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Authors: Don Coldsmith

Runestone (82 page)

BOOK: Runestone
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“True. But I am thinking, it places us in the open, where we can be seen.”

“We could cross it at night,” Dove said. “There should be good moonlight, too.”

“Maybe,” Odin agreed. “Maybe too good. But the thing is this … how close are those who follow us?”

There was silence for a little while, and then Odin spoke.

“I am made to think we must know. I will go back to see.”

“But—” Nils protested.

Odin waved down his objection. “No. You go on, and I will
catch up. Stay along the base of these hills to the right, follow them north. See the notch in the ridge, there? Wait for me below that.”

He turned and was gone, and the other three plodded on.

Calling Dove was tired, and she knew that the others were, too. Just ahead of her, Bright Sky followed his father doggedly, step after step. The boy had never complained, though she knew this must be very hard for him. It had been hard for them all.

It was well past noon when White Wolf called a halt. They were near the notch in the ridge, and here they would wait for Odin. Then they could decide whether to head west across the valley, move on northward along the shoulder of the ridge, or try to seek refuge in its rolling hills.

They had not waited long before they saw Odin approaching along their back trail. He was running, and it was apparent that something was urgent. He trotted to where they waited, and stood for a moment, panting from exhaustion.

“They … come …,” he gasped, pointing.

Dove could not see the war party, but knew that it must be as Odin said. Once more, the Shaved-heads had gained on the fugitives. The final battle was ever closer. It was apparent that they could not cross the valley now, even by moonlight. Their pursuers were too near, and they would surely be seen. Likewise, to go north along the base of the hills would be too exposed. They must try to find refuge in the hills.

Odin, who was breathing more easily now, shifted his pack and started up the slope, following a dim path that angled back southeastward along the shoulder. Dove started to speak about the direction, but realized the situation quickly. The quickest
path
led that way, and direction had now lost all importance. The problem now was simply to find a place to try to hide. Preferably, one that would be defensible.

“Wait,” said Odin suddenly. He turned aside and puttered around among the sassafras bushes.

“What is it?” called Nils.

“Maybe nothing. There is a canyon here.”

The big, old trees had practically concealed that fact. Oaks, sycamores, nut trees, and the heavy underbrush effectively hid a deep and narrow cleft or rift in the hillside. The
tops of the giant oaks that grew from the floor of the rift were
below
where they stood.

The trail they followed led over practically solid stone, a dark limestone that seemed to be a major part of the entire ridge. But it would not leave tracks!

“Maybe we can fool them one more time,” Odin said.

He held aside a sassafras bush, and motioned the others down the steep face of the canyon wall. Nils led the way, turning to help his son.

It was a very dim trail that led downward. Odin followed Dove and tried to make sure that all traces behind them were hidden. They reached the bottom of the canyon, and Dove heard the murmur of water. She was hot and thirsty, and the sound was pleasant. The whole place was peaceful, sheltered, and quiet, with only a birdsong here and there. She felt protected, somehow, in the shelter of these massive gray walls and the canopy of leaves overhead. Even though it was late in the season, ferns and grasses were still green here in this sheltered place.

Dove looked around and gasped aloud. “Look!”

At the very head of the canyon, a massive ledge of stone lay across the rift, forming a cave. Its ceiling was high enough to stand upright, its floor several paces across. It would give comfort and shelter. The four weary travelers walked into its mouth and dropped their packs on the sandy floor.

“A fire?” asked Dove.

“Maybe later,” Odin said. “Let us wait, for now. We can find water, rest, get some sleep, maybe.”

There was a seep spring beside the cave, and a rivulet of water told of larger pools below. Dove picked up a waterskin and made her way down to the pool. She noted the rugged walls of the ravine. In many places, great slabs of stone like that which formed the roof of their cave had fallen away from the rim to slide toward the bottom of the rift. She saw one that must be three paces long, nearly as wide, and as thick as a man’s arm is long. That one leaned almost upright against the canyon wall.

Her husband approached.

“It is a strange place,” he said quietly.

“Yes. Its spirit is good, though.”

He nodded, and they stood there looking around them, unsure what to say. In the power of the emotion that they felt here, anything that might be said seemed unnecessary.

Dove was unsure whether it was the depth of their own emotion or the powerful spirit of the place itself. But she knew that he felt it, too. It was fitting, she thought, to find such a place, on a day that might be their last. That thought itself seemed rather unimportant, somehow, though she knew it must be faced.

Even so, she was startled when her husband voiced a similar thought.

“This,” he said calmly, “is not a bad place to make our last fight-Dove looked at him sharply. She was thinking of the words of the death song, “today is a good day to die.”

And a good
place
, maybe.

“Maybe they will not find us,” she said.

He put his arm around her, and held her close for a moment. “Maybe not.”

But they both knew.

   It was late afternoon when the war party made its way along the path at the canyon’s rim. Those below sat quietly, listening to the shuffle of feet and the words of conversation that they did not understand. Odin stood below, directly beneath the point where the rocky path led to the bottom. There was a moment when it seemed that the Shaved-heads had missed the trail and had gone on. Then, a one-word exclamation, and complete stillness.

The sassafras bush at the rim of the canyon was pulled cautiously aside, and a face peered down. There was an instant of recognition as the tracker looked into Odin’s eye. Odin’s bow twanged, and Ferret had no time to draw back, even. He toppled forward, tumbling and rolling through rocks and bushes, his limp form coming to rest against the trunk of a hickory halfway down the bluff.

Nils hurried quietly to Odin’s side. Odin turned, a grim smile on his face.

“That,” he said, “would be their tracker.”

By the hammer of Thor
, thought Nils,
he still thinks we will escape!

93

“T
hey will attack in the morning,” Odin said positively. “There is not time now, before dark. They will search for any other ways down, probably attack from different directions, if they can.”

It was nearly dark, and the fugitives sat in the mouth of the cave, warming themselves at the fire. There was no reason not to enjoy a fire now. Those who sought them already knew their location and their status. They might as well be comfortable on the last night of their lives.

Even Odin seemed to have abandoned any other hope. The Shaved-heads could keep them in the canyon. It would be possible to survive there for a little while, with water and small game. Sooner or later there would come an arrow from ambush, or a knife in the dark, and the fugitives would be one less, then another.

But neither Odin nor Nils felt that it would be that way. It was not the manner in which the Shaved-heads did things. No, in all likelihood, they had explored the canyon rim quite well before dark. They would have noted any possible paths in or out of its depths, and would plan an attack to overwhelm the fugitives.

“Would they wait a day?” Nils asked.

“Maybe,” Odin answered. “But we must be ready tomorrow morning. If they do not come then, surely the next day.”

Nils nodded, deep in thought. He had been fasting for a day, not entirely of his own choice, but their food supply was
nearly nonexistent. He had saved his share for the child. Now he found that he was past the hunger pangs of an early fast, and into the next phase. That, as he had experienced before, produced a sharpening of all the senses, a bright, crisp clarity of thought. He still saw no way to survive their present situation, but was able to assess it more objectively.

If they were to meet their pursuers in one last battle, let it be so. He could die with a weapon in hand, like a true Viking. His companions, too. Their ways were, after all, not so different.
But if a fight to the death is imminent, let it he on our terms
, he thought. The idea was quickly expressed.

“Odin, let us attack
them!


Attack?”

“Of course. This gives an advantage. Not much, but we do not
have
much.”

“That is true. Attack before
they
are ready.”

“Yes!
Before
dawn, just before—”

“We can slip up and over the rim. They will have a campfire, will be sleepy, just getting up! It is good, Wolf.”

Not good
, thought Nils,
but better than waiting to be killed
.

They began to prepare themselves, though there was little to do. Their weapons had hardly left their hands for many days. Most of the preparation was emotional and personal. Calling Dove had indicated immediately that she, too, would go over the rim with them. The way she gripped her heavy war club left no room for argument.

“I do not intend to become a trophy for some Shaved-head’s bed,” she stated flatly.

She also took Bright Sky aside for a last lesson.

“I can go with you,” he pleaded tearfully. “I can help.”

“No, no, my son. But listen carefully now. You must stay here in the cave. If we come back for you, it is good. If the Shaved-heads come, do not try to fight them. Do as they say. But as you grow up, you must remember: No matter what you are taught,
you are a man of the People
. In this you must take pride, and remember our ways. When you can, go home to the People.”

There was much about this that he might not understand, but she hoped that he would remember.

Odin was rebraiding his hair, making himself presentable
for the crossing-over. Nils knew that Dove, too, would do so. He found himself wondering about what he should do to prepare for this final event.

He wished that he might send a message to his family. Well, they surely thought him dead anyway. They would have long since mourned for him, and recovered from their loss. Years had passed.

Still, he felt that he should leave some evidence of his passing. Maybe, sometime, another Norseman would come this way, and it might be of interest to note that one Nils Thorsson had been here. A bit of carving on a stone, perhaps. That slab down by the stream, maybe. It was so massive that no one could move it, yet smooth and flat on its face. He could stand to work on it, and sometime in the future someone could stand to read it easily.

A tool … all that he had was his short sword. Well, its point, finely tempered, would cut the limestone quite well. It would become dulled, but he could resharpen it. By sunrise it would matter little, anyway.

Now,
what
to carve? His name? Maybe, though pretty long. It should be something, though, to identify him. The colony at Straumfjord had known that he disappeared into the interior. Thorwald Erickson, too, had known. If he could establish an approximate date, and a way to guarantee its truth … In the clarity of his fasting condition, he now began to realize, the simplest way to convey that the message was genuine would be to make it in the form of a riddle. One that only another Norseman would understand. He could use the
old
runes, taught by his grandfather. How pleased Grandfather would be.

Nils returned to the idea of a date. The exact date? He would have to guess because Sven’s bark calendar had been lost in the accident with the canoe. He counted days on his fingers. Early November, it must be, the Moon of Madness for the People. This struck him as an ironic joke, and he chuckled aloud. But did it matter?

“What is it, my husband?”

“It would be hard to explain, Dove. I was thinking of my grandfather. Thoughts that would please him.”

“He is probably thinking of you, then.”

“Grandfather is long dead, Dove.”

“Of course. How else could he help you now?”

The hairs prickled on the back of his neck. The People were so straightforward, so understanding. No, not understanding. One can never
understand
, he had decided. Accepting.
Of course
, Dove had said, and she was right. He smiled. “Thank you, Grandfather,” he murmured. Then he turned to the others.

“There is a thing I must do,” he explained. “I would leave a message on the stone by the stream.”

The others nodded. “I will stand watch,” Odin said.

Nils approached the stone, stuck his torch in a crevice, and ran his hand over the smooth gray surface, planning the placement of the runic characters. Yes … nine in all, it would take. He placed the sword point on the rock and struck a gentle blow with a hammer stone he had chosen from the stream bed. A chip of limestone flew off, leaving a small linear pit. Another, and another … Each character would be a little taller than the length of a man’s finger. Now a careful shaping of each letter in the old alphabet, not in the current one.

BOOK: Runestone
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