Authors: Kate Forsyth
âIt is time we rose up out of the ashes, like a phoenix, and built a new life for ourselves. Starkin, wildkin, hearthkin, we
must build a country where we can all live in peace, where justice and mercy are available for all, where an accident of birth does not determine whether a man or a woman is poor and weak, or rich and strong, where our children can grow and prosper in peace, and our old can die comfortably in bed. Is this not what you Levellers hold dear to your hearts? Is this not worth fighting for?'
âYeah!' men in the crowd shouted, punching the air with their fists. Women cried and embraced, children laughed and pretended to wrestle, while Molly smiled at him with tears shining in her eyes.
âYou all know my grandmother Mags, who has worked tirelessly all her life to make things better in our land. My grandfather said she would be “a crutch for the crippled, a shield for the meek, a voice for the speechless, a sword for the weak”. Well, my grandmother is growing old now. I think it is time for me to take on her mantle. I hope that you will all stand by me and help me, because there is a lot to be done'.
âSo what do you want from us, apart from a guide to take you to Grimsfell?' the Marsh King asked. His deep voice cut through the uproar, bringing with it a gradual silence.
Peregrine took a moment to answer. âI want your continued support, your shelter here in the marshes as long as I need it, and then, if need be, arms and men to help me fight Vernisha'.
âAnd what do we get in return?' the Marsh King asked.
Peregrine took a deep breath. He saw Grizelda leaning forward, urging him with her eyes to promise the Marsh King anything he wanted. He saw Jack swallow and surreptitiously lay his hand on his dagger. He saw Molly cross her fingers.
âI hope what I give you will be a new world,' he answered. âBut in all likelihood, what most of us face is death'.
Grizelda dropped her head into her hands. Jack shifted till he was poised on the very edge of his stool, biting his lip. Blitz ruffled his feathers and hunched his back, sensing Peregrine's tension.
âVernisha has a tight grip on the land,' Peregrine went on. âShe will not be easy to dislodge. I hope that I'll find the Storm King's spear, and that it will give me the power and strength to stand against her. But I don't know if it will, even if I can manage to find it. I can only hope, and fight, and do my best. It's all any of us can do'.
The Marsh King nodded. âTrue spoken,' he said with approval. âWell then, what do we all say?'
The six men and woman who sat beside him rose and went down into the hall, moving among the crowd, listening to all the people said. There was a lot of arguing and gesticulation. After a long timeâso long Peregrine's legs achedâthey came back to the dais and spoke to the Marsh King. He nodded, then looked at Peregrine. âTell us, how are we to know whether you or your father will be any better a ruler than this Vernisha?'
âYou could help us,' Peregrine said wearily. âTell us what you want, what you think needs to be done. We could have a council, like you do here, with representatives from the hearthkin and the wildkin as well as the starkin. I promise you, I'll do my best to work out some system to keep things fair'.
There was a long pause, as the Marsh King ruminated, both enormous fists on his knees. Then he slowly nodded his head. âWell, you're a bold boy, but I like a bit of boldness. Nothing ventured, nothing gained, I say. All right, laddie, we're all yours!'
T
HE GLOW OF THE PEAT FIRE FLICKERED OVER THEIR FACES
as they sat around its warmth.
Grizelda lay back in the chair, an embroidered cushion at her head, stroking Oskar's ears, her stockinged feet stretched towards the coals. Molly sat awkwardly on the floor, carving a lump of dark gnarled wood with a small knife. Nan sat in her wheeled chair, knitting with a fierce
clack
,
clack
of her needles. Jack roasted old wrinkled apples on the end of the poker, thrusting them deep into the orange heart of the fire, while Peregrine sat on a stool, making a collection of new arrows to replace the ones he had lost on the journey. He was fletching the arrows with feathers from the rooster in the courtyard, and using reeds for the shafts, the only straight, light timber he could find in abundance. The Marsh King was in the forge, making him a set of new arrowheads.
âTell me more about Grimsfell,' Peregrine said, his hands so accustomed to his work that he barely needed to glance at them. âSomeone mentioned something about Old Grim. Do they mean Lord Grim?'
âNever heard him called naught but Old Grim,' Nan said. âThere's lots of stories about him round here'.
âCan you tell me some?' Peregrine asked. âBecause we have lots of stories about
Lord
Grim and I'd very much like to know if they are one and the same'.
âWell, then, I'll see what I can remember'. Nan laid her knitting down on her lap. âWhat my nan told me is that Old Grim's a-sleeping under that high hill, with all his boo-bogeys and boggarts. He used to ride out regular like, and everywhere he went people would be a-shivering in their beds, too scared to put a nose above their counterpanes in case they saw him and his Gallop'. Cause if you saw him you'd have to ride with him and whither you'd go no-one knew. All folks knew was that few ever came back again'.
Peregrine leant forward eagerly. âYes! Lord Grim's Gallop. It's the same story. So that's where he sleeps, under the hill with the lightning-blasted oak?'
âAye, that's right. My old nan always said there was a battle there once, which Old Grim lost, and that's why he's bound to lie a-sleeping under the hill'.
âThe Storm King defeated him,' Peregrine said exultantly. âWith the magic of the spear!'
âDidn't he make the spear to fight against Lord Grim?' Jack asked.
Peregrine nodded. âYes. In the old days, Lord Grim and his Gallop came riding out of the hill every winter, through a dark and secret gate from their own realm into ours, bringing with them shadows and coldness and death'. He looked about at the circle of faces turned to his, and let his voice fall into a natural storytelling rhythm.
âWherever they rode, the world would change according
to their whim. Lakes would form in their horses' hoofprints, mountains would heave themselves up and cast themselves down, gardens would be blighted with frost. Wherever he passed, candles turned blue, fires sank and skin turned to gooseflesh. Lord Grim's Gallop brought nothing but grief and fear, for no-one ever knew what the world would do next'.
As he spoke, Peregrine remembered his mother telling him the old story that had been told to her by her mother, and felt raw grief tighten his throat. Where were his parents now? He dreaded what the pretender-queen might do to them now she had them in her grasp. He recalled the story of how minstrels had their entrails eaten out by rats and storytellers had their tongues cut out, and shuddered.
âSo what happened?' Molly prompted him, looking up from her carving.
Peregrine pushed away his dreadful imaginings and went on. âThe Storm King was then just a boy called Wolfgang. He was the only son of one of the Crafty, and he never knew his father. He was a strange, wild child who hated to be kept confined and would sometimes just stare off into space as if he saw things that no-one else could see'. Peregrine had always felt an affinity with the wild boy Wolfgang, for he too was accused of staring into space. âSometimes he fell into such a fit of temper no-one could constrain him. He had Gifts but did not seem to be able to control them. He could whistle up the wind but could not whistle it down again, and the storms he called would rage for days, flooding rivers and tearing down trees'.
âThis is all very interesting,' Grizelda said, yawning behind her hand, âbut I really don't see what use it is for us to know all this'.
âHe made the spear,' Peregrine said sharply. âHe poured all of his Gifts into the spearâthe Gift of Calling Storm, the Gift of Finding and, of course, the Gift of Healing'.
Grizelda frowned. âBut the spear is a weapon. Isn't it meant to kill people?'
Peregrine nodded. âAll the Gifts of the Stormlinn are double-edged, though, Grizelda. I can call and I can send away'.
âHe once ordered a mob of bully-boys to go away and they weren't found for hours,' Jack said with a grin. âThey'd walked their feet bloody'.
âI didn't know what would happen. I've never done it again,' Peregrine said shortly. âIt's against the law of three'.
âGo on, though, laddie, tell us more. It's the best story I've heard in many a long year!' Nan urged.
âWell, Wolfgang's mother was badly hurt one day by the passing of Lord Grim and his Gallop,' Peregrine said. âWolfgang did not yet know he had the Gift of Healing. He was beside himself with rage and grief. He ran after Lord Grim and seized his stirrup, trying to haul him out of the saddle. Lord Grim just laughed at him, scooped him up onto his saddle and rode away with him. Wolfgang howled and fought with all his strength but Lord Grim did not let him go. In the end Wolfgang fainted dead away. When he came to, he was many miles from home. It took him a long time to find his way back again, only to discover his mother was dead'.
âOh, that's so sad,' Molly said.
âWhat did he do, poor lad?' Nan asked, clasping her small gnarled hands together.
âWolfgang travelled all about the land, seeking a way to exact his revenge. He went to every one of the Crafty he could find and studied with them. Everything he was taught he wrote
down, eventually making what is now the Book of the Erlrune. Everywhere Wolfgang went he saw the ruin left by the wildest of the wild things, who knew no rules. He began to think how best to tame and bind and teach them. Slowly he began to make alliances and build Stormlinn Castle, but every winter Lord Grim would come and lay waste to what he had built that year, almost as if mocking his attempt to bring peace and prosperity to the world. It seemed as if Lord Grim and his Gallop were invincible'.
Peregrine paused to take a mouthful of warm spiced mead, looking around at the faces upturned to his. âOne day Wolfgang heard that Lady Grim had cast a spell of protection on her husband and each of her sons'. He lowered his voice and leant forward so the glow of the fire would flicker eerily upon his face. âShe had said:
Naught shall harm thee, so I swear
Naught that moves upon the earth
Naught that flies in the air
Naught that swims in the sea
Naught that grows in the soil
Naught that lies beneath it
Naught that is made from it
Naught shall harm thee, so I swear'.
âThat's fairly all-embracing,' Grizelda said. âJack, are you cooking that apple or burning it?'
âSorry!' Jack cried and pulled the apple out of the fire. It was looking rather burnt, but he cut away the blackened peel, rolled it in brown sugar and passed it up to her.
She took it gingerly, for it was steaming hot, and ate greedily. âThese are really good,' she said indistinctly.
âSo what happened?' Molly asked, her hands busy with her knife and lump of wood.
âWolfgang despaired for a long while, but then one day he went out at midwinter to cut the mistletoe, as has always been the custom among the Crafty,' Peregrine said. âIt occurred to him that mistletoe did not grow from the soil, but was rooted into the branches of a tree. It did not fly, or swim, or creep, or move upon the earth. The more he thought about it, the more he felt that he might have found the flaw in Lady Grim's spell'.
He looked round the circle of intent faces. âYou may not know much about mistletoe. I don't know if you hearthkin follow our wildkin customs anymore'.
âWe hang it from our mantelpieces come midwinter,' Nan said with a toothless grin, âand kiss anyone who stands underneath it'.
âIt is sacred to us,' Peregrine said. âIt stays green in the midst of winter, when the tree it grows in is bare of all leaves. We call it the golden bough, for it often glows golden in the bare winter trees, and thunderbesem, for it is thought to offer protection against lightning, both in the air and â¦' he hesitated and looked away, â⦠and in the brain'.
There was a moment of silence, then he went on slowly, âSometimes it is called all-heal, even though it is poisonous. A ring carved of mistletoe, or a sprig carried on your body, is thought to ward off illness and help wounds heal'.
Peregrine slid his hand into his pocket and drew out his own sprig of mistletoe and showed it to Nan and Molly. âQueen Rozalina plucked it for me on Midwinter's Eve. She cuts it with a silver knife and does not allow any part of it to touch the ground. We think that is a custom left over from the day Wolfgang the Storm King cut mistletoe to make his spear'.
âSo the spear of thunder is made from mistletoe?' Molly asked. âHe made it to get around Lady Grim's spell?'
Peregrine nodded. âHe spent all year thinking and studying, and the following midwinter he used his Gift to find a place where mistletoe grew from a lightning-blasted oak tree â¦'
âOur Grimsfell,' Nan said, nodding her head.
âIt must be,' Peregrine said. âHe cut a branch of mistletoe and carved himself a spear, engraving magical runes along its length and honing its point till it was as sharp as an arrow. He anointed the point with the poisonous juice from its white berries, which only grow at midwinter, and then he called Lord Grim.
âAlthough he was compelled to come by Wolfgang's Gift of Calling, Lord Grim came without fear, galloping through the sky with his great black-horned steed, all his hounds howling at his heels. Lady Grim rode beside him and his ten sons rode behind. Midwinter is the time of Lord Grim's greatest strength. He was arrogant and sure of his power, which would not begin to wane until the twelfth day of Midwinter.