who are you?'
Lunch was a sombre affair served promptly at noon to enable Charles Fordham-Marshall to return to London in time to organise the continuing care of Sir Jonas. The party had been cancelled. All the guests were assembled around the dining table in their work clothes, their plans for the great feast forgotten. The girls had cleared away most of the silver and all of the crystal. By general agreement the decorations remained in place and the fires burned merrily in the reception room and the ballroom. The gleaming packages for the gift giving lay untouched under the tree in the hall.
âSir Jonas will wake up by Christmas and we can have the presents then,' said Jemima, determined to take the most optimistic view of the catastrophe. âHe would hate to think that everything had been spoiled just because he was ill for a couple of days.'
The meal was concluded mostly in silence. Caz's mind was divided between guiding Freyja's gradual return to the secure familiarity of her life in the Shadowed World and his intense curiosity about the contents of an envelope he had found in the desk drawer in the study. It had been sealed with red wax and stamped with the Pring family crest. Sir Jonas had written his name under the seal:
Caspar Wylde.
Inside the envelope was a small and obviously very old book. It was a slim volume, bound in fine red leather with thirty-six gold-edged vellum pages. Someone had written
The Chanting of the Runes
very faintly in pencil on the flyleaf. A different hand had more formally inscribed each of the pages with a beautifully decorated rune and the related lines from the poem. Originally written in Old Norse, a translation into modern English had been added at a later date by the same hand, the identity of whom was revealed on the endpaper. It seemed to Caz that the words had been written especially for him:
Rune-Winner,
Scourge of the Trickster,
Speech-Friend of the Fates,
Go with the blessing of all good men,
that the High One look well upon you and favour you,
and be not treacherous.
Walfried
Everything about the book was a mystery. The runes had been placed in what looked to be random order after the first three pages. The Rune of Ãs was completely out of context, sandwiched between the fourth last and the penultimate pages, which had been left blank â presumably to allow for the insertion of the Runes of the Deathless on those two and the empty final page. Sir Jonas had left no letter or note to explain why he had chosen to hand on such a precious artefact at that particular time. Caz sensed that it was something the Masters had kept to themselves and never shared with the Guardians.
As usual, during the daylight hours, he kept company with the constantly replenished coffee pot and the sugar bowl at the far end of the table â a phenomenon that both fascinated and appalled Charles Fordham-Marshall, who was witnessing it personally for the first time. He searched the silent young man's gaunt face for signs of what he had experienced the night before, Alan's comment that
âhe looked like he'd been through a meat grinder'
uppermost in his mind.
The coffee was generally served before Charles took the vacant seat at the head of the table.