Authors: Bruce Macbain
Also by Bruce Macbain
Roman Games: A Plinius Secundus Mystery (Book 1)
The Bull Slayer: A Plinius Secundus Mystery (Book 2)
A novel
BRUCE MACBAIN
Blank Slate Press
Saint Louis, MO 63110
Copyright © 2015 Bruce Macbain
All rights reserved.
Publisher's Note: This book is a work of the imagination. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. While some of the characters and incidents portrayed here can be found in historical accounts, they have been altered and rearranged by the author to suit the strict purposes of storytelling. The book should be read solely as a work of fiction.
For information, contact
Blank Slate Press at 3963 Flora Place, Saint Louis, MO 63110.
www.blankslatepress.com
www.brucemacbain.com
Blank Slate Press is an imprint of Amphorae Publishing Group, LLC
Manufactured in the United States of America
Cover and Interior Illustration: Anthony Macbain
Cover Design by Kristina Blank Makansi
Set in Adobe Caslon Pro and Viking
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015938961
ISBN: 9780991305865
To Carol with love and gratitude
Odin's Child
On that morning in May, as we rode to the stallion fight at Thingholt, my fate was revealed to me. A raven flew low across the sky into the rising sun, and the moment I saw it I knew Odin had spoken to me and that he would give me the courage to do what I had already secretly made up my mind to do. Only now, half a century later, do I see what a long text was folded into that swift vision.
The spring of my sixteenth year had come early to the South Quarter of Iceland, with days hot and cold, and thunderclouds sweeping up over the mountains. The stallions, smelling the air, trembled and kicked against their stalls. If you staked out a mare where the stallions could smell her, they would fight like berserkers to get at her. The great ones would die before they broke and ran.
Black Grani was such a one. This was his fourth spring and the time had come to take him to the South Quarter Thing and fight him. Thorvald, my father, grumbled and held back, but I gave him no peace, until, at last, he flung up an arm, which meant
yes
.
My brother Gunnar and I set out early from the farm that day, and it was nigh dusk before we came in sight of Thingholt plain and heard the distant shouts of men and the whinnying of horses. We left Grani and our mounts at the horse lines and walked across the sparse heath into the holiday crowd. And as we pushed our way through, there were some who knew us. A few old men came up and in low voices asked to
be remembered to our father. But one red-faced woman, seeing us, cried, “Jesu!” and dragged her little daughter from our path.
Gunnarâsix years older than me and as reckless as he was handsomeâstopped short, favored her with his wickedest grin and purred, “I've eaten my breakfast today, housewife, or wouldn't I just love a bite of your fat girl! Now, my black-headed brother here, who is greedier than Iâ¦.”
The woman elbowed herself out of our way. Some, standing near, laughed, though others eyed us coldly and shook their heads.
“I've too sharp a tongue in my head,” Gunnar allowed to no one in particular. “It's my single fault.”
Ahead of us a crowd gathered for the horse fights. We worked our way to the front until the clearing lay before us, a haze of dust hanging over trampled grass. At the edge, the mares were tethered, while in the center two farmers, stripped to the waist and backed by a knot of shouting friends, shoved and goaded their snorting stallions into battle. It was a good match and we watched, shouting with the rest, until the loser, foam-flecked and streaked with blood, charged into the crowd, scattering spectators to right and left. Winning horse and master both threw back their heads and cried victory.
In the days before the White Christ, the winning horse would have been sacrificed to Frey, whose horse's prick fertilizes the fields, and the meat cut up and sold to the folk to eat. Christian priests put a stop to that, but they were too shrewd to make us give up our sport entirely.
While pieces of silver changed hands and horns of ale went round, Gunnar fingered his yellow beard and looked over the crowd for a likely competitor.
“I will goad Grani.” I had waited for this moment to speak.
“Maybe next year, Tangle-Hair,” he answered, not looking at me. “When you've got more size on you. You'll get yourself trampled.”
Our younger sister had given me the nickname âTangle-Hair', as well as âBlack-Brows' and âHalf-Troll' and several others. Our father resembled a black bullâshort, thick, and dark. Not handsome according to the taste of our people. And I was the image of him, black and shaggy-haired from birth. How much did I resemble him beneath the skin? That question gnawed like a worm in my belly.
“Gunnar,” I said, “I goad him or no one does.”
My skin was cold. What Gunnar could do smiling, I did with teeth
clenched. That was the difference between us.
“That's not how you put it to Father.”
Not even to my brother could I confess the real reason. I could scarce admit it to myself. We fixed our eyes on each other. I would know today, I swore to myself, whether my father's bloodâthe blood that gave me his looks and his temperâhad also infected me with his sickness. I would master my fear today or die. I didn't mind which.
“If it goes badly, you'll face him by yourself.”
“I know.”
“I oughtn't to let you.” But then he smiled. “I hope Grani knows what to do because it's certain as rain and fire you don't. Just promise me you won't lose your temper, it'll only worry the horse.”
While he went back to fetch Grani, I drew a long breath and stepped into the circle to yell my challenge. This was the first time I had put myself forward in a group of strange men. I had a lump like a fist in my throat and hardly recognized my own strangulated voice. In answer there was only a little laughter and scattered shouts of “Brave boy!” Then anger welled up in me and I cried out, “Odd Thorvaldsson does not leave this circle with his horse un-fought!”
For a long moment, nothing. Then a stir in the crowd. “Hold on! Hold on!” Some jumped aside and others turned to look as a man thrust his way through from the rear. He launched himself toward me across the open space.
“Don't burst your lungs, boy, Hrut Ivarsson still has one good ear left to hear you with!”
There was laughter from the crowd at this joke, which he acknowledged with a wave of his arm.
I knew who he was. Even to our remote farmstead, the story had made its way of how this man Hrut had got his ear torn off in a brawl last Yule Feast. Strife-Hrut, as his neighbors called him, was a bully who couldn't enter a strange hall without starting a fight and who never paid blood money for his killings, though he was plenty rich enough. He farmed down on the Whitewater, near the coast, and spent a part of each summer over the sea, trading in his own ship.
He thrust his face at meâred and meaty, with small eyes, and a scrappy beard. He grinned, showing broken front teeth, and said, “I've a roan stallion, ugly as me and less good-natured, that I'll match with yours
for the stakes of a silver ounce.” He pulled a bit of hack-silver from his purse and waved it under my nose. “And seeing as you're only a young'un, my boy Mord, that isn't much bigger 'n what you are, will goad him.”
He had two sons, Mord and Brand, who had followed him into the circle and stood behind him now, one to either side. Both of them were closer to Gunnar's age than to mine and no prettier to look at than their father.
“Mind you,” Hrut tapped my chest with a thick forefinger, “I take up your challenge out of kind regards for Thorvald, for I know whose son you are. He had a shrewd head and a heavy hand once upon a time, and I call it a shame he keeps himself so close nowadays.” It was meant as a sneer and was said loud enough for many to hear.
“He has his reasons,” I said.
“I expect he does.”
With a nod to his sons, Strife-Hrut went off to round up his horse. A moment later, Gunnar appeared at my side, grim-faced.
“Tangle-Hair, these are men who don't like to lose. They'd sooner kill a horseâor his driver.”
“What would you have me do?”
“In Christ's name, Odd, let me handle the horse.” Whenever Gunnar swore by Christ it was as if to say,
Our mother would ask this
.
“Give me the goad,” I said.
They were coming back now, leading their scarred animal, the survivor of many a fight, and the crowd gave them room, for the horse was sidestepping and his ears were flat against his head. I laid aside my sword belt and tunic and picked up the iron-pronged club, while Gunnar, with his hands tight on Grani's halter, brought him to the edge of the clearing. The moment Grani saw the roan, his lips drew back over his teeth and he rolled his eyes like a battle-mad berserker.
“He won't need the goad,” Gunnar shouted over the noise of the crowd. “Keep close and let him hear your voice. That's all he wants.”
Round and round the stallions circled each other in the dusty ring, lashing out with their hoofs, thrusting with their necks, snorting with the same sound that the earth makes when it steams and heaves beneath our feet. And I, with the choking dust and the hot reek of horseflesh in my nostrils, danced alongside Grani, shouting his name and rushing in to throw myself against his flank as he charged.
We fought like brothers, he and I, side by side, the same blood, foam, and sweat soaking us both. The battle-joy rose in my throat and swept me up so that I had scarcely a mind left with which to tell myself,
You have conquered fearâthe sickness hasn't touched you
.
Hrut's horse was a fierce biter and soon Grani was bleeding from his face and neck. But his strength began to tell against the roan. He drove his foe back on his haunches and, rearing up, lashed him with his fore-hoofs. Mord used his goad frantically, raking his animal's back until long ribbons of blood ran down its flanks. His brother Brand rushed in, too, to throw his weight against the beast and the two of them shoved and flailed and swore, but the roan had no heart left in him. Wide-eyed with fear, he shied away, tumbling Brand over in the dust.