A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall (43 page)

BOOK: A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall
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—They've been talking about the ghost of Odin on the radio. I think they meant your son. The reports have been coming in pretty steady. That's the best I can do.

—Thank you. If you can do me one more favor, will you not tell anyone about this? I'm afraid that if my son feels people are after him, he'll be even harder to find.

—We can appreciate privacy. Best of luck.

B
urr wound through the Westfjords for the next three days, sleeping in his car or in the tent pitched next to his car, and listening to the Wolfman or one of the other two deejays, whom Burr dubbed Elaine Benes and Leonard Nimoy. The Wolfman was the only deejay who never drifted into English. Burr tried the doors of farmers and every gas station attendant in the northwest of the country without success. He decided the reticence might be due to the language barrier and memorized the first stanza of an old Icelandic poem in a guidebook as a way of ingratiating himself, “Thó thú langförull legðir/ sérhvert land undir fót,/ bera hugur og hjarta/ samt thíns heimalands mót . . .” (Though you wander far ranging/ Every land underfoot/ Your heart has been stamped/ with your homeland's mark(?) . . .) He couldn't quite get the last word,
mót
; it was a meeting point, a liminal intersection. The irony wasn't lost on him that the one word he lacked was an Icelandic word for liminalism. According to his map, there was a chapel just ahead. He figured he'd try the poem on the caretaker and, if the man was a scholar, he'd make a joke about
le mót juste
.

He got as far as “Thó thú” before a snapping Doberman on a long leash bolted past the old man who answered the door. The dog snapped out years of pent-up aggression and caught Burr's cuff. He kicked free, and the Icelander didn't say a word. He let out more leash until Burr was running back to his car with the dog howling after him. With windows rolled up, he listened to the dog bark back all Burr's quotations, all his puns. He decided that was it, no more pedantry. No more grave robbing. No more obfuscation. No more association. It was up to him and the radio.

He had cash for maybe two tanks of gas. He stayed west of Akureyri, chiefly because that was the radio station's range, and Nimoy, Elaine, and the Wolfman were his only friends in this world.

Then a break. So far as Burr could tell, it was Nimoy who broke the story. Burr could understand about a quarter of the proper nouns they said, half when he was parked and looking at a map. All he understood from Nimoy's broadcast was “Odin,” “Dalvík,” and “Tröllaskagi.” Two of those were places and one was a Norse god, which was why Nimoy chuckled. Several hours later, the Wolfman laughed through a report of the same story, this time with a recorded interview from an eyewitness. It wasn't until Elaine told the story in English—there were dozens of reported sightings of the Norse god Odin wandering through valleys just outside the town of Dalvík—that Burr headed farther north to the troll's peninsula, Tröllaskagi.

Á
stríður recollected the events for her father while he dressed his wounds in the kitchen and later for the national news. At first Ólafur attributed her account to an unhealthy obsession with the Sagas, but the carnage outside was real and a reminder that these stories came from Icelanders living in the same wild land.

Ástríður first thought the bear was another bale of hay. She looked past it and chased the sheep until it lifted its head and sniffed the air. It shambled over like an old cat. The sheep, always skittish, bolted for the highlands. Most got snared by the barbed wire fence or fell in the cleft separating the pasture from the road. The bear jogged toward the densest mass of sheep and struck four dead in as many seconds. He then batted sheep caught in the fence, but appeared to have no interest in them once they were dead on the ground. The bear bit into the loin of the shorn sheep and tore off its leg. It plunged back into the animal and soaked its white coat red.

Their black dog had been sniffing the air and barking furiously. Now that the bear turned his attention to Ástríður, the black sheepdog sprinted between them, snapping at the bear. With one swipe, the bear flung the dog farther than she could throw a stone. Seeing the dog in the air unfroze her. She sprinted for the door.

Ólafur, eyes completely white, ran right by her directly for the bear. He lowered his shoulder to bowl it over. He was still five feet away when the bear hit him with a furious right paw, clawing through his jacket and tearing open his chest. Ólafur's neck snapped back when he hit the ground, knocking him unconscious. The bear sunk his canines into Ólafur's calf and dragged him toward the sheep carcasses.

Ástríður ran upstairs to the painting studio and carried a chair to the wall. She pulled down her grandfather's shotgun from the mount. She breeched the gun. Both barrels were empty. In his desk drawer she found different boxes of shells, one black, one red, and grabbed a handful of each. She ran back downstairs and saw the now red bear dragging her father by the leg not twenty feet from the porch.

She put two black shells into the still-breeched gun and took aim from the rail of the front porch. They hadn't shot since last year because she was simply too small for their only gun. The weakest shot had almost taken her arm off. She had been warned that the black shot did the same thing to her father's arm that the birdshot did to hers. This was going to hurt. She might not be able to take a second shot. She aimed for the biggest part of the bear, the part farthest from her father.

The report echoed up over the scree slopes. The bear sat down before letting go of Ólafur. Then it stood back up and returned to the ram it had been picking at earlier. The slug thumped squarely in his rear leg, in the biggest part of the bear, but the fur didn't redden with blood. The bear shrugged the shot off like a bee sting.

The gunshot was the first thing Ólafur heard. He imagined that he heard a thump as the bullet lodged in the bear's leg, but he didn't tell that to the press. He scrambled to a crawl, his right leg shattered, and hobbled to the house. Ástríður was crumpled against the wooden wall, holding her collarbone and whimpering.

Ólafur took the gun from her feet and the two huddled in the house and locked the door. He called the police. Twenty SUVs were in his drive within the hour. Two police cars were right behind. The bear was slinking around the scree mountain, a stone's throw from the decimated pasture.

B
urr had hiked himself into a dilemma. The scree slope he'd slid down was too shifty for him to scramble back up. He stood on a moss-grown ledge that looked like a reef at low tide. Before him, a valley that stretched into the walls of two mountains. Beside him, a sheer cliff carved by the millennia of ice cap melting into the stream that drained in the dale. He unbuckled his hip belt and dropped the pack on the gravel embankment. The pack was stuffed with all of his gear, then stacked so high with boil-in-bag meals and fuel canisters that it didn't close properly and extended above his head. It weighed even more than when the employees had stuffed it with sandbags to get a fit. He massaged his shoulders. After a few breaths he peered down the cliff. The stream was at least thirty feet down and littered with boulders that could tear him in two.

The paracord in the lid of his backpack was designed for this very situation. Burr unspooled it all, knotted it to the handle of his pack, and paid out rope, inching it down one rope burn at a time. Halfway down it snagged on rock. He tried to free the cord, but almost lost his footing. Until now, the descent had seemed reversible. He would have to let it drop. Burr dropped the pack and realized he would have to follow it down the wet rock.

He didn't hear anything crack, but it was stupid not to house the canister stove and, more importantly, the canisters of fuel. The whole pack could have exploded. Burr had seen enough of that sort of thing.

He looked over the edge he was about to descend without ropes. Does one face forward or backward when climbing down a rock? How foolish to have wasted his lifeline lowering a bag he could have easily carried, or dropped.

He looked down again and tried to plan a route.

It was no use. The rocks that looked stable obscured the rocks behind them. He dropped to his knees, looked around at the melting snowcap, the stretching greens of twilight, the slick black rocks, and thought, if one had to, this would be an acceptable place to die. But it would be a legendary place to
not
die.

He rolled onto his stomach and tapped his feet for the first rocks. After deep breaths, then quick breaths, he transferred his weight to his legs. He traded his grip on the ledge for a grip on the rock and was thus attached at four points. His short-lived rule for Owen on playground ladders was three points of contact at all times. Had he made that up? There had to be an underlying truth there. It was canonical today, because that was the first and only thing he knew about climbing: three points of contact at all times.

He found a ledge for his left foot. Four points of contact with the rock face. Now he could free his right leg. As soon as he transferred his weight to his left foot, the foothold crumbled away. A divot of moss dropped to the black rocks below. Burr quickly kicked for a new foothold and realized that he would have to test each purchase before abandoning his holds. This entire rock face was covered in moss from ledge to slick slope before the stream. It was impossible to tell what was an untouched clump of moss and what was a millimeter skin over a solid grip of rock.

Shaking with the strain of every grip, Burr picked his way down until he was faced with a completely smooth rock wall. He was out of footholds. In the past half hour he had descended about fifteen feet and was still another ten, at least, from the streambed. He didn't have the energy to climb back up. Spidering along the side was beyond his level of competence, and besides, the smooth black U extended the length of the wall. He would have to slide and hope that he was able to slow himself enough to avoid the jagged rocks in the streambed. He assessed the situation. Rolling an ankle would be a fatal injury in a place like this. He could see fifty miles, and there was no one. The moss suggested that no one had climbed this rock for quite some time, if ever. If he rolled an ankle and couldn't hike out, it would be decades before someone found his body. He breathed deeply. His hands were shaking from stress and from strain. If he didn't do something, his muscles were going to give out, or his heart was. He let go.

His toes skidded down the smooth black wall, his fingers clawing for anything, his nose never more than an inch from the rock while his forearms protected his head, down to the bottom of the slope and stopped, less than a foot from a crippling black rock.

It took him a minute to realize he was stable. He hyperventilated. He was light-headed. That could have cost him his life, and it was over in a blip. It was past. Shaking, Burr looked out at the flooded valley below. Hundreds of sheep on the grassy slope echoed the ice caps. The smoke over the fjord caught the long waves of twilight. What a place to survive. And what a story for his son.

Across the stream, cantilevered stone shaded the wet grass. Burr removed the scuffed trekking poles strapped to the side of the pack, hoisted his backpack, and picked his way over the three-foot stream from slippery rock to slippery rock, taking a series of delicate steps where a leap might have sufficed. He collapsed on the far side, his pack his pillow. Looking up at the weathered rock, he spotted a cave. He knew Owen would have done the same.

This was the second valley he had hiked into and the first cave he had seen. Burr climbed up the opposing rock until he could see the back of the empty cave, which was no more than a rock shelter.

Burr made a thankful camp next to the stream. His wrist alarm woke him at six the next morning. By seven he was eating trail mix, his boots were laced, and every stitch of gear was ready for his hunt for more caves.

By noon he was hiking into the third valley on the eastern side of Tröllaskagi. It cut deeper into the mountain and wound away from the lowland pastures. There were no outcroppings here, only glacier-worn scree. As he turned the final bend, he heard the report of a gunshot. He took off his electric blue jacket and pulled the grey rain cover over the red accents of his backpack. He doubled his pace over the rocks. After a half hour of scrambling, he turned to see where the shooter could be positioned. It sounded as if someone had fired at him from the next valley; the shot was certainly from a long way off. And there was only one. He scanned the heights.

The only anomaly in the uniformly grey talus was a small black mouth in the mountain at the end of this valley. He hiked another hundred yards to get a different angle and saw that the mouth of the cave was much larger, but camouflaged by a blue tarp weighed down with gravel and moss.

He stopped to think. There had been no follow-up shot. Only the one. There was nothing to hunt up here, so the shot must have been meant for him. It sounded too faint to have come from the camouflaged cave. The cave seemed no more than sixty yards away, but in Iceland he had no sense of perspective. He'd be exposed on rock the entire time. But the only way was up. He chanced it.

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