Brotherhood Saga 03: Death (109 page)

BOOK: Brotherhood Saga 03: Death
2.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Panicked
, Odin threw three balls of light across the clearing and thrust himself out of his bedroll with his swords in hand. The world silent, the snow shifting down through the trees, his current predicament appeared anything but dangerous. In fact, it seemed calm—peaceful, to a point where this frozen world seemed tranquil and bursting with life. That feeling, however, lasted no more than a moment, as almost immediately he saw shapes shifting on the horizon.

You know what to do,
he thought, first clipping his swords to his belt, then drawing each of the blades from their sheaths.

He began the melodic ceremony by tapping the tips of his swords together slowly, one at a time
, every other breath, then increased the pace during the time he spent curling his bedroll and forcing it into his pack. The Wraiths, who seemed all the more intent on encroaching upon the orbs of light, hovered outside the radius of light, shifting back and forth as if on a boat managed by a clumsy fisherman. Their behavior in and of itself was enough to unsettle Odin, especially since he had only the faintest idea of where to go but not how to get there.

“Keep going west,” he whispered. “That
’s all you can do.”

After throwing his pack onto his shoulder, he navigated himself in the right direction
and continued into the night.

The Wraiths followed him for hours. Slowly, heavily, like dogs intent on the prey whose life was theirs to own and placate to their own dilapidated will—they drew so close at times that Odin found himself wanting to strike out
for fear that they would devour him. His worries eventually escalated into all-out panic when, on all sides, the creatures were so thick that he could see nothing but shadowy, amorphous figures.

This is ridiculous.

Rather than get angry and thrust himself into rage, he began to tap the swords together at an increasingly-alarming pace—first slowly, then in more rapid blows. He eventually began to worry for their conditions come the time he was done with this mission, but rather than dwell on the fact, he shook his head and pushed a path through the darkness, toward the one place he was determined to set foot on.

Over the course of several hours, the Wraiths began to fade—not, it seemed, due to any form of light, but because the Marshlands
began to make way for the coast.

There
.

Heart caught, mind alight, he tapped the swords together three final times before sheathing them.

No Wraiths came forward come the time he broke from beneath the willows and stepped foot onto the coast.

Even in the darkness, it could be seen in the distance—jagged, tooth-shaped, much like
the riddle had described and broken apart on three even sides. Its triangular shadow beckoned the question as to how it had disbanded from the land if not by a higher power, as the break seemed perfect and even serrated to the south of which it lay. Odin’s eyes were so intent on the island before him that he barely realized the time that was passing in light of his newfound freedom.

You need to get going,
a voice said.
It’ll soon be time.

Odin closed his eyes.

As if sensing his distress, the wind began to kick up.

Somewhere, a loon howled
, as if mourning the loss of innocence that was just about to be taken.

The world seemed to draw into terrible focus.

Odin turned his attention to the river at his side, then at the island in the distance.

You have to sing to summon the Ferryman.

“I know,” he whispered, bowing his head. “Thank you, Virgin.”

He took the next several moments to prepare himself for what was to come. Hands laced, chin bowed, hair depicting him in what seemed like a horrible, malevolent light—anyone looking upon the situation would have seen that there was much distress in this young man
’s heart, whom had just stepped from possibly the most dangerous place in the Ornalan country and was now waiting for the strength to do the thing he’d so vicariously planned for a year. That alone was enough to make Odin tremble—not because of the cold, which was ever-so-present, but because of the fact that, soon, he would be committing an act that might erase all good in his life forever.

When Odin turned his head up, he saw the faint image of a bird spreading its wings, then taking flight.

“Ferryman, Ferryman,” he whispered. “Hear my plea—“

Can you do this?
a voice whispered.
Can you, Odin?

I can do this.

Are you sure?

“I
’m sure,” he whispered, tilting his head back up.

All it would take w
ere a few simple words to summon the very creature that, in legend, was said to take men to the place where the worlds were bridged—where, in holy books, it was said would rise from the waters, its hands holding one oar and its eyes set toward the very place Odin stood, head held high and figure cloaked. This fear, and more, was enough to make every hair on his neck stand on end, and in that moment he seemed petrified, unable to move or even speak. He couldn’t, for a moment, breathe, and when his lungs began to beg for air, Odin gasped and took the deepest breath he could imagine, as if he were starving after being drowned.

“Calm down,” he whispered. “You know you can do this.”

He’d come here for a reason.

Were he to turn back now, he would disgrace not only himself, but his father
’s honor.

Slowly, Odin bowed his head.
“Ferryman, Ferryman—Hear my plea: I come to thee in the dead of night, whispering things of horror and fright. Allow me to your island’s cross, I offer a penny, the chilled and frost.”

Odin pulled from his pocket the silver coin Virgin had
given him.

Balanced upon two fingers, he flipped it with his thumb and cast it into the water.

Instantaneously, ripples began to spread in the sea.

Something told him it would have been beautiful were it not cast in a light so somber and demure that it could have been seen as horrible. In the moments that followed the exact time
the silver coin struck the sea, the water beneath the surface began to tremble, as if shivering, cold and virile. A chill wind so cold Odin imagined it would freeze him cast itself across the coast and spun in the space before him, creating a mini-whirlwind that cast flakes of snow across the air and onto the surface of the water. It eventually depressed into the sea, twisting like some fallen dancer, and began to open a portal where into its depths the water crashed. Odin, unaware of what was supposed to happen, merely stood there, trembling, and reached down to grip his swords, both of which seemed too cold to touch.

For one brief moment, he considered the option of turning, running, and never returning. Then, slowly, he remembered just who he had come all this way for—had journeyed, over the year, to the Abroen and back, then to the capital and to the very Marshlands he now stood in.

Miko.

“Father.”

It rose from the depths of the icy-cold water as if it were a figure making its way from the darkest places of the ocean. Its body thin, languid, speaking of death and things that could not be real, its head first broke the surface and revealed to Odin a cloaked figure whose face could not be seen, save for the mute white bone of a jaw polished by beast and fish. The torso rose next, so thin in places it appeared impossible, followed by its arms, which hung below the knees and held within its grasp the oar that would guide them across the river. Finally, its canoe came into view—long, thin, bearing upon its face the image of a lonely human skull with glowing rubies for eyes. Odin found it hard to look the creature directly in the face, for beneath its shadowed hood he felt something horrible lay there—deep, dark and all the more foreboding.

In the moments following its sudden and dramatic appearance, Odin looked up just in time to see its jaw shift and hear a deep rumble echo from its chest.

“Human,” it said, its voice like keratin breaking under the foot of some great god.

“My name Odin Karussa of the Felnon Providence,” he said, tempted to kneel, but unsure if he should. “I seek passage to the island known as Sharktooth, oh mighty one.”

“Yes.”

Yes?

“Come,” the creature said, lifting one hand to reveal a perfectly-symmetrical series of fingers that could only discern it as something that had once been human. “We must go.”

The creature, which Odin did not feel fit to describe as anything more than the Ferryman, shifted its oar and aligned the canoe
along the shore, allowing Odin perfect passage onto its surface.

When he stepped into the boat, he felt something crack, then shift beneath his feet.

When he looked down, he saw what appeared to be hundreds upon hundreds of aquatic spiders trembling beneath his feet.

Unable to say anything not only out of fear, but respect for
the creature he had personally summoned, Odin turned his head up to the island, then looked at the creature before him, trying his hardest not to tremble in spite of the fact he felt he was embarking upon his final quest.

You may never be able to return to the kingdom,
his conscience whispered.

At that moment, he didn
’t care.

All he wanted was his father.

 

It took what felt like hours to cross the river that separated the Haunted Marshlands from Sharktooth Island. More than wary about their progress despite the river
’s short bredth, Odin kept silent and only shifted when he felt it necessary. Much to his satisfaction, the creature said nothing. It did, as he so felt was right, its perspective job.

We
’re almost there,
he thought, training his eyes on the near distance.

It would take no more than a few moments to cross over and be on the very island Odin knew held the strongest source of the Will th
at existed in the human lands.

“It comes,” the creature of bone and death said.

“I see,” Odin said, trailing his eyes over the mist that had developed out of nowhere.

The Ferryman made no further reply.

It took, as it seemed, no more than a few moments for the sandbars that surrounded the island to come into view. Upon encountering them, the Ferryman tipped its oar into the water, guided the canoe around their surfaces, then directed them toward the island without bothering to slow their pace.

When the canoe pushed up onto the island, Odin disembarked, pushed his feet into the peach-colored sand, then turned his attention on the creature that stood no more than a few short feet away.

“Thank you,” he said, breathless and unsure what more to offer.

Rather than say anything
, the Ferryman parted the sand beneath its oar, pushed the canoe away from shore, then disappeared into the mist.

With the knowledge that he was
upon the very location where his father would soon return, Odin stepped forward, into the mist that hung waist-high, then raised his hand, where he summoned three orbs of pale light and pushed them toward the deeper parts of the island.

As he
’d expected, a thicket of trees came into view.

What he hadn
’t expected, however, was a road, one that ran into the forest and eventually disappeared into the darkness.

“All right,” he whispered, taking his first few steps onto the island, then up the road that would lead him to where, he assumed, the
source of Will lay.

Having not expected anything, he couldn
’t rightfully assume whether this path was natural, much less of the physical world. The brief thought that occurred to him shortly after he started forward was that, as unlikely as it was, this path had been forged for him.

If the Elves wanted to hide this,
he thought,
then why is there a road here?

Maybe, like he thought, the road had materialized for him, as he
’d completed the necessary steps to summon the Ferryman and begin his journey. That notion was enough to assure him that things would be fine, but no matter how long or hard he tried to settle himself with that fact, there seemed no shortage of concerns pressing upon him.

“Everything will be just fine,” he whispered. “Nothing
’s going to happen.”

Somewhere behind him, a loon began to cry.

Do the dead speak here?
a voice whispered in his head.

Odin chose
not to concern himself with such things. Instead, he focused his attention on the road and began to make his way toward whatever lay in the distance.

 

He came, after what seemed like an long time, to a break in the path that revealed something marvelous.

At first unsure what to think and even more concerned about the structure set before him, Odin paused and began to take in his surroundings—first the trees, which seemed no different than
those within the Felnon wood, then to the ground, which looked to have died some ages ago and had since retreated into the earth. What frightened him the most, despite the mist that placated the area, was the single object that stood just beyond the end of the road.

BOOK: Brotherhood Saga 03: Death
2.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Magician's Elephant by Kate DiCamillo
The Cornish Affair by Lockington, Laura
Marked by Snyder, Jennifer
Anchor Point by Alice Robinson
Dinosaurs in the Attic by Douglas Preston
A Bad Boy for Christmas by Kelly Hunter
Deep Trouble by Mary Connealy