02 - Runelight - Joanne Harris
02 - Runelight - Joanne Harris
Cover
About the Book
Title Page
Dedication
Maps
Foreword
Characters
Runes
Book 8: Bif-rost
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Book 9: Asgard
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Also by Joanne Harris
Copyright
About the Book
Six hundred miles apart, two girls each bear on their skin a runemark: a symbol
of the Old Days when the known Worlds were ruled by the gods from their sky
citadel, Asgard.
Now Asgard lies in ruins, and the power of the gods has long since been
destroyed.
Or so everyone thinks.
But nothing is lost for ever, and the gods haven’t given up yet (nor stopped
squabbling!) and they want the power of the runes borne by Maddy and Maggie
– these new runes, which carry huge potential, their runelight shining out as a
portent to the future.
Soon both girls are swept into a maelstrom of cataclysmic events that are to draw
them closer and closer to each other, and nearer and nearer to a horrific struggle
where each must prove where their loyalty lies …
Filled with inventive and humorous detail, trickery and treachery, carnage and
lunacy, Runelight is the second title – following Runemarks – in a series of
gloriously imaginative and dramatic tales about the Norse gods.
To Anouchka
Shine on.
Foreword
I’m hoping you’ve read Runemarks, in which case you can skip this bit, because
you already know what happens. If not, there are just a few things you should be
aware of before you begin.
We’re in a place called Inland, a part of one of the Nine Worlds existing in
the branches of Yggdrasil, the World Tree.
The Worlds have ended several times, and will almost certainly do so again.
The forces of Order and Chaos keep these Worlds in precarious balance.
Gods and demons (which are almost but not quite the same thing) exist here
in bewildering numbers, although they tend to get on rather badly with each
other, which explains the End-of-the-World thing (see above).
Originally there were two tribes of gods – the Æsir and the Vanir. After years
of civil war, they decided to team up (under Odin, the leader of the Æsir) to fight
their common enemies and generally keep Order in the Worlds. Odin acquired
magical runes (a nice way of saying he stole them), which he used to keep the
gods (and himself) in power. With the help of his blood-brother Loki, a renegade
from Chaos, he created Asgard, the citadel of the gods, where Æsir and Vanir
lived, reigned, had adventures, fell in love, made a number of foolish mistakes,
played needlessly rude and cruel tricks on each other (well, Loki did, anyway)
and finally fell out with Loki over a silly misunderstanding (his interpretation,
not theirs), which resulted in a chain of events that finally ended in Ragnarók, a
titanic battle against their enemies (everyone else), where all the gods were
meant to have died, fighting the forces of Chaos.
In Runemarks, Ragnarók has come and gone, and five hundred years have
since gone by. The world has changed. We meet Maddy Smith, a fourteen-year-
old misfit living in Malbry, a village of northern Inland. Maddy has a runemark –
or ruinmark – on the palm of her hand that gives her special powers as well as
making her an outsider, a throwback from the Bad Old Days before the End of
the World and the coming of the Order, a religious group based in World’s End
and devoted to the eradication of all things Chaotic, including magic, Faëries,
old gods, stories, and anything else that might give the folk of Inland dangerous
ideas – or, worse (Laws protect us), dreams.
But Maddy does have one good friend: One-Eye of the Wilderlands, soon to
be revealed as one of the old gods – Odin, leader of the Æsir, no less, thought to
have fallen at Ragnarók, but surviving, his powers diminished, as a shadow of
his former Aspect. He befriends Maddy, recognizing in her a potential ally, and
enlists her in a personal quest, which doesn’t work out quite as he intended.
Maddy befriends a renegade goblin (with the unfortunate name of Sugar-
and-Sack) and embarks on a quest of her own, with a number of unforeseen
consequences, leading ultimately to a final, disastrous confrontation on the
shores of the river Dream, where the forces of the Order are massed to wipe out
all of the Nine Worlds.
The gods are wholly outnumbered, of course, but thanks to some unusual
allies – including Jormungand, the World Serpent, and Hel, the ruler of the Dead
–
The Order is completely wiped out.
Odin falls.
The World ends (again).
And Maddy turns out to be Modi, one of Thor’s twin children, presumed lost
at Ragnarók.
The rescued Æsir, being disembodied, are obliged to take on the Aspect of
the nearest appropriate living host – in this case, two humans, a goblin and a pot-
bellied pig.
We leave the gods on the shore of Dream, angry, broken, grieving and faced
with the job of repairing a breach between Worlds that may soon result in all Hel
breaking loose …
So – lots of ends remained untied. Some good people died who should have
survived. Some very bad people who ought to have died somehow managed to
make it.
It’s not what you’d call a happy ending.
But it was the best I could do at the time.
Now. Read on …
CHARACTERS
(
GODS ÆSIR)
Thor, the Thunderer, son of Odin, aka Dorian Scattergood, ex-pig farmer, rebel
and acting leader of the Æsir
Ethel, the Seeress, his mother, aka Frigg, Ethelberta Parson, Oracle and merry
widow
Sif, Thor’s wife, the goddess of plenty, aka Fat Lizzy, a pot-bellied pig
Tyr, the Warrior, aka Sugar-and-Sack, an erstwhile goblin reluctantly turned god
of war
Maddy, who ought to have been born Modi, son of Thor, but who for
complicated reasons turned out to be his daughter instead
Odin, the General, still dead, but working on a solution
(
GODS VANIR )
Loki, blood-brother of Odin, known as the Trickster, fitting into neither camp
but grudgingly tolerated – at least for the present – on account of how he
saved the Worlds
Jormungand, his monstrous son, aka the World Serpent
Sigyn, Loki’s late ex-wife
Hel, his daughter, Ruler of the Dead
Fenris, his other son, Devourer and demon wolf
Skól and Haiti, aka Skull and Big H, friends of Fenris, Demon Wolves,
Devourers of the Sun and Moon, and dedicated followers of World’s End
fashion
Jolly – just don’t call him ‘short’
Hughie and Mandy, aka Hugin and Munin, ravens with a sweet tooth
Angrboda, one of Loki’s more dangerous liaisons, aka the Temptress; hag of
Ironwood, mother of Hel, Fenris and Jormungand – and person of Chaotic
origin
Maggie Rede, a daughter of the Order, and more
Adam Scattergood, a young man with a dream
Crazy Nan Fey, a crone of unruly ambition
Captain Chaos, an entertainer
Sleipnir, an eight-legged Horse and harbinger of the Apocalypse
Mimir the Wise, aka the Whisperer, a disembodied entity with revenge on its
mind
The Old Man, see above
Perth, an entrepreneur and dealer in other people’s property
Surt, a Lord of Chaos
RUNES OF THE ELDER SCRIPT
It was Maggie’s favourite dream by far. She knew what a dangerous game
she played – for demons could enter the world through dreams – but still she
could not let it go. And so in the darkness of the Universal City, surrounded by
forgotten books, lulled by the murmur of wind in the tunnels and by the distant
sounds of music from above, she dreamed of the Word, and of the Bliss, and of
the Tribulation to come. Most of all she dreamed of the Riders of the Last Days,
coming closer as time went by; and she found that if she closed her eyes, she
could almost see them – one of them especially, his young face weathered by the
sun, light hair pulled back with a hank of hide, and the blue of his eyes, so
different to the blue of the Sea; a misty blue, like mountains seen from afar, and
as cold as the peaks of the distant North.
It was a strange and beautiful dream. Strange, because somehow she knew he
was real, and that this – this dead and all-but-forgotten place – was the place to
which he was destined to come. Stranger, because she sometimes felt that the
dreams themselves were calling him in a language of their own; a secret
language like that of those books in which she had found a new purpose.
And so, where most people did all they could to stop themselves from
dreaming, Maggie became a hunter of dreams. And the more she dreamed, the
more real they became to her, and the more she grew to understand that it was
here, among the ruins of the Universal City, that the End of the World was
destined to start, and that she would have a part to play.
It was this thought – and not the books or the rats – that brought Maggie
Rede here every night, walking down deserted passageways, reading strange and
forgotten texts, turning keys half gobbled with rust, and dreaming of that
glorious day when everything she had longed for all her life would suddenly
come true.
One day it would happen. One day her moment would come.
And so Maggie waited amongst her stolen books, and kept the faith, and
studied, and dreamed; little knowing that six hundred miles away, in the far
frozen North, in a village half hidden between mountains and snow, a pair of
ever-watchful eyes had turned at last to the sound of her voice; and that, after
three years of waiting, her dreams were finally marching home.
THOR WAS SPOILINGfor a fight. That in itself wasn’t unusual. The Thunderer wasn’t
best known for his patience, especially not before breakfast, and you had to
admit he’d had a lot to deal with over the past three years.
First had been the arrival of his son, Modi – one of a pair of twins whom the
Oracle had predicted long ago but who, due to the unreliability of oracles in
general, had actually turned out to be a daughter, Maddy. Then there had been
her rescue of the surviving Æsir – with the help of Loki, the Trickster, of all
people – from the Black Fortress of Chaos; which operation had led, if not to the
actual End of the Worlds, then at least to something very like it, something that
had wiped out the enemy, taken the life of the General, and culminated in the
cataclysmic event between Order and Chaos that had caused Dream to burst its
banks and to release its contents into the Middle Worlds.
She hadn’t meant to do it, of course. In Thor’s experience, women never
meant to do anything, which was why – in the Elder Days, at least – they hadn’t
been involved in the dealings of the gods. Let a woman in your life, thought the
Thunderer bitterly, and before you know it, you’re sitting in an ice cave
somewhere with your beard in knots and your glam reversed, and your wife
nagging at you for a new body every ten minutes, as if you didn’t have enough to
do keeping the Worlds safe for mankind.
Bloody women, grumbled Thor. A son would have done things properly …
Of course, it had ended in victory for the gods. Four of them had escaped the
Black Fortress. Loki had gone even further, escaping the realm of Death itself.
But though it was true that the Order had been defeated, never had victory tasted
less sweet.
The Oracle, who had promised them new worlds, had turned out to be the
enemy. Odin was dead, the Æsir divided, the Vanir resentful and hostile; all of
them weakened and irresolute. Without the General they were once more at odds
– the Vanir, under Heimdall’s command, keeping mainly to their stronghold
under the Sleepers (except for Skadi, who hadn’t been seen since the End of the
World and was generally assumed to have gone back home to the Ice People).
The Æsir too were divided. Elevation to godhood is not always an easy
matter to come to terms with, even such beggarly godhood as theirs, with their
broken runemarks and unfinished Aspects. On the shores of the river Dream,
with magic flying around like snow and the disembodied Æsir fighting
desperately for their lives, there had been no chance for discussions or
explanations. Four largely unsuspecting hosts had found themselves suddenly
embodying various Aspects of the divine with greater or lesser degrees of
comfort.
Ethel and Dorian had accepted the change wholeheartedly, and had therefore
come to terms with the situation rather better than Sugar, whose role as Brave-
Hearted Tyr was still something of a trial to him; or Sif, whose complaints at her
reincarnation into the body of a pot-bellied pig had been a trial to everyone.
As a result, the Æsir were split between Malbry Parsonage, which still
belonged to Ethel; the pig farm at Farnley Tyas, which was the home of Thor
and Sif; the smithy, which Tyr had claimed as his own (possibly because it was
closest to the inn); and the smith’s cottage, which had fallen to Maddy after her
father’s death.
Maddy’s elder sister Mae, who might in other circumstances have been
expected to take an interest, had married out of Malbry to a relative of Torval
Bishop’s, and now lived across the river in the little village of Farnley Tyas,
which was about as far from Maddy as could be managed, and where Mae could
sometimes pretend to herself that they were not related.
The folk of Malbry had been reluctant at first to accept the strangers into
their midst. But Maddy was still one of their own; and Dorian Scattergood,
though something of a black sheep, was the son of a most respectable family. A
pity his new wife was so muffin-faced, said the village gossips. Dor – or Thor, as
he called himself now – was a fine-looking fellow, and some had expected him
to pair up with the parson’s wealthy widow – though, to be sure, even Ethel
Parson had grown quite peculiar following her escapade under Red Horse Hill.
Still, to be peculiar was not against the law, they said, and the strangers were
tolerated, if not liked, as long as they kept to themselves and caused no trouble.
There had been a scally with them at first – a red-haired young man with a
Ridings accent and a disrespectful manner – but thankfully his visit had been a
brief one, and had not been repeated. Loki, who could no more refrain from
causing trouble than he could from breathing, had lasted all of three weeks in
Malbry before going back to Red Horse Hill on pain of dismemberment (Thor
wouldn’t even have bothered to give him the warning, even though, as Maddy
pointed out, he had just saved the Nine Worlds). Here he had remained,
watching the valley from his subterranean stronghold and cataloguing the weird
and uncanny things that sometimes emerged from the flanks of the Hill.
Still, reflected the Thunderer crossly, there were worse things to deal with
than Loki right now. Bad as he was, and undoubtedly crazy to the last drop of his
demon blood, at least things happened when Loki was around. And Thor was
bored; so terribly bored that he would have welcomed even the Trickster’s
company.
The cause of his present annoyance was sitting at her dressing-table mirror,
combing her famous golden hair and getting ready for an argument.
Thor watched her and wondered vaguely how a woman’s back was able to
convey such a wide range of negative expressions. It wasn’t as if he had been in
any way responsible for what had happened three years ago. You’d think she’d
be grateful for some of it – her escape from the fortress, her release from
torment, the embodiment of her Aspect into a living host – of sorts.
But Bright-Haired Sif had been angry since the End of the World, and
showed no sign of changing her mind.
‘You all right?’ said Thor at last.
‘I’m fine,’ said Sif in a voice that suggested she was anything but.
That’s the problem with women, thought Thor. They say one thing, and mean
another.
‘What’s wrong?’ he said.
‘I said I’m fine.’ The comb tore at the fabled locks, releasing a fine dusting
of dandruff onto the dressing table. All the gods had done what they could, but
even in full Aspect – or what passed for it, with that broken runemark – Sif
continued to share some of the imperfections of her host body.
It could have been a lot worse. Apart from a few excess pounds and a
tendency to grunt when provoked, Sif could have passed for human almost
anywhere. True, there was little in her present Aspect to suggest that she had
once been an immortal beauty; but neither was there any indication that it owed
much of its existence to a pot-bellied sow called Fat Lizzy.
Sif, however, was acutely aware, and took it out on everyone.
It didn’t help that Thor had fared better. It’s true that he still bore a striking
resemblance to Dorian Scattergood, the man into whose body he had been
reborn; but his colouring and stature were those of the Thunderer, and Dorian’s
mind was rarely in conflict with his. Sif had never ceased to begrudge him this,
and, pulling out a rogue bristle from under her chin, she shot him a look of pure
venom – wasted on Thor, as he happened to be looking the other way.
Behind him, an arrangement of flowers suddenly turned brown and died, but
since neither Thor nor Dorian had ever cared for such things, that too went
unnoticed.
Sif pulled in her stomach with her hands and looked at herself side-on in the
mirror. For a moment her expression softened. ‘Notice anything different?’ she
said.
‘Different?’ said the Thunderer. Such questions were always tricky, he knew
– referring as they might to a new hat, or a different dress, or a fancy hairstyle,
or any one of a thousand things that only a woman would care about.
‘Something about … the dress?’ prompted Sif.
‘Yes. It’s new,’ said Thor with relief. ‘Noticed something straight away.’
‘This is my oldest dress,’ said Sif, her eyes beginning to narrow again. ‘I
haven’t worn it for ages. I haven’t been able to fit in it.’
‘Well, perhaps you should go on a diet, dear.’
Sif gave a snort. ‘For gods’ sakes, Thor. Are you blind? I’ve lost fourteen
pounds!’
But Thor had apparently found something outside that demanded his full
attention. The fact that it was six in the morning, pitch black, and already
snowing heavily did nothing to endear him to Sif, whose chins were trembling
furiously by now, and whose blue eyes burned like magnesium flares.
‘What are you gawping at out there?’ snapped the goddess of grace and
plenty.
‘Something’s wrong,’ said the Thunderer.
Sif was about to make a scathing remark when she saw it too – a signature in
the sky above Red Horse Hill, diffusing its light against the clouds in a pattern
that both of them recognized.
‘That’s Loki,’ said Thor. ‘He’s in trouble.’
‘Ignore it,’ said Sif.
Of course, she and the Trickster had never quite seen eye to eye; and though
she accepted that Loki was not directly responsible for the transference of her
Aspect into the body of a pot-bellied pig, it was true that he had taken a lot of
unnecessary amusement from the situation. If he was in trouble, she thought,
then he could get out of it on his own. Bright-Haired Sif had more pressing
concerns.
But now another signature emerged, this one dark red rather than violet. Both
signatures were very bright, like fireworks in the turbulent sky.
Thor frowned at them for a moment, then made for the door, pausing only to
collect the heavy fur cloak that hung there. ‘I have to go, Sif. That’s my son.’
Sif grunted. ‘What son?’
‘That’s right, rub it in,’ muttered Thor under his breath. ‘I mean, isn’t it bad
enough that my wife’s a pig, without my son being a girl as well?’ He raised his
voice. ‘I have to go. Something’s up. They’re using glam.’
That meant a fight, as Thor well knew, and in a place like this, in the heart of
the Uplands, there wasn’t really much else for a thunder god to do but be terribly
bored – or get into a fight.
In recent years the gods had done both, at first only fighting among
themselves; but as time passed they had realized that there was a more serious
foe to be reckoned with. Its name was Chaos, and it meant just that.
Three years ago, on the shores of Dream, the gates of Netherworld had been
breached for a period of exactly thirteen seconds. During that time, while Chaos
raged, an unknown number of its inhabitants had crossed over from Damnation
into Dream. Most were assumed to have perished there – Dream is hostile
territory so close to its source – but some, the strongest, had clearly survived,
surfacing occasionally into the minds of the Folk, and thence into the Middle
Worlds.
Fighting such creatures was Thor’s only sport. Not a thinker by
temperament, he rather enjoyed being at war, and given that the Order had been
completely eliminated, these beings from Chaos were now the only foe worthy
of the name. Even without a complete runemark, and lacking Mjølnir, the
hammer that had once made him almost invincible, the Thunderer was still a
force to be reckoned with.
He tried to hide his eagerness, but Sif was quick to notice the gleam in his
eye and the way he didn’t quite meet her gaze as she said, in a deceptively silky
tone: ‘So, you’re going, are you, dear?’
He faked a sigh. ‘Well, it’s my job.’
‘Leaving me here alone?’ said Sif. ‘With all kinds of … creatures loose out
there?’
‘Be reasonable,’ said the Thunderer. ‘Big, strapping lass like you, I’m sure
you can look after yourself.’
Later, Thor had to admit that the choice of words had been unfortunate. Like
the cry that starts off the avalanche, it set off a reaction in his beloved,
characterized firstly by certain sounds, then by a furious change in her colours,
and finally by a fretful explosion of glam that melted the snow around the house
to a distance of almost a quarter of a mile and vaporized a family of mice living
under the skirting board.
‘Strapping?’ echoed Bright-Haired Sif. ‘Who in Hel’s name are you calling
strapping?’
There are times when even a thunder god knows when to beat a strategic
retreat. Thor took one look over his shoulder, mumbled, ‘Uh – sorry, love. Must
dash,’ and, hastily throwing on his cloak, escaped into the driving snow.
ON THE TOP of Red Horse Hill, Loki was having a difficult time. The Hill was a
marvellous stronghold, of course, but it had one major disadvantage. It hid one
of the gateways to the Underworld, and the Faërie – goblins, demons, and
sometimes worse – were drawn from a hundred miles around.
Loki could usually cope with that. Being half demon himself, he had a
certain sympathy for the goblins, his little cousins under the Hill. Being half god,
he could usually cope with trolls and other nuisances, even in his present state, in
human Aspect, with his runemark still reversed. But when it came to ephemera
squeezing their way through the spaces between the Worlds and converging
upon Red Horse Hill, Loki felt he’d had enough. He’d already saved the Worlds
once. It wasn’t his job to save them again.
Of course, the gate itself was a source of power. But unless he felt like
playing King of the Hill to every stray demon that came his way, he was going to
have to give up his position sooner or later. At least, this was what went through
his mind as he stood in the Eye on Red Horse Hill, flinging runes at the
monstrosity that reared above him.
It had come out of nowhere, like the others. His mindbolts had barely slowed
it down. Five feet over his head it hung, swaying sleepy-eyed above him with its
fangs dripping venom into his face. He flung up an arm to protect himself and
wondered what he’d ever done to deserve to be victimized in this way.
Naturally he’d encountered monsters before, but this was something that had
no place in the Middle Worlds; an ephemera, a thing of dreams, born from
Dream and obeying only dream logic. It shouldn’t be there, Loki knew. And yet
it was – and it wasn’t the first.
It looked like a snake with a woman’s head, although Loki knew that it might
just as easily have come to him as a giant wolf, or a clockwork clown, or a
swarm of wasps, or any other form given it by the dreamer from whose dream
the creature had been fledged.
In this case a snake.
He hated snakes.
In his true Aspect, with glam intact, Loki could have dispatched the thing
easily. Such things were still possible in Dream – and, of course, in Asgard. But
this was no dream, Loki knew; and Asgard had fallen years ago, leaving the gods
weakened and lost and stripped of most of their power.
He shrank back as far from the thing as he could and reached for the
crossbow at his belt. Over the years he’d become accustomed to carrying
ordinary weapons, and this one had come in handy on several occasions. Not
against ephemera, of course. Still, there’s always a first time, the Trickster
thought, and levelled the weapon ready to fire.
‘What’s thisss?’ said the snake, looking amused.
Loki tried for a confident grin. ‘This is Tyrfingr,’ he said. ‘The greatest
crossbow of the Elder Age. What? You don’t think the gods would have left me
here on my own with no protection, do you? Tyrfingr the Annihilator, they used
to call it. Gift from the god of war himself. If I were you, I’d run for my life.’
The snake gave an undulating shrug.
‘I’m warning you,’ said Loki. ‘One shot from this, and you’ll be fried
calamari.’
The ephemera spat a concentrated gobbet of venom that smashed the
crossbow from Loki’s hand and burned a smoking hole in the ground. Droplets
of venom showered him, and although he was wearing winter furs, the venom
burned through his wolfskin gloves and scorched the tough leather of his winter
coat right through to the skin.
‘Ouch! That was unnecessary!’
‘I know you, Trickssster,’ said the snake.
Loki cursed and flung a handful of small, quick runes at the ephemera,
spinning them through the air like knucklebones. He had little hope they would
do the trick, however. Isa, ice, and Naudr, the Binder, might stay its approach for
a while, but as for driving it away …
With all his strength, Loki cast Hagall at the creature. It was a good hit,
taking up much of Loki’s glam. But the mindbolt went straight through the
ephemeral body, lighting up its internal organs in a sickly flare of colours as it
passed.
‘Iss it my turn now?’ said the snake.
‘Who sent you?’ said Loki desperately. ‘Who dreamed you, and why come
after me?’
‘I come when I am ss-summoned, Trickssster.’
‘Summoned? By whom?’
The ephemera smiled and drew a little closer. Its face seemed vaguely
familiar, though Loki couldn’t quite place it just then – the eyes a troubling
golden-grey, the shapely mouth lined with a double row of fangs.
‘You did. You freed me. From the Black Fortresss.’
‘Oh. That.’ Loki sighed. Saving the gods had been the first genuinely selfless
thing he’d done in over five hundred years, and it had brought him nothing but
trouble. ‘That was a mistake,’ he said. ‘You see, there was this Serpent—’
The ephemera flexed its jaws.
Loki took a final step back and cast Yr like a shield between himself and the
creature. ‘If I freed you from Netherworld,’ he said, ‘then doesn’t that make me
your master, or something?’
The snake gave him a pitying look and drew a little closer.
Loki avoided its hypnotic gaze. The runes that had held it at bay were
already failing. Loki could feel Naudr and Isa flexing against his will, and when
they failed, Yr would follow.
‘Just tell me what you want from me.’
‘Come clossser, Trickssster, and I will.’
‘D’you know, I think I’d rather stay here.’
There was powerful glam in the Horse’s Eye – a combination of ancient
runes dating back to Ragnarók. Glam enough, even now, to keep Yr active for
thirty seconds more – maybe even a minute or so. After that – there was nowhere
to go. Retreat was wholly impossible. Loki was cornered. Even if he shifted to
his wildfire Aspect, a creature that could move between Worlds would have no
difficulty in tracking him into the Hill. His own glam was almost completely
burned out; to leave the protection of the Horse’s Eye at this stage would amount
to virtual suicide.
He had no choice but to signal for help.
Ós, the rune of the Æsir, crossed with Loki’s own rune, Kaen, and cast as
hard as he could against the clouds, should leave the gods in no doubt that he
was in peril. The question was: did anyone care? And if they did, would they
make it in time?
He addressed the snake. ‘Who dreamed you up? And for gods’ sakes, why
pick on me?’
‘Don’t take it persssonally,’ said the snake. ‘Think of it as a compliment that
you ss-still command the attention of Chaos-ss.’
Now Isa was slipping; Naudr had dissolved. Only Yr still held it fast, and
through the circle of his finger and thumb Loki could see the mindshield fading
from its original colours to the thin gleam of a soap-bubble in the sun.
He sent the signal again. Weaker this time, but he saw it flare, casting his
signature colours against the snowbound sky.
Droplets of the snake’s venom had penetrated the mindshield now, leaving
little pockets in the snow where they had struck.
‘Why me?’ repeated Loki, summoning the dregs of his glam. ‘Since when
did Chaos have a grudge against me?’
The ephemera opened its jaws, releasing a powerful stench of venom and
rotting flesh. Its fangs dripped like stalactites. It was smiling. ‘Ss-suffice it to ss-
say, your time is done. You have no place in As-ssgard.’
‘Asgard? What about it? It fell. From rather a height, as I recall.’
‘Asgard will be rebuilt,’ said the snake.
‘You seem very sure of that,’ said Loki, glimpsing a spark of hope. A spark
of runelight, to be precise, approaching fast in the swirling snow. The ephemera,
like so many of its kind from the lands beyond Death, apparently had oracular
powers, and Loki knew from experience that what an oracle craves above all
things (even more than killing gods) is the chance to listen to itself talk.
‘So – you say Asgard’s going to be rebuilt?’ he said, keeping an eye on the
failing mindshield.
‘Why should you care? You will have no hall there.’
‘Didn’t have a hall in the old one, either.’
‘Ss-serves you right for betraying Chaos-ss.’
‘Hang on a minute,’ said Loki, falling to one knee as Yr collapsed. ‘Is Chaos
behind this, or isn’t it?’
The ephemera smiled. A gentle smile – or would have been, but for those
fangs. ‘Order built Asssgard. Chaosss will rebuild it. New runes, old ruins.
Sssuch is the way of the Worldsss, Trickssster.’
Loki flinched at the droplets of venom that landed on his head and shoulders.
‘Perhaps we can do a deal,’ he said.
‘What exactly are you offering?’
‘Oh, I don’t know. The goddess of desire, the sun and moon, the apples of
youth – you know, the usual thing.’
‘You’re ss-scum, you know that. You’d ss-sell anyone to ss-save your ss-
skin.’
‘I happen to rather value my skin. Anything wrong with that?’
‘Ssssss,’ said the ephemera, and struck.
Loki had been expecting it and, with a sudden burst of energy, he launched
himself out of the Horse’s Eye. Rolling, he tumbled fifty feet down the frozen
side of Red Horse Hill, and came to a sharp halt against a fallen rock, once part
of the castle long ago.
The fall left him winded and gasping for breath; and now the ephemera,
which had followed him down as smoothly and as quickly as a jet of spring
water from the source, reared its half-familiar head and bared its glassy fangs for
the kill.
‘I take it that’s a no …’ Loki said.
But then, just as the creature struck, there came a blinding flash, followed by
the double crunch of two missiles striking at serpent speed. A flare of runelight
pinned the snake to the side of the hill, sending forks and runnels of fugitive
glam writhing and scurrying across the snow.
Hissing, the ephemera twisted and thrashed in protest as its body began to
revert to the dreamstuff from which it had been woven.
Loki, who had dodged the strike, now scrambled out of the creature’s range,
avoiding the whiplike tentacles of runelight that thrashed crazily this way and
that; and, looking up at the top of the Hill, saw a tall, slim figure standing there,
a mindbolt in each outstretched hand.
Below her, half a mile away, he could just make out a familiar trail – Thor’s
colours, like a cloud of angry red dust, along the winding road to the Hill.
‘Maddy. You left that a little late.’ He hid his relief with an impudent grin.
‘Not half as late as you nearly were.’ She began to move towards him down
the side of the Hill, making sure not to slip on the snow and keeping a cautious
eye on the stricken ephemera. ‘Are you all right?’
‘Damn, that hurts.’ He rolled up his sleeves and, wincing, rubbed a handful
of snow onto his venom-scorched skin.
‘You should let Idun see to it.’
Loki said nothing, but looked at her, thinking, not for the first time, how
much she had changed since first they’d met. In three years Maddy Smith had
grown from a sullen, uncertain fourteen-year-old into a striking young woman
with granite-gold eyes and dark hair hidden beneath her wolfskin hood. Three
years ago she had been mostly untrained, unsure of her powers and cut off from
her tribe. Now, with her youth and her unbroken glam – one of the mysterious
new runes, Aesk, the Ash – she was stronger than any of the Vanir or the Æsir; a
power in her own right, a true child of the New Age.
The stricken ephemera watched her too. Even as it faded and died, it stared
back at Maddy without fear, its grey-gold eyes widening in what seemed like
recognition.
Behind them, Loki’s eyes widened too, going from Maddy to the snake as
finally he understood why the creature had looked so familiar. He opened his
mouth to speak, then thought better of it as Maddy approached the ephemera,
mindbolt in hand, keeping a safe distance between herself and the woman-faced
thing that twisted and writhed on the ground before her.
‘Do I know you?’ Maddy said.
The snake-bodied thing just stared at her, and Maddy couldn’t rid herself of
the thought that she’d seen something like it before, that she knew it somehow,
or that it knew her …
She turned to Loki. ‘Did it speak?’
‘More than that. It prophesied.’
Maddy looked curious. ‘What did it say?’
‘It told me Asgard would be rebuilt. It spoke of runes and ruins …’
‘Asgard?’ said Maddy curiously. Of course, she was the only one of the Æsir
who had no memory of the Sky Citadel. She knew it only from stories – the
Cradle of the Gods, they’d called it – and there were many tales of how Asgard
had shone above the clouds, linked to the Worlds by the Rainbow Bridge; of how
it had been built for them, using the runes of the Elder Age; how each god had
had his own hall there – except for Loki, which rankled with the Trickster even
now, given that he’d been instrumental in the construction of the Sky Citadel in
the first place, and that without him there would have been no Asgard and no
halls, and probably no Gødfolk, either.
Loki shrugged. ‘That’s what it said. Don’t ask me what that means.’
He wondered whether to mention to her what he’d seen in the snake-
woman’s features. He had no idea what it meant, of course – but Maddy clearly
wasn’t aware, so he filed the information away for use at some later time.
Maddy was talking to the snake. ‘Do I know you?’ she said again. ‘Have I
seen you somewhere before? Why did you come after Loki?’
The dying ephemera flexed its jaws. ‘Ss-see you in Hel—’ it hissed. And
vanished in a cloud of sparks, returning to the fabric from which it had been
spun, leaving only a stench in its wake, and a broad bare strip of melted snow.
‘Well, whatever it was, it’s dead now.’
Behind her, Loki made no sound. She turned, half expecting to see him
passed out, either from exhaustion or from the snake’s venom. But Loki simply
wasn’t there – not by the rock where the creature had been, nor lying breathless
in the snow, nor even at the top of the Hill.
By the time Thor arrived on the scene she had searched the Hill from foot to
crown, but still there was no sign of the Trickster; nothing but his discarded
glove, and the scuffle of snow where he’d tried to escape, and his footprints –
only three of them – leading away into nowhere at all, as if something had
plucked him from out of the sky, or dragged him into the side of the Hill, or
maybe simply swallowed him whole, leaving not even the smallest gleam of
runelight to mark out the place where he had stood.
‘OUT OF THEquestion,’ said Heimdall at once. ‘I’m not sending out a rescue party
for someone who may not even be missing. I mean – who in the Worlds would
take Loki, and why? Chances are he got scared and took off. You’ll see. In a
couple of days he’ll come crawling back with some lame excuse about why he
had to leave in a hurry while you dealt with the enemy.’
It wasn’t often that Maddy called for a meeting of the gods. Apart from the
time this usually took – an hour at least to fly to the Sleepers in bird form;
another hour to fly back – she knew that Æsir and Vanir were allies by force of
circumstance, nothing more. But Loki’s disappearance, she felt, counted as an
emergency. Surely they could agree, just this once, and face the crisis together?
‘He didn’t run,’ she tried to explain. ‘I told you, Heimdall. The thing was
dead. I turned away for a second or two, and when I looked back, Loki was
gone.’ She gave the Vanir a sharp look. ‘Now I know several of you have issues
with Loki—’
‘Issues!’ exploded Bragi, the Poet.
‘Bless you,’ said Idun kindly. The Healer had an annoying tendency to see
the good in everyone, including Loki – even though the majority held that, in his
case, there was nothing to see. ‘I think that’s a little unfair, Maddy. I know Loki
can be a bit – well, wild – but we all care about him really …’
‘Can’t stand the little bastard,’ said Njörd. The Man of the Sea had never
quite forgiven Loki for bringing Skadi to Asgard – Skadi, Njörd’s warlike ex-
wife, who had proved to be a far cry from the shy, domesticated lady Loki had
led him to expect.
Idun looked reproachful. ‘Well, you wouldn’t want to see him hurt …’
‘I’d rather see him dead,’ said Heimdall through his golden teeth. The
Watchman also had issues with Loki; not least the fact that they’d been on
opposite sides at Ragnarók.
‘Well, if you’re going to be negative …’ Idun turned to the four Æsir. ‘I’m
sure the rest don’t feel that way …’
‘Don’t look at me,’ said Bright-Haired Sif. ‘I’m sick and tired of his stupid
jokes. Can I pour you a glass of swine, Sif? So nice to see you snout and about.
Shall we go for a pork in the park? Honestly. It’s juvenile.’
There came a faint choking sound from behind the goddess of grace and
plenty. Of all of them, Sugar-and-Sack had found it hardest to come to terms
with his new identity as a god. Even in his Aspect – as Brave-Hearted Tyr, the
god of war – he still retained far more of his goblin characteristics than was
entirely appropriate.
‘Sorry. Bit of a cough,’ he said.
Sif gave him a long, hard stare.
‘I agree entirely,’ said Freyja, buffing her fingernails. ‘If anything could
make life in this putrid little village even close to bearable, it would be knowing
that Loki was somewhere else.’
‘But you can’t just abandon him,’ Maddy said. ‘You owe him something for
saving the Worlds—’
‘Gods alive,’ exploded Thor. ‘If I hear that whole Loki-saved-the-Worlds
thing one more time I swear I’m going to wring someone’s neck—’
‘Stop it,’ said Ethel. ‘All of you. Shouting won’t solve anything.’
The gods had assembled in the Parsonage – the only place that afforded both
space and privacy for their purpose – and if Nat Parson had lived to witness the
sight of the ten of them in their full Aspects, sitting around his coffee table,
drinking tea from his best china and discussing the workings of demons – and
with his wife, of all people – he would probably have dropped dead on the spot.
Not that the casual observer would have seen much to remind him of Ethelberta
Parson in the calm and thoughtful woman who had spoken with such authority.
And yet there was more than you might have expected. Ethel’s patience, her
loyalty, her kindness and her good sense served Frigg the Seeress well in her
present Aspect, and the gods turned towards her instinctively as she put down
her cup and addressed the group.
‘Friends,’ she told them quietly. ‘A lot has changed since the End of the
World. Three years ago was a time of disorder. Now we have a chance to
rebuild. And just as Loki helped build the Sky Citadel, we may well need him to
build it again.’
‘Build it again?’ said Heimdall. His keen blue eyes were two points of ice.
‘Since when was that an option?’
The Seeress smiled at him. The runemark Ethel on her arm – one of the runes
of the New Script, mystic and full of power – glowed a hazy blue-white. ‘The
cards are about to be re-dealt,’ she said. ‘I speak as I must, and cannot be silent.’
‘Why is she talking like that?’ said Sugar.
‘Shhh,’ said Maddy, who knew a prophecy when she heard one.
Ethel went on in a distant voice:
‘The Cradle fell an age ago, but Fire and Folk shall raise her
In just twelve days, at End of Worlds; a gift within the sepulchre.
But the key to the gate is a child of hate, a child of both and neither.
And nothing dreamed is ever lost, and nothing lost for ever.’
Maddy thought it sounded like one of Nan Fey’s nursery rhymes. Maddy’s
knowledge of these was not vast – in the days of the Order it had been rumoured
that even the most seemingly harmless rhymes hid knowledge of the Elder Days
– but everyone knew the old rock-a-bye about the baby in the treetop, and of
course, as everyone knew, the Sky Citadel had once been known as the Cradle of
the Firefolk.
‘Is there any more?’ she said.
But nothing more came from the Seeress. Instead, Ethel blinked at them, her
Aspect fading once more to that of a simple parson’s wife, a puzzled expression
on her face.
‘You’re all very quiet,’ she said, looking around the circle of gods. ‘Was it
something I said? Now, what was I doing?’
They looked at her.
‘Ah, yes. Tea.’ She smiled and reached for the china pot. ‘Nothing like a nice
cup of tea to put everything in perspective again. Shall I be Mother, everyone?’
LOKI AWOKE IN darkness. All of him hurt: he was bound hand and foot, and as he
tried vainly to summon light and found that his glam was as thoroughly wiped
out as the rest of him, he was forced to conclude that he might be in trouble.
He seemed to be in a kind of cave. He knew that from the cold, the echoes,
the nuggets of rock on the hard floor that seemed to know exactly where to dig
into him most painfully, and the unmistakable cave-smell – the creeping scent of
holes and cellars, like dust and earth and seeping moisture and blind things
growing from cracks in the stone.
He wasn’t under Red Horse Hill. Loki knew that Hill too well, and he would
have sensed his territory. No, this place was unfamiliar, and whoever – whatever
– had brought him here must have dragged him through from World Above. He
remembered standing on the Hill, rubbing snow on his hands, and then …
Just flashes. He remembered a light – not daylight, but brighter and shining
with a red-white glow …
He remembered being hit on the back of the head so hard that he fell to his
knees …
Then a voice saying, Got him, dude …
Then nothing but the dark.
So maybe I’m dead again, he thought. But Hel didn’t generally tie up her
guests. And Loki had been most efficiently bound, hands and feet roped
together, the cord looped around the back of his neck.
At least he was alone, he thought. To have left him unguarded was careless –
Loki had a knack of escaping from confinement – and he began to feel more
optimistic. Those ropes would last for precisely as long as it took his weakened
glam to recover – after which he would be out of here as fast as his wildfire
Aspect could take him.
He tried to move to a more comfortable position, and all around him the echo
awakened like a nest of shifting snakes, slithering all around him, projecting
their voices to a thousand lost places, a thousand cavities in the rock.
Startled, he cursed, and once more the echoes picked up the sound, and soon
the cave was percussive with it as it ricocheted against the stones, going deeper
and deeper into the caves until nothing was left but a low vibration that tugged at
his eardrums and made his hackles stand on end.
So much for escape, Loki thought.
No wonder they hadn’t left a guard: he couldn’t make a move in this
underground echo chamber without sending out signals for miles around. Gods
knew what any sound might attract from out of the labyrinth of World Below:
rats, bears, trolls – snakes …
Terrific, thought Loki. That’s all I need.
After that he tried to keep still, but his position was not a comfortable one.
His back hurt; he was shivering; and now hunger was starting to worry at him,
sharpening its claws on his belly.
Why me? he thought desperately. What did I ever do?
On further reflection, however, Loki had to admit he’d made a few enemies
over the years, all of them more than capable of trying for a bit of revenge. There
was Hel, whose hospitality he had just managed to escape during their last
encounter, and who had promised to see him dead sooner rather than later. Then
there were the Tunnel Folk, whom he’d conned out of some rather unique and
very valuable merchandise several centuries ago, and whose long memories and
ability to hold a grudge would have made an oliphant look positively fickle.
Then Skadi, of course – the Snowshoe Huntress – who would be more than
happy to collect his hide, or cut it to ribbons with her runewhip. In fact, none of
the Ice People were likely to show him any mercy if they chanced to get hold of
him; nor were most of the Faërie; nor the Sea Folk; nor the Cloud Folk; not to
mention selected members of the Æsir, the Vanir and, of course, Chaos – perhaps
the least likely of all factions to forgive a traitor in their ranks.
Loki sighed, making the cavern walls exhale despondently. In Ridings
parlance, he was toast.
Suddenly he heard a sound, something not caused by the shifting of his body
against the pebble-strewn floor. The sound of boot-heels against the stone. A
single pair? No, more than one – pattering and scattering and chasing each other
across the rock walls until soon they became a cavalcade that seemed to
approach from every side, so that even if Loki had managed to break free, he
would not have known which way to run.
His glam was still out, worse luck. All he could do was wait and see.
He did not have to wait long, however. He listened for five minutes or so to
the sound of approaching boots before he saw a light somewhere to his left, and
a hulking figure, made taller and more sinister by the leaping shadows, came
into view. Behind this Loki could just glimpse two more dark figures, the first
holding a lantern that spat out an oily, reddish light. He fought the urge to shrink
back, and looked up calmly as they approached, trying not to betray his surprise.
For instead of being minions of Chaos (or the Tunnel Folk, or the Ice
People), his captors were simply three youths of the Folk – all three dressed in
uniform black and each of them, for some reason, wearing a bandage on his
thumb.
The one with the lamp seemed to be in charge. He stepped up to Loki
without any sign of hesitation – which made him either very secure, or
incredibly stupid, or both – and scrutinized him for a moment in the reddish light
of the lamp.
Loki squinted up at him. He was sure he’d never seen him before. For some
reason, however, the fact was less than reassuring.
The stranger looked to be in his late teens. His face was pale and angular
behind a curtain of lank brown hair, and there was a keen intelligence in his
grey-gold eyes that seemed absent in those of the other two. His comrades were
very much alike; Loki guessed they were brothers. Both were shaggy and heavy-
set, with oily skin prone to spots and thick-fingered hands carpeted with hair.
Both were wearing heavy boots, and shirts of a design unfamiliar to the Trickster
– some World’s End fashion, he assumed – embroidered with a pattern of skulls.
One of them – the bigger one – peered suspiciously at Loki. ‘Dude. You sure
it’s him?’ he said.
‘You think I’d mess up?’ said the one with the lamp. ‘Sure it is.’ He stepped
forward, took Loki’s arm and, with a single sharp gesture, tore his shirtsleeve to
the shoulder, exposing the runemark Kaen, reversed.
The hairy brothers took a step back.
‘It’s all right. He totally can’t get away.’ The stranger narrowed his eyes at
the captive Trickster. ‘I thought you’d be taller in real life.’
‘You’re making a mistake,’ said Loki. ‘Whoever you think I am, I’m not.’
‘Yeah, right,’ sniggered the larger, hairier brother.
‘Tell him, Big H,’ said the shorter one.
The lamp-bearer silenced him with a growl and turned again to Loki. ‘Don’t
lie to me,’ he said softly, staring into Loki’s eyes. ‘I know exactly who you are. A
named thing is a tamed thing. I hereby name you child of Chaos. I name you
Keeper of the Fire.’
Loki sneered. ‘That’s rather vague …’
The pale young man showed his teeth. ‘Oh, I haven’t finished yet. I name
you Sky Traveller, Farbauti’s son, Begetter of Serpents, Father of Wolves—’
‘Father of Wolves?’ Loki frowned. The words were beginning to take effect –
words or Word, he did not know – although what a trio of boys of the Folk
would be doing with one of the secret texts from the Book of Invocations he
could not at present begin to guess.
The three were not members of the Order. Of that he could be certain, he
thought. But the words alone were powerful. A named thing is a tamed thing.
Not that they stood a snowball’s chance of actually taming Wildfire. But in his
present Aspect, subject to all the weaknesses and imperfections of his human
form, they could perhaps come painfully close.
‘Look here,’ said Loki, playing for time. ‘This really won’t get you
anywhere. But if you’ll just tell me what you want, then maybe we can do a deal.
I can get you anything – gold, weapons, runes – women …’
The hairier brother – the one called Big H – looked up at this with some
interest. Loki guessed that the three of them hadn’t had much luck with women –
not entirely surprising, he thought. Their social skills were hardly impressive,
and one – or maybe all – of them smelled.
‘Women,’ he went on silkily. ‘Oh yes. I know ways to make you irresistible
to the sweeter sex. I can teach you cantrips you wouldn’t believe – runes to melt
an ice maiden’s heart. I swear, by the time I’ve finished with you, they’ll be
queuing up halfway to the Ridings to see you. Redheads, blondes, brunettes – or
if you like exotics and you’re not too worried about the progeny, then I know
some demons who’ll blow your mind and spoon it up like ice cream—’
‘He can talk, can’t he?’ said Big H.
‘He sure can,’ grinned his friend.
The pallid youth ignored them both. He simply went on with the canticle as
his two friends watched with eager eyes, nudging each other in suppressed
excitement, and Loki felt what was left of his strength ebb slowly away into the
dark.
‘I name you Trickster, Father of Lies. I name you sire of Half-Born Hel. I
name you Fire-Bringer, Architect and Destroyer of Worlds. I name you
Archangel, Fallen One, Opener of Forbidden Doors, builder of the Citadel. I
name you Dogstar, Lighter-than-Air …’
The ritual words rolled over Loki like stones onto a burial mound, and once
more he struggled against the ropes that held him, pointlessly chafing his sore
wrists. He didn’t even know all these names; but there was no denying their
power. ‘Please,’ he begged. ‘Just tell me your name. Tell me who you’re working
for—’
The force of the Word pinned him again, making him writhe in anguish.
Where in Hel was it coming from? The Order was gone, its followers dead. The
Nameless was a spent force. Besides, these boys were not Examiners; they
lacked the power to cast the Word. So – who was the one supplying the glam?
And how could he negotiate if he didn’t know who he was dealing with?
‘Tell them they’re making a big mistake. Hurt me, and my people will—
Oww!’
Now the force of the Word was unspeakable; a loathsome, crawling
sensation, something far worse than mere pain. It seemed to reach right into him,
and he screamed aloud – or thought he did – helplessly, without calculation, just
because he had no choice.
‘You haven’t got any people,’ said the youth. ‘All you’ve got is some tired
old gods and a handful of noobs. How pathetic is that? I name you Wildfire, son
of Laufey—’
‘All right! I’m sorry! Whatever it is you think I’ve done—’
‘I name you Loki, wielder of Kaen—’
‘Please,’ gasped Loki. ‘I’ll do anything …’
The pale youth smiled. ‘I know you will.’
certain strength of mind to force a promise from a god. Even the Seeress
IT TAKES A
had found it difficult – which had once led to the death of Balder the Beautiful
and to the unfortunate chain of events that had ensued in the weeks that led up to
Ragnarók. Even now, it wasn’t easy; but out of Aspect and with no glam to
speak of, Loki was at his most susceptible; and the force of the Word, along with
a powerful combination of the runes Úr, Naudr, Isa – and some others he
couldn’t quite make out – was enough to force him into sullen acquiescence.
But a god’s sworn oath is binding, as Hel had found out four years ago at the
End of the World, on the shore of Dream, and to break it would have disastrous
effect. Basically, the nasty truth was this, the Trickster realized: whatever the
pale young man told him to do, he was bound to do it now, or face the cosmic
consequences.
‘So what do you want?’ he said at last, when it was clear that he was trapped.
He felt uneasy, as well he might: the last time he’d been caught like this, it had
been by Thiassi, Skadi’s father, who, after three weeks of none-too-gentle
persuasion, had finally wrung a promise from Loki to kidnap Idun, the Healer,
and to deliver her into the custody of the Ice People. Such an oath, once made,
cannot be broken without incurring the most serious cost, and it had taken all
Loki’s guile and glam to find a way to avoid both payment and retribution.
‘Whatever you want, I’ll give it to you. Just tell me what it is, OK?’
The pale youth shrugged. ‘We’re waiting,’ he said.
‘Waiting? For what?’
‘You’ll see.’
It occurred to Loki once again that perhaps Skadi was behind all this.
Perhaps she hadn’t gone home, after all. Perhaps she’d been planning this all
along. His young captors might be her creatures; although they looked to be of
the Folk, there was something feral about the three of them, an animal gleam in
their golden eyes, their mouths crammed with too many teeth …
‘So – won’t you tell me who’s in charge?’
‘You’ll find out soon enough,’ came the reply.
The pale youth who had cast the Word now turned to his companions.
‘Watch him for me, both of you. If he tries to move, hit him.’
Loki gave him a hurt look. ‘Who, me? What did I do?’
Big H squinted down at Loki, looking, if possible, even bigger and more
menacing than before. A faint rank scent of rotting meat seemed to emanate from
him. Loki sensed that personal hygiene was not high on this young man’s list of
priorities.
‘I’ll give him a belt of my glam,’ said Big H.
Glam? thought Loki. What glam?
More than ever, he wished for the truesight, which would show him what he
needed to see. But his own glam was still burned out, and the brothers showed
no colours at all, nor any sign of a runemark, though now that he looked more
closely, he could see that they bore matching tattoos: a flaming sun on Big H’s
arm, a full moon on his friend’s, each flanked by the symbol that Loki knew as
the Wolf Cross. Not a runemark, exactly, but a sign of allegiance to Chaos in one
of its darkest, most sinister forms.
Their leader had moved to the back of the cave, apparently waiting for
someone. Loki, seizing his chance to gain information, turned to the smaller of
his captors and gave him his most innocent smile.
‘So, Big H—’ he began.
‘No, I’m Skull,’ corrected the youth.
‘Dude …’ Big H gave him a nudge.
‘Oops, sorry.’
Loki said nothing, but grinned inside. Now, at least, he knew their names.
Nicknames, both of them, he guessed; but every piece of information was
valuable. He put on his most guileless expression and turned to the brothers once
again.
‘So – what happened to your thumb?’ he said, indicating the bandage that
adorned Big H’s hand. It seemed rather too much of a coincidence that all three
of his captors should meet with identical accidents; and now that he came to
think of it, wasn’t there something strange about all this – something that rang a
distant bell?
‘We – uh – like, we swore an oath.’
‘Blood-brothers, man,’ said Big H.
‘Really?’ said Loki. ‘So – you’re not actual brothers, then? I mean, you both
look – very alike. What does the H stand for? Handsome? Hairy? Hefty? Huge?
I said handsome, right? I meant handsome. Oh, and I don’t think I caught your
friend’s name?’
‘Don’t talk to him,’ warned the voice of their leader from the far side of the
big cave. ‘Didn’t she say not to talk to him?’
‘She?’ said Loki apprehensively. Once again, images of Skadi and her
runewhip took unsettling shape in his thoughts.
‘Dude,’ said the hairy youth. ‘You heard what Fenny said. Shut up.’
Loki hid a triumphant grin. Fenny, he thought. So that’s your name.
Names, as he knew from experience, were words of power, not lightly given.
But it wasn’t a name he recognized, and he squinted across the cavern once
more, trying to see if there was anything at all in the young man’s face that could
give him any kind of clue as to the nature – as well as the scale – of the trouble
in which he had landed himself.
Nothing. Just the light of the lamp and the shadows that leaped like flung
spears against the rock walls of the cavern. Then …
Just for a moment he saw something. Maybe it was a trick of the light, but it
brought the gleam back into his eyes and a flicker of recognition into his mind.
There was something about that profile. Something about those matching tattoos.
And something behind that human form – a hint of colours imperfectly
concealed, a distant thread of violet …
Ah. Hello. There it was. A trace of a signature in the air, so faint that Loki
had missed it at first. Now, as his spent glam began to recover, the colours also
slowly returned, filament by filament, bracketing his silhouette with their
fleeting rainbow sheen.
Loki fingered the runeshape Bjarkán and, through it, tried to see Fenny more
closely, but his hands were tied too tightly for that, and the momentary
impression he thought he’d had – of someone else behind the boy – was gone in
a blur of light and shade.
‘Stop that, you,’ warned Big H.
‘Stop what?’
‘You know what.’
Frustrated, Loki shook his head. It was no good, he told himself. There was
nothing he could do. Unless …
I’ll give him a belt of my glam, he’d said.
Now Loki considered Big H’s threat. If he could persuade him to use his
glam – or whatever he counted as such – then the explosion of runelight that
would inevitably follow might well be enough to identify his signature, or at
least to find out how strong he was. Of course, Loki had no wish to be belted by
anything – but sometimes you needed to take a risk.
He gritted his teeth. ‘You stink,’ he said.
Big H looked at him. ‘You talking to me?’
‘Well, duh,’ said Loki. ‘Who do you think? It’s bad enough having to look at
you both without having to smell you too. I mean, don’t you people wash?’
‘Dude, his ass is so dead,’ said Skull, not without admiration. ‘No one disses
the Brotherhood. I don’t care whose father he is—’
‘Shut up,’ said Fenny from the far end of the cave.
Loki ignored him. ‘Brotherhood? What Brotherhood? Brotherhood of BO?
And what kind of dialect is that, anyway? The North Ridings? Sheep country?
You look to me like the kind of man who might be lucky with his sheep—’
‘Lucky with his sheep?’ Big H’s face was dangerously congested.
‘Well, you do look like a—’
The whack, when it came, was every bit as powerful as Loki had feared it
would be. It caught him squarely across the side of the head, knocking him
sideways into the rock wall. The only problem was that Big H didn’t use glam,
just one of his big, hairy hands, and the only colours Loki could see were the
stars that danced in front of his eyes.
Not such a great plan, after all.
He lay on his side, breathing hard, trying to link the few facts he had. Fenny.
Skull. Big H. The Brotherhood. Those matching tattoos. Those colours. He’d
seen them before, he knew he had. If only he could remember where …
Loki’s flame-green eyes opened wide in the darkness.
The Wolf Cross.
Father of Wolves.
I don’t care whose father he is …
‘Oh no,’ he whispered.
And then there came a thrashing of wings as something large flew into the
cave. Some kind of bird, thought Loki, and once more he thought of the Huntress
– but Skadi, he knew, would have chosen a form that reflected that of the natural
world. A hawk, perhaps, or a mountain cat, or her favourite Aspect, the snow
wolf.
This creature was something like a bird, but no bird Loki had ever seen.
Instead it looked like a child’s drawing of something only glimpsed in dreams:
its wings were a violent purple, its head a fiery scarlet. It settled on an outcrop of
rock, sparks crackling from its fiery tail, and fixed Loki with a piercing stare.
Behind it came running a small, bandy-legged, aggressive figure, rather less
than a goblin in height, but with a squarish, massive head that gave it a look of
the Tunnel Folk.
It gave Loki a look of contempt. ‘Oh, it’s bloody you,’ it said.
head from the floor. ‘Should I know you, or something?’ he said.
LOKI LIFTED HIS
The dwarfish creature shrugged. ‘Who cares? The important thing is, you
know my lady. And my lady needs to have a word with you.’
Loki swallowed. ‘A word?’ That sounded ominous. In his experience, a word
often turned out to be something that hurt. ‘Who’s your lady?’
‘Can’t you guess?’ The female voice was deceptively pleasant, and it took
Loki several seconds to identify it as that of the firebird, now perched on a rock
above him. ‘I thought you were smarter than that, Loki.’ It opened its long, sharp
beak and gave a very human yawn.
‘Poor sweetheart,’ it went on. ‘Have my boys been rough with you? Untie
him, Jolly. If he tries to run, break his legs.’
Jolly was the dwarf, it appeared. A somewhat inappropriate name – Loki had
met jollier people in Hel – and he glared and grimaced at Loki as he cut through
the ropes that secured him, leaving the Trickster even more certain that he and
Jolly had met before.
But there was no time to think of that now. Fenny, Skull and Big H were
closing around him menacingly, and Loki knew the firebird was right. Trying to
run would be a mistake.
‘Thank you.’ Painfully, he stood up.
The firebird watched him unblinkingly.
‘Looking good, Angrboda,’ he said. ‘Feathers always suited you.’
The bird lifted a careless wing. ‘So you do recognize me,’ she said.
‘Oh, Angie. How could I not?’ he said. ‘You know you’re the love of my life,
right? And Fenris …’ He smiled at the youth who called himself Fenny. ‘One
minute he’s a cute little wolf cub, gambolling happily through Ironwood, chasing
squirrels and disembowelling birds; the next thing you know, he’s hit puberty
and he’s into the whole released-from-Netherworld, kidnapping-Dad, aligned-
with-the-forces-of-Chaos thing. Doesn’t it make you feel proud?’
Fenris growled. ‘Shut up, Dad.’
‘Articulate as ever,’ said Loki. ‘And your little friends, Skull and Big H –
Skól and Haiti, by any chance? Demon wolves with an appetite for celestial
bodies?’
The hairy brothers grinned. ‘Yeah.’
‘Dude. We’re the Devourers.’
Loki sighed. ‘OK,’ he said. ‘So – to what do I owe the pleasure? Not that I
don’t appreciate this little family reunion, but did you have to send a snake after
me? Wouldn’t a postcard have done just as well?’
The firebird spread its purple wings and fluttered down from its perch on the
rock. The moment it touched the ground, it changed, appearing now as a slender
young woman dressed in a close-fitting black tunic and sporting big boots and
purple hair. She looked to be in her late teens. So much for appearances. Loki
happened to know that Angie was as old as the hills – actually, rather older than
that – and that behind her look of innocence there beat an ancient, savage heart.
Her eyes were heavily circled with kohl, and there was a row of purple studs
going through her left eyebrow. One arm was bare. The other was intricately
sleeved with tattoos: stars, birds, concentric patterns, and something that looked
like a runemark, amethyst against her skin –
Interesting, Loki thought. She’d never had a rune before. And this one was
somehow different; not a rune of the Elder Script, but brighter than a bastard
rune. A new rune, then? Was it possible?
He indicated the mark. ‘Nice. Is this what they’re wearing in Chaos these
days?’
‘Not quite,’ Angie said. ‘And I didn’t send that ephemera. In fact, we were all
set to rescue you when your funny little friend intervened.’
‘Really? How touching,’ Loki said. ‘I should have known you were on my
side when you ordered Shorty to break my legs.’
Jolly gave a little growl.
‘Dude,’ said Skull. ‘Don’t call him short.’
But Loki was thinking furiously. The fact that this was family didn’t mean he
was home and dry. Quite the opposite, in fact. This was Angrboda – otherwise
known as Angie, the Witch of Ironwood; the Temptress; the Mother of Wolves;
cruel as a mountain cat, wily as a snake, unpredictable as – well, Loki.
Now Loki, looking back, wondered how he could ever have been so rash as
to get involved with the Temptress. She was very alluring, he thought. That, he
supposed, was his only excuse. But you don’t fool around with Chaos. Five
hundred years, three demon children and two Apocalypses later, it still sounded
like a bad idea, and his absence had clearly done nothing to make her heart grow
fonder.
Still, he wasn’t dead yet, which probably meant one of two things. One: she
needed him alive. Two: her plans for his execution involved something more
elaborate than three wolf brothers and a sulky dwarf.
Of the two possibilities, Loki much preferred number one.
He grinned at Angrboda. ‘So – first of all, I’d like to say how happy I am
you made it here. I’m guessing you left the Black Fortress during the little fracas
I caused there, and managed to enter the world through Dream.’
Fenris gave a low growl.
Jolly looked disgusted.
‘That little fracas, as you call it,’ said Angie, ‘damn near ended everything.
Chaos was breached, Death was wide open and Dream was awash with
ephemera fighting to get into World Above. Fortunately, Jormungand had
already made his way out of Dream and back into the One Sea, from which he
freed us – no thanks to you.’ She shot Loki a scornful glance. ‘Yes, we escaped.
But only just. And as for your contribution to events – Loki, don’t you ever grow
up? I’ve never seen anything so irresponsible.’
Loki blinked. ‘You’re lecturing me about responsibility?’
‘That rift you opened,’ the Temptress said. ‘A rift from Death into
Netherworld. For thirteen seconds that gate was open, letting Hel knows what
into the Worlds. And you’re here, with that Who? Me? expression on your face,
pretending it’s nothing to do with you?’
‘Be fair,’ said Loki. ‘I was dead—’
‘Being dead is no excuse. You were given a second chance, and it’s up to you
to put things right. The old Order is gone. That means you’re the new Order now
– you and the rest of the surviving gods. It means that it’s up to you to redress
the balance – to help rebuild Asgard, to hold back Chaos, to bring stability to the
Middle Worlds – and what are you doing instead? Hiding out in Nowhere-land,
getting drunk, picking fights with each other, hob-nobbing with the Folk, for
gods’ sakes, while all the time those ephemera are munching their way through
the fabric of the Worlds—’
‘Now wait a minute,’ Loki said. ‘Since when did you care about maintaining
Order? I thought Chaos was your business.’
Angrboda looked away and played with a wisp of her purple hair. ‘Let’s just
say that in this case … I have a personal interest.’
‘An interest? In what?’
‘In the new Asgard, of course,’ said Angrboda impatiently. ‘Listen, Loki. At
this rate, with the Universal City overrun, with ephemera coming out of Chaos,
with the Nine Worlds so full of holes that they might as well be Ridings cheese,
things will probably come to an end in another twenty years or so. But rebuild
Asgard and you have a chance. A chance to regain your Aspect. To re-establish
Order again. To be gods—’
‘What’s in it for you?’ said Loki.
‘The truth is,’ she said, ‘I like it here. I’ve built a niche in World Above. And
if Chaos comes to the Middle Worlds—’
‘You mean – Chaos might not be thrilled to find out that you’ve gone totally
native?’
Angie shrugged. ‘Something like that.’
‘To say nothing of a new rune – and how did you get that, by the way?’
‘Suits me, don’t you think?’ she said. ‘That’s Wyn, the rune of high stakes
and big prizes. Play your cards right, and you may even find that some of those
prizes come to you.’
‘So – what do you want from me?’ Loki said.
‘Darling – I want to help you, of course. I’m willing to put all my resources
at your disposal. You’ll be needing all the help you can get if you’re going to
rebuild Asgard.’
‘Rebuild Asgard?’ Loki said. ‘But I don’t build things. That’s not me. I cheat,
steal, swindle, misappropriate, sabotage, disrupt, commandeer and demolish –
but build? Angie, you’ve got the wrong man. You need Thor, or Heimdall …’
She shook her head. ‘I need you. I’ve heard there’s been a prophecy.’
‘You’ve got to be joking,’ Loki said.
‘Not even a bit,’ said the Temptress. ‘I take these things very seriously. And
so should you, when the enemy sends an ephemera after your hide—’
‘You knew Chaos was after me?’
Angrboda shook her head. ‘This didn’t come from Chaos,’ she said.
‘Someone from the Middle Worlds pulled that creature out of Dream. Someone
who clearly wants you dead …’
‘Wonderful,’ said Loki.
‘Oh, we were keeping an eye on you,’ said Angie reassuringly. ‘The boys
would have stopped you getting hurt.’
‘Well – er – thanks,’ said Loki. ‘Forgive me if I’m not entirely overwhelmed
with confidence at the thought of the Wolf Brothers and Fenny-boy standing
between me and extinction. Not forgetting Shorty here …’ He shot a look at
Jolly, who responded at once by showing him a set of alarming yellow fangs.
‘Don’t call me Shorty,’ said the dwarf.
Loki suppressed the urge to laugh. ‘You spoke of resources earlier. I’m
assuming you have more up your sleeve than this little band of comedians here
… Because if you haven’t, Thor and Heimdall are going to laugh themselves
into a seizure, after which they’re going to play ball with my head—’
‘Now, Loki,’ Angie warned. ‘I hope you’re not going to be difficult. You’ll
deal with us whether you like it or not – the only real choice you have is whether
you want to do it the easy way or the hard way.’ Her kohl-rimmed eyes narrowed
menacingly, and at her side, Fenny gave a warning growl.
Loki shrugged. ‘So what’s the deal?’
‘Well,’ said Angie, ‘it’s simple enough. I have something the Æsir thought
lost, which they’ll need when it comes to a fight. I also have a new rune to put at
their disposal. In exchange, I want guarantees …’
Uh-oh. Here it comes, Loki thought.
‘First: amnesty for my people. When the Æsir get back into power, I want to
be sure we’ll be left in peace. Two: the return of our rightful territories.
Ironwood for Fenris. The One Sea for Jormungand. And for myself? A place in
Asgard. A hall of my own amongst the gods.’ Angrboda took a step forward and
playfully kissed Loki’s nose. ‘So those are my terms, sweetheart,’ she said. ‘Now
it’s your turn. What do you say?’
LOKI WAS SILENTfor a long time. When at last he found his voice, all the humour had
gone from it. ‘You know they’ll never agree to those terms. A deal with the
Witch of Ironwood? They’d never believe it wasn’t a trap. The moment I tell
them I’ve spoken to you, they’ll peel me like a grape. And if you think holding
me hostage will help … Well, you’d have more chance if you brought them my
head – which, incidentally, they’ll probably relieve me of the minute I even
mention your name …’
Angie raised an eyebrow, and the row of studs caught the light. ‘Always so
dramatic,’ she said. ‘Your folk can’t afford to turn me down. I mean, without me,
what have you got? Washed-up has-beens like Heimdall and Frey. Flower
children like Idun and Bragi. Recalcitrant recruits like Tyr. Besides, you haven’t
heard the best part yet. If the Æsir meet my terms, then this is what I’m willing
to offer them. First, an alliance with my people. Of course, I can’t answer for all
of Chaos, but as far as our little group is concerned, the Gødfolk make better
allies than enemies, and we want them on our side. And to show our goodwill, as
well as my rune, we’re prepared to give you the Hammer of Thor the moment
the treaty’s agreed.’
Loki’s eyes widened. ‘The Hammer of Thor? Mjølnir?’
‘None other,’ said Angie, looking smug.
‘How? It was lost at Ragnarók. Swallowed by— Ah.’ He smiled. ‘I see.’
‘That’s right. Jormungand.’ Angie shrugged. ‘Apparently his … digestive
functions take a bit longer than we’d thought.’
‘Ew,’ said Loki.
The Wolf Brothers grinned.
‘He can’t help it,’ Fenris said. ‘Devouring things runs in the family.’
‘And so we retrieved it,’ Angie went on. ‘And we’re prepared to return it to
its rightful owner – a gesture of good faith, if you like – as soon as the gods have
given their word.’
And at that Angie turned away and began to inspect her fingernails, which
were painted purple, while Loki, who was thinking hard, tried to make sense of
her plan in his mind.
On the whole, he thought he understood. Chaos was prone to rebellions. That
was the nature of its folk. He himself had thrown in his lot with their enemies
when it suited him, which had earned him no friends among his own people.
Now, it seemed, Angie was doing the same. But she and her renegades would
not risk an open confrontation. Much better to march under some other banner;
then, when the Sky Citadel was rebuilt and Order restored, they would use their
alliance with the gods to protect them from the retribution of Chaos – while
doing precisely as they pleased, like delinquent children wanting their freedom,
yet happy to be sheltered and fed by parents too soft to turn them away.
Yes, thought Loki, it did make sense. And yet there were things that troubled
him. The first was how organized they seemed. Chaos is – well – chaotic. There
are no generals in Pan-daemonium. And Angie had been no exception, proving
as volatile as Loki himself. But here she was, speaking of treaties and oaths and
strategies and the rebuilding of Order and Asgard. It wasn’t the Angie he knew
at all. Which led the Trickster to conclude that perhaps there was someone else
behind all this.
He knew better than to say so, however. If they had Thor’s Hammer, he
thought, they needed careful handling. The hammer, Mjølnir, Thor’s Right Hand,
had been one of the great treasures of the Elder Age, lost for ever, so they’d
thought, in the great upheaval that the Folk liked to call Tribulation, and the Æsir
knew as Ragnarók.
Since then, the gods had barely survived. Even Maddy’s rescue attempt had
resulted in only partial success. Their numbers now stood at thirteen – including
a goblin and a pot-bellied pig – which was hardly the stuff of conquest, he
thought. Angie’s assessment, though harsh, was not entirely unfair. The Æsir
were a spent force; the Vanir scarcely better. And with Skadi gone off on her
own, and Maddy the only one of them whose powers had not suffered dramatic
reversals, it had seemed unlikely that the gods would ever make much of a
comeback.
But with Mjølnir, they might have a chance. The mighty hammer, carved
with runes that made it indestructible, heavy enough to gouge great chasms into
the mountainside, and yet able to shrink itself small enough to tuck into your
shirt.
No such weapon had been forged since the beginning of the Elder Age. Even
the Tunnel Folk had lost the skill; and Loki was torn between suspicion of
Angrboda and of her motives, and the simple knowledge that with Mjølnir
anything might be possible: the defeat of Chaos, the rebuilding of Asgard and,
with the new Sky Citadel, the return of their primary Aspects; and, with them,
the power to rule the Worlds …
‘All right,’ he said, looking up to where Angie was now sitting on a rocky
ledge above him, swinging her legs. ‘Angie, I’ll try. I’ll put your suggestion to
the gods. I can’t make any promises.’
She narrowed her kohl-rimmed eyes at him. ‘You’d better be persuasive,’ she
said. ‘I want my hall in Asgard.’ She turned to smile at Fenris, who had been
watching Loki with open mistrust throughout the conversation. ‘And there’d
better not be any treachery, either, or Fenny and the boys will be paying you
another call.’
Big H winked. ‘Believe it, dude.’
‘And just to ensure your complete support, I’m sending Jolly to keep you on
side.’ Angie smiled at the dwarf, who was watching Loki with a look of distaste.
‘You’ll like Jolly,’ she said. ‘In fact, you’ll be inseparable. He’ll wait on you,
he’ll follow you home, he’ll be your constant companion. And if you try
anything – a trick, a scam, a double-cross – then you’ll be in big trouble.’
‘Big trouble?’ Loki scoffed. ‘So what’ll he do? Bite my knees?’
Jolly gave him an evil look. ‘What’re you sayin’? You sayin’ I’m short?’
‘Who, me?’ Loki said.
Jolly pushed back his jacket sleeves, revealing meaty forearms on which
were inscribed the symbol –
The dwarf’s fists were also unusually large for such a small person, and Loki
just had time to read the words Fad\ir and Mod\ir tattooed across the knuckles
before the dwarf lowered his head and butted him squarely in the solar plexus,
knocking all the air out of his lungs and leaving him gasping on the floor.
Jolly brought his misshapen head very close to Loki’s face. ‘Don’t call me
short,’ he said. ‘I don’t like it when folk call me short.’
‘Right,’ said Loki.
‘Now stand up.’
Loki did so with difficulty. He’d spent rather too long on the floor that day,
and was beginning to feel victimized. He eyed the dwarf with cautious respect.
Short he might be, Loki thought, but there was a lot of glam in the little fellow.
The twin runemarks on Jolly’s arms shone out with a baleful red glow.
From her ledge, Angrboda smiled. ‘We call it Daeg, the Thunderbolt. Packs
a punch, doesn’t it?’
Loki had to admit it did.
And the thought that Angie had access now to two of the runes of the New
Script made an even greater impact. Where had she managed to find the glam
that should have belonged to the new gods? It made him very uneasy to think of
Angie equipped with such things. And what would the other gods make of it?
Nothing good, that was for sure. In fact, they would probably assume that he
himself was somehow to blame …
‘I’m giving you twenty-four hours,’ Angie said. ‘That should be enough to
convince the gods that they need my people on their side.’
‘And if they decide against?’ he said.
‘I’m sure you can persuade them.’
‘And if I can’t?’
Angie laughed, swinging her legs against the rockface. Beside her the Wolf
Brothers sniggered, and Fenris snarled his amusement.
‘Loki,’ she said. ‘You crack me up.’
‘Thanks,’ said Loki mirthlessly.
‘No, really,’ said Angrboda. ‘You’re going to need that positive outlook for
when you rebuild Asgard.’
‘Yeah, I’m always at my most positive when I’m about to be disembowelled
by my friends.’
She gave him an indulgent look. ‘I’m sending you back to World Above.
Skull and Big H will look after you. And if you need to contact me, just tell
Jolly. He knows what to do.’
The little man bared his teeth again. He was definitely a carnivore, Loki
thought. Maybe even a cannibal.
Loki sighed. ‘OK. Let’s go.’
‘That’s my boy,’ said Angie.
BACK IN WHAT was left of the Universal City, Maggie Rede was dreaming again. It
was a strangely powerful dream, lit with the colours of Chaos and peopled with
shapes that twisted and writhed. The Folk of the Order do not dream; but Maggie
was no longer entirely their child, and after reading the Good Book, the rules
that had bound her for so many years had begun to unravel like windblown flax,
and the dreams had come soon after …
Now she dreamed of a man with red hair and eyes of a searing fire-green.
She’d seen him before in dreams, and knew that he was somehow her enemy.
But this time he was in trouble, she thought, and she grinned and clenched her
fists in her sleep. She could see that his colours were very strong – demonic
colours such as she’d seen depicted in the Good Book; and there were runes
among them – unholy fire-runes like those she had seen in the Book of Words.
The same kind of symbol shone from his arm – the ruinmark of the Firefolk.
By his Mark shall ye know him …
Kaen. The name of the ruinmark was Kaen. Reversed. She did not ask
herself how she knew. Perhaps she’d seen it in the Book that lay open against the
wall at her side. The golden key that opened it now hung on a chain around
Maggie’s neck. It was her most treasured possession. She always closed the
Book when she left, but when she was alone in her secret place, she liked to keep
it open at the Chapter of Invocations, where the secret names of the Firefolk
were written in letters of silver and gold.
She struck out at the red-haired man, slamming him against the ground. He
threw up a shield to protect himself, but the shield was weak. It would not last.
Her enemy cried out in pain; venom spattered the Northlands snow.
Good, thought Maggie in her dream. Let’s see you talk your way out of this.
Now the man was on his knees. She could see the fear in his eyes. She
couldn’t hear what he said, but knew that he was pleading for his life.
Mercy? I don’t think so, she thought.
Moving closer, she could see him lying helpless at her feet. Triumph
bloomed in her like a rose. She could have killed him easily, but she wanted the
pleasure to last a while. She wanted to see him suffer first; she wanted him to
grovel and beg before she sent him to Netherworld.
But now there came a flare of colours, and Maggie saw a figure approaching;
a small but somehow ominous shape, bracketed with runelight. And yet there
seemed little to justify the surge of panic Maggie felt as the figure came closer. It
was only a girl, after all – a girl of about her own age. A girl with curious grey-
gold eyes, hair loose around her shoulders, and one of those ruinmarks on her
extended palm …
Maggie thought: She looks just like me!
And then there was another bright flash, and the world flipped over like a
leaf—
And Maggie awoke with a loud cry, sheathed in sweat and trembling, and
found herself back in the catacombs, head resting close to the open Book, over
which she must have fallen asleep, and the after-image of the dream stamped
against the shadows.
But now, as she struggled to banish her fears, Maggie saw that she was no
longer alone. A young man was sitting opposite her, cross-legged upon the stony
floor. A young man who might have been seventeen or eighteen, but whose face
bore the marks of experience. His hair was like that of the northern folk; his eyes
were blue as distant ice.
Maggie realized that as she slept, the bergha she was wearing had slipped,
and, blushing, she tugged it back into place before addressing the stranger.
‘Who are you?’ she said sharply. ‘Who are you, and what are you doing
here?’
The young man smiled, and Maggie Rede felt a funny little shiver go down
her back, as if a tiny feather of ice had brushed against her shoulder blades.
‘My name is Adam,’ the young man said. ‘And I’ve come a long way to find
you.’
THREE YEARS HAD passed since Adam Scattergood had found his way out of World
Below. Little now remained of the boy who had pissed his pants on Red Horse
Hill and had come close to losing his mind at the merest hint of things uncanny.
Now it was he who stood his ground while other people fled in fear; and he had
seen so much that was uncanny, unnatural and downright impossible that all
trace of fear in him had gone, leaving him with a hatred of Seer-folk and Faërie
that was nine-parts born from envy and one-part from his passenger – the
whispering Presence in his mind that had been with him for the past three years.
The Seer-folk had the power to build Worlds. Why should Adam not have it
too? But Adam had no ruinmark, and Adam had no Book of Words, and even if
he had, he knew that there was no particle of glam in him, and the words would
lie useless on the page, however hard he tried to awaken them.
The Voice in his head had told him this – the whispering Voice that had
guided him out of Hel and back into the Middle Worlds; the Voice that had
taught him so many skills, but which sometimes still ranted and railed at him,
calling him useless, stupid and weak – a nonsense, as Adam had trained
relentlessly these past three years, and his body was all muscle.
At first Adam had wondered whose Voice it was that guided him. He had
seen, three years ago, how the Nameless had come in Aspect out of a stone head
carved with runes, and had fought the blind General of the Seer-folk, and killed
him; after which it had tried to possess Maddy Smith, and had failed, and been
lost in the river Dream. Adam also seemed to recall that the Nameless actually
had a name: it was Mimir the Wise, or the Whisperer; an ancient being with a
bitter grudge against the gods and the power to enter minds and control the
actions and thoughts of the weak.
But here Adam’s native caution had blunted the edge of his memory. The
affairs of gods were no business of his, and all in all he was happy to stay in
ignorance. He sensed that the less he remembered of the events of three years
ago, the less likely he was to incur the rage of the passenger inside his mind.
Besides, there were compensations. His unseen passenger had skills. Now
Adam shared them too: he had knowledge and instincts he’d previously lacked.
Emerging from World Below, he’d astonished himself by hunting for food –
killing a deer with his bare hands and dressing the skin for later use, though
these were skills he’d never learned.
Later, he discovered that he could fight too – as a group of hill bandits
learned, to their cost. Sword, bow and throwing knife – all seemed strangely
familiar. He could also ride a horse and trap a fish, and find his way at night by
the stars, all of which had ancient names – names he’d never known before.
He was not strong at first, of course; but walking and exercise hardened him,
and by the time he reached the Universal City, he was a foot taller and a hundred
pounds heavier than when he’d left Malbry at the age of fourteen. In fact, Aileen
Scattergood’s spoiled, lazy son had grown into a fine-looking young man, skilled
in all manner of combat, speaking four dialects, and more learned in the Good
Book than the most senior of the Order’s Magisters.
His name was no longer Scattergood, although he had kept the Adam part.
Scattergood was a provincial name, fit for a rustic from the North. Instead he had
taken the name of Goodwin, a trusty, dependable Lowlands name, and invented a
plausible history to account for his presence in World’s End.
Not that he would need it now, Adam Goodwin told himself. No, after weeks
of searching the city he had found the prize he sought. Two prizes, in fact – and
the Voice in his head seemed to caper and howl in glee, reinforcing Adam’s
occasional (but always unspoken) fear that the thing in his mind was insane.
‘Adam?’ repeated Maggie. Her eyes were dark and expressive, and coloured
grey-gold like mountain granite. Just like her sister’s, in fact, he thought, and a
new surge of hatred blossomed within him, seeing the face of his enemy …
Of course he hadn’t seen her – except in his dreams – for the past three years.
But those eyes were unmistakable; and that mouth, with its hint of sullenness;
the hair pulled back in a thick braid …
Why don’t we just kill her now? Send the Seer-folk her head in a bag—?
You fool, whispered the passenger. Just leave the thinking to me, will you?
And try to be charming, for once in your life. This girl is extremely valuable.
And so Adam swallowed his hatred and gave the girl his most winning smile.
It was a little cold, perhaps; but all Maggie saw was his blue eyes and the firm
line of his jaw and the fair hair that fell almost boyishly across his forehead …
Good, said the passenger. Now tell her what I told you. And for gods’ sakes,
be courteous. None of your village-boy ways in World’s End.
So Adam put out his hand and said: ‘Adam Goodwin, at your service.
Maggie Rede? I’ve been looking for you.’
‘HOW DID YOU know my name?’ she said. ‘Are you a dream, a demon – a ghost?’
There were ghosts in these catacombs, though until now Maggie had never
encountered one. But the handsome young man with the piercing blue eyes had
none of the look of the ghost about him.
In fact, Maggie Rede had never seen anyone so vital. He glowed with health;
his hair shone; he moved with the easy, effortless grace of one who is completely
at ease with every muscle and nerve in his body. He was a stranger, and yet there
was something about him that seemed oddly familiar. Had she seen him in one
of the markets? The tavern?
‘A dream?’ said Adam. ‘Far from it. In fact, if anything, you’re the dream.
The dream I’ve been following all my life.’
It was a good line, he thought. The Voice gave him lots of good lines, and he
had become quite adept at delivering them. Besides, he knew girls, and he
guessed that this girl was no different to the rest of them. A few good lines, a
kiss or two, and she would be his for the asking.
But Maggie didn’t seem impressed. In fact, he thought she looked furious.
For a moment she seemed to struggle to speak; then she turned away from him,
drawing her scarf protectively close.
‘Whoever you are, you shouldn’t be here. You woke me. I was sleeping.’
‘I know. I’m sorry to intrude,’ said Adam in a humble voice. ‘But now that
I’m here, aren’t you even a little bit curious about what I’ve come to tell you?’
‘No,’ said Maggie. ‘You shouldn’t be here. It isn’t … right for you to be
here.’
Adam Scattergood clenched his fists. The girl was going to be troublesome.
Of course, he should have expected as much – knowing who the girl was.
He swallowed his impatience. ‘What isn’t right?’ he asked her.
‘You and me, alone like this. Here. Alone. Together.’
Adam turned his face away, not wanting his expression to show. Clearly the
girl was some kind of prude. He should have guessed she would be. The bergha
she wore told him as much; and, of course, no respectable daughter of the Order
would want to be alone at night – with a man – in such a place as this.
‘Trust me. I’ve no interest. All I want is to talk to you.’
He thought she bridled a little at that, and grinned to himself in secret.
There’s nothing like a show of indifference to get a girl’s attention. From the
corner of his eye he watched as she fought curiosity, fiddling with the little gold
key that hung from the cord around her neck.
At last she seemed to relax a little.
‘What did you want to talk about? And how did you know I’d be down
here?’
Adam shrugged. ‘I know lots of things. Those dreams you’ve been having,
for instance.’
She shook her head. ‘I don’t dream.’
‘Of course you do,’ Adam said.
Maggie narrowed her eyes. ‘Do you?’
‘Oh yes,’ said Adam. ‘I’ve dreamed of you. I’ve dreamed of you every night
for years. And you’ve dreamed of me. You know you have. You really think you
can lie to me?’
Maggie felt all the breath in her body suddenly leave it, as if she had been
punched in the stomach. Then she looked into Adam’s face directly for the first
time, and knew why he’d seemed so familiar.
This was the face she’d seen in her dreams – her dreams of Tribulation. The
blue of his eyes. The line of his jaw. She felt a surge of panic. How could this
man have come from her dreams? How could she have known his face?
‘You are a demon,’ Maggie said.
Adam smiled. ‘Quite the opposite. I’m a demon-hunter. I know all about
you, Maggie Rede. Daughter of Donal, niece of Elias, known within the Order as
Examiner Number 4421974.’
Maggie’s eyes widened still further. ‘No one knows the secret names,’ she
said in a voice that trembled a little.
‘I know much more than that,’ Adam said. ‘I know what you’ve been doing
here, Maggie, delving into forbidden books. I know what dreams they’ve given
you.’
Guiltily, Maggie raised her hand to the golden key that hung round her neck.
‘It’s all right,’ Adam said. ‘I’m not going to try to take it from you. But I
know how you lost your family – your brothers when the Order fell, your parents
to the plague that came after. I even know how your uncle died.’
Maggie went pale. ‘The Bliss—’ she began.
‘There was no Bliss. That tale was concocted to hide the truth.’
‘The truth?’
Adam sighed. ‘I know it’s hard. But the Bliss was just a Faërie-tale invented
by the enemy. Those people – the Order, your family – they weren’t reborn to
celestial Bliss. There was no Nameless waiting for them on the shores of the
First World. The First World fell long ago, in the days of the Winter War. The
Order was trying to build it again – when all this happened … this massacre –
what your people call the Bliss.’
Maggie stared at him. ‘No,’ she said. ‘I don’t know why you’re telling me
this. The Order was fighting Chaos. Bringing perfection to the Worlds. And
when their task was finally done, then the Nameless called them home—’
‘Maggie,’ said Adam. ‘Open your eyes. Does this world look perfect to you?’
He paused to let his words sink in. ‘Look at it,’ he went on. ‘Thousands of people
dead with the plague. The Universal City reduced to a sink of corruption and
vice. Foreign traders in every square, stinking up the place with their food, their
animals, their heathen ways. Slaves being traded where libraries stood. Opium-
dens and liquor-traders on the steps of the cathedral itself – Chaos where Order
used to be. Is this what the Order was fighting for? Is this what you call
perfection?’
Slowly Maggie shook her head. Now that she came to think of it, the stories
didn’t really make sense. Souls swept up to celestial Bliss; bodies left to rot on
earth. And the plague – surely that had not been part of the plan …
‘But if you’re right,’ she said at last, ‘then what happened to the Order? How
could ten thousand people die, all at once, in a heartbeat?’
Now Adam smiled to himself. ‘That’s what I came here to tell you,’ he said.
‘That’s why my mission led me here. Your parents, your brothers, your uncle
Elias – all the other Magisters and Professors and Examiners of the Order, all
those good folk who gave up their lives to keep the Worlds clear of corruption
and Chaos …’ Now the young man’s blue eyes gleamed, and his face was alight
with a fervent glow. He turned once more to Maggie and gave her his most
earnest look.
And then he put his hand on hers, and Maggie felt a shiver of something pass
through her body, a sudden surge of mysterious heat as he looked at her and
whispered: ‘They didn’t die from the Bliss at all; Maggie, they were murdered.’
‘MURDERED?’ REPEATED MAGGIERede in what sounded to her like a stranger’s voice. She
knew she ought to feel angry – shaken, distressed, grieving, shocked – at the
news Adam had given her. But in truth, the overwhelming sensation she felt was
simple relief – relief that she had been right; that the feelings she’d had over the
past three years had turned out not to be simply a figment of her lonely
imagination, but the shadow of a deeper truth; that the forces of which she had
read so avidly were not only real, but more sinister than even she had been led to
suspect – forces that could wipe out ten thousand people at a single stroke,
forces that threatened the very Worlds.
Maggie already knew their names. They were names she had seen again and
again in the pages of the Good Book; names that filled her with unease and with
a kind of fevered excitement. The Æsir. The Vanir. The Seer-folk. The Firefolk …
‘Have you seen them?’ she said at last. ‘The Firefolk – have you seen them?’
Adam nodded. ‘Once,’ he said.
‘Tell me,’ said Maggie, eyes gleaming.
‘If I do,’ he said, ‘there’ll be no going back. It’ll eat up your life, as it did
mine. And the things you’ll know – the things you’ll see—’
Suddenly the young man’s face changed: a shadow seemed to pass over it –
his eyes darkened, his mouth twisted – and if Maggie had been of a whimsical
nature, it might almost have seemed to her that another face had surfaced briefly
beneath the young man’s features: that of an older, harsher man, with a smile of
infinite malice and guile …
But Maggie was too excited to be deterred by shadowplay.
‘Tell me what you know,’ she said.
‘All right,’ said Adam with a smile. ‘But don’t say I didn’t warn you.’
And so Adam Goodwin told his tale. And as Maggie listened in silence, she
began to be conscious of a most curious sensation. Not pleasure – though her
face was flushed. Not anger – though her heart was beating faster than a hunting
hawk’s wing. Instead, she felt unexpectedly alive; like something that enters a
cocoon to emerge, months later, as something else.
It didn’t matter any more that she’d never been close to her family; that she’d
almost forgotten her brothers, who had joined the Order when she was a child.
As for her uncle Elias, Maggie had never met him at all. Still, those things didn’t
matter now. Grief; loneliness; sorrow; guilt – all that belonged to the past. Now
there was only the certainty of what her enemies had done – and the equal
conviction that they had to be stopped.
‘These Firefolk,’ Maggie said. ‘They won the war by a trick. A cheat.’
‘That’s right,’ said Adam. ‘They’re devious. They have no Laws, no honour.
They lured the Order into Hel and unleashed Pan-daemonium onto them without
a thought for the consequences. And that’s why you see the Universal City as it
is – overrun, in Chaos. But in the North it’s far, far worse. There are gateways
there through which things can pass – not just in dreams, but in the flesh. Things
from before Tribulation, released into the waking Worlds like flotsam from the
river Dream.’
Maggie’s eyes grew wide with alarm. ‘And is that what you do?’ she said.
‘Hunt down these things and send them back?’
‘I used to,’ said Adam. ‘But not any more.’
‘What happened?’ said Maggie.
‘Not here,’ he said. ‘Somewhere light. This place reminds me too much of—’
Adam broke off. ‘Too much of the Seventh World,’ he finished in a low voice.
It took Maggie some time to take that in.
‘You were there?’ she said. ‘You were actually there?’
Adam nodded.
‘But how did you …?’
‘I wasn’t in the Order,’ he said. ‘I’d never received Communion. So when the
Firefolk made their move, I alone was overlooked. I survived. I saw it all.
Sometimes I wish I hadn’t.’ He paused. ‘That’s why you have to trust me now.
That’s why I need you to understand. With the Order gone, there’s no one left to
continue the fight. No one but me – and you, Maggie.’
He looked at her appealingly, and Maggie thought she had never seen anyone
with eyes so blue. World’s Enders were most often dark – Maggie was almost
Outlandish – but Adam was like the sun on the Sea, and Maggie was bedazzled.
‘Me?’ she said.
Adam smiled.
‘But how can I—?’
‘Shh. You trust me, don’t you?’
Maggie nodded. ‘I think so,’ she said.
‘Then do as I tell you.’ And Adam drew from his pocket a slim pearl-handled
razor. ‘I need you to keep very still …’
‘Why? What are you going to do?’
‘I’m going to show you a mystery.’
‘You’re going to cut me?’ Maggie said.
‘Power demands a sacrifice. Believe me, this is worth it.’
Maggie looked at the razor. The thought of being cut alarmed her a little; but
blood, she knew, was a powerful thing. Perhaps this was some kind of initiation,
she told herself; something like the prentice’s rite when he first entered the
Order.
‘All right.’ She held out her hand.
‘No. Take off your headscarf.’
‘Why?’ said Maggie in surprise. Brought up in the ways of the Order, she
had strict ideas of modesty. Even now that the Order was gone, to show her hair
to a stranger – a man; a man who was not a relative – seemed almost indecently
intimate.
‘Do I have to explain everything?’ said Adam, getting impatient. ‘Come on,
Maggie, it’s only a scarf. You think I haven’t seen a girl’s hair before? Besides,
where I come from, only married women cover their hair.’
For a moment Maggie was pulled two ways. She wanted to do what Adam
asked, but still it felt obscurely wrong. It wasn’t so much the bergha itself, but
all that it had meant to her. To Maggie, wearing the bergha returned her to a
more orderly time, a time when to be called modest was the greatest praise a girl
could receive – that, and unimaginative, which was nearly as good as obedient.
Maggie had tried to be all those things for as long as she could remember – and
the urge to be obedient now, to do what Adam asked of her, was almost
overwhelming. Adam had worked with the Order. That made him practically an
Examiner. And the language he used – that of sacrifice, and power, and
mysteries – was so close to that of the Order that to refuse him anything seemed
so much worse than removing a scarf.
The bergha was pinned around her head and shoulders in a style that had
once been popular, and that some of the older women still followed. It took
Maggie a moment or two to remove the pins that held it in place; beneath it, her
long hair was braided.
Adam nodded approvingly. ‘Keep very still,’ he told her.
‘What are you going to do?’ Maggie said.
‘It won’t hurt a bit. I promise.’
‘But – this is going to help you, right? Help you fight the Firefolk?’
‘Trust me,’ Adam said. ‘This is going to hurt them bad.’
Maggie obeyed and closed her eyes as he reached to unfasten her hair.
Clearly it had never been cut. The Good Book frowned on short hair in girls, just
as it did on long hair in boys. Each to his own, and each in their place, the Book
of Laws instructed them, and although this rule had never been particularly
enforced in Malbry, World’s End was closer to the Order, and therefore more
likely to insist on such things.
‘Remember, this is a sacrifice,’ he said in his most persuasive voice. ‘New
times demand new Laws. New ways.’
For a moment Maggie still hesitated. It wasn’t that she was vain, but her hair
was all she had of her past life. She remembered her mother brushing it every
night when she went to bed; her brothers tugging on her braids when they were
playing together.
And then she opened her eyes again. She knew what she wanted. The past
was gone. Her mother and brothers were all dead – and all because of the
Firefolk. And here was Adam, offering her a chance to hurt the enemy, and all
she could think about was her hair?
‘Give me the razor,’ she told him fiercely.
‘All right,’ Adam said, and smiled.
Five minutes later, the job was done. Maggie’s braids were gone, and the rest of
her hair was shorn so close that in some places the scalp showed through. It
didn’t look too bad, Adam thought. Maggie’s hair was curly and thick, and
would grow back soon enough. And under a bergha or a veil, no one would
guess at the silvery mark – the silvery mark at the nape of her neck, just where
the Voice had said it would be.
He’d had to shave that part himself – Maggie couldn’t see to do it properly –
and when he uncovered the ruinmark, the Voice in his mind gave a cry of
triumph, making Adam flinch. The razor gave a tiny jump, leaving a faint line of
crimson.
‘Ouch!’ said Maggie.
‘I’ve found it,’ he said.
Adam folded the razor and put it back in his pocket. ‘I can see how they
missed it,’ he went on. ‘Even when you were a baby, I’m guessing your hair
must have hidden it.’
‘Hidden what?’ Maggie said. ‘Please, Adam – what do you see?’ Now there
was tension in her voice, and he could feel her trembling as he traced the rune
with a fingertip. It seemed to brighten as he did so, like tarnished silver beneath
the polishing cloth. A forked shape like a fallen twig, gleaming now with a
ghostly light—
She wondered if Loki knew that rhyme. Probably he didn’t, she thought;
which was no doubt for the best. Nan Fey liked the Trickster, and was genuinely
sorry for what was to happen to him. But sentiment could play no part in the
coming chain of events. The Auld Man’s plans must always come first, and if he
demanded a sacrifice …
And so she watched the Trickster go by, and gave her little toothless smile.
Pucker-lips, a-pucker-lips. That wasn’t quite the right word, of course. But
something was coming. Something big. The Auld Man had told her so.
LOKI AND JOLLY’Sfirst port of call was Dorian Scattergood’s farmhouse, from the
open window of which came a thunderous snoring. Loki was quick to pick the
lock, and to follow the sound to the four-post bed that Dorian had once occupied
– but further investigation revealed the sleeper to be female, stout, with blonde
hair of unusual wiriness.
Damn it!
Loki took a hasty step back onto Jolly’s foot, which raised a growl from the
little man. The goddess of grace and plenty gave a sigh and rolled over, eyes half
open in the shadows.
Wincing, the Trickster held his breath. To be in the village at all was bad
enough. But to be here, of all places …
‘Shh,’ he whispered. ‘It’s all right. You’re only dreaming. Go back to sleep.’
Sif gave a sigh and rolled over again with a noise like a sousaphone in
distress. Most of the bedclothes rolled with her, and Loki was treated to rather
more than he wanted to see of the goddess’s plump hindquarters, which still bore
the mark of Dorian’s livestock tattoo.
‘Please, no,’ whispered Loki. The last time he’d sneaked into Sif’s bedroom
had ended with his lips being sewn together – painful, but nothing at all
compared to what had originally been planned; or, indeed, to what Thor would
do to him this time if he ever found out.
Sweating, he began to move back, inch by inch, towards the door. Jolly
matched him step for step – he moved soundlessly, in spite of his gait. And as
Loki breathed a sigh of relief and the bedroom door swung shut in his wake,
there came a voice in his left ear as low and as dangerous as that of a distant
avalanche, and at the same time a large hand clamped around his neck.
‘So tell me,’ growled Thor, ‘’cos I want to know. Exactly how do you want to
die?’
‘Ah, Thor,’ Loki said, in a casual voice that lost much of its effect for being
half an octave higher than usual. ‘Believe it or not, I was looking for you.’ He
tried to extricate himself from the Thunderer’s grasp, without success. ‘In fact, I
have some information that I know you’re going to—’ A thumb on his windpipe
cut him off.
‘No, I don’t think you do,’ said Thor. And he began to apply pressure against
Loki’s throat.
‘Just listen,’ said the Trickster.
Thor showed his teeth.
‘Three little words—’ gasped Loki, beginning to turn blue.
So it really happened, reflected Thor. He hadn’t noticed it before. People
really did turn blue …
‘Please,’ whispered Loki.
Thor eased the pressure from his thumb.
Loki coughed.
‘That counts as one.’
‘Thor—’
‘That counts as two,’ said Thor.
Loki gave him a vicious look. He put a hand to his bruised throat and took a
deep breath, trying not to cough again.
Then he said: ‘Mjølnir—’
A heavy object moving at speed takes a certain time to come to a halt. For a
moment Thor’s fist continued its trajectory, and might even have reached its
target if Loki hadn’t managed to duck; then it stopped in mid-air and Thor’s face
took on an expression of doubt mingled with a dawning hope.
‘The Hammer?’ he said.
‘No, dummy, the other Mjølnir. The one that flies through the air, catching
birds.’
The Thunderer looked slightly confused.
‘Of course the Hammer,’ Loki said. ‘Thor, listen – I know where it is. In any
case, I know who it’s with. And the good news is: they’re willing to trade.’
Loki was used to death threats. A death threat or two before breakfast, he
thought, was just the way to begin the day. Some people preferred cereal, but
Loki ran on energy, and there was nothing better, to his mind, than a daily
helping of menace and intimidation to sharpen his intellect and keep him on his
toes.
Which was why, over the course of that morning, Loki had already received
no fewer than twelve promises of immediate torture, beating, dismemberment,
disembowelling, and other acts of unpleasantness – none of which had been
carried out, thanks to Thor, whose reluctant belief in Loki’s tale had swayed the
four Æsir and most of the Vanir, with the obvious exception of Heimdall (who
would no more have believed the Trickster than he could have given birth to
ocelots) and Skadi, of course, who wasn’t there.
Which wasn’t to say that they were pleased. In fact, during that morning’s
emergency council of war (convened in haste by Ethel and Thor, and held in the
drawing room of the ex-Parsonage) Loki had to answer a great number of
awkward questions and swear a good many binding oaths before anyone else
would believe him; and even then, it was only the presence of Maddy and Thor
that dissuaded the Vanir (who didn’t enjoy being summoned like this) from
trying out on Loki’s person a variety of methods of interrogation designed to
ensure he was telling the truth.
‘But why would I lie?’ said the Trickster.
‘Because you’re the Father and Mother of Lies,’ said Heimdall, gnashing his
teeth so hard that they sparked.
‘Ah, come on, Goldie. Give me a break.’
‘With pleasure. Legs or spine?’
‘I swear there’s nothing in this for me.’ Now Loki directed a heartfelt plea
towards his circle of judges. ‘But you all heard the prophecy. Asgard’s going to
be rebuilt, with us or without us. A deal with Chaos gives us a chance to be part
of it. And if Thor gets his hammer back, with the new runes Angie can share
with us—’
‘New runes? Are you sure?’ said Frey.
‘Absolutely,’ Loki said. ‘I only saw two, but there must be more. And—’
‘And if there are,’ Frey went on, ‘then maybe Asgard can be raised, and we
can recover our Aspects. And if Thor gets his hammer back …’
It was a powerful argument. To the gods, exiled for five hundred years, its
power was irresistible, and finally even Heimdall was moved to grudging
acceptance.
‘They’ve got the Hammer? Are you sure?’
Loki nodded. ‘On my life.’
‘If you’ve lied to us, Dogstar, you’re dead,’ said Heimdall, bringing the total
of threats to thirteen. ‘Just as long as we’re clear on that.’ And he put his hand
out to join the rest, completing the circle.
Loki gave a sigh of relief. ‘All right. Now for the oath.’
Freyja sniffed. ‘But there’s no one else here!’
‘Please. Just this once. Do as I say.’
And now Loki began to recite the terms Angrboda had laid out: ‘Amnesty
for our allies in Chaos. The return of disputed territories: Ironwood for Fenris;
the One Sea for Jormungand; and a hall to be readied in Asgard for Angrboda,
known as the Temptress, in payment for her loyalty—’
There came a low, impatient growl. The Thunderer was getting restless.
‘Such pact to be sealed,’ went on Loki in haste, ‘by a gesture of goodwill
from our new allies – to wit, the return of Mjølnir, the Hammer of Thor, such
return to be effectuated as soon as the settlement is agreed—’
‘For gods’ sakes, get on with it,’ said Thor.
‘Are we agreed?’ said the Trickster.
Æsir and Vanir nodded in turn.
There was a rather lengthy pause.
‘So – now what?’ said Freyja at last.
Loki shrugged. ‘I suppose we wait.’
They waited, hands clasped, in a circle. They waited so long, in fact, that
Thor regained his dangerous look, Heimdall showed his golden teeth, and even
Loki, who had assumed an air of insouciance throughout the proceedings,
seemed to lose some of his confidence.
‘What’s holding us up?’ said Njörd at last.
‘I suppose these things take time,’ Maddy said.
Loki shot her a grateful look.
‘If this is one of your games …’ Thor began.
‘Leave it out,’ said Loki. ‘Fourteen death threats and counting, and I haven’t
even had breakfast yet. You’re going to hurt my feelings.’
‘I’m going to hurt much more than that,’ said Thor, breaking the circle and
taking two steps towards Loki, who took refuge behind one of Ethel’s chairs. ‘In
fact, if something doesn’t happen right now, I’m going to—’
But precisely what Thor planned to do was suddenly interrupted by a sound
from behind him. A sound of laughter, to be precise, and if Loki didn’t recognize
it, that was simply because his diminutive comrade had previously shown so
little sign of the explosive mirth to which he now gave noisy vent.
Lounging on the ottoman, teacup in one hand, biscuit in the other, Jolly the
dwarf was laughing.
His presence had barely registered with any of the gods before. Only Tyr had
noticed him, and that was because the god of war was still primarily Sugar-and-
Sack, a renegade goblin from Red Horse Hill, who knew a dwarf when he saw
one, and who, on seeing Jolly, had been quick to dismiss the comparison.
Now he turned to the little man. ‘Have we met before?’ he said.
Jolly gave an insolent smirk. Sprawled on the ottoman he looked even more
misshapen than before, his massive head thrown back onto the cushions, the
china cup held with exaggerated delicacy between his pudgy fingers. He seemed
quite unafraid of Tyr, or, indeed, of any of the gods.
‘I’m talkin’ to you,’ said Brave-Hearted Tyr, lapsing into goblin-speak. He
levelled his gaze on the little man and, taking a step, addressed him thus:
‘Short-arse—’
Jolly’s laughter stopped at once. ‘What?’ he said in a dangerous tone.
‘Who’re you callin’ short?’ In a second he was out of his seat, his iron-grey eyes
level with those of the reluctant god of war. Sugar had time to wonder how such
little legs could ever support such a massive head before something butted him
in the pit of the stomach and sent him flying across the room.
‘My china!’ said Ethel.
‘Don’t call me short.’
From behind the overturned china cabinet, Sugar gave a feeble thumbs-up.
Jolly resumed his place on the couch – as well as his good temper. ‘As long
as that’s understood,’ he said. ‘Now p’raps we can talk.’
He poured himself a cup of tea, added nine lumps of sugar and rolled up his
shirt-sleeves, revealing the double rune on his arms.
‘Folks, the name is Mjølnir. But you can call me Jolly.’
THE LITTLE SQUARE-HEADED man’s revelation caused uproar amongst the gods. Only
Loki seemed at all inclined to laughter, although he wisely kept out of the way as
Æsir and Vanir faced each other with expressions of outrage and disbelief, and
Jolly simply drank his tea and grinned all over his puglike face.
‘Thor, what in Hel’s name is going on?’ said Heimdall, finding his voice at
last. ‘How can this – this – be a hammer?’
Jolly smirked evilly. ‘Learned mesself some new skills while I’ve bin in
World Above,’ he said, looking pleased with himself. ‘Couldn’t just lie around
waitin’ for you lot to wake up, could I?’
Heimdall glared at Loki. ‘And you’re trying to tell us you didn’t know?’
‘Don’t look at me,’ said the Trickster. ‘I didn’t make Mjølnir. We all knew it
had powers …’
‘Powers, yes. But – arms? Legs?’
Jolly scratched his armpit and yawned. ‘I’da thought youdda bin more
pleased to see me,’ he said. ‘Seein’ as you’re goin’ to be needin’ me soon.’
Loki narrowed his eyes at him. ‘You’re not an oracle as well, are you?’
Jolly shook his head.
‘Thank gods.’
‘Still,’ said Jolly cheerfully, helping himself to more tea. ‘From what I heard,
there’s trouble ahead, and you’re goin’ to need every bit of help you’ve got. ’Cos
if they come at you through Dream—’
‘Bloody prophecies,’ said Thor. ‘Why don’t they ever make proper sense?
All this stuff about gates and dreams. All this stuff about new runes. Why can’t
we have war in the real world?’ He bared his teeth at Jolly, who bared his own
teeth in return. ‘With Mjølnir and Brave-Hearted Tyr on our side, we’ll give
them a bloody good hammering.’
Brave-Hearted Tyr gave a sickly smile. ‘Is war really the answer?’ he said.
Jolly gave him a knowing grin. ‘Gettin’ cold feet, are yer?’ he said.
‘Course not,’ Sugar said. ‘But god of war – shouldn’t that job go to someone
… more warlike?’
Jolly shrugged. ‘Bit late for that now, innit?’ He stretched out his feet on the
ottoman. ‘Nice tea, by the way. Got any more of them biscuits?’
‘So – er – Jolly,’ said Thor, whose baffled expression had gradually darkened
to one of growing impatience. ‘I mean, I’m glad you’ve kept busy and
everything, but – when do I get my hammer back?’
Jolly gave him a look. ‘What?’
‘Well – of course I’m happy to meet you, but … when do I get my hammer
back?’
Jolly’s face took on an expression not unlike Thor’s own. ‘And that’s all I
get, is it?’ he said. ‘No Hey, Jolly, I’m so glad you’re here, or What was it like,
bein’ swallowed by the World Serpent? Or even How did you manage among the
Folk? No. It’s just Where’s me bloody ’ammer without so much as an if-you-
please—’
‘Well, you do belong to me,’ said Thor.
‘Belong to you?’ Jolly snapped. ‘I’ll ’ave you know that things’ve changed a
bit since I were anybody’s property. I’m not just here for hittin’ things. And if
you’re expectin’ me to fold up and sit in your pocket like I used to do in the old
days, then you’ve got another think comin’, because I’ve got business of me own
—’
‘But – you’re a hammer,’ protested Thor.
‘Not any more,’ Jolly said, calmly proceeding to finish his tea.
Thor’s face darkened even further. ‘Loki …’ he said in a dangerous voice.
But as the Trickster had wisely chosen that moment to find urgent business
elsewhere, it was left to Thor himself to point out that perhaps there was
someone, after all, who annoyed him more than Loki did.
This knowledge did nothing to improve his temper, and there were
thunderclouds on Red Horse Hill throughout the whole of that afternoon, while,
from another mountaintop, a penetrating eye was levelled on the valley of the
Strond, and two black birds flew into the storm, skirted the lightning that stalked
the skies, wheeled around the Sleepers twice and then were swiftly lost from
sight.
MAGGIE’S RETURN TO the Communion Inn had not been as easy as she’d hoped.
Perhaps if she had managed to evade Mrs Blackmore’s vigilant eye, then she
might have been able to collect her few belongings and leave before difficult
questions were asked. Unfortunately for Maggie Rede, this happened to be
delivery day, and by the time she and Adam reached the alley behind the
Communion Inn, her absence had already been noted.
‘So here you are, madam – at last!’ said Mrs Blackmore as she came in. ‘And
where do you think you’ve been all night?’ Her gaze took in Maggie’s furtive
look, her crumpled clothes and the scarf knotted hastily around her head. ‘You
look a proper vagabond and no mistake. And who’s this?’ The beady eyes
narrowed on Adam, standing quietly outside the door, holding the Good Book
under his arm.
Mrs Blackmore at once dismissed the likelihood of his being a potential
customer. If he had been, her scruples might have taken a back seat. As it was,
she took in his travel-stained clothes, his long hair and his Outlandish look, and
launched into a shrill tirade, in which she denounced all northerners, riff-raff and
vagabonds, bemoaned the loose morals of young folk today and almost passed
out at the sight of the Book.
‘Oy!’ shrieked Mrs Blackmore in alarm. ‘I’m not ’avin’ that thing in ’ere!
That’s stolen, that is, stolen from the Order! You got no business takin’ it!’
Maggie tried to explain. But Mrs Blackmore (whose plague charms had once
included pages torn from books such as this) was already working herself into a
state of high moral outrage. ‘There’s powerful words in there!’ she said in a
voice that could have shattered glass. ‘Ye’ve not been trying to read them? Laws
preserve us, what next, girl? Out all night gallivanting, and now what? Looting –
witchcraft?’
Maggie tried to edge past her, acutely aware of the fact that her ex-employer
was starting to attract attention. There were still lawmen at work in the Universal
City, and while not all the Laws were strictly enforced, rumours of witchcraft
were never ignored, and looting was a grave offence.
‘All I want is to collect my things,’ she told her. ‘Then I swear I’ll go.’
Mrs Blackmore gave her a piercing look. ‘Ye’re not in trouble, are ye?’ she
said. Her eyes went back to Adam. ‘Because if ye are, there’s easier ways than
messing with the Order’s books …’
‘I’m not in trouble,’ Maggie said.
‘Ye wouldn’t be the only one,’ said Mrs Blackmore virtuously. ‘Many’s the
girl as hides her shame under a maiden’s bergha.’ And with that she reached out
suddenly and snatched at the scarf around Maggie’s head. It pulled free, and Mrs
Blackmore’s feigned outrage turned to genuine alarm as Maggie’s newly shorn
head was bared and, with it, the ruinmark that gleamed on her neck.
‘Oh my gods!’ said the landlady, forgetting herself enough to swear. ‘Gods,
ye have a ruinmark, an honest-to-godless ruinmark. Where did ye even get such
a thing? Unnatural! Unnatural!’ And she backed away as fast as she could,
forking the sign against evil (a fingering of the runeshape Yr) and knocking over
a coal-scuttle in her haste to get away. ‘If my husband were still alive,’ she
declared in a tremulous voice, ‘he’d have something to say, miss! Traipsing
around the city at night, cavorting with Outlanders, corrupting the Word,
flaunting that ruinmark like a badge o’ pride …’
Adam looked impatient. ‘We don’t have a lot of time,’ he said. ‘Deal with
her, Maggie, for Laws’ sakes.’
‘Deal with her?’
Adam put a finger meaningfully to his throat.
‘Oh no,’ said Maggie. ‘I couldn’t—’
‘Why not? Use your glam. You used it on me, didn’t you?’
Maggie looked at him helplessly. ‘I can’t. It would be murder,’ she said.
‘Oh, please,’ said Adam impatiently. ‘Do I have to do everything?’ And he
pulled the sword from the sheath at his side – a pretty blade from Jed Smith’s
forge, and sharp as a World’s End fishwife’s tongue – and levelled it at the
landlady, thereby reducing Mrs Blackmore to a quivering pudding, chin and lip
both striving in vain to carry as much as a squeak of fear.
‘I believe my friend said something about collecting her effects …’ said
Adam, punctuating his words with a slight increase of pressure from the sword-
point.
Mrs Blackmore’s chins shook.
‘I didn’t hear that,’ Adam said. ‘Is there some kind of a problem?’
‘No problem,’ said Mrs Blackmore.
‘I thought not,’ Adam said. ‘In fact, we will be so discreet that you won’t
even know we were here.’ And Adam reached into his pocket and drew out a
handful of coins.
Mrs Blackmore, recognizing the gleam of gold, gave a shudder and forked
the sign against evil again – which pious gesture would not prevent her from
spending the money later, when the demons had fled. For demons they
undoubtedly were, as she would say in a low voice to her friend Mrs Claymore,
who ran the taphouse down the road; only a demon had such eyes.
‘Go then,’ she said. ‘Give ye joy.’
Adam smirked. ‘I think it will.’
In fact, he didn’t care at all about collecting Maggie’s things – she had little
enough in the world, and Adam had plenty of money – but the Voice in his head
had insisted, and now Adam thought he knew why. He had already cut off
Maggie’s hair. Now he had cut off Maggie’s life – her job, her home, her
acquaintances – making himself her only friend, her ally and protector.
Of course, this never crossed Maggie’s mind. In fact, in spite of everything,
Maggie was happier than she’d ever been before. She was jobless and destitute –
homeless, an outcast – and yet she felt lighter than air; and it was with a strange
new sense of recklessness that she ran to join her new friend on the streets of the
Universal City, to conjure up an army of dreams to ride against the Firefolk.
DREAM IS A river that flows both ways – a fact often overlooked by the Folk, for
whom dreaming had always been considered territory best left unexplored.
Malbry’s own Crazy Nan Fey was rumoured to be a victim of turbulent spirits,
channelled into the world through Dream, though Maddy Smith had always
suspected the other kind of spirit to be at fault – the kind that came in bottles and
kegs. But Dream is far more than a river, as Odin One-Eye could have told her.
Dream is the stuff of Worlds – all Worlds – and all things come and go from it,
as water comes and goes from the Sea, becoming clouds, rain, snowflakes, tears
– all so ephemeral, all so unique, always changing but never lost, a universe of
possibility where any thought can take form.
In Malbry, Maddy was dreaming. It was a quiet, comforting dream that took
her back to her childhood years, when everything was new, and her old friend,
whom she knew only as One-Eye, would tell her tales of the Elder Age and teach
her how to fling cantrips to bamboozle Nat Parson and torment Adam
Scattergood and his cronies.
Today she was only ten years old, and she and One-Eye were lying side by
side in the sage-grass of Red Horse Hill, watching the fat fairweather clouds pass
rapidly in the morning sky. It was just past Midsummer’s Fair Day; the Sleepers
were crowned with blue haze, and from the fields below Red Horse Hill came
the distant sounds of grazing cattle, and birds, and the sleepy sound of the river
Strond snaking across the valley.
‘That cloud looks like a serpent,’ said Maddy (who of course had never seen
such a thing, except perhaps in One-Eye’s books). ‘A big one, with a shaggy
head.’
‘Aye, perhaps,’ said One-Eye lazily, taking a puff of his stubby pipe. The
smoke made two distinct little clouds of its own, like two tufts of rabbit-tail
grass, which chased each other into the swift summer air and were lost on the
crest of the Hill.
Maddy said: ‘Did you see it too?’
One-Eye smiled. ‘There’s substance even in clouds,’ he said. ‘And dreams
are no less potent or less perilous if the dreamer happens to be awake. Do you
see those birds over there?’ He pointed them out: two black birds, too large to be
jackdaws, too dark to be gulls. Crows – or ravens, perhaps, thought Maddy.
‘I see them,’ she said.
‘Good. You keep your eye on them. Birds are messengers, they say. Did you
know that the General had the power to send out his thoughts in the form of a
pair of birds?’
Maddy nodded. ‘I’ve heard the tale.’
‘Hugin and Munin were their names. Spirit and Mind, in the old tongue.
Rascals both, but with their help he could scrutinize every one of the Nine
Worlds. The Middle World. Dream. The Underworld. Even into Chaos itself –
Odin’s eye saw everything, for Mind can travel to every World. Now look for
me, Maddy. What else do you see?’
Maddy squinted at the sky. ‘That pink cloud looks like a horse,’ she said.
‘But with more legs than usual.’
‘Really,’ said One-Eye.
‘Over there. Can’t you see it?’ Maddy said.
‘No,’ he said. ‘But I’m sure you can. What else do you see?’
Maddy smiled. ‘That one looks like a basket. A basket full of washing. And
that one …’
‘Yes? Is there anything else?’
Maddy narrowed her eyes at the sky. She thought the birds looked closer
now, circling the brow of the Hill. And for a moment, in their wake …
She looked away. ‘I don’t think so. Can we play another game?’
‘Of course we can, Maddy. You’ve done very well.’ One-Eye tapped out his
pipe onto a piece of rock at his side. ‘But now I must ask you to do something
else. Something that may prove difficult.’
‘Of course,’ said Maddy, her eyes lighting up. ‘What is it you want me to
do?’
One-Eye moved closer, and now she could see how old he suddenly looked,
how sad, with his dusty cloak and his eye-patch and his battered hat on the
ground at his side. And she wanted above all things to put her arms around him,
but there was something in his manner that made her afraid to lay hands on him,
as if at a touch he might disappear …
‘You’re not ill, are you?’ she said. ‘You look so … tired.’
‘Aye. Maybe I am. But there’s work to do before we can rest. Hard work.
And I need your help.’
‘You mean like digging for treasure?’ asked Maddy, looking up eagerly.
There was treasure under Red Horse Hill, everyone in the valley knew that.
Relics from the Elder Age: gold and diamonds and rubies.
‘Not that kind of treasure,’ he said.
Maddy was disappointed. ‘But I thought …’
‘Never mind. Listen. I need you to trust me. I know you have little reason to.
I lied to you once, and paid the price. Fair enough, that’s what I do. But now I
need you to trust me again. The fate of the Worlds depends on it.’
Maddy was puzzled. ‘I don’t understand. When did you ever lie to me?’
One-Eye looked grim. ‘Trust me,’ he said. ‘I know you don’t understand –
not yet. Nevertheless, I need your word. Trust me, Maddy. Do as I say.
Remember this conversation. One day you’re going to understand exactly what
I’m talking about. That’s when I’ll need your trust, Maddy. That’s when you’ll
know what you have to do.’
Maddy nodded.
One-Eye went on. ‘I need you to search for something,’ he said. ‘An artefact
of the Elder Age. A very special thing indeed. You can call it the Old Man. The
Old Man of the Wilderlands.’
‘The Old Man of the Wilderlands?’
Odin nodded. ‘That’s one of its names. Though it won’t look like a man to
you, but something else entirely. It may look like a piece of rock; but it’s what’s
inside that matters.’
Maddy nodded solemnly. ‘How will I find it? Where will you be? Won’t you
be coming with me?’
One-Eye smiled. ‘Patience,’ he said. ‘By the time this message reaches you,
you’ll understand what I’m trying to say. For the moment, remember this.
Someone’s going to come here soon. For the Horse, and for the Old Man. And
you’re going to have to be ready.’
Maddy frowned at him. ‘Who?’ she said.
‘You’ll soon find out. Don’t tell anyone we spoke. Not if the gods
themselves were to ask—’
‘The gods?’
‘Please, Maddy. I don’t have much time.’
‘All right,’ said Maddy. ‘I promise.’
‘Good.’ One-Eye tucked his pipe carefully back into his tobacco pouch. The
birds were very close now, spinning and circling the brow of the Hill. One-Eye
turned to look at Maddy again. ‘Now I have to go,’ he said. ‘Don’t worry, you’ll
hear from me again. Keep dreaming, Maddy. Remember me. And keep an eye
out for those birds.’
And with that he stood up and put on his hat and vanished into the sweet air
of Red Horse Hill without even a flicker, and Maddy awoke with tears on her
face to the sound of beating wings in the dawn.
AT FIRST MADDY thought she was still dreaming. Two black birds – two ravens, in
fact – were perching on the window-ledge. Maddy could hear the whispering
squeak of their feathers moving against the glass, and their cries – a loud,
unmusical craw – were enough to wake the Sleepers.
She rubbed her eyes and got out of bed and walked towards the window.
To her surprise, the two big birds did not fly away at her approach, but
simply watched her from guinea-gold eyes, occasionally shifting from one foot
to the other in the half-comic, ponderous way that always made Maddy think of
Nat Parson.
She thought of her dream.
Birds are messengers.
Maddy frowned at the two birds. They looked just like ordinary birds to her.
Both looked glossy and well-fed. One – the smaller of the two – had a single
white feather on its head. The other, a ring around its foot.
Birds are messengers. Why not? There was plenty of truth in dreams, she
knew. Could Odin have somehow sent these two? And if he had, where was he
now? Death, Damnation, or maybe Dream?
Maddy opened the window. Feeling slightly foolish, she spoke to the birds.
‘Do you have a message for me?’
The larger bird pecked at its wing.
The smaller cocked its head. Craw.
‘Sorry. I don’t speak raven.’
Crawk.
‘What do you want?’
Craw. Craw.
Maybe they wanted a bribe, she thought. Ravens and crows were greedy, she
knew; she had often watched as One-Eye fed them with crumbs from his pocket.
Maddy had never quite understood why – the birds were thieves and scavengers,
ready to peck the eyes from your head if they could get away with it – but for
some reason One-Eye had always liked them, calling them my tattered ones and
laughing at their antics.
‘Do you want something to eat?’ she said.
Two pairs of eyes swivelled up at her.
‘All right. Wait here.’
There was a half-eaten biscuit on a saucer by the bed. Maddy turned to pick
it up, meaning to scatter the crumbs on the ledge—
But the ravens were there before her. Without waiting for an invitation, both
had flown into the room, one now perching on the bed-post, the other on the
mantelpiece. Maddy hadn’t quite realized how very large a raven could be. The
sound of their wings was disquieting in the little room; their beaks looked sharp
and dangerous.
‘Who asked you in?’ Maddy said.
The smaller of the two birds hopped from the bed onto Maddy’s arm and
pecked at the biscuit in her hand. Maddy dropped the biscuit, and the bird caught
it in mid-air, bearing it off to the corner of the room. The larger raven gave
pursuit, and there followed a sudden vicious scuffle of talons and beaks as the
two of them quarrelled over the food. A china candlestick – one of two – fell into
the fender and smashed.
‘Stop it!’ said Maddy, just managing to rescue the second candlestick.
The ravens paid no attention at all.
Maddy stared at them helplessly. What an idiot she was, she thought – so
eager to believe her dream was real that she’d thought a pair of scruffy ravens
might be messengers from another world. She looked around for some kind of
weapon – a broom, a carpet-beater, perhaps – with which to shoo the birds away.
A voice – the smallest of voices – came to her as if from a dream.
Rascals, both, it whispered, and laughed.
‘Odin?’ said Maddy.
Craw. Crawk.
The birds stopped squabbling at once. They seemed to be waiting for
something; two pairs of golden eyes stared fixedly at Maddy.
‘I don’t know what you want,’ she said.
Crawk. Crawk. ‘Why don’t you tell me?’ Maddy was starting to lose her
temper.
And then she suddenly knew what to do – it was so simple that she’d missed
it; but if the birds were what she hoped, then there was a way to know for sure.
She made the sign of Ós with her hand. ‘A named thing is a tamed thing,’ she
said in a voice that trembled a little.
Two pairs of eyes blinked.
Maddy made the sign again. ‘I name you Hugin and Munin,’ she said. ‘Spirit
and Mind, in the old tongue. Now – will you tell me what you’re doing here?’
The two birds disappeared at once, to be replaced by two tattered figures,
one lounging on the ottoman, one perching on the bed. To Maddy they looked
almost identical, but for the difference in gender and size, and the broad streak of
white in the girl’s long hair. Both were dressed in shiny black, in a fabric that
might have been feathers or silk, but which somehow resembled neither. Their
hair was wild and tangled, and they both wore a great deal of silver jewellery –
rings on every finger; bracelets stacked halfway up each arm – earrings that
jangled with feathers and bells; strings and strings of gleaming jet beads.
They looked like Chaos folk to Maddy, and each carried a black design that
she did not recognize – the woman’s on the right arm, the man’s on the left:
what seemed like half the contents of Ethel Parson’s pantry, her two visitors
unburdened their tale. Wines and spirits, more like. Gods, who are these people?
But Maddy had soon learned that when dealing with Hughie and Mandy,
certain things took time. Time and sustenance, it seemed – and as far as their
joint appetites went, the two were more like locusts than birds. A raised mutton
pie; a cold roast ham; several loaves of bread; some cakes, including a plum
pudding set aside for Yule; a cheese; a whole barrel of biscuits; various jars of
jams, preserves, cherries in brandy, dried apricots; plus wine, ale, a bottle of
mead and, lastly, tea – with six sugars.
‘What, no cream?’ Maddy said.
Mandy grinned and made a sound very like a raven’s craw.
‘She disn’ae talk much in this Aspect,’ said Hughie apologetically. ‘But she’s
a fearsome thinker.’
‘So, what do you want from me?’ Maddy said. The clock on the wall now
said nine o’clock, and it was only a matter of time, she thought, before one of the
gods came looking for her and found her entertaining guests.
‘Well, if ye had a dozen eggs, I’d no say no tae an omelette—’
‘Apart from food,’ said Maddy. ‘And drink.’
Hughie looked disappointed. ‘Well, ye already know that, a-course. We’ve a
message from the General.’
For a moment Maddy could hardly breathe. ‘One-Eye?’ she said in a choked
voice.
‘Aye, that’s him. He called us from Dream.’
Maddy cast her mind back to the last time she’d spoken with the General.
That had been three years ago, on the ravaged shores of Hel. Look for me in
dreams, he had said. And Maddy had done precisely that, waiting and hoping for
a sign that somehow her old friend might have survived – in spirit, if not in
Aspect. But Maddy had taken his words as little more than cold comfort. One-
Eye in dreams was not the same as One-Eye in the living flesh, and as time had
passed, she had finally come to believe that dreams were all that remained of
him.
‘Odin’s still alive?’ she said.
‘Well – yes and no,’ Hughie said. ‘That’s why he had tae send us, see?’
Craw.
‘You leave the talking tae me,’ said Hughie, addressing Mandy. ‘Now what
was that message again, eh?’
Crawk.
‘No, I havenae forgotten.’
Craw.
‘Mandy, I resent that. I am not inebriated.’ He drew out the word to its full
five syllables, spreading his arms for emphasis and knocking over a vase. Maddy
winced inwardly. Ethel was partial to her trinkets and, even in her Aspect as
Frigg the Seeress, wouldn’t take kindly to these intruders in her home.
‘I don’t understand,’ Maddy said. ‘Is Odin alive, or isn’t he?’
Hughie shrugged. ‘That’s a little hard tae say. Dream runs through all Nine
Worlds, Death and Damnation included.’
‘But you said he gave you a message for me—’
Mandy crawed impatiently.
‘Aye, aye. Give me time.’ Hughie seemed to gather his thoughts. ‘So we
heard there’d been a prophecy. Regardin’ the rise of the First World …’
Maddy nodded. ‘That’s right.’ She struggled to recall the words of the
Seeress.
‘The Cradle fell an age ago, but Fire and Folk shall raise her
In just twelve days, at End of Worlds; a gift within the sepulchre.’
Could this be her destiny? Was Maggie Rede from World’s End fated to ride
the Horse of Fire? She’d dreamed of this for so many years, alone in her
underground labyrinth. She’d read so many stories of the Universal City and the
great Apocalypse; of Tribulations and Cleansings; of warriors and demons and
gods. And in her darkest, wildest dreams Maggie had always fought alongside
them, riding across the Nine Worlds, wading through rivers of unholy blood, an
angel with a crossbow.
Nevertheless, in three years she had never killed anything bigger than a rat;
and now, with the face of her enemy – so very like her own face – staring up at
her from the snow, Maggie found that she simply could not obey the Voice
without question.
‘Who are you?’ she said to the girl at her feet. ‘Who are you, and how do you
wear my face?’
The girl climbed painfully to her knees. The canticle had silenced her
momentarily, but now her glam – and her voice – had returned. Her ruinmark
flared in the palm of her hand, a brilliant coppery colour, but she made no visible
move to attack.
Do it, Maggie! Finish her! The Voice had lost its calm authority; its tone was
one of anguish now. Maggie Rede, I COMMAND YOU—
But Maggie’s attention was on the girl. Her voice was almost lost in the
sound of Maggie’s ghostly passenger, but even so, she could hear it – a pleasant
voice, much like her own, but with a trace of a Northlands accent:
‘Maggie. Listen. That voice in your head. The one that tells you what to do.’
Maggie felt her throat contract. ‘How did you know my name?’ she said.
‘How did you know about the Voice?’
The presence in her mind had become a savage, snarling animal. YOU WILL
OBEY MY COMMAND! it said.
Maggie shook the Magister aside like a terrier shaking a rat. It hurt, but she
was stronger; she felt its rage and frustration clawing for control of her mind …
‘How did you know?’
‘I guessed,’ said the girl. ‘It’s the Whisperer. An enemy of my people and
yours. I’ve seen people under its spell before. And I know you’re not really a
murderer.’
Maggie frowned. ‘You’re lying,’ she said. ‘You’re one of them. The enemy.
The filthy, treacherous Firefolk.’
‘That’s right,’ said the girl. ‘I am one of them. But we are not the enemy. The
Whisperer is the enemy. It lies. It wants to use you. It knows who you are, and
it’s using you to wreak revenge on your family.’
‘I don’t believe you,’ Maggie said. ‘The Firefolk killed my family.’
‘That isn’t true,’ said the girl from the North. ‘Maggie, I’m your s—’
It was then that the ground began to explode. A geyser of earth and rocks and
grass erupted twelve feet to Maggie’s left, followed by another one just in front
of her spectral mount. The Red Horse reared; he bared his teeth; cold fire shot
from his nostrils. At the same instant something began to flood uncontrollably
out of the Hill: a squealing, snickering tide of life that swarmed out of the holes
in the broken ground and fanned out onto the seamless snow.
At the same moment Maggie felt something snag at her thoughts, like a fish-
hook caught inside her mind. It was her passenger again, battling its will against
hers. For a moment her vision blurred. A spike of pain went through her head.
Her dream-hands clutched the cat’s cradle of reins even more tightly than before.
Below her, the girl from the Northlands was struggling to get to her feet.
Earth and rubble showered them both, bouncing off the crust of snow. Maggie’s
head was pounding now; her vision doubled, trebled. She was vaguely aware of
the girl from the North turning once to look at her, then beginning to run across
the snow.
Above her, two ravens circled mystically.
The fish-hook in Maggie’s mind pulled again, urging her to give in, to obey.
YOU CANNOT RESIST ME, MAGGIE REDE. I ORDER YOU TO OBEY
ME! STRIKE HER DOWN! USE THE WORD! DO IT NOW, BEFORE IT’S TOO
LATE!
But Maggie was no Adam Scattergood, to be reeled in like a caught fish.
STOP IT! she said, and shoved at the unseen presence with all the considerable
force of her will. The Red Horse beneath her reared up, almost as if to encourage
her.
She felt the Magister’s astonishment.
GET OUT! she ordered, and lunged again. Once more the Horse responded.
The Voice grew plaintive, pitiful. Please, Maggie. Let Me explain—
GET THE HEL OUT OF MY MIND, Maggie said, and gave a final violent
push. Beneath her, the Horse gave a giant leap; there came a sudden flare of light
…
And Maggie opened her eyes again and found herself back in the Universal
City, sitting up in bed with the Good Book open at her side, and Adam watching
her wide-eyed, and the old familiar city sounds like music in her waking ears.
For a moment she was so relieved to find herself back home again that she
almost didn’t notice the fact that she and Adam were not alone. A sound brought
her back to reality; a gentle, familiar whickering – the kind you might hear on
any street corner or in any place where livestock is kept.
Maggie turned and saw a horse standing by the bedside. It looked just like a
regular horse – a strawberry roan with a long black mane. It had the usual
number of legs. Why then was she so sure that this was no ordinary animal? And
what was it doing in their room?
She turned to look at the Good Book, still open at the picture of the strange,
eight-legged Horse. Had the picture caused her dream? Or had dreaming driven
her mad?
The picture in the Good Book showed the Horse with a rider. Had that rider
been there before? Maggie couldn’t remember. But it was so dark in the room
that she’d probably missed it. A tiny figure with cropped dark hair, wearing a
scarlet tunic …
Maggie closed the Good Book and locked it with the golden key. Then she
turned to look back at the Horse through the circle of finger and thumb. Through
the rune Bjarkán she caught a brief, unspeakable glimpse of red. And on its
bridle, a flash of blue signalled the presence of some kind of glam.
She’d thought it was a dream. But no. Here it was, in the real world. The Red
Horse of the Last Days …
Which now, it seemed, belonged to her.
I saw an eight-legg’d horse trot by.
(Fie, oh fie, ye drunken fool!)
Nine Worlds were in his gleaming eye.
(Fie, ye drunken scally!)
World’s End drinking song
THE GODS (EXCEPTfor Maddy, of course) knew nothing but the aftermath. For five
hundred years the Red Horse had slept, awaiting the time of the Last Days. Now
he was gone, the Hill was no more, and Dream – raw Dream, undiluted,
uncontrollable – was unleashed upon the valley.
It was the greatest wave of ephemera the gods had seen since Ragnarók. It
started under Red Horse Hill, where all the dregs of World Below – Faërie,
goblins and other undesirables, including Loki, who was still in disgrace – had
made their quarters out of reach of Æsir, Vanir and the Folk.
It had come quite early that morning, when the sun was barely grazing the
Hill. The villagers of Malbry had mostly still been in their beds, except for a few
early risers and Crazy Nan, who got up at dawn to feed her cats and had seen the
chaotic signatures in the sky above the Hill. For most, however, the first sign had
been a kind of rumbling sound, as of an impending storm, followed by an
explosion, as if all the geysers of World Below had chosen to erupt at once.
The rats had felt it first, and fled upwards in their thousands, swarming from
the darkest depths, streaming through holes in the porous rock, squealing and
biting and tearing each other – and at anything else that stood in their way – in
an increasingly frenzied struggle to escape.
Sugar, with Thor in the blacksmith’s house, found the courtyard full of them:
brown rats, black rats, grey rats and red-eyed albino rats, pouring out of sewers
and drains as World Below prepared itself for a massive evacuation. Some even
popped right out of the ground like corks from bottles of ginger beer, and Sugar
saw that a cloud of birds had begun to assemble over the village; eagles, carrion
birds, hawks and crows and jackdaws and gulls, excited by the swarming prey,
were circling over Malbry in numbers hitherto unseen.
Maddy, running as fast as she could away from the scene at Red Horse Hill,
had time to remember the occasion when, three years ago, while trying to
capture a goblin, she had accidentally summoned all Malbry’s vermin into Mrs
Scattergood’s cellar. The present disruption was something like that, but
magnified ten thousand times. Something was coming – something big –
released by her twin and by the Horse they had awakened between them. As she
ran for cover, Maddy couldn’t help wondering why Maggie had not made a
move to attack as she lay helpless and dazed at the foot of the Hill.
Had she lost control of the Horse? Had she simply run out of glam? Had she
decided to leave the job of finishing off the enemy to whatever was coming from
World Below? Was it some vestige of loyalty, a sense of kinship that had stayed
her hand? Or was it because she knew somehow that Maddy too had disobeyed
orders, preferring to lose the Red Horse rather than strike at her sister? Was she
being used by the Whisperer, an innocent caught up in its plans? And if so, could
she be saved from herself and brought back to her family?
There was no one to answer these questions, of course. Hughie and Mandy
were long gone, lost in the growing maelstrom of birds. Odin’s bridle was also
gone. The plan to harness Sleipnir had backfired in a most spectacular way, and
as for going to the Universal City – that was surely out of the question, now that
this new threat had raised its head.
No, this attack must be dealt with first, Maddy said to herself as she ran. And
yet for the moment, she realized, what had happened on the Hill would have to
remain a secret – at least, until she knew the truth about the Whisperer and her
mysterious twin. To betray her to the gods at this point would be nothing less
than disastrous – and if Maggie, in spite of the assault, had sensed any kind of
bond with her, then Maddy owed it to her to find out.
She made ready her glam for the inevitable, while around her the air turned
black with birds and the ground came alive with vermin, swarming from holes
and rents in the earth towards the village of Malbry.
Meanwhile Loki, to whom no movement under the Hill was lost, had sensed
the disruption immediately and taken to his bird form, as the network of
tripwires and runes he had laid in place these five hundred years was torn apart
like a spider’s web, and first the rats, and then a tidal wave of ephemera surged
upwards from the Eighth World, driving all things before it.
His escape came not a moment too soon. As he soared in hawk Aspect above
the chaos on the ground, there came a wave of turbulence that almost knocked
him out of the sky, though he had time to see Maddy’s signature vanishing into
the maelstrom, and to wonder what she was doing there. And what was that
other signature, submerged in the general confusion? Had he imagined it? Was
he simply seeing stars?
Then the third wave came out of the Hill, and Loki lost interest in everything
but getting as far from the epicentre as possible. A sudden release of water – ice-
cold water from the Seventh World – erupted from fissures in the earth, so that
the river Strond increased to ten times its normal size in as many minutes, and
the flood barriers at Malbry Riverside were broken, and the first great wave of
flood water charged like a herd of buffalo down Malbry High Street, past the
church, knocking down the wooden houses closest to the river before spilling out
across farmlands and pastures all the way to Nether’s Edge.
This was no ordinary flood, Loki knew. It was the river Dream, unleashed,
awash with the flotsam of Chaos. Faced with such a powerful threat, Loki didn’t
stand a chance, and, abandoning all loyalties, he fled in bird Aspect as fast as he
could towards the Seven Sleepers, where the Hindarfell Pass, just newly cleared,
would provide him with the best means of escape from whatever was after him.
In the village, the Folk were in chaos. Some ran out to see what was
happening and were swiftly borne away by the flood. Some fled to the church
for safety; some hauled bags of sand and earth to their doorsteps to form a
breakwater against the tide. But water was not the end of it: now came fire out of
the ground; and boiling mud, which, meeting the flood water, caused great gouts
of steam to erupt from the already swollen Strond, rolling like thunder across the
land, so that some of the oldsters remembered the tales of demon wolves that
swallowed the Sun, bringing darkness even in summertime.
Maddy saw it coming, and found the nearest tree to climb. A stunted oak, but
large enough, she hoped, to withstand the tide of water and mud. Settling into a
fork in the trunk, she looked up into the roiling sky, trying in vain to distinguish
the forms of Odin’s ravens among the thousands of circling birds.
‘Hughie! Mandy! Are you there?’
From the cloud she thought she heard the faintest of replies.
Craw. Crawk.
‘Stay close!’ she cried.
Again, that harsh note of reply.
From her refuge in the tree, Maddy drew her mindsword, for now, after fire
and flood, came the rest: Pan-daemonium unleashed.
After the billows of steam and the plagues of rats and the subterranean
waters came creatures that only Dream could have spawned: clawed things and
flying things and things with the features of the dead. The deadliest kind of
ephemera, fashioned from the raw stuff of Dream and spawned from the wells of
Chaos, tearing their way through the rent in the Worlds towards the lair of the
Firefolk.
The Æsir were quick to react to the threat. Assuming as much of their true
Aspects as they were able to summon, with mindswords and runeweapons they
took their stand against the advancing enemy. No one was at their best, of course
– runemarks broken or reversed; muscles weakened; instincts dulled; subject to
all the imperfections of their host bodies. Still they stood. Still they fought.
Outside the Parsonage Brave-Hearted Tyr, in spite of his inferior size, was
making a fair job of dispatching every rat that came his way. They lay in drifts
around the square, their bodies creating a barrier against the rising water.
Ethel’s priority was the Folk. As panic seized the villagers in their struggle to
escape, she spun runes into the air to shield the innocents from harm; directed
them into the church, which was large enough to take them all; reunited families
and promised them that all would be well. And in spite of her Aspect as Frigg
the Seeress there was still enough of Ethelberta Parson in her to reassure the
village folk – who otherwise might well have assumed that the strangers were to
blame for all this, and turned their rage against their protectors.
Meanwhile the Vanir had not been idle. From under the Sleepers, they too
had seen the plague of rats that poured from the Hill, flooding the many
passageways that ran from beneath the Horse’s Eye; the noxious tide that
followed them – the waves of ephemera from Dream, the verminous geyser from
World Below that rushed to fill every hole, every crack, every crevasse in the
ice.
Now, from their ice-cave underground, Njörd worked to hold back the flood
while Bragi struck power chords on his guitar. Frey had unsheathed his
mindsword and was scything methodically through the enemy’s ranks, while
Freyja, in her Carrion Aspect (which she despised most of the time as
unglamorous, but whose skeletal features were enough to strike fear even into
the heart of Dream), flew around the battle scene, shrieking and striking out with
her claws, dislodging clusters of stalactites that fell like spears from the ceiling
and onto the heads of the enemy.
Back in the village, however, Thor was having staffing problems. Faced with
a cloud of ephemera, the soul-eating parasites of Netherworld, he quite
understandably assumed that his mighty hammer would be at his side during the
mêlée. But Jolly seemed less than willing to take part, and the Thunderer spent
several minutes wheedling before he could persuade him to put aside his
breakfast and to assume his Aspect as Mjølnir.
‘Me toast’ll go cold,’ he protested. ‘Can’t you manage on yer own?’
Thor attempted to explain that this was a bit of a crisis.
Jolly pulled a face. ‘Well, I don’t think much of yer timin’,’ he said. ‘I can’t
bloody stand cold toast. And what about me sausages?’
Thor took a deep breath, smiled and promised Jolly all the sausages he could
eat – but later, when they’d saved the Worlds.
‘Say please,’ Jolly said.
At which time Thor’s patience expired at last, and he erupted into full Aspect
in Ethel Parson’s breakfast room – all seven feet of Thunderer, red beard spitting
fiery sparks, eyes like torches, fists like anvils, thick blue veins running up his
arms – and there was Mjølnir at his side, still looking strangely like Jolly, with
its huge misshapen head, its double runemark gleaming, illuminated with
glamours and light.
Thor gave a growl of satisfaction and, seizing the weapon in his fist, strode
out into the courtyard again and proceeded to do what he did best, which was to
hammer things.
And there were so many things to hammer. Not quite as many ephemera as
the gods had encountered in Netherworld three years ago, but far more than they
had seen in World Above since Ragnarók, five centuries ago, when Surt had
marched out of Chaos and Asgard had fallen from the sky.
There were feathered snakes and birds with teeth; fire-cats and mud
monkeys; there were spiders, and swarms of flying eyes, and eagles with human
faces, and bats, and things that were nothing but tentacles, like creatures of the
One Sea.
Ephemera can take any shape; and even when smashed into pieces, they can
often re-assemble, but Thor and Mjølnir made a powerful team, and with Brave-
Hearted Tyr at their side, killing rats, as well as Sif – who had dropped her
current Aspect and now faced the enemy as a ferocious battle-sow, with golden
tusks and eyes like coals – they laid into the hordes of Netherworld with the
vigour of a small army.
‘What are they after?’ yelled Brave-Hearted Tyr, hurling a mindbolt at a
platoon of marching umbrellas. On contact, the umbrellas broke up into a shower
of spinning crescents, each one as sharp as a razor-blade, that sliced screaming
through the air before embedding themselves in the frozen ground.
Thor shrugged. ‘How in Hel would I know?’ He levelled his hammer at an
oncoming ice bear and sent it howling back to Netherworld. ‘I’m not the one
who opened the rift …’
‘No, that was Loki,’ said Brave-Hearted Tyr. ‘It must have given way at last!’
‘Well, if that’s who they’re after,’ said Thor with a growl, ‘they’re welcome
to him. Anytime.’ And, lifting his hammer, the Thunderer returned once more to
the business in hand.
LOKI HAD NEVER doubted for a moment that he was the one they were after. He’d
automatically assumed from the start that his deal with Angrboda and her folk
must have come to the attention of Chaos, and that this offensive was the result.
Certainly, it made sense. An alliance between demons and gods might
threaten even Surt’s domain, especially if the Sky Citadel were indeed to be
rebuilt, and the First World reinstated as theirs. Of course, that didn’t explain
what he had seen in the sky before the eruption. Maddy’s signature was hard to
miss, and he was more than familiar with the colours of the General’s Horse,
which he had glimpsed in the moments before the Hill had started to erupt,
emitting so many signatures that all trace of Sleipnir and Maddy had quickly
been obliterated.
Loki, of course, had known all about the creature sleeping under the Hill.
Technically, in Horse Aspect, he was Sleipnir’s parent – a relationship he would
rather forget – and as such he could have awoken the Horse quite easily; but he
had no interest at all in doing so. Quite apart from the fact that Odin would have
torn him limb from limb if he’d tried anything of that sort, the Trickster didn’t
much like horses, preferring his bird Aspect to anything four- or eight-legged.
Maddy, it seemed, had no such qualms. The presence of her signature so close to
the source of the eruption suggested that she had taken the Horse. Perhaps she’d
assumed that the aftermath would provide her with adequate camouflage to
make her escape before anyone made the connection. Perhaps, now that Odin
was dead, he thought, its power had been too much for her to resist.
All the more reason, Loki thought, for him to take his flight while he still
could. Maddy couldn’t help him now, even if she’d wanted to. If he could reach
the Hindarfell, he might have a chance of finding shelter outside the valley, and
thereafter make his way southwards into the Universal City and beyond, where,
he thought, he could probably find better, safer, more comfortable – and
certainly more lucrative – opportunities to develop his skills.
But Hawk-eyed Heimdall, at his post in the Sleepers, had been waiting years
for just such a move, and his sharp eyes were quick to notice the small brown
bird flying towards the Hindarfell. Ignoring the chaos below him, he took to his
own winged Aspect – that of a white sea-eagle – and set off in pursuit of the
bird, whose gaudy violet signature-trail marked it conclusively as the fugitive
Trickster.
For a time it seemed that the smaller bird might almost evade its pursuer. But
Loki was tired, Heimdall was stronger, and the many eruptions from World
Below had conspired to create a turbulence in the thin mountain air that battered
and shook the Trickster until, at last, he was forced to the ground just as he
reached the Sleepers.
With the white sea-eagle still on his tail, Loki headed for a space between
two peaks, where, halfway down the mountainside, a pool of white mist spilled
out from beneath a glacier, partially obscuring the scene below. If only he could
reach it, he thought, then maybe he could find somewhere to hide …
The mist was thick and creamy, like the head on a glass of ale. He plunged
into it, feeling the drop in temperature as soon as he passed through the cloud
layer. As he came to land on an outcrop of rock, Loki had a moment to
appreciate the unusual thickness of the fog – its ghastly pallor; its sickening cold;
the stench that enveloped everything within its reach – before something
happened that made him forget his pursuer, his flight; that startled him right out
of his bird form and back into his human Aspect, sprawling him clumsily into
the snow in his hurry to escape.
The white sea-eagle swooped into view, but Loki barely even glanced his
way. He simply lay shivering where he had fallen, his eyes widening in disbelief
as something came slithering out of the mist in the glacier’s shadow. Something
large. Something dark. Something monstrously familiar …
Loki swallowed painfully. ‘Jorgi? Is that you?’ he said.
LOKI’S DREAD WAS not misplaced. The last time he had encountered the World
Serpent – otherwise known as Jormungand – the circumstances had been less
than amicable. But at least he’d been in full Aspect then, with Maddy by his
side, and with the (somewhat reluctant) support of Hel, the Guardian of the
Underworld.
This time he was alone, freezing cold and, worse still – one of the
disadvantages of shifting to bird Aspect being that he’d had to leave his clothes
behind – clad in nothing but his skin. Not the way he had envisaged their reunion
– in fact, Loki thought, the only way he would have willingly submitted to such
an encounter was with a large army standing between himself and the Serpent
(which would be safely bound with runes – Loki saw no virtue at all in settling
scores in person).
He looked at the open jaws of the beast, bared his teeth in a feeble smile and
said: ‘Jorgi – uh. Long time no see.’
Heimdall, meanwhile, recognizing his prey’s attempt to escape, had taken a
fast, steep dive into the pool of white mist. The first thing he saw on arrival was
Loki, stark naked, backed up as far as he could go against an outcrop of white
rock, and such was the Watchman’s eagerness to dispatch his enemy at last that it
took him several seconds to notice the massive, dark, undeniable head of the
World Serpent leering from under the skirt of the glacier, his interminable coils
lost in mist, his jaws half open and drizzling venom onto the snow.
‘Heimdall!’ said Loki gratefully.
The Watchman resumed his Aspect.
Jormungand gave a beastly yawn and slithered forward another twelve feet.
Heimdall shot Loki an evil look and summoned a handful of fire-runes – though
whether these were intended as weapons or merely to combat the bitter cold
could not easily be determined.
‘Running out on us, Loki?’ he said. ‘I always knew you would, some day.
And now I find you here – with that, and all Hel following after you …’
‘Give me a break,’ said the Trickster. ‘Do I look like I have a death wish? If
you recall, Jorgi and I didn’t part on what you’d call friendly terms.’
‘Really?’ said Heimdall with sarcasm. ‘And after you freed him from
Netherworld too. You’d think he might show some gratitude.’ He levelled the
full force of his ice-blue gaze at the cowering Trickster. ‘So – am I to take it
you’re telling me you didn’t have anything to do with what’s happening right
now under the Hill? That you didn’t open a gateway to unleash the hordes of
Netherworld, and that you’re not now planning to make your escape with the
help of your monstrous son, the World Serpent?’
‘Well, actually—’ began Loki.
But what he’d been about to say was lost in a sudden flurry of wings as
another bird – an outlandish bird, with purple and scarlet plumage – fluttered
through the veil of mist and alighted on the outcrop of rock. Loki had barely a
moment to react before the bird became Angrboda – fully clothed in a long
hooded coat of scarlet fur and purple snow-boots with outrageous heels – sitting
on the high rock and watching him disapprovingly.
‘I’m very disappointed,’ she said.
‘Angie, please. I can explain—’
‘You’re telling me you weren’t running away?’
‘Damn right I wasn’t,’ Loki said. ‘In case you hadn’t noticed, there’s a bit of
a crisis going on. I was covering the rear – making sure the pass was secure –
while Goldie and the gang held the Sleepers, and Thor and the others dealt with
the Hill. Thanks for the Hammer, by the way. Great little guy. I miss him
already.’
Angie grinned. ‘I thought you would.’
‘Excuse me?’ Heimdall bared his teeth. ‘Can I ask what in Hel is going on?’
‘Cool it, Goldie. She’s on our side. We had an arrangement, remember?’
‘Not with that, we didn’t,’ Heimdall said, with a sideways glance at the
World Serpent.
‘Well, that’s where you’re wrong,’ Angie said, hopping down from her icy
perch. ‘Jormungand’s going to help us. You gods think you’re so clever, with
your glamours and your mindbolts, but Jormungand here can snap up ephemera
the way an ice bear snaps up fish. You’ll need him – and the rest of us – if you’re
to have any chance against what’s coming.’
‘And what is coming, according to you?’ Heimdall’s eyes were very bright.
‘War, of course,’ said Angrboda. ‘The battle for the Sky Citadel.’
‘We lost that battle long ago. How can we hope to win it now? This is a trick
…’ He turned once more on Loki, the rune Hagall trembling in his palm.
Loki forked Yr, the Protector, with fingers that were numb with cold.
‘Play nice,’ said Angrboda, ‘or I’ll take your toys away.’ She made a gesture
with her hand, and something shot from her fingertips – a spray of purple sparks
that struck Hagall from Heimdall’s hand and showered Loki with shrapnel.
Loki remembered the runemark he’d seen earlier on her arm, and wondered
silently to himself how Angie could have obtained such a powerful glam. The
runes had been gifts to the gods long ago, from Odin Allfather himself – broken
or reversed in defeat at Ragnarók; with the General gone, he thought, there could
surely be no more.
And yet she had hit him with something, he thought; something very
different from the unruly, gaudy glamours of her kind. Loki felt very uneasy.
‘Come on, Angie. I’m cold,’ he said. ‘If you’re here to help, then get on with
it.’
Angie gave him a quelling look. ‘We’re here to prove to your stuck-up
friends that they’re going to need us on their side. And to make sure you don’t
get any ideas – like weaselling out of doing your bit and flying south to sunnier
climes …’
Heimdall clenched his golden teeth. ‘There’ll be no weaselling,’ he said.
‘Good,’ said Angrboda. ‘We can discuss this further when Jormungand has
cleaned up the mess.’
‘Cleaned up the mess?’ said Heimdall. ‘You’re saying he’s not responsible?’
‘Of course not. Weren’t you listening? Something happened on the Hill.
Something that fractured the rift in Dream and let out all this vermin. But there’s
nothing to suggest for now that we were ever its target. In fact, it’s entirely
possible that this wasn’t meant for us at all.’
‘What was it, then?’ said Heimdall.
‘That remains to be seen,’ said the Temptress, with a sideways glance at
Loki. ‘But whatever – whoever’s responsible, they’ve left us with plenty of
evidence.’
‘How so?’ said the Watchman, narrow-eyed.
The Temptress arched an eyebrow. ‘They came to us through Dream,’ she
said. ‘How better to know them than from their dreams?’ And with that, she
stepped towards Jormungand and climbed onto his scaly neck, holding herself in
place with the aid of a strap placed around his jaw.
‘I’ll see you back in the village,’ she said. ‘There’s someone there who needs
our help.’ Then, turning back with a grin: ‘Oh, and for gods’ sakes, boys – put
some bloody clothes on.’
NO ONE BUT Maddy had seen the Horse as he birthed himself from the Hill. But the
signs of his passing were clear enough. Something large had broken free; and
given the signature he had left, it was only a matter of time before they came to
the obvious conclusion.
The initial surge of ephemera from the Hill had dwindled to a verminous
ooze, and the Æsir had now been joined by the Vanir, who in their animal
Aspects had raced down from the Sleepers towards the source of the attack.
Now, regrouping by Red Horse Hill – at least, by what was left of it – they
surveyed the damage with anxious eyes as the horrible truth became clear to
them.
‘So all this time that wretched Horse has been right here under our noses?’
said Frey. ‘But who could have known where to find him? And why?’
‘Loki,’ said Thor. ‘He made the damn thing.’
Sif, still in battle-sow Aspect, grunted her approval.
‘But why all this mess?’ squeaked Idun, who, of all the Vanir, had no animal
Aspect and had taken the shape of a hazelnut, which Njörd carried in his talons.
‘Couldn’t he just have stolen the Horse without waking half of Netherworld?’
‘This is Loki we’re talking about,’ said Bragi. ‘Who knows why he does
these things?’
No one knew the answer to that. But what was clear to all of them was that
what had once seemed little more than a nick between the boundaries of the
Worlds had now become a gaping wound. There was no way of knowing when
another wave of ephemera might strike; but on one thing the gods were all
agreed. Such damage to the boundary between the Worlds had not been seen
since Ragnarók, and as far as most of them were concerned, Loki was the
obvious culprit.
There was some justification for this. After all, it was he who had caused the
original rift in Dream. Afterwards, from Red Horse Hill, it had been Loki’s job
to guard the Eye. But now the Eye had been pulverized, and Loki was missing,
his trail leading south, with an ice-blue signature that could only belong to
Heimdall shooting after him in pursuit.
‘When I get my hands on the weasel,’ said Thor, flinging his hammer into a
cluster of afreets, ‘I’ll use him as a toothpick.’
‘I’ll chop him into fish-bait,’ said Njörd.
Freyja, in Carrion Aspect, rasped: ‘I’ll make a necklace from his teeth.’
Sif grunted through her tusks. ‘I’ll spread him from here to Fettlefields.’
Jolly resumed his Aspect for long enough to remark, with a smirk: ‘Well, I
don’t see him comin’ back here in a rush, not with this little lot to clear up—
Oops, watch out, here they come again …’
The lull in the battle had proved to be only a temporary respite. Now once
more the Hill disgorged a new glut of ephemera, taking shape as they
approached, coming towards them on nightmare hooves and wings that stole the
sun from the sky.
Once more the gods prepared to face another offensive.
Bragi took out his guitar and struck a mighty power chord. A battery of sharp
little notes scattered across the hillside, dropping ephemera in their tracks,
although they still kept coming.
Bragi frowned and tightened a string. ‘Am I in tune?’ he said.
Thor shrugged indifferently. Dorian Scattergood had been tone-deaf, and he
himself had never been particularly interested in music. As far as the Thunderer
was concerned, guitars, pipes – or, still worse, lutes – were usually best avoided.
Instead, he unleashed his hammer again, striking rifts in the valley floor that
led right down into World Below. Sugar wielded his mindsword, Frey his
double-edged scythe. But for every stray demon they managed to halt, for every
mindbolt that struck the mark, for every piece of ephemera that was blown back
into oblivion, ten more escaped into the air, becoming insubstantial, acquiring
the shapes of vapours and clouds, or sank back into the marshy ground,
following rootlets, rivers, streams, finding their way to the One Sea, fishing for
dreams as they drifted.
From Malbry all the way to World’s End, people sensed their presence.
Babies woke up screaming; good dogs turned bad overnight; old folk died in
their sleep; rabbits ate their litters. Dream had turned another page. Tribulation
was closer.
Meanwhile, back at Red Horse Hill, the situation looked hopeless. The gods
were outnumbered ten thousand to one. Poisoned by the toxic air, feathers
singed, glam burned out, cut and bruised and aching, step by step and blow by
blow, they were forced back, away from the Hill.
Tyr had a number of rat bites. Frey’s right arm hung useless. Bragi’s guitar
had a broken string. Even Thor was limping, though Jolly still seemed to be
enjoying himself. And the flow of ephemera out of the Hill was as steady as
ever.
Maddy, less than a mile away, had fared even worse than the Æsir. Clinging
to a stunted oak, a river of mud and fire at her feet, she had managed, with runes
and her mindsword, to combat the worst of the attack. The beings that surged out
of the Hill had for the most part avoided her, but a clash with a column of razor-
ants, some giant leeches and something that looked like a pterodactyl (though
she had never seen one, of course) had left her with cuts and grazes and a gash
across her forehead that was still bleeding steadily. That, combined with the
fumes from World Below and the continuous onslaught on her glam, now found
her much weakened, her mindsword pared down to little more than a sliver, her
grasp on the tree trunk – now slick with her blood – finally beginning to fail.
Her friends, though close, were out of reach. The air was charged with
ephemera. Their presence formed a kind of mist – a mist that was filled with
invisible shrapnel – that clung to Maddy’s hair and clothes, freezing her limbs,
dragging her down, eating away her resistance.
Odin’s ravens were nowhere to be seen – in fact, it was hard to see anything
under that creeping cloud of mist.
She wondered vaguely where Loki was. Somewhere safer, probably. The
Trickster had always had the knack of not being there when trouble arose – a fact
that had done little to earn him the trust of the Æsir during the current conflict.
Besides, what now came out of the Hill would have tested the faith of even the
most devoted of Loki’s few remaining friends.
As before, it began as a rumbling from the channels of World Below; the
surge of ephemera stuttered and stopped, like a water pipe blocked by some kind
of obstruction. And there came a sound like a thousand steam-kettles all about to
blow at once; a screaming, hissing, ratcheting sound …
As Jormungand made his entrance.
IT WAS AN impressive entrance, as Maddy conceded later, after she’d shaken the
dust from her hair and marvelled over the fragments of rock – some of them
gems that the Tunnel Folk would have sold their grandmothers to obtain –
projected so high into the air that five minutes later they were still falling like
shooting stars over Malbry.
Of course, she had seen the World Serpent before. But Jormungand in Aspect
was a sight to challenge anyone’s nerve. His head was as big as a team of oxen,
his mane like a haystack of runelight. And his jaws – jaws that were open wide
to engulf the fleeing shoals of ephemera – were like a pair of barn doors edged
with teeth the shape and size of scimitars.
Maddy reached for her mindsword, knowing that it was hopeless.
Jormungand reared his massive head; Maddy gathered the last of her strength
and prepared to go out fighting. She could feel the Serpent’s venomous breath,
feel the heat of his approach. But he did not attack. He simply lolled and gaped
at her, no more than twenty feet away. Perhaps he recognized her, she thought.
Perhaps he would listen to reason.
Maddy lowered her mindsword. ‘Ah – remember me?’ she said.
She was still far from confident. The last time she and the Serpent had met
had been three years ago, in one of the dungeons of the Black Fortress, and
although he had helped the gods to escape, that had mostly been due to Loki,
who had used himself as human bait to induce the beast to wreak havoc.
‘I’m a … friend of Loki’s,’ she said.
Jormungand gave a long hiss.
‘Well, not so much a friend,’ Maddy amended hastily. ‘More what you’d call
an associate.’
The World Serpent made an unspeakable sound and rolled over in his sheath
of slime. His stench was almost palpable. She wondered what was to stop him
from simply opening his jaws and gulping her down like a grape. Once more she
reached for her mindsword. Worn down to no more than a toothpick now, it
would scarcely have deterred a rat. The World Serpent gave an enormous yawn
—
And then there was girlish laughter, and a ringing voice from above that said:
‘Oh, darling. Put it away.’
Maddy looked up – just in time to see the Witch of Ironwood jump down
from her position on the Serpent’s flank, in scarlet furs from head to foot and
looking very pleased with herself. At her side, the Wolf Brothers gambolled like
unruly puppies in the wake of the devastation.
‘Thought you could use a lift,’ she said. ‘Climb aboard, and I’ll take you
home.’ She sternly addressed Jormungand, who had turned his attention to a
shoal of ephemera that was drifting past. Opening his enormous jaws, he inhaled
– and drew the ephemera into his mouth with the ease of a whale ingesting
plankton.
Angie stroked his slimy mane. ‘Hungry, darling? That’s my boy.’ She smiled
at Maddy. ‘My boys have always had a healthy appetite,’ she said. ‘Now come
on, sweetheart, and take Maddy home. You can catch a bite on the way.’
Meanwhile, not far from the village, the gods were watching with apprehension.
A fistful of glamours was all they had left; they were limping, exhausted, close
to defeat. Regrouping on the higher ground, they had watched the river rise,
while the Folk gathered in clusters in and around the soundest buildings –
mainly the church and the Parsonage, where Ethel had remained to help – some
carrying possessions, others silently glaring at those who had brought this
disaster upon them.
Crazy Nan Fey was among the crowd, although she knew perfectly well that
the gods were in no way responsible for what was happening. It was all written
down in the Good Book, and in the nursery rhymes of her youth – which all
went to show, said Crazy Nan, that the old wives’ tales the Order despised were
not as foolish as they’d claimed, and that if anyone could somehow avert that
long-awaited Apocalypse, then it would most likely be an old wife—
And then came an almighty crash, and out of what little was left of the Hill
burst Jormungand in full Aspect, throwing up a shower of stones as he erupted
from the ground. Flaming pieces of half-melted rock showered the valley like
shooting stars, and Nan and the villagers were forced to take cover wherever
they could as the gods turned to face the new attack.
It was some five minutes before the dust and debris had cleared enough for
the gods to realize that the World Serpent was not alone. A trio of wolves
accompanied him, plus a firebird, two ravens and, approaching from the
direction of the Sleepers, a sea-eagle, and a small brown hawk whose signature
scrawled across the sky marked it unmistakably as …
‘Loki. I should have known,’ growled Thor, grabbing Jolly by the feet.
But Jolly had taken one look at Jormungand and resumed his goblin Aspect.
‘That slimy bastard swallered me once,’ he said. ‘I’m damned if I’m goin’ in
there again.’
The Thunderer, finding himself disarmed, gave a howl of fury. ‘You come
back here right now,’ he roared.
‘Or what?’ said Jolly, picking his teeth.
‘But that’s the World Serpent,’ said Thor plaintively.
‘So what if he is? He’s on our side.’
As the gods looked on in silence, it became clear that Jolly was right. If
being on the side of the gods meant swallowing ephemera, slurping shadows,
gobbling dreams, snapping up demons by the shoal with what seemed like
insatiable appetite, then the Serpent was on their side.
What was more, he had a rider. Almost obscured by runelight, she seemed to
be clinging onto his mane, her russet-red signature shining through the miasma.
The three wolves they had seen were still at her flanks; and although beside the
Serpent these looked no larger than kittens, the gods could see from their
signatures that they were no ordinary wolves, but creatures of terrible power and
strength. And above them all flew the firebird – a bird unlike any in the Nine
Worlds, its trail coloured that eerie rainbow’s-end purple that the gods associated
with Chaos.
‘What in Hel’s name is going on?’ Thor growled in frustration. ‘Isn’t that
Maddy riding the snake?’
The others squinted at the scene, and finally agreed that it was.
‘She’s coming this way,’ said Freyja. ‘I can see her colours now.’
‘Thank the gods she’s safe,’ said Njörd.
Bragi picked up his guitar and strummed a chord of victory.
‘And there shall come a Horse of Fire,’ said Ethel in her quiet voice. ‘And
the name of his Rider is Carnage. And there shall come a Horse of the Sea – and
the name of his Rider is Treachery.’
‘What is this?’ said Njörd. ‘A prophecy?’
‘It’s from the Book of Apocalypse.’ Ethel, whose role as a parson’s wife had
sometimes included helping him – in a very unofficial capacity – to prepare his
weekly sermons, had more than just a passing knowledge of the contents of the
Good Book. ‘The Horse of Fire – Red Horse Hill – and now, perhaps, the Horse
of the Sea—’
‘What? The Serpent?’ Freyja said.
‘But a serpent isn’t a horse …’ said Njörd.
‘And the Good Book is often inaccurate,’ said Ethel in her calm voice. ‘But
if I’m right, then the End of the Worlds is closer than we imagined. Two of the
Riders are already here. We have to face the enemy.’
‘I thought that’s what we were doing,’ said Thor.
Ethel shook her head. ‘No. This is just a diversion. The final battle takes
place in World’s End. In just twelve days, at End of Worlds—’
‘What?’ said Thor.
‘Where else? she said. ‘That’s where Asgard fell, after all. They even built a
memorial.’
‘The cathedral of Saint Sepulchre.’
For a moment there was silence as the gods considered the End of the
Worlds. Sugar in particular felt very apprehensive. In his newly acquired
capacity as god of war, he was aware that the prospect of another Ragnarók
ought to fill him with enthusiasm. But Sugar-and-Sack had not yet outgrown his
previous – and somewhat unimposing – role, and had found the Aspect of Brave-
Hearted Tyr unexpectedly hard to assume.
Perhaps, thought Sugar, when Asgard was rebuilt, he would take to Aspect
more readily. For now, though, he still found killing rats a challenge, and the
thought of a final battle gave him goosebumps all over.
‘A Rider whose name is Treachery,’ said Thor. ‘That has to be Loki, hasn’t
it?’
‘Let’s not jump to conclusions, shall we?’ said Ethel, still watching the
Serpent’s approach. He was moving very quickly now, blurring along the Malbry
road, and now the gods could smell him too, like a stretch of mud-flats in the
sun; a salty stink that caught at their throats and made their eyes water. At last he
stopped, and Maddy climbed down from where she had been clinging; Maddy
with a gash on her head and three enormous wolves at her heels.
‘It’s all right. Jorgi’s on our side,’ she said, seeing Thor almost ready to
strike.
‘What happened?’ said Idun, in goddess Aspect. ‘Are you all right? Have
some apple …’
Idun’s apples were legendary – a cure for age and sickness as well as for
wounds in battle. She carried supplies wherever she went: the fruit was dried,
but still good, and Maddy accepted a small piece, not so much for its healing
properties as for the excuse it gave her to be silent a few minutes longer. The
thought of lying to her friends was almost too dreadful to contemplate; and even
the presence of Jorgi and the wolves now came as a welcome diversion.
Freyja, also in goddess Aspect, pulled out a scented handkerchief (one
belonging to Ethel, whose wardrobe was rapidly diminishing) and applied it to
her pretty nose. ‘He may be an ally,’ she remarked, ‘but why does he have to
smell so bad?’
‘And what in Hel’s name are they doing here?’ growled Sugar, whose
hackles had risen instinctively at the sight of the wolves – who now revealed
themselves as Skull, Big H and Fenris, still clad in their customary black, but
with the further addition of a large and flashy collection of studded belts,
wristbands and silver jewellery (mostly designed around the skull motif), which
clearly counted as battle gear.
Fenny looked down at Sugar with contempt. ‘Is this what the Æsir have
come to?’ he said. ‘Recruiting noobs to fight their war?’
Sugar-and-Sack growled again. ‘Who you callin’ a noob?’ he said.
Fenny shrugged. ‘Bit short, aren’t you? I’m surprised you can even hold a
sword. Now the last god of war …’
Skull and Big H exchanged grins.
‘He was kind of a big guy,’ said Skull.
‘Yeah. Lots of meat on him, man,’ said Big H.
Sugar growled and clenched his fists. Fenny gave his uneven smile and
displayed the Wolf Cross on his arm. They might even have come to blows if, at
that moment, the firebird had not alighted in front of the gods, resolving itself
into the Aspect of Angrboda, the Temptress of Ironwood.
‘You!’ said Freyja with loathing.
‘I have to say,’ Angie said, ‘I expected a little more gratitude.’
‘Gratitude?’ growled Thor.
Angie blew him a kiss. ‘I told you you needed me,’ she said. ‘And my lovely
Wolf Boys, of course. Imagine what a mess you’d be in if Jorgi hadn’t been here
to clean up.’
Thor frowned and narrowed his eyes. The World Serpent, who had retreated
after dropping Maddy off, was now coiled companionably around what was left
of Red Horse Hill, looking like someone at the end of a very long, very
satisfying Yuletide dinner; full of meat and potatoes, but still able to pick happily
at a mince pie, a chocolate, a handful of raisins, some hazelnuts …
‘You’re saying you weren’t behind all this?’ said Thor, with some suspicion.
‘Of course not,’ said Angie. ‘Why should I be? I want my hall in Asgard.’
‘Which brings us back to Loki again,’ said Thor, glancing up into the sky,
where the hawk and the eagle were beginning their descent. ‘Well, when I get
my hands on him …’
‘Why blame Loki?’ Maddy said.
‘Because it’s always Loki,’ said Thor.
Maddy shifted uncomfortably. The Thunderer did have a point. Time after
time, when trouble arose, the Trickster was behind it. This time he was innocent,
and only she could prove it. After all, this was her fault: she had woken the Red
Horse; she had let Maggie take it from her. Of course, if she told the gods the
truth, she would have to betray her sister – her twin – and any chance of
redeeming Maggie would be lost. Her connection with the Whisperer would
damn her for ever in their eyes. Even it if were finally proven that Maggie had
been an innocent dupe, the gods would demand vengeance. Maddy imagined her
sister chained underground, or banished into Netherworld. She couldn’t let that
happen, no. But if she lied to protect her twin, then Loki was sure to take the
blame …
Before she could fully make up her mind, the white sea-eagle and the small
brown hawk had landed on a nearby fence, becoming Heimdall and Loki again.
Sif, catching sight of them, gave a grunt of outrage. ‘Oy! Look what the cat
dragged in!’
Thor’s face took on the expression of one who, long since overtaken by
events, finally sees his purpose in life. He lunged forward, and in less than a
second Loki was dangling from his fist as all the gods gathered round to watch.
‘Nice one,’ said the Trickster, thoroughly tired of this by now. ‘Nice way to
treat the guy who just helped save all your lives.’
His fire-green eyes lit on Maddy, and a look of relief came onto his face. If
Maddy was there, he told himself, then she would be able to vouch for him.
Whatever her reasons for taking the Horse, she’d never leave a friend in the
lurch.
‘So – how did you save our lives?’ said Frey.
‘Well, if you’d give me chance to explain – and, by the way, I don’t want to
sound prudish here, but there are ladies present,’ said Loki, indicating his state of
undress, and adding with a malicious smirk, ‘Oh, and Sif and Freyja, of course.’
‘Shut up and take this,’ said Heimdall, who had already found himself
something to wear, and now thrust a bundle of clothes at Loki. With his usual
economy of words, the Watchman explained the situation as he saw it to the little
group of bewildered gods, while Loki struggled into a borrowed shirt (very
much too big for him). Angie looked on with a sweet smile, while Fenny and the
demon wolves stood around, grinning and showing their teeth and displaying
their muscles and Wolf Cross tattoos.
Big H addressed the Trickster. ‘Dude,’ he said. ‘You look terrible.’
‘Friends of yours?’ said Heimdall.
Once more Loki began to explain. It wasn’t a straightforward explanation.
He was just getting to the part where, fearlessly, he had taken bird form to
reconnoitre the mountains, when two more birds – two ravens, in fact – alighted
on the fence of the Parsonage.
Hughie and Mandy, Maddy thought; but before she could say anything, a
sudden and violent commotion broke out.
The Wolf Brothers, all three acting as one, swiftly resumed their Aspects
and, with a single giant bound, made for the Parsonage fence. At the same time,
the new arrivals took wing, swooping low over the heads of the wolves and
craw-ing loudly and impudently. The three wolves howled in frustration as the
birds kept safely just out of reach. Fenny snapped at the larger raven, which
responded by pecking him on the nose.
‘Oh, where did they come from?’ said Angie crossly. ‘Always causing
trouble …’
Maddy couldn’t help smiling at that. From what she’d seen of the Temptress
so far, trouble seemed to follow her.
‘Stop that,’ said Angie sharply, addressing the ravens and the wolves. ‘We
have a truce, remember?’
‘A truce?’ said Hughie, resuming his human Aspect. ‘What, with the mutt?’
Fenris gave Hughie a filthy look while holding his nose with both hands.
Sugar, who had loathed the wolves on sight, fingered his mindsword and
scowled back.
Maddy noticed that Mandy, who had also returned to her human form, was
now wearing Fenny’s dragon-claw earring. Her bright gold eyes were alive with
mischief. She opened her mouth and crawk-ed.
Loki blinked at them for a moment, then looked down at himself again. ‘You
know,’ he said, ‘I think this may be a lady’s shirt.’
‘Don’t worry,’ said Heimdall grimly. ‘You won’t be needing it for long.’ He
turned to Maddy. ‘Tell me,’ he said. ‘What exactly happened here?’
Later, Maddy realized that this had been her final chance to confess her role
in the day’s events. A window of opportunity, and foolishly she had missed it.
But hindsight is a false friend, the kind that gets you into trouble, then follows
you around looking smug and saying: See? I told you so.
If someone else had asked her, then maybe she could have come clean.
Kindly Njörd, or Ethel, or Frey, or even Bragi, whose idea of a stern rebuke was
to sing at the culprit as loudly as he could. But Heimdall, whose eyes were as
hard as tempered steel and just about as forgiving; Heimdall, who saw
everything, heard everything, trusted no one, and never slept …
‘Tell them, Maddy,’ Loki said, sensing her hesitation. ‘Tell them this was
none of my fault. You were there. You saw.’
Maddy looked away.
‘Please …’
Loki addressed the circle of gods. ‘Folks, I know how it looks,’ he said. ‘But
this time it’s nothing to do with me. I was under the Hill, hanging out, minding
my own business, and suddenly – boom! – surprise. Ask Maddy. She was there.
She must have seen everything.’
Maddy shook her head. ‘I’m sorry, Loki, I can’t,’ she said.
‘What do you mean?’ said Heimdall.
‘I mean I didn’t see anything. Nothing but ephemera. But surely you can’t
think Loki could have had anything to do with that?’
‘Can’t I?’ the Watchman said. ‘Given that I caught him trying to make a run
for it just as things started to get nasty here – a situation for which he stands
largely responsible – not to mention the appearance of the World Serpent, the
Fenris Wolf – and now Sleipnir. That’s three of Loki’s children so far – at least
three that we know about …’ He turned to Loki. ‘So – where’s Hel?’
Loki looked bewildered. ‘Hel? You know she doesn’t leave her domain …’
‘Not until now,’ said Heimdall. ‘But with things as they are, why shouldn’t
she? Maybe she knows how helpless we are. Maybe she’s just waiting for
someone – someone like you – to give the word.’
‘That’s right,’ agreed Freyja spitefully. ‘He sets us up with the Temptress. He
talks us into a deal with Chaos, he gives Thor a hammer that only works when it
feels like it, starts a battle that no one can win, and then, when the two sides are
otherwise engaged, he strolls away to collect the loot, leaving the snake in
control of the Hill, and the rest of us virtually powerless. Isn’t that about right?’
Loki shot Maddy an anguished look. ‘Tell them, Maddy. Please,’ he said.
Once more Maddy looked away.
Heimdall bared his golden teeth and turned to Angrboda. ‘Well, Temptress?
What do you say?’ His voice was low and dangerous.
‘Let me remind you,’ Angie said, ‘that we had an agreement, the gods and I.
You swore an oath. To break it now …’ She smiled. ‘There might be …
consequences.’
Heimdall glared. ‘The gods keep their word.’
‘Well, that’s good,’ said Angie, smiling at him. ‘The last time a god reneged
on a deal was down in Hel, three years ago. And we all know what happened
then, don’t we?’
The gods exchanged glances, their faces grim.
Finally the Watchman spoke. ‘You’ll get what was promised, Temptress,’ he
said. ‘You’ll have your hall in Asgard. But we made no promise regarding Loki,
and if he has betrayed us—’
‘Betrayed you? How?’ Angie said.
‘Something happened here,’ said Thor. ‘Something that blew the Hill apart
and set free the General’s Horse. Loki was there. Loki ran. Loki knows more
than he’s telling.’
‘Besides, there’s the Good Book,’ Freyja said. ‘The Rider’s name is
Treachery …’
‘Be fair,’ said Loki desperately. ‘You’re quoting a prophecy of the Folk. You
know how these things get twisted. For a start, my name is Trickery. Not
Treachery. There’s a difference, you know.’
‘Not a very big one,’ grunted Sif.
‘Hardly a difference at all,’ said Frey.
‘Let me hammer the truth out of him,’ said Thor, looking almost cheerful at
the thought.
‘At last, a practical solution,’ said Frey. He turned for support to the god of
war, who affected to be looking at something else. Sugar was still mostly goblin,
and the prospect of laying violent hands on the Captain was practically
unthinkable.
‘I don’t think we need to go that far,’ said Njörd, ‘but I would welcome some
answers.’
‘I agree,’ said Bragi. ‘I vote we keep an eye on him until we know what’s
happening.’
Loki gave his twisted smile. ‘By keep an eye on him,’ he said, ‘I’m assuming
that what you really mean is clap him in irons and lock him away until we can
prove he’s guilty?’
‘Precisely,’ said Thor, moving forward again.
‘I thought so,’ said Loki.
And with that, he assumed his Wildfire Aspect and shot across the courtyard
in a lightning trail of flames. Of course, the gods were expecting it; but in the
wake of the recent battle, glam was low and reflexes dulled. A dozen mindbolts
shot across the yard, but none of them hit Loki, who, zigzagging round the
Parsonage, had leaped through the half-open window, ricocheted off the kitchen
stove, ended up in the fireplace and vanished in a cloud of sparks before anyone
could catch him.
As far as the gods were concerned, this proved his guilt conclusively. Maddy
Smith knew better, of course, but couldn’t afford to take his side. Not against
Maggie, her longed-for twin; Maggie, whose motives were still unclear, but who,
she was certain, needed her help.
Loki could look after himself – after all, he had a long history of getting
himself out of trouble. And if it came to a choice, well …
A Horse of the Sea, she thought ruefully. And a Rider whose name is
Treachery …
Treachery it is, then, she told herself with an inward sigh, and, without
waiting for further developments, she left the gods to their debate and set off
again towards the Hill, where the Black Horse of the Last Days was waiting to
take her to World’s End.
ADAM SCATTERGOOD STARED at the Horse that Maggie had brought with her out of
Dream. Her communion with his passenger had left him, for the first time in
three years, without its presence in his mind, and although the interval of
separation had lasted only minutes, it had made him feel terribly vulnerable, as if
all the knowledge he had acquired had been suddenly and brutally stripped away,
leaving him directionless, defenceless, ignorant and …
Free?
The thought was a revelation. That he could be free, really free, had never
before crossed his mind. It began as a tremor in his spine, spread to the pit of his
stomach and leaped like wildfire into his brain, filling him with equal parts of
terror and excitement.
His head spun, his throat was dry; for a moment he felt as if he might be
having a seizure. In three long years of slavery, of serving his passenger’s every
whim, of living in fear of what it might do if Adam dared to displease it, the
thought of simply walking away had never before occurred to him.
I could be free, thought Adam; and all at once he saw himself laying aside
his pack and his sword; forgetting his dreams of destiny – which were not quite
his dreams, he understood, but those of the presence that had inhabited him for
so long that, until now, he had been unable to tell where he ended and his
passenger began. I could walk away, Adam thought, and the terrible tremor
intensified. I could do it right now!
Whether or not he would have dared remains a matter for speculation. Could
he really just have gone home, put aside his destiny and gone back to being
Adam Scattergood: running the Seven Sleepers Inn; keeping in with the
neighbours; marrying young, like his father; growing fat, like his mother; going
to church every Sunday and trying his hardest to forget that he could have been
magnificent?
In any case, there was no time to think. The tremor had barely a moment to
plant its beguiling fish-hooks in his mind when his passenger came hurtling back
with such force that it knocked Adam to the floor and pinned him there, bruised
and shaking and terrified, as the thing that had once been Mimir the Wise flung
itself back into place in his mind like a petulant house-guest into a much-used
armchair.
Thinking of his treachery, Adam began to whimper. The Nameless could be
cruel, and it knew how to punish rebellion. But today it was preoccupied. Adam
sensed at the same time a wild and frenzied excitement, and an ecstasy of rage
that surpassed anything he had encountered since that day on the shores of
Dream, when the two of them had first become one.
How dare she? How DARE she refuse Me? it screamed.
Adam glanced at Maggie, who was watching him with some concern.
‘Adam? Are you all right?’ she said. He didn’t look it, Maggie thought. She
could see him shivering. ‘Adam? Please? What happened?’
‘It’s nothing,’ said Adam. ‘It’s over now.’ He sat up. ‘Tell me what
happened.’
Sitting beside him on the bed, Maggie recounted her journey through Dream,
from Red Horse Hill to her flight through the clouds, to the whispering, guiding
Voice, which she had driven from her mind when it had tried to control her.
Adam’s blue eyes widened. ‘You did?’
Maggie nodded. ‘In my dream. But it wasn’t really a dream, was it?’ she
said, with a glance at the roan Horse.
‘Dream is a river that runs through Nine Worlds,’ said Adam, who needed no
prompting on this. ‘It’s a dangerous place, and just as real as anywhere else.
More so, perhaps, because in Dream you can see things as they really are,
stripped of all their disguises.’
‘Disguises?’ said Maggie.
He looked at the Horse. ‘Well, I’m guessing it looks different to the way it
did when you were in Dream.’
‘But why is it here?’ Maggie said. ‘And whose was the Voice? And who was
that girl? And why does she look exactly like me?’
The passenger spoke in Adam’s mind. Tell her you can’t discuss it now. Tell
her there’s something you need her to do. Tell her it’s very important. And for
gods’ sakes, tell her to stop asking questions!
But Maggie was looking at Adam through the circle of finger and thumb.
Her friend looked feverish, she thought, sick and anxious and afraid; and every
time she spoke to him, he put his head briefly to one side, as if awaiting
instructions before answering her, or as if he were listening to a voice that only
he could hear.
She remembered what the girl from the North had told her about the Voice in
her head. What had she called it? The Whisperer? And could it be that Adam
heard it too?
She focused on the rune Bjarkán, searching Adam’s colours. And then she
saw it – an alien strand of runelight in his signature. Adam flinched; his colours
flared – and that was when Maggie was certain. Someone else was watching her,
a silent, ghostly onlooker …
She banished the rune. ‘Magister?’ she said. ‘No need to hide. I know you’re
there.’
In Adam’s mind, his passenger writhed and spat like a pit of snakes.
Adam, with a tremendous effort, forced himself to stay calm. ‘I have no idea
what you’re talking about—’
‘Don’t lie to me, Magister. You tried to take control of my mind. You tried to
make me obey you. That girl on the Hill – she said you would. She said you
were the enemy.’
‘No,’ said Adam. ‘That isn’t true.’
‘Then what are you?’ Maggie said. ‘And why won’t you tell me what’s going
on?’
‘I will,’ it replied in Adam’s voice. ‘But first I need your obedience.’
Adam, mouthing his passenger’s words, could feel the intensity of its rage.
He sensed that it was on the verge of some colossal eruption:
How dare she question ME!
He flinched. Maggie found herself strangely touched. When Adam had first
come to her in the labyrinth under the Universal City, she had thought him rather
arrogant. After that she had been slightly in awe of this young man who knew so
much. But now that she saw his true colours at last, she felt a peculiar
tenderness. He was only human, she thought; and the thing that called itself
Magister had him in its power.
‘I want you to let my friend go,’ she said.
‘Maggie, don’t,’ said Adam.
‘Let him go,’ she repeated. ‘Then we can talk.’
Adam was sweating now. ‘Please,’ he said. ‘You don’t know what you’re
dealing with. It saved my life in the Underworld. Now it tells me what to do. It
knows what I’m thinking. Mercy, please …’ He whimpered and fell to his knees.
‘What’s wrong?’ Maggie said.
In Adam’s voice, the Magister said: ‘This is your doing, Maggie Rede. I don’t
enjoy inflicting pain.’
Adam began to flail and scream, clawing at the floor with his hands. ‘Please!
Maggie! Make it stop!’
‘Leave my friend alone,’ she said.
‘Not before you agree to My terms.’
‘What terms?’
‘All of them.’
Maggie put her hand to her mouth. She realized that she was trembling.
‘Don’t,’ she said. ‘I’ll do what you want. I swear I will.’
‘Swear on your true name?’
‘Yes! Yes!’
At once, the presence in Adam’s mind released its hold on him. The young
man crawled to his knees and retched. Maggie’s throat was pinprick-tight. She’d
never felt such terror before. She never wanted to feel it again.
What’s happening to me? she thought. What is this treacherous weakness?
‘I didn’t want to do that,’ said the Magister in Adam’s voice. ‘But both of you
needed a lesson, and our time is growing short.’
Adam looked at Maggie. ‘Thank you,’ he whispered, and took her hand.
For a moment Maggie held it, not quite knowing what to feel. Alone and
loveless for so many years, that simple human contact felt strange and exotic –
and thrilling. She wondered what it would be like to kiss Adam, and found
herself flushing wildly.
‘Has it gone?’ she said at last.
‘It never really goes away,’ said Adam. ‘But I think we’re all right to talk.’
This wasn’t quite a lie – he knew that if he deceived her, she would see it in
his colours – but it wasn’t quite the whole truth. In fact, he could still hear his
passenger, its small, sly Voice inside his mind, and he knew that if he made a
mistake, retribution would follow.
‘You wanted answers, Maggie,’ he said. ‘Are you sure you’re ready?’
She nodded.
‘All right. I’ll tell you everything. Then, if you still don’t trust me—’
‘I trust you,’ Maggie said. ‘It’s your Magister I don’t trust.’
Adam looked uncomfortable. ‘I hope I can change your mind about that. I
need you, Maggie …’
Maggie smiled. It felt very strange to wear such a smile, like trying on some
unaccustomed item of clothing. She remembered her feeling of disgust when
Adam had found the glam on her neck; her reluctance to take off her bergha in
front of a man who was not one of her family. Now those feelings seemed
childish, absurd. What was there to be afraid of?
As a child she had seen her parents die and her world dissolve into Chaos. If
she’d known then what she knew now, she might have been able to save them –
to help them – or at least fight back. But now things would be different. Now she
had glam – that mysterious fire that made common people into gods. Better still,
she had a friend. Someone who listened. Someone who cared.
Maggie had dreamed of healing World’s End, of Cleansing a city in anarchy.
Now her dream had grown smaller, somehow; smaller, yet more significant. Lost
libraries, scally traders, the breakdown of Law and Order – even her desire for
vengeance against the agents of Chaos – all had suddenly given way to a deeper,
more powerful kind of desire.
Maggie had no name for it. She barely even knew it was there. All she knew
was that something had changed; some lever had been pulled or pushed, setting
in motion a mechanism that had never been used before. And as another small
piece of an intricate trap tumbled slowly into place, Adam Goodwin grinned to
himself, while the Red Horse of the Last Days started to munch on the silk
tassels of the bedspread and, for the first time in five hundred years, Mimir the
Wise was satisfied.
AS MADDY APPROACHED the remains of the Hill, she found that, to her surprise, all was
calm. The aftermath of the battle had left little in the way of debris, as most of
the casualties had been of the ephemeral kind, and had fled back into World
Below, or vanished into nothingness. The few, mostly harmless, remaining
creatures that had escaped the World Serpent’s appetite were scattered across the
wintry fields: a unicorn; a goblin or two; a cluster of baby dragons borne like
dandelion seeds on the air.
And all around the toppled Hill lay a blanket of pale, bright mist; no ordinary
cloudbank, but something that welled up from World Below and flooded the
flatlands around the Hill in a way that Maddy recognized …
The river Dream, she thought; much of its power spent now; the force of its
eruption quelled, dispersing its vapours at leisure. All the same, she approached
it with care, knowing the potency of Dream, unsure of what might still be hidden
away beneath the shroud of white mist.
‘Jormungand?’ she called at last.
The World Serpent, gorged on Dream, seemed reluctant to respond.
Raising her voice, she tried again, not wanting to enter the bank of mist. But
the vapour dampened everything; and the dream-shapes that she’d seen at the
start – that menagerie of Outlandish creatures – had dwindled to almost nothing.
Only the ghostly mist remained, a residue of the battle, perhaps, and on the
ground a kind of ash, interspersed with nuggets of slag, like cinders from a
blacksmith’s forge.
The cloud was right in front of her now. Maddy could see a wavering line,
like the tide-line on a beach, which marked the boundary of Dream.
‘Jormungand?’ she repeated.
There came a rumbling from the dreamcloud. Maddy cast the rune Yr and
took a step forward into Dream. Nothing happened. She took another step. The
mist was cold, and disturbing in a way that Maddy could not quite explain. She –
who had witnessed Netherworld in all its bewildering multiplicity, who had
looked Half-Born Hel in the eye and had walked the road to the Underworld all
hedged around by the souls of the dead – found herself shivering with fear at
nothing more than a bank of cloud.
But as she moved further into Dream, she began to see what was happening.
What she had assumed was just cloud was something far more sinister: it seemed
to Maddy almost as if the air, the trees, the rocks, the ground – the whole fabric
of reality was slowly dissolving around her, unravelling into the dreamcloud like
a piece of knitting, reducing to its component parts.
As she watched, a brown rat crawling over a piece of rock slowed down,
grew dim and then popped out of existence before her eyes, leaving just a smear
in the air to indicate where it had been. The rock itself soon followed suit, and
she realized that the ash at her feet was the residue of this process, a gradual
dissolution of everything within the cloud. How long would it take for a human
being? And what did this mean for the valley itself?
Once more she called for Jormungand. This time the Serpent heard her.
There came a fearsome rumbling from the blasted remains of the Hill, and the
glutinous head of the World Serpent emerged from the broken ground like a
mighty earthworm scenting the rain, and levelled his gaze on Maddy.
‘Listen,’ she said. ‘I was wondering if you could help me.’
Jormungand simply gaped at her in a way that redefined apathy.
Maddy tried a more forceful approach. ‘I need to get to the Universal City,’
she said. ‘I mean – I need you to take me.’
The Serpent gave a colossal yawn. His breath was foul enough, Maddy
thought, to stop any number of ephemera. For a moment she thought of giving
up and actually walking to the Universal City. But if she was to find Maggie
Rede before Heimdall and the other gods learned of her existence, she had to get
there straight away – which meant travelling through Dream, of course – and,
failing Sleipnir, Maddy thought, Jormungand would have to do.
‘So – will you take me?’
A long pause, in which the Serpent looked just as bovine as ever.
Maddy gave an impatient sigh. ‘I wish I could tell if you understood. Don’t
you have a human form?’
‘He does,’ said a voice from behind her, ‘but this is by far his most appealing
Aspect.’
‘Loki,’ said Maddy, without turning round.
‘Oh, so you do remember me,’ said Loki in a casual voice. ‘Call me paranoid
if you like, but after your spectacularly loyal defence of me back there, I
wondered if I’d done something wrong.’
‘Have you?’ said Maddy.
‘No. Have you?’
Maddy turned to look at him. He’d assumed his original Aspect – easy to do
in Dream, of course – and was watching her from a cautious distance, his green
eyes bright with malice. In Dream, she saw, as in Netherworld, his runemark was
no longer reversed, and his colours shone more violently than they ever had in
World Above.
‘Listen – I’m sorry about that,’ she said.
‘That’s all right, then.’ Loki’s scarred lips twisted in a dangerous smile.
‘Because here I was thinking, for some reason, that you were the one who’d
opened the Hill, taken Odin’s Red Horse and let half the Underworld escape in
the process, and were even now preparing to take off in secret with Jorgi, leaving
Yours Truly to take the rap – and we’re not talking a rap on the knuckles here,
but something much more permanent – without so much as an explanation.’
Maddy cast the rune Bjarkán and shot a quick glance at Loki. That casual
approach, she knew, was simply a ploy to take her off-guard, and as soon as he
saw a chance to attack, he would try to tackle her. She could see it in his colours
now – an acid-green thread of malevolence combined with the red of his anger –
in this case, perfectly justified.
‘If that’s what you thought,’ she said, ‘then why didn’t you tell the others?’
He shrugged. ‘You think they would have believed me? I’m hardly the most
popular guy in the Middle Worlds right now.’ He narrowed his eyes at Maddy
and smiled. ‘Anyway, I was curious. Whatever reason you might have had for
freeing the Red Horse from under the Hill, it must have been something
important.’
Maddy gave him a sharp look. ‘You think I knew the Horse was there?’
‘Oh, please,’ said Loki impatiently. ‘Don’t play the innocent with me.
Remember, I know Red Horse Hill. I know every crack and crevice. You think I
never suspected that something big was buried here?’
‘The Whisperer …’ Maddy began.
‘That’s what I assumed at first,’ said Loki, with his disarming smile. ‘But I
was wrong, wasn’t I? Mimir was never the main prize. Odin was planning to use
him to get the gods back on his side before revealing his master plan.’
‘What plan?’ said Maddy.
‘War with Chaos,’ Loki said. ‘The End of the World. Asgard reclaimed. It’s
all there, in the Good Book; with the Horse whose Rider is Carnage. Carnage.
Grim, in the language of the Elder Age. And did you know – by some freak
coincidence – that happens to be one of Odin’s names?’
Silently Maddy shook her head.
‘But the Whisperer betrayed him,’ Loki went on implacably. ‘You went off to
Netherworld; he was blinded; the gods turned against him. He had to reassess his
plan. Even so, it nearly worked; but without the Horse it was futile. He fell. We
all thought he was gone. Then, suddenly, I wasn’t so sure. Strange things began
to happen. Like Angie cutting a deal with the gods, and giving Thor back his
hammer. And then this business with the Hill. And if those weren’t Odin’s
ravens back there, then I may just have to resign my position as Asgard’s most
brilliant exile …’
‘What are you getting at?’ Maddy said.
‘The General survived, didn’t he?’ Loki’s eyes blazed fire-green. ‘He
managed to escape somehow, and he doesn’t want the others to know. That’s
fine. I’m cool with that. I mean, he must have his reasons. And if he’s working
with Chaos now – well, I totally understand. It wouldn’t be the first time.’
‘Odin would never do that!’ Maddy said.
‘Sorry,’ said Loki. ‘My mistake.’
‘I mean it,’ said Maddy angrily. ‘Odin would never do that. I can’t explain
his plan right now, but betraying the gods isn’t part of it.’
‘OK. I’m sorry. Forget I spoke. So – he does have a plan, then?’
Maddy eyed him suspiciously. ‘What do you want, Loki?’ she said.
Loki shrugged. ‘Same as always. Let me go with you to World’s End. That’s
where it’s going to begin, right? The war between Order and Chaos? I don’t
know why you’re keeping so dark, or what you think you can do alone, but if the
General did survive, then I know he’d want me to help you.’
Help me? Help yourself, more like. Maddy thought she understood. Loki, as
always, was hedging his bets. Out of favour with the gods, he thought to gain
Odin’s protection, or at least to put some distance between himself and the
carnage at Red Horse Hill. She might even have succumbed to his charm – alone
and uncertain as she was – but for the thought of Maggie Rede. Loki, she knew,
had no scruples at all, and if he found out about Maggie, he would not hesitate to
use the information to restore his status amongst the gods – or, worse, to bargain
with Chaos.
Maddy hated to leave him this way, but she simply couldn’t take the risk of
exposing her sister to further threat. And so she turned to Loki and smiled, and
hoped that he would understand. ‘Look, I’m really sorry,’ she said. ‘I promise I’ll
tell you everything. But first I have to do this—’
And with these words she summoned all her considerable glam and flung it
as hard as she could. Just to slow him down as she fled – Loki in Aspect was no
pushover, even for her – but the glam she chose instinctively from all those at
her command happened to be the new rune she’d snagged that morning from her
ghostly visitor.
For a second the rune Ác burned silvery white at her fingertips, then, without
any further encouragement, swiftly merged with her own rune, Aesk. She felt
rather than heard the click as the two runes locked together, then a mindbolt shot
from her open hand, knocking Loki off his feet; then slammed him hard against
the ground some fifty yards away from her.
At first she was afraid he was dead. But, narrowing her eyes, Maddy saw that
his signature was there, although its potency was dimmed.
She considered the glam she had flung at him. It looked like an ordinary
combination rune – Ác, the Thunder Oak –
– but in this case, clearly, Ác and Aesk had come together to make up something
far more powerful –
– a glam that had knocked the Trickster out cold (and in his most powerful
Aspect, no less) as effortlessly as swatting a fly.
Once Maddy had determined that Loki wasn’t faking it – that he really was
unconscious – she found herself faced with the awkward choice between leaving
him there at the mercy of Dream, or dragging him into the open, where his
signature would instantly betray his location to Heimdall and his people.
She opted for the second choice, hoping that Loki would understand. The
gods would be furious at his escapade, and would probably give him a hard time,
but he’d talked his way out of worse things before, and Maddy was certain that
he would cope.
As for his suggestion that Odin might have turned his coat and struck a deal
with the enemy, she dismissed it with a shake of her head. Odin might be
devious – sometimes even dishonest – but he would never betray the gods. She
had no choice but to follow her heart and go off in search of her sister, and hope
that her search for Maggie would lead her to the Old Man.
She left the unconscious Trickster just outside the dreamcloud and ran back
to the Horse’s Eye, where Jormungand, stirred by his father’s defeat, was
showing signs of excitement – shaking his mane and hissing and generally
giving the impression of a Serpent ready for anything.
Maddy gave him a wary look. ‘We’re on the same side, right?’ she said.
Jormungand made a horribly puppyish sound.
‘And you know where I have to go? Right?’
Jormungand almost frolicked.
‘And when we get there, you’ll behave yourself? You promise you won’t eat
anyone? I mean it. That would be bad,’ she said.
Jormungand gave a half-shrug and slowly began to uncoil himself. Maddy
took a double handful of the World Serpent’s mane and hauled herself into
position. I hope you know what you’re doing, she thought.
And they lurched off into the heart of Dream.
LOKI WOKE UP with a headache. Not so much a headache, in fact, as a pain that
began at the top of his head and extended as far as his body could reach. Even
his hair hurt – which, on second thoughts, he decided wasn’t all that surprising,
given that someone was using it to yank him briskly to his feet.
Thor seemed the likeliest guess – though to be fair, the Trickster thought, it
might just as easily be Heimdall. Or Frey. Or Njörd. Or even Angie. If she had
been anywhere nearby, his best guess would have been Skadi of the Ice Folk,
otherwise known as the Snowshoe Queen, the Huntress, and the Snow Wolf.
Fortunately, he told himself, Skadi was out of the picture for good. In the
weeks preceding Ragnarók it had been she who’d had him chained to a rock with
a snake spitting poison into his face, and the last time they’d met she’d come
very close to bringing him down with her runewhip.
He blinked against the harsh light – the sun had finally risen above the mist
that spilled from World Below, and its dazzle on the fallen snow was enough to
blind him briefly.
He tried to recall what had happened.
For a moment he couldn’t remember anything. Then it began to come back:
Maddy, the dreamcloud, Jormungand – and the image burned onto his retinas of
a glam he’d never seen before –
He would have liked to give all this more thought. But the present situation,
he knew, demanded his full attention. Once more, cautious, he opened his eyes.
At first there was too much light for him to see anything; and then things started
to swim into place: the mist, the snow, the brilliant sky, a pair of luminous
golden eyes peering at him from under a tangle of raven-black hair.
Loki blinked at the golden eyes, trying to read their expression.
Crawk, said Mandy.
‘Ach, you’re awake,’ said Hughie, stepping into view.
‘What happened?’ said Loki, trying in vain to get free of the hand that was
fastened in his hair.
‘We thought maybe ye’d like tae tell us that,’ said Hughie with a cheery grin.
‘We found ye, passed out, by Red Horse Hill, surrounded by broken bits of
glam.’
‘Maddy,’ said Loki. ‘She caught me off-guard. And she has the World
Serpent with her.’
Crawk, said Mandy.
Hughie grinned. ‘Did she mention where she was heading at all?’
‘She mentioned World’s End.’
‘World’s End? Are you sure?’ This new voice came from behind him. The
hand seemed to clench more painfully. ‘If you’re lying, Dogstar …’
The Trickster stiffened. He knew that voice. He finally managed to free
himself and turned to face its owner, and felt all the strength go out of his legs as
he found himself looking at a familiar pair of ice-blue eyes and a smile like a
cut-throat razor.
‘Oh, crap …’ Loki said.
‘Hello again,’ said Skadi.
MEANWHILE, ON DREAM’S thoroughfare, Maddy had decided that any other form of
travel had to be preferable to this. Certainly it was the fastest way; but moving
down through Dream at a speed she had once thought unimaginable, clutching at
the Serpent’s mane with hands that had lost all sensation, trying not to look at the
things that lurched and clawed and snatched at her as she and Jorgi hurtled down
the sickening series of whirlpools and falls that made up the boundaries between
the Worlds, Maddy began to realize that her jaunt through the Black Fortress of
Netherworld had been nothing compared to this.
There were pockets of ephemera like deadly bursts of fireworks; there were
clouds of flesh-eating parasites and rains of knives and geysers of flame. And
then there were the dead, of course: a slew of cold and hungry jetsam, bodiless
fingers clutching at her, whispering voices pleading to her.
Help us, Maddy. Help us live …
It lasted only minutes, although when she emerged from Dream, Maddy felt
as if she had been travelling for half her life. She opened her eyes into darkness;
and for a moment almost believed that this had all been a real dream, and that
she was still in her bed at home, and that none of this had happened.
But there were no bedclothes around her, and the place had a resonant sound
– and a serpent-stench that Maddy knew only too well. No. This was no dream.
This, she thought, must be World’s End.
She cast the rune Sól, and found herself in some kind of underground
storeroom, the roof of which had partially collapsed under the weight of
Jormungand, who had come to rest on the floor above with his head lolling
happily in World’s End and the rest of him hidden in World Below.
‘I told you to look inconspicuous,’ Maddy hissed reproachfully, and was
surprised to see the Serpent’s head begin to change its Aspect, becoming a large
and shaggy black horse with a tail so long that it brushed the floor. It wasn’t an
especially handsome beast, and its breath did smell suspiciously carnivorous, but
it would do, Maddy thought – at least until she had found Maggie.
She patted the black horse cautiously. ‘That’s much better, thank you,’ she
said. ‘Now. Let’s see where you’ve brought me.’
‘YOU LOOK SURPRISED,’ the Huntress said.
‘Well, I’m not exactly at my best,’ said Loki, rubbing his sore head. ‘Besides,
I was under the impression that you’d gone back to your people.’
‘I did, at first,’ said Skadi, fingering her runewhip. ‘That is, until the rumours
began. Rumours of mischief under the Hill. And a Rider whose name is
Treachery.’
‘And so you assumed I was to blame. Well, have I got news for you, folks—’
‘Shut up, Dogstar,’ Skadi said. ‘You’re not here to argue your innocence. If I
had my way right now, you’d be chained to a rock in Netherworld with
poisonous snakes for company. That could still happen if you mess me around.’
Loki gave her a cautious look. ‘I’ll try not to mess you around,’ he said. ‘So
– where am I, and what do you want?’
Skadi gave him a cold look. ‘You’re near the Seven Sleepers,’ she said.
‘There’s a cave about a hundred yards back that leads into the mountainside. It’s
dry enough, and there’s water nearby. I think you’ll be fairly comfortable. Of
course, you’ll have to stay hidden,’ she went on. ‘Otherwise they’ll track you
down. And given the feeling towards you right now, I wouldn’t rate your
chances. A Rider whose name is Treachery – who else could it be but the
Trickster?’
Loki nodded. ‘OK,’ he said. His mind was working furiously. Could the
Huntress be trying to help? It seemed improbable, somehow. And why were
Odin’s ravens with her? Had the General really survived? Or was this the
prelude to something else – some form of interrogation?
Almost imperceptibly, Loki started to reach for his glam.
Crawk, said Mandy accusingly.
Skadi raised her runewhip. Its coils slithered across the snow like cables of
electricity. ‘I’m warning you,’ she said through clenched teeth. ‘It’s bad enough
having to save your life, but try that again and it’s going to hurt.’
‘OK.’ Loki spread his hands.
‘Verra wise,’ Hughie said. ‘Mandy doesn’t talk a lot, but she can see across
Nine Worlds.’
‘See this …?’ Loki made an obscene hand gesture. Then he turned back to
the Huntress. ‘So – forgive my mistrustful nature, but … why would you want to
save my life? It’s not like we’re the best of friends.’
‘You got that right,’ said Skadi. ‘But Balder wanted you to live, and I guess
he had his reasons. As for the General, wherever he is—’
Mandy crawk-ed.
Skadi paused. Beside her, Odin’s Spirit and Mind levelled twin pairs of
golden eyes at the renegade Trickster.
‘Oh,’ said Loki. ‘It’s like that, is it?’ His scarred lips twitched appreciatively.
‘Listen, if Odin’s alive somewhere, if that’s why you’re protecting me, then why
not bring me in on it? I can totally see why you might not want the Vanir to
know – but I’m his brother, for gods’ sakes, and if he’s planning to make a deal
—’
‘What kind of a deal?’
Loki shrugged. ‘Damned if I know. But someone’s pulling strings all right.
The Red Horse is loose, the Black Horse is free – now all we need is the Horse
of Air, and it’s all aboard the Faërie bus for Ragnarók!’
Skadi gave him a scornful look. ‘Got it all worked out, haven’t you?’
‘Well, it wasn’t difficult.’ Loki grinned. ‘Maybe the General survived.
Maybe he wants to take charge. But the balance of power has changed in three
years: Heimdall’s made an alliance with Chaos, and suddenly Odin isn’t sure
how many real friends he has left. So he does a bit of recruiting by stealth. It
doesn’t take much to get Maddy on side. But as for Yours Truly – I understand.
We’ve had our differences in the past. But you can tell him, Skadi – I’ve
changed. I’m on the side of Order now.’
Skadi’s eyes gleamed ice-blue. ‘Well, maybe that’s the problem,’ she said.
‘Changing sides is your speciality. So what we’re going to do is this. We’re
putting someone in charge of you. Someone to keep you on the right track.
Someone to make sure you don’t change sides.’
That sounded ominous, Loki thought. ‘You don’t think I’d rat on the
General?’
‘You did before, at Ragnarók.’
Loki shrugged. He could have explained the reasons for his defection. He’d
spent the months before Ragnarók chained to a boulder in World Below,
friendless and abandoned, with a snake dripping venom into his face (courtesy of
Skadi, of course). Only his faithful wife, Sigyn, had stayed, collecting the poison
droplets – and to be honest, Loki thought, the snake had been better company.
There was something about total loyalty, uncritical devotion, endless patience,
perpetual forgiveness and the general inability to believe that a loved one could
ever do anything wrong that, frankly, just gave him the creeps.
A horrible thought occurred to him. ‘Please. You don’t have to lock me up.
I’m not the second Rider. I swear. I mean – would I ride a giant snake?’
Skadi gave him a chilly smile. ‘Begetter of Serpents? Father of Lies?’
‘That hurt my feelings,’ Loki said.
‘Well, count yourself lucky that’s all that got hurt. And she won’t be your
gaoler or anything. Think of her more as a guardian. A friend. Someone to watch
over you …’
‘She?’ said Loki.
‘Can’t you guess?’
Loki went pale. ‘Oh no. She died …’
Skadi smiled. ‘You opened Hel. You let a whole bunch of dead people
loose.’
‘But the odds of getting anyone out …’
‘I guess you must just be lucky,’ she said.
And now the Huntress stepped aside to make way for a newcomer, and all
the remaining colour fled from Loki’s signature and from his face.
To a casual observer it might have been hard to determine why; for the short,
round-faced woman who approached looked as inoffensive as one of the Folk.
Her hair was brown and sensibly tied back; her dress was plain and practical.
Her eyes were her best feature, being large and blue and soulful, and were at
present fixed adoringly on the Trickster.
‘Well, aren’t you going to say anything?’
Loki stared at his ex-wife. His late ex-wife, he amended. His late,
unlamented ex-wife – tenacious as a bloodhound; stubborn as a sunstruck mule;
jealous as a housecat; crazy as a box of frogs.
He’d thought that seeing Angie again had been a stroke of ill-luck. But to be
reunited with two ex-partners in the same week – not to mention Fenny and
Jormungand – felt like persecution.
He closed his eyes. ‘Gods, this is Hel.’
‘What did you say?’
‘I said – I said … hello, Sig.’
Sigyn responded with a squeal and flung herself at Loki. ‘I knew you’d be
happy to see me!’ she said. ‘I’ve missed you so much – oh, sweetheart. Have
you missed me? I know you have – and now we can be together again!’
Loki was trying as best he could to fend off the barrage of kisses. ‘Great.
Yeah. Thanks, Sig.’
She hadn’t changed at all, he thought, half smothered in her scented embrace.
Still as needy; still as sweet; still mad as a fish beneath that smile – and what
was that mark on the back of her hand? It looked like a runemark, Loki thought,
though Sigyn had never had one before –
‘Where did you get that?’ he said. ‘And what in Hel’s name is it?’
‘Hel’s name is right,’ Skadi said. ‘We’ve called it Eh, the Wedlock. Another
rune of the New Script.’
But now Sigyn released her embrace and peered at Loki critically. ‘You look
awful,’ she remarked. ‘Hasn’t that nasty Angie person been looking after you at
all? Hasn’t she been feeding you?’
‘Sigyn, I’m fine,’ Loki said.
Sigyn eyed him narrowly. ‘So. She’s still around, then? You’ve seen her?’
‘Well …’ said Loki.
‘It doesn’t matter. Really. I know. I bet you’ve been seeing her all this time.
You have been seeing her, haven’t you? After everything I’ve done for you. You
lying, cheating little rat!’ And she dealt the Trickster a ringing slap.
‘But you were dead—’ he protested.
Sigyn slapped him again. ‘I see. That’s your excuse, is it?’ she said. ‘Just
because I was dead, you thought you’d hook up with that floozy again!’
Skadi hid a little smile. ‘Men are so easily seduced. You have to watch them
all the time.’
‘Oh, I plan to,’ Sigyn said, and, raising her hand, she fingered a sign that
gilded the air with runelight. At the same time something appeared around
Loki’s left wrist; something that looked like a fine gold chain.
‘What’s that?’ said the Trickster.
Sigyn spoke a cantrip – Eh byth for eorlum – and a similar glam appeared
around her own right wrist, linking them together.
Loki said: ‘Please, don’t do this.’
Skadi shrugged. ‘It’s for your own good. Or would you prefer that rock in
Netherworld?’
Sigyn’s blue eyes lit up at that. ‘Do you know, that might be safer …’ she
said. ‘I’d be only too happy to stay with him there. I’d bring him his meals, and
sing to him, and hold a basin over his face so the horrid snake couldn’t hurt him
—’
‘What snake?’ said Loki.
‘Well, there’d have to be a snake, dear,’ said Sigyn in a reasonable voice.
‘You know, just like the old days. Just you and me – and the snake, of course …’
‘I don’t think that will be necessary,’ said Skadi, interrupting her. Between
them, Eh, the Wedlock, gleamed and crackled with runelight. ‘Loki, don’t try to
escape,’ she said. ‘Sigyn – just take care of him.’
Sigyn gave a radiant smile. ‘Oh, I will. I promise,’ she said. ‘I’ll take such
good care of him.’ She turned to Loki. ‘Are you hungry, sweetheart? I’ve got tea
and cake in the cave.’
‘Tea? Cake?’ Loki said.
Kindly, Sigyn patted his hand. ‘What? Did you think I was going to starve
you to death? And then we can have a lovely talk. Now that I have you all to
myself—’
‘No – wait!’ Loki said, seeing the Huntress turn away.
But Skadi just ignored him, resuming her favourite Aspect. In the form of a
white snow wolf she padded away across the snow, while above her, Odin’s
Spirit and Mind took off into the sparkling air.
Tight-lipped, Loki watched them go. He’d been a prisoner many times – in
dungeons, in Netherworld, under the Hill, in the lair of the Tunnel Folk, in the
caves of the Ice People – but never before had he felt his imprisonment so
keenly. The golden chain around his wrist was gossamer-thin but unbreakable,
restricting his movements, though otherwise deceptively easy to overlook –
except for the presence of Sigyn, the embodiment of constancy, never more than
a few feet away, her eyes fixed adoringly on him.
Loki shivered. This was bad – worse even than Netherworld. At least in the
Black Fortress he’d been able to scream. Here, he couldn’t even do that. Instead
he had to be nice, drink tea, make small-talk with his late ex-wife. Around his
wrist, the Wedlock gleamed and glimmered pitilessly, binding the Trickster to his
fate once more until the End of the Worlds; shackled with the bonds of love.
there was the Word. And the Word created Nine Worlds, from
‘IN THE BEGINNING
Firmament to World Beyond. And the Nameless ruled over everything, keeping
Order and Chaos in place, enforcing the Laws of the Universe.
‘Now in those days the Firefolk were always at war with the Ice Folk, and
they wanted to possess the Word, to defeat their enemies for good. So they sent
one of their people to bargain with the Nameless. This was Odin, son of Bór, and
he spoke of building a citadel to protect the Worlds from Chaos. But the
Nameless did not trust him, and wanted proof of his good faith. So Odin offered
a sacrifice – one of his eyes in exchange for the Word, and a promise to keep
Order. The Nameless agreed, and the Firefolk built the Bridge that spanned the
Worlds and started to build their citadel.’
Now that Sleipnir had been relocated (not without some difficulty) to the
stables, Adam felt much more comfortable. A bribe to the domestic staff meant
that Maggie’s occasional eruptions of glam could easily be overlooked; but the
sudden appearance of a horse in a luxury penthouse suite above Examiners’
Walk would certainly have attracted the wrong sort of attention.
Now, at last, Adam told his tale, while Maggie listened keenly. It was a story
that she knew well, having read many different versions of it. Still she listened
eagerly.
‘How could they build such a thing?’ she said, when Adam paused to take a
breath. ‘I mean, it was up in the sky, wasn’t it? How did they get it to stay up
there?’
‘It’s complicated,’ Adam said. (In fact, he had no idea himself.)
Maggie looked expectant. ‘Well?’
Inside Adam’s mind, his passenger sighed. Nothing comes out of nothing, it
said, and Adam echoed obediently: ‘What do you do when you’re building a
house? The first thing is to cut down trees. Creation works through destruction.
Well – the Word behaves in the same way. It breaks down the blocks of creation
and shapes them to its purpose. Dream becomes reality. Reality helps fashion
Dream. That’s why the Word is so dangerous. That’s where the Nameless made
its mistake.’
Maggie stared at Adam, wide-eyed. Nowhere in the Good Book had she ever
seen a reference to the Nameless making a mistake – or even a suggestion that
such a thing was possible. It sounded almost like blasphemy. But by now she
trusted Adam rather more than she did the Good Book, and her eyes simply
opened wider.
‘A mistake?’ she said.
‘Oh yes.’ Adam smiled. ‘Even the Nameless makes mistakes. But Odin was a
plausible rogue, and he seemed to be on the side of Order. It was only much later
that it became clear that Odin had allies on both sides – including a traitor from
Chaos itself, brought in for his gift of trickery – and the Nameless began to
regret its trust, and to be wary of the Firefolk. And so it laid a trap for them,
hoping thereby to clip their wings and reclaim some of its power.
‘So it summoned a demon from World Beyond, a being by the name of
Svadilfari, and enslaved it with the force of the Word, and gave it the shape of a
great Horse. And the Nameless offered to help them complete the Citadel in less
than a week – single-handed, except for the Horse – for a price as yet
undetermined.
‘It seemed too good to be true at first. A task that would have taken the
Firefolk years completed in less than seven days – but Odin One-Eye was wary.
He’d already paid a high price for his bargain with the Nameless. To enter into a
contract without even knowing what it would cost would be the act of a
madman. But Loki, his brother in Chaos, persuaded him to make the deal. The
job would never be finished in time, he said; the risk was therefore minimal. And
so they agreed, and the work began. But Svadilfari was by his very nature an
architect of castles in the air, and rune by rune, glamour by glamour, the Sky
Citadel began to take shape.
‘Five days into the contract, the Firefolk were getting anxious. Odin in
particular was uneasy, not least because his people were beginning to whisper
that it had been his intention from the first to throw in his lot with the Nameless.
Typically, he blamed Loki, who, seeing where the land lay, set out in haste to
redeem himself before they threw him from the sky.’
Maggie hadn’t heard this part of the tale. Even in the Good Book’s Closed
Chapters, mention of the Firefolk had been kept to a minimum, and all she knew
was that somehow they had taken the First World through trickery, and in so
doing had made themselves gods.
She thought of the Horse they had left in the stables, feeding placidly from a
bale of hay. He looked so like any other horse that even she could hardly believe
his true Aspect – that thing, half Horse, half spider, that had birthed itself from
the side of a Hill with half of Dream in its terrible wake …
‘The Red Horse …’ she ventured shyly. ‘Is he – Svadilfari?’
Adam shook his head. ‘Not quite. Loki knew how to change his shape – an
easy task in the First World – and he took the form of a little white mare – a very
pretty little white mare – and lured away the demon Horse back into the realm of
Dream. The Nameless tried to call him back; but Svadilfari was infatuated, and
he and the white mare disappeared for two whole days and two whole nights.
And so the seven-day deadline passed, and the Citadel was left unfinished. And
the Nameless had to admit defeat, and forfeit Asgard to the gods.’
‘And the Horse?’ said Maggie.
Adam shrugged. ‘No one saw him again,’ he said. ‘But when Loki came
back in his natural form, he brought back with him an eight-legged foal, child of
the demon and the white mare. He called him Sleipnir, and he gave him to Odin
as a bribe, in exchange for being allowed to stay when all the others wanted him
out.’
Maggie stared at Adam, enthralled. ‘So … Loki was his mother?’ she said.
‘How did he manage to do that?’
‘You wouldn’t believe all the disgusting things that Loki’s managed to do in
his time,’ said Adam, taking Maggie’s hand and looking at her earnestly. ‘But
now we have him. Odin’s Horse. Sleipnir. The greatest steed in the Nine
Worlds.’
‘But why?’ said Maggie. ‘Why bring him here? Isn’t he still dangerous?
Besides, I thought our job was to wipe out demons, not release them into the
Worlds …’
‘Patience,’ said Adam with a smile. In fact, by now he was feeling
thoroughly impatient with Maggie, but three years of living with the thing in his
mind had taught him a measure of self-control. ‘Believe me, I understand how
you feel. I was like that myself once. Of course I hate working with demons just
as much as you do, but sometimes the end justifies the means, and this time the
lesser evil is to bring these creatures into the Worlds, so that a far greater menace
can be defeated for ever.’
‘The Firefolk,’ said Maggie.
‘That’s right,’ Adam said.
‘But the Good Book says that the Riders will—’
‘Herald Tribulation?’ Adam smiled. ‘That’s right,’ he said again. ‘The End of
the Worlds. Ragnarók. Apocalypse. The Winter War. But this time we’ll be
calling the shots. We’ll be in charge. We’ll name the date.’ He put his hands on
Maggie’s shoulders and looked into her grey-gold eyes. ‘Don’t you see what this
means?’ he said. ‘It gives us a chance to do things right. To bring Order out of
Chaos. To save the Worlds from the Firefolk.’
‘You mean we can stop Tribulation?’
Adam nodded. ‘Of course we can. You have what it takes to defeat them.
You already have the Red Horse. Now all we need is one more thing: an artefact
of the Elder Age that will help us destroy them once and for all.’
‘An artefact?’ She looked at him.
‘People call it the Old Man.’
‘What is it?’
Adam shrugged. ‘All I know is we need it.’
‘But what about …’ Maggie lowered her voice. ‘What about the Magister,
Adam? Who – what – is he? And can’t we get you free, somehow?’
Adam went pale and shook his head. ‘You don’t know what you’re talking
about,’ he said in a low and urgent voice. ‘My master’s here to help us. I know
back there it looked different, but you have to believe me. He’s on our side. It’s
… complicated. All right?’
‘All right,’ said Maggie doubtfully. ‘But tell me – who was that girl on the
Hill? The one with the ruinmark, who looks just like me?’
In Adam’s mind, his passenger uttered a distant warning.
Leave this to me, Adam said. I know how to handle her.
You’d better, said his passenger. Or I’ll take you both apart.
Briefly Adam considered whether a quick prayer to Loki would count as
blasphemy at this stage. He knew from the Voice in his mind that the Trickster
had once been in similar shoes, had suffered this same communion and had
somehow broken free at last …
‘Trust me, Maggie,’ he said, and smiled. ‘You asked me once if I were a
dream. Well, that’s where everything begins. That’s where you’ll find your
answers. Dream. Will you trust me?’
‘Yes, I will.’
So Adam began his story.
MAGGIE REDE MISTRUSTEDdreams, as she mistrusted dreamers. But Adam explained it
all so well; and now she began to understand how Dream had been breached by
the Firefolk to unleash Chaos into the Worlds, and how from that Chaos they
planned to rebuild the Rainbow Bridge and, from there, take possession of the
Firmament itself, the First World of Creation.
‘And so you see,’ Adam said, ‘the answer to everything lies in dreams. Your
dreams, Maggie – yours and mine. That’s how we freed the Horse of Fire. That’s
how we’ll track down the Old Man. And that’s how we’ll vanquish the Firefolk
and bring Order back to the Nine Worlds.’
‘But why does it have to be me?’ Maggie said.
‘Because of who you are,’ Adam said. ‘Because you carry their blood in your
veins.’
‘But I don’t,’ protested Maggie. ‘My uncle was an Examiner. My parents
were Orderly folk. My brothers were both in the Order.’
Adam touched the nape of her neck, where the runemark Ác, the Thunder
Oak, still gleamed beneath her shorn hair. ‘You didn’t get that from Donal Rede.
Or from his goodwife Susan.’
‘Then who did I get it from?’ Maggie said.
Adam sighed and took her hand. ‘You asked me about the girl,’ he said.
Maggie looked at him eagerly. Ever since her return to World’s End she had
longed to know more about the girl on the Hill, who looked so like her, and
called her by name, and knew about her family.
‘This may come as a shock,’ Adam said. In fact, he was enjoying himself.
For the first time since his passenger had taken residence in his mind, he was
experiencing the joy of wielding power.
‘Who is she?’ Maggie said. ‘She told me she wasn’t an enemy.’
‘Maybe not to you,’ he said. ‘But to me, to my master, to all the Worlds, to
everything we hold most dear—’
‘What do you mean? Who is she?’
He smiled. ‘Her name is Maddy Smith,’ he said. ‘I knew her – fought her –
long ago, before I met my master. She looks ordinary enough, but in fact she is
one of the most dangerous and powerful of the Seer-folk. She hates me. She’s
always hated me. And …’
Adam paused for effect.
‘Yes?’
‘Maggie – she’s your sister.’
He’d expected tears – hysterics, perhaps; to Adam, that would have been
normal. But Maggie Rede was no ordinary girl, and although her lips tightened
momentarily, her expression remained eerily calm. Her shock and disgust at
finding the runemark at the nape of her neck now seemed like an eternity away;
in fact, Adam thought resentfully, she was just like Maddy herself – pert,
stubborn and too clever for her own good.
‘How can we be sisters?’ she said. ‘I’ve never even met her before.’
Adam gave a narrow smile. ‘Of course you haven’t met,’ he said. ‘But you
are sisters, nevertheless. You’re the twin children of Thor and Jarnsaxa, of Chaos
and the Firefolk. That’s why my master wanted you to kill her while you had the
chance. The link that binds you is dangerous, and until it can be severed, your
soul will always remain in the balance, and the Seer-folk will never leave you
alone.’
For a long time Maggie said nothing. Could it be that in one world, a person
could seem so harmless – even apparently likeable – while in another, they were
as devious and destructive as Adam Goodwin seemed to suggest?
She thought of the Red Horse down in the stables. He seemed such an
ordinary beast. And yet, in another world, he was the Red Horse of the Last
Days. Could what Adam said be true? Could it be that the enemy was Maggie’s
own twin sister?
Adam put his hand on her arm. ‘I know you don’t want this, Maggie,’ he
said. ‘Just as I never wanted it. But all that changed when I met you. Together,
we can face anything. Together, with my master’s help, we can change the Nine
Worlds, take what was broken and build it anew.’
‘Can we?’ said Maggie.
‘Of course we can.’
And at this he looked into her eyes, and all Maggie’s common sense
dissolved into a rosy haze. Here was someone who knew her heart; someone
who accepted her; someone with whom she could share any secret, however
dark.
Her hand crept to the nape of her neck, where the runemark Ác was glowing
like a firebrand.
‘You don’t think I’m tainted? By this?’ she said.
‘Of course not.’ Adam smiled. ‘In fact – I think you’re beautiful.’
Maggie looked at him in surprise. She had never been a beauty, of course;
not even before she had cut her hair. Too poor to afford the expensive clothes
that were the fashion in World’s End, she had always been considered plain – too
tall; too boyish; too clever; too pert; unwilling to play the seduction games
played by other girls of her age. Her luminous eyes were too direct; her hair,
which had been beautiful, was always hidden under a scarf. Now even that was
gone, and just at the moment when Maggie, for the first time in her life, had
started to care what she looked like.
Of course, Adam knew this perfectly well. Maggie Rede and Maddy Smith
were alike in more than features; they shared a similar temperament, and even
their different backgrounds had done little to alter the resemblance. Both had
been solitary children – Maddy spending hours alone in Little Bear Wood,
Maggie in her underground haunts beneath the old University. Maggie had her
sister’s pride; her courage and her confidence. But underneath all that he could
see that Maggie longed for someone to trust; for a friend in whom she could
confide – or even, perhaps, fall in love …
Love? Maggie Rede would have laughed at the thought only a few days ago.
Now there was something in her eyes; a warmth that touched her plain face with
something approaching beauty. Adam Scattergood had changed from the spoiled
and sullen young man he’d once been. At seventeen, he was handsome; he had
an air of mystery; he knew many things; he was different to all the other young
men she had ever en countered. Most importantly of all, he was telling Maggie
what she wanted to hear – that he needed her – that he wanted her – and to
Maggie, to be needed was the greatest attraction of all.
He gently pulled at the bergha that covered Maggie’s shorn hair. ‘Must you
really wear this? Now that I’ve seen you without it …’
Once more, and for the last time, Maggie hesitated. ‘But Adam, my hair …’
‘I like it this way. It makes you different,’ he said.
It was the first time Maggie had heard that word used as anything but a
negative.
‘Different?’ she said, allowing him to undo the headscarf and draw it away.
Tenderly Adam touched her hair. ‘Beautiful,’ he repeated.
He drew Maggie towards him; she rested her head on his shoulder. Her
forehead seemed made for that cradle; she closed her eyes and settled there.
‘I still don’t trust your master,’ she said.
Adam smiled. ‘Do you trust me?’
Slowly Maggie nodded.
‘Then come with me,’ said Adam. ‘And dream …’
MADDY KNEW IT only from stories. Nat Parson had been full of tales of the Universal
City, with its green parks and its gracious halls, its domes of glass and its spires
of gold, its harbour with its tall ships, and the One Sea that stretched out for ever.
But Nat Parson had always been prone to exaggeration, and, given that no one
else in Malbry was in a position to contradict him (a pilgrimage was a costly
thing, and no one had come back from the Universal City in something
approaching forty years), Maddy had always assumed that his accounts of the
place were much embellished, and that the reality would turn out to be
something very different.
Even so, she found herself unprepared. The dark and eerie catacombs, the
tunnels so like those of World Below, the hidden libraries infested with rats,
seemed more like the ruins of an empire than any kind of a city. Exploring the
labyrinth underneath the ancient buildings, she found herself marvelling at the
amazement of riches, seemingly abandoned here: fragments of blackened
silverware, cut up and hidden by looters who had lost their way in the darkness
and whose bones still littered the catacombs; blocks of marble; toppled
archways; uncut gemstones like nuggets of fire; papers and ledgers centuries old;
and books – hundreds, thousands of books, some swarming with bookworms,
some still intact, some locked, some coded, some lavishly illuminated, some
written in foreign languages – some containing maps and charts of the World
Beyond the One Sea.
Maddy would have liked to take time to investigate. Surely among these
forgotten things she might be expected to find the Old Man. But she also needed
to find Maggie Rede; because if all she suspected was true, then it was only a
matter of time before the Seer-folk found their way to World’s End. And Maddy
needed the Old Man – not just because Odin had told her so, but because if, as
she believed, the Old Man was the Whisperer, she could use it to prove to the
other gods that Maggie was an innocent, a pawn in the hands of their enemy.
But first she had to find her twin; to try and explain the truth to her. That
might not be easy, she knew. Maggie was a World’s Ender, brought up under the
Order’s regime. For all Maddy knew, her sister might be a believer, devout in the
ways of the Good Book, a willing convert to Mimir’s deceptions, a soldier of the
Nameless. It had taken One-Eye six years to teach Maddy what she needed to
know. Maddy had only days, at best, to ensure that Maggie was prepared.
The Cradle fell an age ago, but Fire and Folk shall raise her
In just twelve days, at End of Worlds; a gift within the sepulchre.
The Æsir had assumed (too fast) that the twelve days of the prophecy
referred to the building of Asgard. Now it seemed likely to Maddy that the
twelve days were a countdown leading up to Ragnarók, whether the gods were
ready or not.
Two whole days had already passed since Ethel had made the prophecy.
Which left nine days to find the Old Man, which could be buried anywhere. Nine
days to find her sister, and to persuade her she wasn’t an enemy.
And so Maddy left the catacombs, and, using Sól to light her way and with
one hand fastened in Jorgi’s mane, managed to find a way aboveground into the
University.
They emerged just south of the Great Cloister, once a place of mediation,
recently converted into a teeming marketplace packed with stalls and businesses.
It was lucky for Maddy that she did; for among the crowds of Outlanders, the
slaves and the dancers and the entertainers, the veiled women and the painted
ones, the thieves and the pickpockets, the cut-throats and the mercenaries, not
even a rustic from the North and her strangely unconvincing horse was likely to
attract much attention.
She tried to pass by unnoticed, but found it difficult to ignore a dog with two
heads; a dancing snake; a tattooed prophet speaking in tongues; a man selling
severed fingers.
‘What kind of place is this?’ she said to herself as she wandered from one
plundered hall to another, among the cobwebs and chandeliers, avoiding the
cracks in marble pavements, hearing the clamour of unknown voices against the
ghosts of long ago. She’d expected to find it a shrine to the Order; a monument
to her vanquished foes. That would have been appropriate. Ten thousand men
had died, after all, in the name of what they believed. Maddy found, to her
surprise, that she felt more sympathy for her dead adversaries than she did for
these World’s Enders, who seemed to have given themselves up entirely to the
pursuit of pleasure and profit now that Law and Order were gone.
‘Wanna buy a charm, lady?’
Maddy turned, and saw a journeyman addressing her, his face almost entirely
concealed behind a grubby yellow scarf, his tall figure hidden beneath the
coloured robes of the Outlands.
‘Charm?’ said Maddy.
The journeyman grinned, and Maddy thought she saw a glimpse of bright
blue eyes above the yellow scarf. ‘Love spell, miss? You look the type.’
She shook her head. ‘Really. I’m not.’
‘Then what about a good-luck charm? Genuine piece of the Elder Age. For
you, only two bits.’
Still grinning, the journeyman held out a tray. It was piled with nuggets of
black rock. They looked like the cinders from Jed Smith’s forge – light and
sharp-edged and pitted with holes. Some bore tiny crystals embedded in the
surface; others, the ghost of a rainbow.
‘I don’t have two bits,’ Maddy said.
‘Ah, come on,’ said the journeyman. ‘Genuine piece of Asgard, this. Blasted
to cinders by Screaming Lord Surt himself. Fell on the fields like black rain. Go
on. Make me an offer.’
Discreetly, Maddy fingered Bjarkán. In the circle between her finger and
thumb – a gleam of rainbow runelight.
‘So you can see the colours, eh?’ The journeyman peered at Maddy, and once
again she caught a glimpse of his eyes above the grubby yellow scarf. She’d
taken him for an older man at first, but those blue eyes were clear and bright.
She guessed him to be forty at most; maybe even younger.
‘If I were you,’ he told her, ‘I wouldn’t do too much of that. Too many
people watching. Ready to take an interest.’
Maddy banished the rune Bjarkán. The smallest gleam of kingfisher-blue
flickered between her fingers. Had she imagined it? Probably. She’d done it so
many times before. Her old friend was three years dead, and still she saw him
everywhere – through a carriage window; sitting by a fountain; in a crowd on
market day; walking by the side of a road. It hurt – perhaps it always would. And
yet she almost dreaded the time when she would no longer see One-Eye in the
face of journeymen from World’s End to the distant North …
She looked more closely at the man. ‘Don’t I know you from somewhere?’
she said.
The journeyman shrugged. ‘You might,’ he said. ‘I’ve been a lot of places.’
That voice too was familiar. Maddy’s heart gave a hopeful lurch. She reached
out her hand and tugged at the scarf wrapped round the journeyman’s head,
exposing his features completely. The wry and slightly irregular mouth; the hair
pulled back with a strip of hide; the mobile, humorous eyebrows – all were more
than familiar, but the face was that of a stranger.
The journeyman raised an eyebrow. ‘Excuse me?’
She looked away. ‘I thought you were someone else,’ she said.
‘Aye, well, that’s life,’ said the journeyman, indicating his tray of wares.
‘Take these little bits of rock. You wouldn’t think that once they’d been part of
something that spanned the sky. Look at ’em now – all burned out. And yet
there’s glamours inside of ’em, like seeds just waiting to up and grow …’
Maddy looked at him. ‘Glamours,’ she said. She picked up one of the black
stones. ‘Where did you find these, anyway?’
‘They’re all around the city,’ he said. ‘That is, if you know where to look.
Most of the big ones were gathered up, but you can still find fragments lying
around, and of course, there are the stories.’
Maddy thought of Red Horse Hill. ‘What kind of stories?’
‘The usual. That this is what’s left of the Sky Citadel that fell during
Tribulation. Fragments of Dream that the Firefolk brought to build the Bridge
between the Worlds …’
‘What’s your name?’ Maddy said.
The journeyman shrugged. ‘What’s in a name? Call me Lord Perth, if you
feel like it. And you can be Lady Madonna. And then we can both pretend to
ourselves that we’re not just a pair of scallies, raking the footprints of the gods.’
A shiver went down Maddy’s back. She cast the rune Bjarkán once more,
and looked at him through her fingers. And this time she saw his signature, red
as the heart of a midsummer rose, which shone out like a beacon, and on his
arm, a patch of light …
A runemark?
‘Show me your arm,’ she said.
Perth gave her a quizzical look. ‘What? Here?’
‘Your arm,’ she said, and, grabbing his wrist, pushed up the sleeve of his
blue robe.
And there it was: a new rune, rose-red and burning with glam –
‘What are you playing at?’ hissed Perth, and pulled down his sleeve to cover
the mark. ‘This isn’t show and tell, girl. Play that kind of trick again and I’m apt
to end up in the stocks. Or even at the end of a rope.’
‘I’m sorry,’ said Maddy. ‘I didn’t know.’
‘Of course, it’s just a tattoo,’ he said. ‘Had it done on Saint Sepulchre’s Day
after a few too many pints. Could have kicked myself afterwards – I dunno what
got into me. After all, the last thing I need is another set of distinguishing
marks.’
Maddy nodded. She was thinking hard. She knew that rune was no tattoo.
Did Perth really believe it was?
‘So – what does it mean?’ she said at last.
He shook his head. ‘It’s just my name. Perth, it says, in some Outlandish
tongue. Supposed to bring me good luck, but it’s brought me nothing but bad so
far.’
‘Really?’ said Maddy. ‘How so?’
Perth just shook his head again. ‘I’d rather not discuss it here. And if you’ve
got any sense at all, you’ll hide yours. Yes, of course I see it,’ he said. ‘Right
there in the palm of your hand. Wear gloves, for gods’ sakes. The Order may be
gone, but there are slavers in this city who’d pay good money for a girl like you
– that is, if you don’t get lynched first.’
Maddy put her hand in her pocket and frowned. There was so much she
didn’t know about the ways of World’s End. Slavers, mercenaries, thieves – how
in the Worlds would she find her sister? Perth – whoever, whatever he was, with
his runemark and his pile of rocks – was hardly a trustworthy ally. But could he
help her find Maggie? Or was she better off alone?
She peered at him once again, through Bjarkán. Yes, there was deceit in his
colours, a green-gold thread that ran through his glam. The man was more than
capable of lying to her, or selling her out, or stealing from her, or swindling her.
He’d done those things before, she sensed. And yet in spite of all that, Maddy
read no malevolence there; no real signs of wickedness. She concluded that he
was harmless enough, as long as she didn’t trust him with her purse. Besides, she
badly needed a guide through this maze of a city.
‘Listen, Perth,’ she said at last. ‘I’m a stranger here. I may need help. Perhaps
we could help each other.’ Perth looked doubtful. ‘That so?’ he said. ‘I thought
you didn’t have two bits.’
Maddy clicked her fingers, summoning the money-rune Fé. It gleamed
provocatively in her palm, guinea-gold and glamorous.
Perth’s blue eyes lit up at once. ‘Nice trick.’
‘I’ll teach it to you.’
‘Done!’ Perth grinned. They shook hands. ‘So – what have you come to find
in World’s End? And exactly what kind of horse is that?’ He narrowed his eyes
at Jormungand, who was apparently investigating a display of fresh fish on a
nearby market stall. As Perth and Maddy watched, the Horse idly snapped up a
live king crab as if it were a mouthful of straw.
Maddy grabbed Jorgi’s bridle. ‘No!’
The Horse of the Sea rolled his eyes. For a moment the king crab’s spidery
legs twisted and clawed in his open mouth. Then there was a crunching sound,
and a whinny of satisfaction.
The vendor in charge of the fish stall, who had barely had time to take it all
in, now rubbed his eyes in disbelief. ‘Did you see that?’ he asked Perth.
‘See what?’ said Perth innocently.
‘That horse,’ said the fishmonger, looking shaken.
Perth looked sympathetic. ‘I know how you feel,’ he said kindly, putting his
arm round the man’s shoulders. ‘The hooch they were selling here last night was
enough to make anyone start seeing things. If I were you, I’d just sit down, take
the weight off your feet for a while …’
The fishmonger, a burly man, sat down heavily on the ground. As he did so,
Maddy saw Perth relieve him deftly of the fat purse at his belt. She glared at
Perth in warning; the journeyman gave her a sunny smile.
‘Come on, you,’ Maddy hissed, dragging Jorgi away through the crowd.
Perth grinned and followed them, still carrying his tray of rocks. ‘This is
going to be fun,’ he said.
Jorgi gave a fishy belch.
Maddy closed her eyes in despair.
They moved on into the Universal City.
MEANWHILE, BACK IN Malbry, the gods and their allies in Chaos were engaged in
strenuous argument. Maddy’s disappearance, as well as that of the World
Serpent, had already caused enough concern; but the signatures that she had left
– the spent cantrips, her struggle with Loki, the unmistakable colour-trail of her
escape into Dream – had triggered further division between Æsir and Vanir.
One faction (mostly Thor) was sure that she had been abducted, although the
tracks were confusing. On the one hand, the presence of Loki’s trail pointed to
some kind of ambush. On the other, it was clear that she had defeated Loki –
which seemed to suggest that whatever the reason, Maddy had entered Dream
willingly. How she had entered it, whether or not Loki was still with her, and
whether the presence of the World Serpent could positively identify either of
them as the Rider whose name was Treachery, remained a matter for debate.
Heimdall’s side was strongly in favour of finding Loki and making him talk.
But to the Æsir, the rift in Dream – now growing at a visible rate – remained the
more immediate concern.
‘It has to be sealed,’ argued Frey, whose runesign, Madr, marked him as a
friend of the Folk. ‘If we don’t, then the valley Folk won’t stand a chance.’
Bright-Haired Sif gave a grunt of contempt. ‘Seal it? You and whose tribe?’
she said. In fact, Thor had spent most of the afternoon working around the rift in
Dream, tapping the ground and blasting it with runes, and finally using Mjølnir,
his mighty hammer, to pound at the site of the Horse’s escape – the only visible
result being the line of enormous hammer-shaped holes that now surrounded Red
Horse Hill.
Since then, Jolly had refused to leave his dwarf Aspect, complaining of a
headache, and Sif had had a great deal to say on the subject of Thor’s
incompetence.
The Thunderer looked resentful. ‘This isn’t like fixing a leak, dear,’ he said,
with the scowl that had once levelled giants. ‘We’re talking about a fundamental
breakdown between the fabric of Worlds, not a faulty U-bend.’
Sif gave a very pig-like snort.
‘More cake, dear?’ suggested Thor.
By this time the Huntress had joined the gods in the front room of the
Parsonage, and, with her furs and her runewhip, was looking very out of place
on Ethel’s blue silk ottoman. Odin’s ravens – in human form – perched silently
at her side.
‘I know we’ve had our differences,’ Skadi said, looking at Njörd. ‘But this
rift in Dream threatens us all. It has to be closed. Whatever it takes.’
‘You think we haven’t tried?’ said Thor.
‘I know you’ve tried,’ said Skadi. ‘But the rift is growing all the time. It’s
like something’s melting a hole in the ice, and we’re all about to take a dive.’
The image, though crude, was potent enough. The gods exchanged fearful
glances. Only Jolly seemed unconcerned; apparently oblivious to the imminent
arrival of the second Ragnarók, he was picking the icing from a pile of cupcakes
that Ethel had made for afternoon tea.
It wasn’t that she’d wanted tea. But in her days as a parson’s wife, Ethel had
come to rely on certain routines, which was why the table was set as usual, with
its array of little sandwiches, scones and cakes. Skól gave the cupcakes a hopeful
sniff, but Jolly wasn’t about to share. He bared his teeth at the demon wolf and
gave a long, low growl. For a moment Skól was tempted to take up the
challenge, but, seeing Jolly’s ferocious expression, wisely decided against it.
Besides – a wolf in a fight with a hammer? Dude, that was just too freaky.
‘I don’t understand,’ said Heimdall at last. ‘At first the prophecy seemed
clear. Asgard rebuilt by the power of Dream. But so far, this rift in Dream has
brought us nothing but Chaos.’
He looked out of the Parsonage window, where the rift was clearly visible in
the late-afternoon sun – a column of cloud that towered above what was left of
Red Horse Hill. He reckoned its diameter at about a quarter of a mile – not large,
but growing steadily, expanding, consuming bushes, rocks, grass, trees at a rate
of about three feet an hour. All the gods could hear it now – a sound like the
chirr of crickets; a sound into which all other sounds were vanquished by a wall
of noise.
Bragi fingered his guitar. Still out of tune after the battle, it gave a mournful
jangling sound.
‘Oh, please,’ said Freyja. ‘If I hear another one of Bragi’s dirges, I’m going
to kill myself.’
Bragi looked hurt. ‘It’s the strings,’ he said. ‘You know what it’s like out of
Aspect. If only we could get Asgard back …’
Freyja sniffed. ‘Yes, I know. In Asgard, everything’s peachy. In Asgard, Sif
gets her figure back, Tyr gets to play with the big boys, Thor gets to hammer
whoever he wants, I get a change of clothes and a bath, and you get to play your
lute again without making everyone’s ears bleed.’ She flicked back a strand of
her red-gold hair. ‘The only problem being, of course, that Asgard fell an age
ago, taking our Aspects with it, and the only chance of getting it back is to
decipher some lame prophecy that doesn’t even rhyme.’
Fenny gave a smirk. ‘Noobs. You don’t have a clue, do you, babe?’
‘Who are you calling babe?’ said Freyja, her Carrion Aspect beginning to
show.
Heimdall had to intervene before it got any uglier. ‘The key to the gate is a
child of hate, a child of both and of neither. Do you think that line could refer to
Maddy? After all, she is the child of Thor and the demon Jarnsaxa. Though why
she should be a child of hate—’
‘Loki,’ said Frey with conviction. ‘He’s the child of demons, and everybody
hates him. Plus, he was the one who opened the gate to Netherworld in the first
place. Who else could it possibly be?’
‘I’m not sure I like the term demons,’ said Angie, interrupting. ‘Some people
might find it offensive.’
‘So what would you rather?’ Heimdall said.
‘Persons of Chaotic origin?’
‘Gods!’ exploded Heimdall. ‘Maddy’s lost, Loki’s escaped, the End of the
bloody Worlds is at hand, and you’re lecturing me about political correctness?’
But Ethel had suddenly gone very still. ‘Now what?’ he said.
‘Maddy isn’t lost,’ she said. ‘How could I have missed it? It’s obvious.’
‘What is?’ Heimdall said.
‘I see a mighty Ash that stands beside a mighty Oak tree. We all thought the
Ash was Yggdrasil, but—’
‘Maddy’s sign is the Ash,’ said Frey. ‘You mean, Maddy’s involved in this?
If that’s true, then who’s the Oak? And what about Treachery, Carnage and
Lunacy?’
‘The Three Horses of the Last Days.’ Ethel dropped her knitting (a hat) and,
for the first time, looked agitated. ‘The Horse of Fire is Sleipnir, of course. The
Horse of the Sea is Jormungand. And the Horse of Air is probably already on its
way. And if Maddy is the key to it all, then World’s End is where she’ll be
heading. That’s where Asgard fell, after all. And that’s where we should be right
now.’
‘Why? What’s the rush?’ said Sugar-and-Sack.
Ethel gave him a quelling look. ‘In just twelve days, at End of Worlds; a gift
within the sepulchre. You all remember the prophecy I made the day before
yesterday. That means that in nine days’ time, in World’s End, where Asgard fell
at the end of the war, the final conflict will occur.’
There was silence as the gods took this in.
‘What about the Folk?’ said Frey. ‘Leave now, and they’re done for.’
‘Leave too late, and we are done for!’
Frey sighed. ‘Ethel’s right,’ he said.
‘What about Loki?’ Angie said, with a curious look at Ethel. ‘Being the
Trickster, and all that – don’t you think we might need him?’
‘Need him?’ said Thor. ‘I’ll break his neck.’
‘Not if I do it first,’ said Frey.
‘Leave him alone,’ said Skadi. ‘We don’t have time to hunt him now. When
we’re finished in World’s End, we can deal with him at leisure.’ She looked
around at the other gods. ‘Agreed?’
Thor shrugged. ‘World’s End it is.’
‘Agreed,’ said Ethel with a smile.
And that was how, by sunset, anyone watching the Hindarfell road (through the
circle of finger and thumb) might have seen the ill-assorted band – some on
horseback, some trotting on foot, some running, some soaring overhead –
approaching the narrow cleft in the rocks and passing out of the valley.
Such an observer, armed with the truesight, might have seen their signatures,
ominous as the edge of a storm, spanning the dusk like a rainbow as they passed
into the shadow of the mountains.
Such an observer, had they but seen her on her porch by the Malbry road,
might have sighed and shaken her head, and muttered, Kids, what will they do
next? before hitching her skirts above her knees and kicking her heels in a
gleeful dance – not a pretty sight, to be sure, with her swollen old legs in their
long stripy socks, but Crazy Nan Fey could dance a jig as merry as the next man
when the occasion demanded it, and she had been waiting a long time for just
this opportunity. The Auld Man had promised her a glammy of her very own,
and a place at his side in Faërie, if only she did what he told her to do when next
she came to him in Dream.
Crazy Nan Fey believed in dreams. She always had, even when they had
tried to say that dreams would steal away her soul. They never had – maybe
Nan’s soul was too old and dry for dream-demons to care about – but over the
past three years it seemed that every time she closed her eyes she saw more
when she opened them. Goblins and little folk; signatures and glammies. And
now she had seen the Auld Man in Dream – aye, and his black birdies too – and
they had taught her a skipping song like those she’d danced to as a child:
Which, to Nan Fey’s mind, at least, meant that everything must come
around-round, like the Serpent with its tail in its mouth circling the Nine Worlds,
and she had smiled and nodded, because she knew the Good Book, including the
Book of Apocalypse, in which the end of one World is announced, and the
beginning of another.
To Nan, the signs were very clear. The End of the World was coming. The
first sign had been the emergence of the new runes of the Younger Age; then the
release of the old gods from the Black Fortress of Netherworld. Then had come
the Nameless, and his defeat at the cost of the General’s life. Then had come the
rift from Dream, spilling into the Middle World. Then the return of Odin’s
Horse, and the escape of the World Serpent.
After that, as everyone knew, there was nobbut one step to Last Days. As the
gods converged on World’s End, it was told that Three Riders would come into
the Worlds, three Riders on three Horses – red for the fires of World Below,
black for the depths of the One Sea, and white for the clouds of the Firmament –
and they would conquer the Nine Worlds, and Asgard would belong to them:
And now Nan Fey laughed aloud. For years folk had mocked her visions,
calling her crazy and lunatic and saying she had her head in the clouds. Well,
very soon she would show them all. They would see who was crazy. Nan Fey
would ride the Horse of Air to the Bridge across the Firmament, and the mark
with which Nan had been born – a broken, reversed form of the rune Fé – would
become a glam of the New Script, complete and full of power.
Meanwhile, so the Auld Man said, all Nan had to do was dream. And so she
went back into her cottage and sat down on her narrow bed – the same box cot
she had used as a girl, when she was Nancy Wickerman, the basket-maker’s
daughter – and folded her hands like faded petals across the bosom of her dress,
and waited for Dream to take her into the clouds and over the moon and across
the Sea to Asgard.
There was an old lady so mad, they say,
That she flew through the air in a basket.
She flew to the Land of Roast Beef
With brandy in a flaskit.
Into the clouds and over the Moon and into
the Land of the Seer-oh
Where the Faëries play all the livelong day
and the oceans are made of beer-oh!
Ancient Ridings nursery rhyme
Loki impatiently. ‘If I hear another nursery rhyme, or folk song, or
‘OH, PLEASE,’ SAID
Faërie story, or amusing anecdote from the everyday lives of the newly reborn, I
swear I’m going to kill myself.’
Sigyn put down her lute and shrugged. ‘Well, I think you’re very ungrateful,’
she said. ‘Anyone would think you didn’t want me here.’
Loki looked down at his left wrist, where Eh, in the form of a fine gold
chain, sparkled and glimmered harmlessly. At first he’d tried to break it, but in
vain; his wrist was scored with angry marks. Changing to bird form hadn’t
helped; even in his Fiery Aspect the Wedlock rune still held him fast, and hours
later he’d had to accept the fact that escape was impossible.
Worse still was the fact that Sigyn was happy. Nothing Loki could say or do
seemed to have any lasting effect on her. She remained implacably cheerful in
the face of his initial rage, then his persistent rudeness and finally his silent
resentment, plying him with food and drink and trying to keep him entertained
with stories and songs of her homeland.
Sigyn had rather a pretty voice, and, as well as the lute, could play both the
harp and the mandolin. With glamours she had managed to transform the cave
into an airy boudoir, with silken drapes and vases of flowers and dishes of
sweetmeats on every surface, but so far her efforts had borne no fruit, and Loki
seemed as bored and uncooperative as ever.
‘I don’t want you here,’ he told her now. ‘Go away and leave me alone.’
Sigyn smiled uncertainly. ‘Now you know that isn’t true. It’s just that you’re
tired and cranky. Let me fix you something to eat, and then I’ll sing you a lullaby
—’
‘I don’t want a lullaby,’ he snapped. ‘And I – am – not – getting – cranky!’
Sigyn shrugged and turned away. ‘I don’t see why you have to be so mean,’
she said, with a tremor in her voice. ‘I was going to make you a feather bed, with
down pillows and satin sheets. I was going to bring you hot spiced wine, and
rose-petal candies, and honey cake. I would have sung you my sweetest songs,
even slept on the floor if you’d wanted me to …’ Now her eyes were swimming
with tears and her mouth had thinned to a stubborn line. ‘And for all the
affection you show in return, I might as well be a poisonous snake. Well, if that’s
the way you want it …’
She forked a little sign with her hand, and suddenly the Wedlock became a
set of manacles linked to a chain so heavy that Loki fell to his knees. At the
same moment, the shimmering outline of something long and sinuous appeared
in the air above him, like something behind a silk screen. A distant tearing sound
accompanied it.
Loki had heard that sound before, at the gates of Netherworld, and once
again on Red Horse Hill. The fabric of Worlds seemed to stretch and yawn, and
Loki suddenly realized that the powers of Eh, the Wedlock, extended to far more
than glamours.
‘Er … hang on a minute,’ said Loki, pinned to the ground by the weight of
the chain.
Sigyn pretended not to hear. She forked another sign with her hand, and now
Loki saw something like a snake’s head pressed against the troubled air like a
child’s hand pressing against a balloon. It gleamed with a sickly soap-bubble
sheen, acquiring substance as he watched.
‘Sigyn, sweetheart …’
She looked at him. ‘Well?’
‘You’ve got this all wrong,’ Loki said. ‘Of course I appreciate all you’ve
done. And – yeah, maybe …’ He gritted his teeth. ‘Maybe I was kinda cranky.’
Sigyn’s expression softened again. The manacles dropped from Loki’s
wrists, once more becoming a fine gold chain. The bubble (with the snake inside,
like a worm in a dead man’s eye) winked out of existence.
Loki took a deep breath. ‘Where did you learn to do that?’ he said.
‘Do what?’ said Sigyn.
‘You know – the – ah …’
Sigyn ignored him. ‘Rose-petal candy?’ She held out the dish. It was made of
pink porcelain, and had popped into existence just as quickly and effortlessly as
the snake had popped out of it.
‘Ah – yes. That would be nice.’ Loki took a sugared rose and put it
cautiously into his mouth, trying not to think of the fact that Sigyn, in her present
mood, could probably turn it into a cockroach, or a stone, or a razor-blade …
‘Delicious,’ he said, forcing a smile.
‘I know they’re your favourites,’ Sigyn said. ‘And now …’ she went on, and
began to sing:
Sleipnir never really slept, but then it would have been true to say that he was
never completely awake. A creature with one foot permanently balanced in each
of eight Worlds, a part of him was always in Dream, and he moved along the
path of Worlds with the ease of a ray of sunlight. Death, Dream, the Worlds
Above – all were the same to the Horse of Fire, and he led the travellers speedily
along the shores of the river, where black birds flew and the thing they sought –
which happened also to be his quarry – shone out among the skerries of Dream,
a lone blue light in the wilderness.
Adam was not asleep, of course. Instead he stood guard in the stables, watching
in astonishment as Maggie clambered onto the Horse, then vanished with
Sleipnir into mid-air, leaving nothing but the empty stall and the sunny scent of
hay in their wake. Once more the Whisperer’s absence left him feeling strangely
light, and for a moment he harboured a dangerous thought – What if they never
come back at all? – and felt a little stab of hope. Then he dismissed the thought
as absurd, and settled down in the hay to wait.
***
Meanwhile Maggie was riding across a vast, deserted, level plain, the terrain
obscured by ground-mist, the sky a tarnished steel lid. On the horizon, a river ran
– or perhaps a part of the One Sea. Certainly Maggie had never seen any river as
broad as this, not even in her stolen books.
Otherwise she was conscious of a feeling of disappointment. This was a far
cry from the excitement of Red Horse Hill. Even Sleipnir looked normal here – a
placid old strawberry roan plodding through the wilderness.
‘What is this place?’ she said aloud.
We’re very close to the source of Dream. The Voice in her mind sounded
almost smug. Can you see the river? The islands? That means we’re getting
close.
Maggie looked across the plain. The river in the distance was only faintly
discernible; a movement against that layer of mist. Occasional marsh-lights
flared at their feet, but otherwise there was nothing to be seen, and no sound at
all but the muted baffle of Sleipnir’s hooves against the ground, and the sound of
her own heart, like the beat of a moth’s wing in an empty cathedral.
‘Close? But we’ve been here hours,’ she said.
Time works differently in Dream. Believe Me, we are getting close.
Well, Maggie thought, the river at least looked no nearer than it had when
they had entered this world. And she couldn’t see any islands – just a formless
clutter of clouds against the far horizon. Except that if she narrowed her eyes,
she could see strange shapes in that jumble of clouds; shapes that sometimes
resolved themselves into faces of people she’d once known. Her father. Her
mother. Her brothers. Her childhood friend, Molly Carr, who had died when she
was only eight. At that, Maggie gave a start of surprise – she hadn’t thought of
Molly for years – and made as if to dismount.
No! exclaimed the Voice in her mind. You don’t set foot on the ground here.
Not even for a moment!
‘Why?’ said Maggie. ‘The Horse doesn’t seem to be having any trouble.’
Must you question everything? The Voice sounded almost plaintive. Can’t
you just do as you’re told for once? Find Me the Old Man and leave?
‘Well, I don’t see how you can find anything in this mist,’ Maggie said. ‘I
thought that if I walked a bit – I mean, how do you know the Old Man’s here? It
might be right at our feet, for all you know.’
I don’t have to know, snapped the Voice. And you don’t have to think, thank
gods. All we have to do is ride. Can you do that, Maggie?
Maggie gave a sullen sniff. ‘All right. There’s no need to be rude,’ she said.
‘I just wanted to—’
Yes, I know, said the Voice in her mind. You just wanted to walk a while.
Shall I show you what happens then? Will that make you happy?
She shrugged.
There’s a knife in your pocket. Take it out.
‘How did you—?’
I just know, said the Voice. Now take it out of your pocket, girl. Hold it out at
arm’s length. Then drop it at the Horse’s feet. Well, what are you waiting for?
‘Will I be able to find it again?’ Maggie said, still holding out the pocket-
knife.
I very much doubt it, said the Voice dryly. But perhaps then your
interminable curiosity will be satisfied.
Maggie let the knife fall. For a moment she thought it had vanished in mid-
air; and then she was struck by a realization so huge that she almost fell off
Sleipnir’s back. She gave a cry, looked upwards, and tightened her hands on
Sleipnir’s mane until the knuckles showed bone-white. Above her, the sliver of
metal that had been her pocket-knife streaked up into the iron-grey sky …
Except that it wasn’t the sky at all, as Maggie now suddenly understood.
They were travelling upside-down. The mist at their feet was cloud, she saw; the
marsh-lights were far-off lightning; while the grey lid above them was the
ground, some great, incomprehensible distance away.
I told you things were different here, said the Voice with a trace of smugness.
And especially here, in the heart of Dream, travel is rarely straightforward.
‘Is that why we needed the Horse?’ said Maggie, trying not to be sick. How
far above their heads was the ground? Half a mile? Ten miles? ‘And how come
he doesn’t fall?’
Sleipnir isn’t just a horse. He’s a creature of ephemera, given the outward
shape of a horse. In Dream, he could look like anything. Like this …
And, just for a moment, Maggie found herself at the helm of a long, tall ship
with bright red sails, all fluttering with pennants and flags along the rigging.
Or this …
Now Sleipnir became an oliphant, his bridle studded with rubies, bearing a
tower on his back and daubed all over with red clay.
Or maybe this …
The Horse’s final transformation was something Maggie had never seen. It
felt like some kind of a carriage, upholstered in red velvet, which moved so
much faster than any vehicle she had ever encountered; blurring through worlds
at the speed of Dream and making a sound like thunder—
Maggie clenched her fists. ‘Stop that!’
Instantly the Horse was back, as placid and plodding as ever.
‘How do you do that?’ Maggie said.
I don’t, said the Voice. I simply redirected your glam – which, by the way, is
impressive. As I’m sure you’re aware, Maggie, I don’t have a physical presence
yet. But that will soon change. As soon as we have the Old Man.
‘So,’ said Maggie. ‘This Old Man – where exactly is it meant to be?’
In Dream, of course, replied the Voice.
‘Yes, but—’
Dream is a place in perpetual flux, made up of countless islands. Some are
very small, while others may contain whole worlds. Some last for only fragments
of time, others may last longer. I have reason to believe that the object we seek
has attached itself to one of these dreamlets.
‘So – you don’t actually know which one.’
If I knew that, why would I need you, or the Horse? The smugness had gone,
to be replaced once again by the Voice’s habitual petulance. A thing can only be
pulled out of Dream as a physical entity. Even a chunk of rock might do, if— It
stopped abruptly. What was that?
It looked like a streak of bright light shooting between the Horse’s hooves.
For the first time in their strange journey, Sleipnir showed signs of excitement.
He pricked up his ears and shook his mane, and blew sparks out of his nostrils.
The sparks were red and orange, and circled around them like fireflies.
‘Is that it?’ Maggie said.
No, it’s not. The Voice was curt. But we may not be the only ones looking for
the Old Man.
Maggie squinted into the cloud, trying not to think of the infinite space
beneath it. She found that it was far more comfortable to recall the illusion of a
mist-covered plain, beneath which occasional marsh-lights flared. The light she
had seen was nothing like these: for a start, it was much brighter; and secondly it
seemed to move below them with a definite intent. It was also getting closer.
Maggie saw it shining out, brighter than the heart of a forge.
‘Is it – one of the Firefolk? Is it my sister?’ Maggie said.
I hope not, said the Voice dryly. After what happened on Red Horse Hill, I’m
not exactly confident.
‘That’s not fair!’ Maggie said. ‘I didn’t know she was one of them.’
The Whisperer gave a mental shrug. The fact is, you’re unreliable. Your
loyalties are divided. I can see it in your mind. You think you can win her over.
Maggie looked defiant. ‘Well, maybe I can win her over,’ she said. ‘If only I
could talk to her—’
Listen, Maggie, said the Voice, sounding very cold now. I know you don’t
trust Me. I understand. I hope the time may come when you do. But you care
about Adam, don’t you?
‘Yes.’
Then for Adam’s sake, do as I say. I will tell you what to do. And when we
have the Old Man, I will let the boy go.
Maggie nodded. ‘All right.’
Beneath them, the light was dazzling now; a shield of brilliance under the
mist. It was hard to see details in the cloud, but for a moment Maggie thought
she could see the shape of something behind the brilliance. She narrowed her
eyes, then, remembering that this was Dream and that here her inner vision was
strongest, made a circle between her left forefinger and thumb and squinted
through that at the moving light.
The result was dramatic. She suddenly saw, in the burning heart of that
radiance, the image of an old woman – eighty, ninety, a hundred years old – her
white hair flying out behind her, her legs tucked under her body, her hands
clenched tightly onto the side of …
Was that really a washing basket?
For a moment Maggie could only stare. It certainly looked like a washing
basket; its spectral form danced in the air, and beneath it, bearing it along, was
something almost like a horse …
Of course, it bore no resemblance to horses Maggie had already seen. It did
remind her of Sleipnir, though – Sleipnir in the Aspect he had assumed on Red
Horse Hill. But whereas Sleipnir was fiery in Aspect, this creature – if it was
alive at all – was very clearly a spirit of the air. It seemed to be made up of
filaments of light, strung like luminous spiderweb across the darkness. Its tail
stretched out interminably; its mane was a burning nebula. And, astride it, the
old woman in her washing basket grinned and cackled and waved at her.
Gods! She sees me, Maggie thought.
But the Whisperer was showing signs of agitation.
Lose them! ordered the Voice in her mind. Don’t let them follow us any
further.
‘Is she one of the Firefolk?’
No, it’s worse than that, said the Voice. Wake the Red Horse of Tribulation,
and soon the others will wake up too. If you’d done your job on Red Horse Hill
— Maggie heard it snap off the thought like someone cutting the head off a rose.
Never mind that now, it said. But we need to outrun it. It means to follow
Sleipnir.
As if he had heard his name spoken aloud, Sleipnir gave a nervous whinny.
Maggie noticed that he was beginning to revert to his fiery Aspect – sparks shot
from his mane and tail; his legs began to lengthen; the net of glam that bridled
him began to shine a brilliant blue – and Maggie knew that in a few moments the
strawberry roan would once more become the creature she’d birthed from the
Horse’s Eye.
Hang on! warned the Whisperer. We may have to travel on rough terrain—
But before it had even finished the sentence, the fabric of Dream was already
changing around them. Gone were the illusions of earth and sky; gone was the
distant river, the clouds at the horizon. Now there was no horizon at all, but a
cluster of lights in the distance towards which Sleipnir began to accelerate at
some incomprehensible speed.
Keep firm hold of the reins!
But Maggie had no intention of letting go. Her only previous ride through
Dream had been tame in comparison with this, and she did not have Maddy’s
experience of travelling through Netherworld. This was altogether different, and
if it had not been for Adam, still waiting for her in the Universal City, she would
have banished the Whisperer from her mind and escaped the horrors through
which she now fled …
Islands, the Voice had called them.
To Maggie, they were nothing like any island she had ever heard of. But they
did float; like Fair Day balloons they drifted around the travellers, moving in
every direction, some circling, some rising, some clothed in glam, some almost
dark. Some seemed to be travelling upside-down – whole cities floating in mid-
air with their spires scraping the river bed; though for all Maggie knew, she was
the one who had lost her sense of perspective.
There were places that looked almost like home, with its narrow streets and
its harbour. There were valleys and peaks, forests and glades. There were stolen
moments; lost loves; secret kisses; guilty thoughts. There were diamonds buried
a million miles deep, and hidden fears and long-lost friends. There was standing
in the marketplace, clothed in nothing but your skin, while a crowd of village
Elders watched in disapproval. There were creatures shaped like musical
instruments; hens with heads like trumpets and tuba-bodied pot-bellied pigs.
There was swimming in the One Sea by night, watching the shooting stars
overhead. There was running barefoot down an endless corridor, with terrible
creatures in pursuit. There was the memory of birth and the certainty of death.
There was nothing; there was everything – and through it all rode Maggie Rede
and the Horse of Fire, while Crazy Nan and the Horse of Air followed in their
turbulent wake.
And then, just as suddenly, they stopped, and Maggie found herself floating
in a small red rowing boat down a swift-moving river. There were no oars on the
rowing boat, and yet it moved freely enough, rocking violently to and fro.
Maggie, mindful of Sleipnir’s earlier transformations, kept a firm hand on the
rudder and tried to avoid the debris that seemed to rise and fall in the murky
water. She soon became aware that the Horse of Air had joined her – once more
becoming the washbasket in which Crazy Nan had begun her journey – but,
urged to greater speed by the Voice inside her mind, she concentrated all her
efforts on following the current towards a third vessel, seemingly adrift, just
visible through the thick mist coming off the water. The third vessel was
unoccupied, but there was something there all the same; something that Maggie
could almost make out in the runeshape made by finger and thumb …
‘Is that the Old Man?’ she said.
Whatever it was, she thought, it was bright. Its brightness baffled her
truesight. It was like looking at something against the sun; and she found that
even through Bjarkán she could not determine the size of the thing, or whether it
was alive.
Don’t waste time! said the Whisperer. Just reach for it as you go past!
‘Reach for it? With what?’ Maggie said. ‘I don’t even have a piece of rope.’
But already the time for discussion was past. The river Dream, here at its
source, flows with incredible swiftness, and Maggie’s little rowing boat was
being carried along at such a speed that within the four or five seconds of their
conversation they had almost reached their target. Crazy Nan was not far behind
– perhaps a couple of boat lengths – and Maggie could hear her laughing and
singing to herself above the roar of the river.
‘Let it go!’ cackled Crazy Nan. ‘You can’t outrun Epona!’
From which Maggie quite wrongly concluded that Epona was this mad old
demon-woman’s name, and wasted unnecessary seconds trying to remember if
she’d heard it before, or indeed why the bizarre spectacle of an old woman
riding in a washing basket should awaken in her memory the sound of her dead
mother singing, and a sudden craving for roast beef—
Stop her! the Whisperer almost moaned. Let her get in front of you, and all
My work will be in vain …
Maggie kept her hand on the boat while trying to see over her shoulder. The
crazy old woman was six feet away. For a moment Maggie’s granite-gold eyes
met Nan’s faded blue ones, and she raised her hand, where the rune Ác flared,
ready to strike—
‘Maddy Smith!’ cackled Nan. ‘Fancy seeing you here! We’re going to the
land, girlie!’ she cried, shaking her head in glee. ‘The Land of Roast Beef, where
the Faëries play, and no one ever goes hungry!’
Perhaps it was hearing that name, Maggie thought, when she later recalled
what had happened. Or perhaps it was the sudden idea that the old woman had
pulled a thought from her mind. Either way, it spoiled her aim, and Ác flew
harmlessly past Nan’s head and vanished into the slipstream.
At the same time, a wave propelled Nan’s washing basket a fraction ahead of
Maggie. Nan’s skinny arm shot out and grabbed something out of the third boat,
and then the Horse of Air was off, careening through the waters of Dream and
right up into the rapturous air, with Nan’s voice shrieking with glee in its wake
and the Whisperer’s rage, immense and all-consuming, crushing Maggie like a
vice and roaring in her head:
NO! NO! IT WAS IN OUR HANDS!
And then the impossible happened. Crazy Nan dropped her prize. Perhaps it
was the excitement, or the fatigue of that ride to the gates of Hel, or the fact that
her old arms were not as strong as they used to be. In any case, she dropped it,
and for a moment the object that both of them sought fell like a star across the
face of Dream.
Maggie, who had gone cold at the thought of what her failure might mean for
Adam, found herself acting on instinct she never even knew she had. With
uncanny speed she flung out Sleipnir’s reins like a fishing line and dragged at
the falling object. For a second she thought it hadn’t caught … and then it was
somehow in her hands – a thing that might have been a rock, but which gleamed
a curious kingfisher-blue.
And then, in a moment, she was back. Dream closed like a curtain behind
her. She almost fell as the Red Horse gave an eager lurch towards the hay net
above his stall. The ride must have given him quite an appetite, thought Maggie,
clinging to the object she had brought out of Dream; then she slid off the Horse’s
back and into Adam’s waiting arms.
‘Adam, I got it! The Old Man!’
Let me see it, the Whisperer said, resuming its place in Adam’s mind. The
boy was not an ideal host – it would have been far better to possess the girl, with
her marvellous, untrained, unbroken glam, but it already knew from experience
that Maggie was too strong to break. Unless she gave herself willingly, beggars
could not be choosers.
Take it! it commanded, and Adam obeyed, at the same time wondering what
was so wonderful about a piece of rock. It looked like the volcanic glass that,
long ago, he and his friends used to dig out of the sides of Red Horse Hill,
although this was by far the largest piece that Adam had ever seen. It was
heavier than he’d expected, and when he turned it in his hands, he thought he
could almost see features there, bluntly fashioned into the stone.
‘It doesn’t look much,’ Maggie said. ‘Are you sure this is it?’
Adam nodded. ‘Quite sure.’ He ran his hands across the glassy surface. It
was warm; much warmer than ordinary stone, as if it might almost be alive. And
now he even remembered it, although his acquaintance with the Whisperer’s
previous incarnation had lasted only minutes – most of them spent in abject
terror as gods and demons did battle in Hel …
Now he remembered the goblin, who had seized hold of the stone Head and
flung it into the river Dream – where the being who had once been Mimir the
Wise had tried and failed to possess Maddy Smith; and how at that moment a
Voice in his mind—
That’s right, interrupted the Whisperer. That’s why I needed you for so long.
A vehicle for My consciousness. Of course, you were only a temporary solution.
You had no further potential. Not even a broken runemark with which to enter
Asgard. I did what I could with what I had, but I knew that one day I would have
to move on.
‘You want to go back in there?’ Adam said.
Go back to my old cell? Oh no. I have something rather better in mind.
Besides, it’s already occupied.
Maggie was feeling restless. Unable to follow the conversation between
Adam and his passenger, she had turned her attention to the rock that she had
fought so hard to retrieve.
What was so special about it, then? Maggie formed the rune Bjarkán, and
peered at the object through its lens. What she saw was something that looked
rather like a big cabbage inside a shopping net; but the net was made of runelight
– dozens and dozens of woven strands – and the cabbage—
She gasped and banished the rune. ‘It’s alive!’ she exclaimed. ‘It looked at
me!’
The being that had once been Mimir the Wise felt a rare pang of amusement.
It used Adam’s voice to say: ‘Did it now? Shall I introduce you?’
Maggie stared at the stone Head. Now that she knew how to look, she could
see the features quite clearly: the outline of a lean jaw; a jutting nose; a clever
mouth now bracketed with double lines of anguish; and across one empty eye-
socket a ruinmark that she recognized as a broken form of Raedo, the
Journeyman, in reverse.
In its stall, the Horse of Fire made a shrill, uneasy sound.
‘For pity’s sake, who’s in there?’
Adam looked at her and smiled. ‘Maggie, meet the General. Otherwise
known as the Old Man.’
MAGGIE STARED AT the chunk of rock. So this was the Old Man she’d heard so much
about; the thing that Adam valued so much. Looking at it closer now through the
circle of finger and thumb, she could clearly see its features, dimly illuminated
inside the volcanic glass, and if she concentrated very hard, she thought she
could even hear its voice …
They had moved it to the penthouse where Adam and Maggie had their
rooms. Now, with the curtains prudently drawn, the two young people examined
their prize.
‘Is it alive?’ Maggie said.
The Whisperer laughed with Adam’s voice. ‘Alive, and at My mercy. Yes.’
‘What is it? Who is it?’
‘Never mind. What matters is its value to us. With your power and My
knowledge, there’s nothing that we cannot achieve.’
Once more Maggie stared at the rock. The being that seemed to be trapped
inside mouthed frantic, silent phrases. Inside the cradle of runes, it shone with a
faint luminescence, and a brighter glow lay at its heart, like a piece from a fallen
star.
‘A fallen star?’ said the Whisperer. ‘Yes, I suppose you could call it that.
Fallen from the Firmament into the depths of the Underworld; rescued from the
realm of Dream; and now at last, at long last, My prisoner, bound by his own
glamours into the Aspect in which I was trapped for so long …’ Once more
Adam gave the Whisperer’s laugh. ‘What does it feel like, General, to be as
helpless as I was?’
‘You mean it’s one of the Firefolk?’ Maggie said in disbelief. ‘Is that a
demon trapped in there?’
‘A demon, or a god. Who cares? There’s hardly any difference. Make it talk,’
it told her. ‘You can do it. You have the glam. You can make it prophesy. You can
make it give to you the runes of the Younger Script – the ones that will rebuild
Asgard and make us lords of the Nine Worlds.’
‘I can?’ said Maggie doubtfully. She put her hands on the piece of rock. The
light at its heart shone fretfully. She followed the contours of its face, tracing its
features in the stone. ‘How do I make it do anything? It’s a rock, for gods’ sakes
…’
With an effort, the Whisperer tried to contain its impatience. ‘You have the
Good Book. Use it!’
Maggie gave Adam a doubtful look. That rasping note in his voice was not
his, she knew, but that of his passenger. She hated the fact that her friend could
be manipulated in this way, like a puppet in a sideshow; and she didn’t much
care for the offhand way in which the Magister spoke to her.
‘You promised you’d let Adam go,’ she said. ‘I’ve kept my part of the
bargain—’
‘Bargain?’ said the Whisperer. The rasping note was harsher than ever. ‘Must
we talk of bargains when the End of the Worlds is upon us? We have the Old Man
in our grasp, and you’re haggling over it like a loaf of bread in a village
bakery?’
Maggie opened her mouth to reply, but Adam interrupted.
‘It’s all right, Maggie,’ he said, now speaking in his own voice. ‘My master’s
manner can be abrupt. But if we want to save the Worlds, these new runes are all
we need.’
Maggie looked doubtful. ‘How many new runes?’
‘No one knows for sure,’ Adam said. ‘We know the Firefolk have at least
two.’ He glanced at the Old Man, now glowing even more brightly. ‘Maggie, this
is our chance,’ he said. ‘This thing’s a kind of oracle. It can tell us about the
Firefolk. Their plans. Their powers. Their numbers. With the runes, we can stop
them. We can win this war before it even starts.’
Maggie looked at the Good Book lying open at her side. A text, all in runes,
seemed to shine from the page where Raedo glowed a kingfisher-blue.
‘Is this the text?’
Adam nodded.
Maggie fingered the Journeyman rune. Even to her untrained hands, it felt
uncommonly powerful. She aimed it at the stone Head, making its cradle of
runes flare, and started to read from the Good Book:
‘I name thee Odin, son of Bór.’
And was that a tiny glint of response, deep inside the heart of the stone? Was
it just a reflection from the sunlight through the curtains? Or could it be a wink,
she wondered, from a single gleaming eye?
‘Be careful,’ said Adam. ‘It’s dangerous.’
Maggie nodded and went on: ‘I name thee Grim and Ganglari, Herian,
Hialmberi—’
The Head was glowing fiercely now, as if the being inside the rock knew that
it was under attack. Maggie’s own head began to ache, and she realized that this
was part of the thing’s defence; this demon, with its broken glam, was stronger
by far than the Whisperer. She was already halfway through the verse when a
voice spoke up inside her mind – a voice that was, for a demon, both
surprisingly cultured and vaguely amused. She faltered and stopped mid-
sentence.
Maggie Rede. At last, it said. Can I just say how proud I am?
‘What?’ said Maggie.
Don’t be modest. For a torturer’s first attempt, I think you’re doing very well.
Though you may have to work on your intonation.
‘Who said I was going to torture you?’
Given the company you’re in, it seemed a reasonable guess.
‘You don’t know the first thing about me,’ said Maggie, turning back to the
Book.
You’re wrong. I know all about you. I’ve known all about you all your life.
Did you think you were alone, under the old University? What did you think you
were doing down there? Didn’t it ever occur to you that every time you read from
those books you were calling out at the top of your voice to anyone who could
hear you?
Maggie looked back at the Good Book. ‘You’re trying to distract me,’ she
said.
Not at all, said the Old Man. By all means, feel free to continue. You’re very
powerful, by the way. You certainly scared the sunshine out of my brother Loki.
The snake was a clever detail, I thought. I wonder what you’ll dream up for me.
Maggie shot the Old Man a look and went back to the canticle. ‘I name thee
Bolverk,’ she went on. ‘Grimnir, Blindi, Har-Harbárd—’
Harbard, corrected the Old Man. The accent on the first syllable, please. And
try not to stutter. A sensitive person might mistake it for mockery.
‘I don’t need your help,’ said Maggie.
No? I rather thought you did.
‘Just let me read the canticle. Then you can help me all you want.’ She went
on with the ancient text, reading from the Good Book, and as she read, the runes
on the page lit up, one by one, with a hectic light.
‘I name thee Omi, Just-as-High.
I name you Sann and Sanngetal …’
The canticle was working. As she spoke, the net of runes flared, each rune
lighting up in turn. As it did so, Maggie felt the Old Man’s power recede and
fail; its broken glam no match for hers.
Maggie, please. It hurts.
She flinched. The disembodied thing could feel. Its anguish set her teeth on
edge, like walking over broken glass. She tried to steel herself to go on, but
suddenly her mouth was dry. The Old Man was right, she told herself. She really
was a torturer.
Maggie, you have to listen to me. The Firefolk are on their way. You can’t
stop them, whatever you do. Even if you kill me now—
Maggie clenched her teeth. ‘I name thee Vili, and Wotan, and Ve—’
Maggie! Please! Just listen to me! Is this the Order you dreamed about?
Maggie faltered, then stopped.
She thought of Adam, a prisoner of the being that called itself Magister. She
thought of her parents, dead of the plague, and of her brothers, dead of the Bliss.
She thought of the Universal City, overrun with cut-throats and thieves. And
then she thought of herself, dreaming of death and destruction, taking joy in the
prospect of seeing her enemies suffer and bleed …
The Old Man was right, Maggie thought. There was no Order in all this. For
three years her life had been nothing but Chaos, grief and loneliness. Could it be
that the Old Man might give her something different?
Adam was looking impatient. ‘What are you doing, Maggie?’ he hissed.
Good question, Maggie thought. The Old Man was at her mercy now. One
more couplet would break its will. But something inside her refused to go on.
She had touched the creature’s mind. She knew the anguish the Word provoked.
And to torture a thinking, rational being – even one of the Firefolk – was this
what she had come to? Was this the price of Order?
The Old Man’s struggles were weakening now. Its glam was almost
exhausted. To speak the last words of the canticle, to annihilate this ancient
being when it was already in her power, now seemed both needless and cruel.
Maggie closed the Good Book. The last two lines of the canticle – the final
cantrip that would have bound the Old Man to her will – remained unspoken.
The creature in the chunk of rock gave a kind of mental sigh.
Thank you, Maggie. I’m in your debt.
In Adam’s mind, the Whisperer gave a howl of frustration. Don’t stop! Don’t
stop! What is WRONG with her? Tell her to finish it – finish it NOW!
But Maggie’s attention was focused elsewhere. In her mind the Old Man’s
presence was unfolding like a flower. What she had failed to take by force was
offering itself willingly, page by page, like an open book – text, illuminations,
maps – spread out before her in glorious profusion.
‘What’s this?’ she said.
You wanted to know me. Here I am.
And now came a cascade of images, some strange, some troublingly familiar.
Stories of the Elder Age; faces and places and sigils and glams; battles and
banquets and fragments of dream; heroes and monsters and long-lost friends; old
betrayals, lost loves; and beneath all that, a sorrow so deep, such a world of grief
and loss that Maggie, no stranger to loss herself, could hardly bear to think of it.
The Old Man was old, she realized. Older than the Order; older even than the
Universal City. Odin, son of Bór, had seen the World Tree grow from a sapling;
had seen an empire rise and fall; had seen his children grow up and die; had
watched the dance of Order and Chaos as it moved across the centuries. He had
cheated Death; survived in Dream; had even escaped Damnation.
And all for what? He was alone. His people were scattered, aimless, at odds.
Two of his sons were dead; the third still wandered, weakened, among the Folk.
Of all his people, only his grandchildren, only the twins mattered now: Modi and
Magni, children of Thor, the Oak and the Ash that would rebuild the Worlds—
Maggie opened her eyes in shock. ‘No – I don’t believe it!’
The Old Man’s voice in her mind was dry. Believe it or not. You saw what
you saw.
‘You’re lying!’
I think we both know I’m not.
For a moment Maggie was too stunned to think. The landscape of the Old
Man’s mind went on unfolding around her, but she was unable to take it in;
dwarfed by that single, mountainous truth …
If she was Maddy’s sister, then …
The Old Man was her grandfather.
With a cantrip, she banished the link that bound the Old Man’s mind to hers.
Relief flooded through her, relief so strong that her knees gave way and she fell
to the ground. She began to shake.
‘What’s wrong?’ Adam said.
Maggie found that she could hardly speak. A mass of emotions warred in her
– emotions she could barely identify. Finally she seized on one that she could
really understand; one that she’d had experience of throughout her short and
troubled life.
Anger.
‘Why didn’t you tell me?’ she said, and her voice was enough to make Adam
flinch. The air crackled with fugitive glam, raising the fine hairs on his arms.
Deep down in his mind, his passenger whispered words of caution: Don’t
mess this up, boy.
But Adam needed no warning. He’d seen Maggie angry before, and knew
that she could be dangerous. ‘What did it tell you, Maggie?’ he said. ‘Did it
teach you the New Script?’
She shook her head. She knew that her rage was not against Adam himself,
but still she did not trust herself. She took a deep breath, felt dizzy and clung to
the bed-post for support.
‘That thing,’ she said. ‘The Old Man – did you know he was my
grandfather?’
Adam did know, and had dreaded the time when Maggie might find out the
truth. A lie would be disastrous – she would see it in his colours at once – and so
he simply nodded and said: ‘I did. Oh, Maggie. I’m sorry.’
Maggie felt her rage recede, leaving her very close to tears. ‘Why didn’t you
tell me?’ she said.
‘I wanted to protect you.’ Adam knelt beside her. ‘I thought you might never
have to find out …’ He put his arms around her. For a moment she stiffened;
then she put her head into the curve of his shoulder and sobbed.
‘Don’t cry, Maggie,’ Adam said. ‘You’re not the first to be taken in. My
master, your sister, even me—’
‘My sister?’
Adam kissed her hair. ‘She’s been a pawn in his game all along. He used her
to get to my master, then used her again to get to you. Now he wants to claim
you as well. That’s why we have to deal with him fast. And with the other
Firefolk.’
Maggie nodded. It all made sense. The Old Man had misdirected her;
pretended to cooperate, discovered her weakness, then dealt her this blow. Was
this how he had claimed Maddy Smith? By playing with her loyalties?
She turned her gaze towards Adam. ‘He told me they were on their way.’
‘Who?’ said Adam.
‘The Firefolk.’
For a moment Adam said nothing. In his mind, his passenger had suddenly
grown very still and very alert. He braced himself for the creature’s rage, but
when the Whisperer finally spoke, its voice was calm and silky.
The Firefolk are coming? it said. All right. Let them come.
You don’t seem very concerned, Adam said.
I’m not, replied the Whisperer. The road to World’s End isn’t easy, especially
not for the likes of them. Even if they manage somehow to settle their personal
differences, they’ll still have the Folk to deal with. Lawmen, posses, border
patrols – all those things will slow them down; test their resources; drain their
glam. And if we need to intervene – well, we have our dreamer.
‘Maggie,’ it said in Adam’s voice. ‘All this has exhausted you. For the
moment you should get some rest. Tomorrow we can try again.’
Maggie looked at him gratefully. ‘Next time I’ll do it right,’ she said. ‘I
promise I won’t let you down.’
And now, once more, the Whisperer spoke silently to Adam, occasionally
pausing in its instructions to check that the boy had understood. Adam listened
carefully, and if he was surprised at some of the things his master required, he
wisely avoided comment.
A boy from the Northlands, he told himself, should never have been caught
up in this battle for Worlds, and he had long since given up any desire for power.
The time was approaching when he would be free, the Voice in his head assured
him. All he needed to do was obey, and very soon Adam would be able to do
whatever he wanted – go home, if he chose; or stay in World’s End and collect
his final reward.
Just do exactly as I say, and I will give you everything that you have ever
wished for. All you ever dreamed …
No more dreams, Adam thought. If I had a wish, that’s what it would be.
Inside his head, the Whisperer laughed. Granted, it said. Now do as I say.
Adam Scattergood obeyed.
THAT NIGHT, INspite of her fatigue, Maggie hardly slept. The richness of their
surroundings, the softness of the four-post bed, the memory of the Old Man’s
voice like a dark caress in her mind – all conspired to keep her awake until at
last she could bear it no longer. She crept out of bed, leaving Adam asleep on the
sky-blue sofa, and went over to the window, where a moon for wolves to howl at
was rising over the city, gilding the rooftops and casting panels of light and
shade across the floor of the penthouse.
The Old Man was on a plinth by the bed, silent under a dust-sheet. Was it
sleeping? Was it dead? A part of Maggie hoped it was. But the greater part
wanted nothing more than the chance to question their prisoner; to ask him about
her family – and most of all, her sister – without alerting Adam, or the dark
presence inside him of which she was always conscious.
Maggie tiptoed to the plinth and gently pulled aside the sheet.
‘Are you there?’ she whispered.
Something flickered inside the rock. Maggie. You seem troubled, it said.
‘I need to understand something.’
The Old Man’s colours brightened again, almost like a little smile.
Let me guess. You’re troubled because I showed you where you came from.
You’re a child of the Æsir – our last encounter proved that. As if there could be
any doubt in view of that runemark you carry.
The smile was even more luminous now, casting patterns of colour and light
across the darkened bedroom.
Maggie frowned. ‘But how can that be? I was born here, in World’s End. My
parents were Susan and Donal Rede. Everybody knows that.’
Really? said the Old Man. Did you know it, Maggie? Or were you always
different? Always asking questions? Always wanting something more – a thing
you couldn’t even name? Always looking for a place you didn’t even know was
there?
Maggie’s eyes widened. ‘How could you know that?’
I was in Dream for a long time. I saw a lot of things there.
‘You saw my dreams?’ Maggie said.
Maggie, I’ve been watching you since the end of the Elder Age. I know how
alone you must have felt, but believe this: I never forgot you. Not for a moment.
All this time I’ve awaited my chance to bring you home to your people.
‘I don’t believe you!’
I think you do. Why else would you have come to me?
There was no answer to that, of course. Maggie knew that he was right. For
all her suspicion, for all her rage, there was something that drew her to the Old
Man; something even stronger than the thing that drew her to Adam. It was
wrong – disloyal, perhaps – but there was no denying it. The knowledge that she
had a family had altered the landscape of her mind. Now a range of mountains
stood where once there was nothing but wasteland. Her sister. Her father. Her
grandfather. All of them waiting to welcome her home …
‘You told me they were on their way,’ Maggie said.
I told you true.
‘What are they coming for?’
You, of course. The Old Man’s voice was tender now as it whispered and
coaxed in Maggie’s mind: Magni, child of the Thunderer, I name thee; Magni,
child of Thor; I name thee child of Jarnsaxa; born of Order and Misrule; I name
thee Ác, Thunder Oak; sister of Aesk, Lightning Ash; I name thee Builder,
Destroyer; War-bringer and Bow-breaker; Dreamer and Awakener and Mother
of the Latter Age …
And now, as she listened to the words, Maggie began to experience a curious
sensation. From feeling scratchy and restless, she began to feel almost sleepy.
Her heavy eyes began to close. Her mouth curved in a little smile. Dream, in all
its seduction, began to unfold its petals—
She snapped her eyes open. ‘Stop that!’
She saw what it was doing now. The Old Man was trying to charm her, to
take her off-balance, subdue her will, to ease her into the world of Dream, where
she might be susceptible to the same kind of possession that Adam’s Magister
had already tried – and failed – to inflict upon her.
Panic brought her to her feet.
It’s all right, said the Old Man. Just listen for a moment more—
But Maggie’s cry had woken Adam. ‘What are you doing?’ he said in alarm.
The voice in her head grew urgent. I wasn’t trying to hurt you, it said. You
must understand. I’ve made mistakes; I’ve done bad things. But I would never
hurt you. We are your family, Maggie. We love you. We want you. We need you—
‘I said stop!’
And with that Maggie flung the rune Ác with all her strength at the prisoner.
There came a howl of anguish from the creature inside the rock, and the net of
runes that enclosed it flared so brightly that its pattern was imprinted on her
retinas for several minutes afterwards.
Maggie shielded her eyes against the sudden blaze of runelight. Then, as
abruptly, the Head went dark.
‘What in the Worlds were you playing at?’ Adam was standing beside her.
‘I couldn’t sleep.’ Maggie’s heart was pounding like a hammer. ‘I got up to
talk to the Old Man, and then he tried to trick me …’
She looked at the darkened Head in dismay. ‘I haven’t killed him, have I?’
she said.
Adam shook his head. ‘No. But you have put him out of action. Tell me
exactly what happened,’ he said.
Faltering, Maggie tried to explain. About her curiosity; the urge she’d felt to
speak to the thing alone and without hindrance; then how it had drawn her in,
seduced her with words and canticles …
‘What did he tell you?’ Adam said.
Maggie hung her head.
‘Well? Did he mention your family?’ Adam’s voice was relentless. ‘Did he
say he needed you? Wanted you? Loved you, perhaps?’
Maggie nodded wordlessly.
‘Of course he did,’ Adam said. ‘I told you he was dangerous. I warned you,
Maggie, didn’t I? I said he’d try to seduce you.’
‘I know. I know that,’ Maggie said. ‘I just thought …’
‘You could reason with him?’ Adam said in a dry voice. ‘You think he really
cares for you? You think because of who you are he wouldn’t sacrifice you like a
shot if it happened to serve his purpose?’
And now Adam told her about Maddy Smith: about how Odin One-Eye had
befriended her when she was just seven years old, and groomed her into doing
his work, and sent her at great peril into World Below – without so much as a
warning – to find a glam of the Elder Days that the Æsir called the Whisperer …
‘That’s how much he cared for her,’ Adam finished triumphantly. ‘She was
seven years old. An innocent. He lured her away from her family. He corrupted
her. He taught her to kill. He made her into a murderer. So don’t you be getting
any rosy thoughts about how she might be redeemable. None of them are.
They’re the enemy. They never wanted you before, and the only reason they
want you now is because you’re the Rider of Carnage.’
Maggie sighed. ‘I see that now. I suppose you think I’m very naïve.’
‘No, Maggie. I understand better than you think.’
She looked at him. ‘You do?’
‘Of course. You think I’ve never been lonely? You think I’ve never wondered
what it’s like to have someone to love?’ He turned away, and from the corner of
his eye saw Maggie watching intently. ‘No one’s ever wanted me,’ he went on in
a quiet voice. ‘No parents, no people, no friends. Just my master, and now—’ He
stopped.
‘Now what?’
‘Nothing. Forget it. Go back to bed,’ Adam told her curtly. To an outsider, it
might have looked as if he were struggling to contain some long-repressed
emotion. In fact, he was trying not to laugh. ‘Why should you care what I feel?’
he said. ‘I’m nothing to you, after all.’
Maggie put her hand on his arm. ‘That’s not true. You’re my only friend—’
‘I don’t want to be your friend,’ he said, turning to her abruptly. ‘I’ve tried,
but I can’t. I love you—’
She looked at him, startled. ‘What did you say?’
‘I love you,’ he said, and touched Maggie’s face. Blue eyes looked into grey-
gold. Deep inside, he was grinning.
‘Adam, I—’
‘Shh,’ he said, and drew her gently towards him. The gesture felt so natural
that Maggie barely even gave it a thought. Her head sought the part of his
shoulder that seemed to fit her so perfectly, and she closed her eyes with a long
sigh. His hands dropped gently to her waist. He started to guide her towards the
bed.
For a moment he felt resistance. Maggie, he knew, had been raised to believe
in purity above all things. Over three days he had done a great deal to break
down those beliefs and to replace them with those of his passenger; but even so,
he knew that this was the ultimate test of her loyalty.
‘I’ve loved you since the day we met,’ he said in a dreamy, coaxing voice.
‘Ever since that day in the tunnels I’ve thought you were the bravest, the most
beautiful girl I’d ever seen in my whole life. And I’m not afraid of dying in the
battle with the Firefolk, but I’d never forgive myself if I went without at least
telling you how I feel.’
And then he kissed her on the mouth, and Maggie forgot the End of the
Worlds, the Old Man and the Whisperer; she forgot the Æsir, her sister and her
family; she even forgot the Good Book and all its rules on modesty. In fact, she
forgot everything but the touch of Adam’s hands, the faint and sleepy scent of
him, and the words of love he whispered to her, more potent than any runecharm
…
And as the two of them lay entwined on the giant four-post bed, Mimir the
Wise felt a tremor of joy as he finally saw his goal within reach; and the Old
Man of the Wilderlands, silent in his bed of rock, kept his counsel and slept, and
dreamed, like all slaves, of being master.
MEANWHILE NAN ANDthe Horse of Air were skimming over Hel’s domain. It wasn’t
the first time Nan had seen Hel – Crazy Nan was used to the worlds around
Dream, and had spent much of her life there. Since childhood, waking or
sleeping, she had always felt more comfortable in Dream than anywhere else,
which was why folk had always called her daft, and had avoided her company.
Some even believed (Nat Parson among them) that her travels through
Dream had robbed her of her soul as well as her sanity, and had called for her to
be Examined; but in spite of the ruinmark on her forehead – a barely
recognizable corruption of the rune Fé –
Nan showed no other sign of possession, and so the campaign was abandoned.
After all, Nan Fey had her uses. She was an excellent midwife; she had a knack
with healing herbs; and for the few like Maddy Smith who listened to her stories,
she was a source of old tales, of rhymes and half-forgotten lore.
Now Nan soared over Hel and wondered what she should do for the best.
She had failed to bring back the Auld Man, which was a problem, but not an
insurmountable one. Odin One-Eye had a knack for dealing with problems, and
besides, wherever he was, he was better off there than floating in Dream like a
cork in ale, waiting for Chaos to swallow him up.
She decided to get back to Malbry. She had already spent too long in Dream,
where Time works somewhat differently than in any of the other Worlds, and
there were more pressing concerns at home than brooding over the Auld Man.
His birdies would tell her what to do next. But with the gods having set off for
World’s End, the situation on Red Horse Hill was reaching a fine old crisis point,
with no one left to deal with it but Nan herself – and, of course, Epona. Just how
an old woman and a washing basket might be able to close a rift in Dream that
neither Æsir nor Vanir had managed to close in the past three years, or deal with
the dreamcloud that even now was spreading fast towards Malbry, reducing
everything it touched to fragments of shining cinder, Nan was as yet uncertain.
But the Rider whose name was Lunacy had a lunatic’s optimism, believing that
there was always a way; so she promptly urged the Horse of Air back towards
the waking Worlds.
Some time later she was awake and sitting in her washing basket exactly as
she had been when she set off on her extraordinary journey, and if it hadn’t been
for the fact that it was now full night and the kitchen fire had gone out, coupled
with the stiffness in her old legs and the gnawing at the pit of her stomach, she
might almost have thought that no time at all had passed since she and the Horse
of Air had vanished over Malbry.
And speaking of the Horse of Air …
Nan climbed from the basket and looked out of her window. In the garden
Epona was cropping the frozen grass by the door, though now her Aspect had
shifted to that of a rather elderly white mare with one milky eye and one dark
one, which gleamed disreputably at Nan in the moonlight, as if the old Horse
wanted nothing better than to stir up trouble in one form or another.
Nan went outside. It was snowy, but clear. Gently she patted the white mare’s
mane and took a lump of sugar from her apron pocket. Epona accepted the sugar
lump with a greedy snort and shook her head, wanting more.
‘There’s a good old girl,’ said Nan. ‘Ye’ve done very well. You have a rest
now, while I feed the cats.’
Nan’s cats were mostly wild, though some of them ventured inside the house.
Keeping a cat for any other purpose than catching mice was not common
practice in Malbry, and many of the village folk took this little foible of Nan’s as
further proof of her eccentricity. Nan liked her cats, however, and always fed
them at half-past five every afternoon, at which time they would assemble
outside the cottage and raise a plaintive chorus.
Today Nan was long overdue. The moon had been up for hours and the
chorus of mewing had grown to a wail. She hurried outside with her bucket of
scraps, to be greeted by more than two dozen cats – brindled and tabby and
black-and-white – winding between her feet and legs and purring loudly and
expectantly. So loud was this collective purr that Nan almost missed the sound of
the rift between Worlds, now grown to the sound of a waterfall during the spring
melt, and when she eventually heard it, she was shocked by how much its voice
had increased during her few hours’ absence.
She left a pan of bread-and-milk for the cats and hurried onto the Malbry
road. The village lay some miles away – so far that on a still day Nan could only
just make out the ringing of the church bells – but tonight the sound of the rift in
Dream was very clearly audible, which meant, Nan thought, that in her absence
the dreamcloud had already crept visibly closer to the village; at this rate, in a
week or less it would be at their doorsteps. If she looked very hard she could see
it too, snaking against the starry sky like the Serpent with its tail in its mouth,
ready to devour itself.
‘Oh my Laws,’ said Crazy Nan.
Crawk, came a voice behind her.
She turned, and saw a raven perching on the fence-post. She recognized one
of the Auld Man’s birdies – the smaller one with the white head – and reached
into her apron pocket for another sugar lump. She tossed it to the raven; Mandy
caught it in her beak and transferred it immediately to her claws, turning it deftly
round and round like a puzzle she was trying to solve.
Nan smiled. ‘Here ye are. I thought I’d see ye before long. I reckon ye
already know the news regarding the Auld Man?’
Ack. The raven pecked at the sugar lump. Ack. Ack.
‘Attack,’ translated Nan.
Crawk. It finished the sugar. Kaik.
‘I don’t have any cake,’ said Nan. ‘Ye cleaned me out last time, ye did.’
Kaik. Kaik, said the raven.
‘Ach, wait,’ said Nan. ‘Ye want me to wait.’
Iar, said the bird.
Nan frowned. The Auld Man’s birdies had never been what you’d call easy
to deal with. The big one, Hughie, could talk all right, but rarely said anything
useful. The smaller one was better at carrying and remembering messages, but
tended to find speaking difficult. Now it hopped down from its perch and pecked
energetically at the frozen ground.
‘Wait,’ repeated Nan. ‘How long?’
The raven crawk-ed again. Once more it pecked at the cold ground. But this
time its beak left a mark in the snow – a mark that stood out in the moonlight –
‘What is it? A glammy?’ Nan said.
Iar. Iar. Iar.
This seemed to be all the bird had to say. After several minutes of pecking
the ground, of squawking, of strutting up and down, of hopping onto the fence-
post and back again, Mandy finally seemed to lose heart, and with a final
accusing Crawk! took wing and vanished into the sky.
Nan studied the mark in the snow. It certainly looked like a glammy. One of
the New Script, likely as not; though how she was meant to use it, gods only
knew.
Still, the Auld Man would find a way. He always did, she told herself.
Chances were, wherever he was, he was just where he wanted to be. And if his
birdies said to wait, then wait was what she had to do.
And so the Third Rider went back inside and made herself a pot of tea, while
Epona cropped the grass in the yard, and on the road from Red Horse Hill the
serpent of mist inched closer still, dissolving everything in its path into the stuff
of dreams.
, travelling light and changing horses at every stop, might
A WELL-EQUIPPED PARTY
possibly reach World’s End in a week. But it soon became clear to all concerned
that the gods and their allies in Chaos could not hope to make the trip in
anything under two.
It wasn’t just the distance to be covered, which was significant enough, but
the number of outposts they had to pass, with all the tedious formalities that
entailed – credentials checked, baggage searched, names and identities called for
– formalities that would, at best, cause grave delay to the party.
Better to travel cross-country, they said, avoiding the outposts as much as
possible, and keeping away from the cities. It would add some time to their
journey, but would save them from having to deal too often with the Folk, who,
with their deep-rooted mistrust of all things Outlandish, would not make it easy
to pass unchecked.
In Aspect, or in animal guise, they could have spanned the miles easily. But
gone were the days (for most of them) when such glam could be used without
counting the cost. Now the gods were cautious, reserving their strength for what
lay ahead, knowing that every mile they crossed in this way would leave them
weaker when they arrived, to face an enemy as yet unnamed.
But Heimdall (who was in charge of supplies) was painfully aware that time
itself was now in shortest supply, and that if they hoped to reach World’s End
before their remaining time had elapsed, then they would have to achieve
something fairly impressive as far as speed and teamwork were concerned.
Which was a pity, Heimdall thought, because so far neither teamwork nor speed
had proved remotely achievable.
Twenty-four hours had already passed since they had set off from Malbry. In
that time they had managed to cover no more than eighteen miles, or the distance
between Malbry and the Hindarfell. A cheerless, mostly sleepless night had been
spent in a bothy by the roadside, and the following day had been largely taken up
with Freyja complaining about her feet; Idun stopping to gather herbs; the Wolf
Brothers eating everything in sight and chasing every rabbit that came within a
mile of the road; Odin’s ravens taunting the wolves; Bragi trying to cheer people
up with a variety of singing styles; Skadi quarrelling with Njörd; Jolly
quarrelling with Sugar; and Thor quarrelling with everyone. Nightfall had come
as quite a relief, in spite of their painful progress, and by the time they stopped
for the night, Heimdall was exhausted.
They found a small inn called the Moon and Stars, in which, for a generous
payment (summoned, of course, by the money-rune Fé), the Watchman was able,
first, to bribe the landlord, who claimed he had never seen such goings-on, and
secondly, to pay for half a dozen rooms – not enough for all of them, but the
landlord had insisted that no animals be allowed in the building, which meant
that several of their number had to be banished to the barn, including Skadi, who
had of course taken umbrage at having to share with the Wolf Brothers, and
Njörd, who had joined them to keep the peace.
This turned out to be a mistake, as Heimdall soon discovered; for by the end
of the evening Hughie and Mandy had found their way into the pantry, where
they had started an impromptu party (to which only they were invited), in the
course of which they managed to make so much noise and affray that the
landlord was roused, and, emboldened by righteous anger as well as the prospect
of generous compensation, had stormed up to Heimdall’s room to demand an
explanation.
It had been decided during the course of their trip that Heimdall should
represent the group. He’d always been closest to the Folk; he was well-spoken
and presentable as well as being a skilled negotiator, whereas Skadi’s idea of
negotiation was to strike first and negotiate later, and Thor didn’t even know
how to spell ‘negotiation’.
This was why the landlord, whose name was Mr Mountjoy, had rightly
assumed that Heimdall was in charge, and why the Watchman now found him, at
one o’clock in the morning, standing at his bedside in nightshirt and cap, every
whisker on his face bristling with outrage.
‘Sir, I must protest!’ he said.
Lucky for Mr Mountjoy that Heimdall slept with one eye open. If he’d
wakened Thor in that way, there might have been serious consequences. As it
was, the Watchman sat up and bared his teeth at the landlord.
‘Couldn’t this wait till morning?’ he said, with dangerous composure.
‘It certainly could not,’ said Mr Mountjoy. ‘May I tell you, sir, that in twenty
years of being landlord of the Moon and Stars, and furthermore being, if I may
say so, more than cognizant of the ways of travellers and Outlanders and
Wilderlanders such as yourselves—’
Heimdall considered a silencing charm, but knew that he should preserve his
glam. He simply narrowed his eyes and said: ‘Please. Just get to the point, all
right?’
But Mr Mountjoy was still in full flow. ‘Let it be known, sir,’ he went on,
‘that I have never seen such carryings-on as I have witnessed this evening. Birds,
loose women, dwarves, savage dogs, woofs – I’ll have you know I don’t hold
with woofs, be they tamed or otherwise – roaming loose around the place,
terrifying the customers—’
‘But we are the only people here!’ said Heimdall in frustration.
‘Nonetheless, the principle stands.’
‘All right, all right,’ said the Watchman, almost snarling. ‘How much to
silence your … principles?’
Mr Mountjoy scratched his head. ‘Well, there’s four shilling for the veal pie
that I was fancying for tomorrow’s lunch; twenty for the two bags of sugar; ten
for a churn of best butter; ten for a bushel of apples; six for the ravages done to a
pudding I had laid by for Yuletime. Oh, and the bread, of course. Call it twenty.
Plus distress and disturbance … Call it an even hundred.’
Heimdall narrowed his eyes still more. Those thrice-damned birds were
becoming more than troublesome; and to judge from the sounds he had heard
from behind the barn as he tried to get to sleep, he guessed that he would soon be
asked to pay for damage caused to the erstwhile occupants of a henhouse by
three demon wolves and a sea-eagle.
Did they think he was made of money? Heimdall asked himself plaintively.
Even with the rune Fé, cash was not something he could pluck from mid-air
without serious consequences to his glam, and the Universal City was still a long
way away. In just seven days, something big was going to happen in World’s
End, and if he had read the signs aright, then this was a party for which none of
them could afford to be late.
For the first time in his life Heimdall began to regret the absence of Loki,
whose quicksilver tongue and sharp wits would have made short work of their
problem.
‘You’ll have your money, landlord,’ he said. ‘Now will you let me get some
sleep?’
As it happened, he managed less than an hour before the landlord was back
again. Sugar-and-Sack, still more goblin than god when faced with the prospect
of strong drink, had tunnelled into the cellar, where Jolly was already waiting for
him, having first imbibed a whole keg of ale.
There had ensued an altercation, liberally punctuated with flagons of ale,
which had rapidly descended into a fight when Jolly took umbrage at being
called Stumpy, and responded by saying that Sugar was fat.
At this point the landlord had called Frederick Law, who, entering the scene
of the crime, found both perpetrators lying, blind drunk, by a silent pool of
spilled ale. He carried them off to the local roundhouse; then returned with Mr
Mountjoy to ensure that Heimdall was correctly informed.
‘Because statute nineteen of County Law clearly states,’ said the lawman,
‘that a man must take responsibility for the actions of his underlings, including
damage caused by same, and if these two dwarves belong to you, as I am led to
believe …’ He paused to peer at Heimdall.
‘Yes?’
‘It’s just that we don’t see many dwarves here, sir. Exactly what kind of
business brings you to these parts?’
Heimdall took a deep breath. ‘It’s two o’clock in the morning,’ he hissed.
‘Wake me at nine.’ Which response merely confirmed Fred Law’s suspicions that
the fellow with the golden teeth and the fancy armour was some kind of
Wilderlands warlord with no respect for property or the Law; and so he called
out his posse and set them to watching the Moon and Stars, just in case the party
decided to up sticks and leave without paying their bill.
Which was why that morning at four o’clock, when Njörd and Skadi left the
barn to embark on a further spot of hunting, the first thing they saw was a posse
of the Folk, armed with spears and crossbows, sheltering in the porch of the inn
and watching them in astonishment.
The first thing the lawman did was go and complain to Heimdall again,
which gave the Watchman no choice but to order his livestock back into the barn
– now secured with a padlock – and hope that nothing else happened.
His optimism – such as it was – was short-lived. He was awoken once more
(this time at dawn) by the sound of raised voices. Getting up in haste to discover
the cause of the commotion, he found the entire posse gathered in the smaller of
the inn’s two dining rooms, where Freyja, never able to resist the temptation to
perform, was holding court – in Aspect – to a dozen noisy admirers; meanwhile,
in the larger dining room, Thor was eating a whole roast ox while Frey attacked
a side of beef, Sif was protesting loudly in front of a plate of sausages, Bragi and
Idun were singing a duet, and Ethel was calmly dunking biscuits in tea while all
Hel was let loose next door.
‘We may have a little problem,’ she said.
‘Oh gods,’ said Heimdall.
The scene in the smaller dining room was already beyond disastrous. The
Folk were very easy to charm. Already the goddess of desire had them all
competing ridiculously for her favour: eyes and noses had been blackened and
bruised; pieces of furniture had been overturned in the scuffle for her attention.
One fellow lay at her feet like a dog; another hastened to bring her a cup of
wine; several had tried to write poetry, with truly awful results; and even Fred
Law and Mr Mountjoy were grinning like fools while Freyja – dressed all in
white, her runemark gleaming guinea-gold against her bare shoulder and her
long red hair spilling down her back like some kind of fabulous bridal veil –
watched through modestly lowered lashes and smiled like the blade of a golden
knife.
The Watchman immediately banished the charm by casting the rune Fé,
reversed.
Freyja, in human Aspect, leaped to her feet. ‘You!’ she spat at Heimdall. ‘You
always have to spoil things!’
Heimdall gave her a quelling look. ‘You forget yourself, lady,’ he said.
‘Don’t you lady me, you killjoy. I was having a good time till you came
along! Why don’t you just lock me in the barn with the others? Or with Sif in the
piggery—’
‘Sif isn’t in the piggery,’ protested Heimdall, glancing uneasily at the
lawman.
‘Well, maybe that’s because she has Thor to protect her. I’m completely
alone in the world …’ She blotted her eyes with her handkerchief. ‘I have no one
at all to care for me—’
‘Stop that,’ said Heimdall quickly, seeing the glazed, adoring look return to
the eyes of the possemen. He strode up to Freyja and led her to the far side of the
room. ‘We were trying to stay inconspicuous!’ he hissed into the goddess’s ear.
‘And so far, the god of war is in gaol, as is the hammer Mjølnir. Skadi and Njörd
are locked up in the barn along with what the innkeeper amusingly refers to as
“our livestock”. So much for our so-called allies. All I need now is for the Witch
of Ironwood to make an appearance and …’ He paused to take another breath
and, just at that moment, saw Angrboda coming down the stairs, discreetly
attired in thigh-high boots and a corset of fur and dragon-scale, and gave an
audible moan of despair.
‘Why me? Why me?’
Fred Law gave him a guarded look. ‘I wonder if you could spare a few
moments, sir? But before you move on, I still need to know your business and
your plans—’
Just saving the Worlds, Heimdall thought. If only everything were so easy.
In the good old days of the Elder Age, he would simply have used a cantrip
or two to charm the man into doing his will. Even now, he knew that between
them the gods had more than enough glam to defeat a posse of the Folk. On the
other hand, could they really afford to alert every lawman this side of the
Hindarfell to their presence? Could they fight the Folk all the way to World’s
End? And how much time (and glam) would that cost?
He managed to summon a strained smile and levelled it at the lawman. ‘Of
course,’ he said through clenched teeth. ‘I’ll be more than happy to answer all
your questions. But first, let me buy you all breakfast–’ he grimaced at Angrboda
– ‘while I – ah – consult with my – colleague here-’
‘Trouble?’ said Angie in a low voice as Heimdall came towards her.
‘We’ve come eighteen miles. Eighteen miles!’ moaned the Watchman in
desperation. ‘How will we ever reach World’s End? We set off thirty-six hours
ago, and we’re barely out of the valley!’
Angie shrugged. ‘You need Loki.’
Heimdall, who had harboured just the same thought, now gave a howl of
frustration. ‘No!’
‘I don’t think you have the choice,’ said Angie. ‘Unless you can think of a
plausible tale to explain all this to the lawman.’
Heimdall gave Angie a hard stare. ‘Given that you and your wolf brood are
somewhat to blame for all this, as you call it …’
Angie bristled indignantly. She was easy-going most of the time, but any
attack on her children and she reverted back to her Ironwood Aspect: cold and
dark and deadly. ‘Don’t bring Fenris into this,’ she said in a low and dangerous
voice.
‘Why not?’ said Heimdall. ‘You did.’
‘That’s because we need him,’ she said. ‘Fenris, and the Wolf Boys.’
‘Need them for what?’ yelled Heimdall. ‘All they’ve done so far is eat and
get us into trouble! And now you’re suggesting Loki – Loki, whose middle name
is Trouble – as the best way to solve all our problems?’
The Seeress, who had observed the scene from the doorway of the larger
dining room, looked at Heimdall with sympathy. ‘Maybe Angie’s right,’ she said.
‘Maybe we do need Loki.’
‘But we have no idea where he is …’ Heimdall began plaintively.
‘Well, funny you should say that,’ she said. ‘In fact, I know just where to find
him.’
‘Where?’ said Heimdall, his eyes brightening.
‘He’s in a cave by the Sleepers,’ she said. ‘And I think that by now he’ll be
more than happy to cooperate.’
Heimdall took a moment to think. ‘But if you knew where he was all this
time—’
‘I wanted him alive,’ Ethel said. ‘The way you were talking yesterday, you’d
have lynched him before he could open his mouth.’
Heimdall began to protest at this, then decided against it. ‘So – you really
think we can trust him?’ he said.
‘Trust him? Of course not.’ Ethel smiled. ‘This is Loki we’re talking about.
He’s a liar, a coward, a cheat, and very probably a traitor too. But faced with a
situation like this, who would Odin have asked for?’
Heimdall snorted. ‘Odin’s not here.’
‘All the more reason to do as I say.’
Which was why, a few minutes later, a falcon might have been seen winging
its way from the Hindarfell, its signature a roaring blue across the hazy winter
dawn. It settled some thirty minutes later on a big rock outside a cave that Ethel
had described to Heimdall.
Loki, sensing its approach, felt a surge of desperate hope. He knew what
such a visit meant. Either the gods wanted him dead, or else they had a job for
him. He looked into Sigyn’s adoring face (she was at his feet, playing the harp),
and tried to suppress a shudder. Either option, he told himself, would come as a
deliverance.
‘DON’T YOU DARE say a single word,’ snarled the Watchman as he entered the cave.
He’d had time to practise this scene in his head as he flew down from the
Hindarfell, and he hadn’t been looking forward to it. It always rankled to ask
Loki for help – and to come to him now like a penitent, clad only in gooseflesh,
was beyond humiliating. Heimdall had already promised himself that if Loki
cracked a single joke – Hel’s teeth, if he cracked so much as a smile – he’d break
both his arms and worry about the consequences later.
Loki read the signs, of course, and carefully assumed a neutral expression. A
small, polite gesture to Sigyn earned Heimdall a suit of clothes – yes, they were
ephemeral, like all Sigyn’s glamours, and thus did little to keep out the cold, but
at least the Watchman’s dignity was safeguarded, and it was therefore with
slightly less belligerence that he addressed the Trickster thus:
‘Now pay attention, Dogstar. I’ve come to offer you a deal.’ He then went on
to explain in full the situation at the Moon and Stars, all the while observing
Loki for any sign of inappropriate humour.
‘So basically,’ Loki said, still wisely keeping a straight face, ‘you’re saying
that you need me.’
‘Rrrr,’ said Heimdall between his teeth.
‘I’m a liar and a traitor and I deserve to die, but’ – Loki’s scarred lips
twitched irrepressibly – ‘all the same – you need me.’
Heimdall started to calculate exactly how many of Loki’s bones he could
afford to break before he lost his value. Loki saw him working it out and resisted
the further temptation to gloat. ‘All right. Count me in,’ he said. ‘I mean,
anything for the family. There’s just one little thing …’ He grinned. ‘If I’m going
to help you all get to World’s End in time, then I’ll need something in return.’
‘I’m not here to bargain,’ Heimdall said. ‘We’re giving you your freedom
back, which is already more than you deserve.’
‘Of course.’ Loki’s grin widened. ‘I’m just saying that I may need some
support, maybe even protection, if my plan to save the day doesn’t happen to
meet with the full approval of the gods.’
Heimdall frowned. ‘So … you’ve got a plan?’
‘I always have a plan.’ Loki grinned even more widely. ‘Listen, I’m not
asking for much. But you know how things are with me and the gods. Some
might be – shall we say resistant? – to any idea coming from me.’
‘What’s the plan?’ Heimdall said.
‘Oh no,’ said the Trickster. ‘That is not the way it works. You want my help?
Take me with you. Make the others do as I say. I promise, if you do that, I’ll get
you all to World’s End by dawn on the seventh day.’
‘Impossible!’ Heimdall said. ‘The journey takes a fortnight.’
‘Trust me, it won’t. You have my word. As long as you swear to do as I say.’
Heimdall narrowed his eyes at Loki, now the picture of innocence.
‘I’m asking for less than a week,’ said Loki. ‘After which you’ll be free to
take whatever retribution you deem appropriate – assuming I haven’t kept my
word.’
There was a long pause, during which Heimdall went over in his mind all the
previous instances in which the gods had been obliged to go along – albeit most
reluctantly – with one or another of Loki’s plans. There had been many; but in
each case, even Heimdall had to admit, the Trickster always found a way.
‘You’re really that good?’ he said at last.
Loki shrugged. ‘I’m Loki.’
***
Ten minutes later, the falcon had been joined by a companion – a small, fast-
moving brown hawk with a gold ring around its foot from which a fine chain
dangled. That was Eh, the Wedlock, with Sigyn’s presence now inhabiting a
small gold acorn-shaped charm at the end of the little chain. Both Loki and
Heimdall had tried in vain to persuade her to sever the runecharm and stay where
she was; but Sigyn was unshakeable. World’s End was a dangerous place.
Anything could happen there. What if Loki got into trouble? What if he was
injured?
Heimdall thought this only too likely, but wisely kept the thought to himself.
Sigyn was welcome to come, he said, as long as she didn’t get in the way. Loki
agreed, rather sullenly – but an acorn on a bracelet was better than a ball and
chain, and besides, he told himself as he flew, who knew what inspiration a few
days on the Roads would bring?
For the present, however, he simply tried to concentrate on the immediate
problem: that of conveying seven gods, five goddesses, three wolves, a person of
Chaotic origin, two ravens and a hammer through four counties in less than a
week without expending too much glam or attracting undue attention. Not the
easiest of tasks, he knew; but he did have a plan, and with Heimdall’s help …
He grinned to himself, and his colours brightened as he flew. Whether the
plan worked or not, it promised to be a lot of fun.
And if he failed?
He banished the thought. He’d burn that bridge when he came to it.
IT WAS ALMOST noon at the Moon and Stars, which was how long it had taken for
Heimdall and Ethel to persuade the gods that trusting Loki was their best chance.
Thor and Freyja were particularly resistant to the idea: both had good cause to
remember the last time Loki had tried something like this – an occasion that had
ended up with Freyja betrothed against her will and Thor, posing as the bride,
ready to break up the party.
Skadi too would have protested most violently, if she had been consulted at
all. But with runemarks reversed and glam running short; with little money and
fewer supplies; with Sugar and Jolly still in gaol; with the lawman and his posse
pressing for information and the Wolf Brothers locked up in the barn with Skadi
and Njörd, the remaining gods were beginning to understand the value of a little
subterfuge.
‘Well, I’m not dressing up as a woman again!’ declared the irate Thunderer.
‘Why not? It was fun. You looked so cute.’
Thor lunged at the Trickster, but Heimdall intercepted the blow. ‘I told you.
No one touches him,’ he said, and gritted his golden teeth. ‘At least, not until the
seventh day – after which you can hit him all you like.’
The subject under discussion grinned and settled himself more comfortably
into Mr Mountjoy’s favourite armchair. He had arrived in his hawk Aspect, but
planned to return with more fanfare later, and had sent Frey out in wolf form to
make the necessary arrangements.
‘So I’ll need some paper and ink,’ he said. ‘And paint, canvas, glue, wood,
and – oh, some little bottles of water.’
Having provided these supplies, the gods left him alone for an hour,
whereupon he emerged, slightly inkstained, but pleased with himself, and
brandishing a number of carefully lettered pages. Ethel took one and peered at it.
‘Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus!’ she read aloud. ‘A Paragon of
Excellence! Beasts and Marvels! Wonders and Freaks! Brought to you from the
Wacky Wilderlands, come see’ – she raised an eyebrow – ‘Mr Muscles, the
Strong Man! The Amazing Wolf Boys! Queen of the Pigs!’
Sif’s eyes narrowed dangerously. ‘Queen of the what?’ she said.
Loki looked modest. ‘Catchy, huh? Plus there’s Helga and her Huskies,
Dancing Dunhilde and her Dwarves, Biddy the Bird Charmer – plus we’ll be
selling Professor Pinkerton’s All-Purpose Purgative Potion (bottles of water, to
you and me), the Cure for Anything at All, from baldness to incontinence –
especially when we’ve got Idun standing nearby with a healing charm hidden up
her sleeve.’ Loki shot them his brilliant smile. ‘So? Am I a genius, or what?’
For a few minutes the noise was too great to make out any individual
responses, and Heimdall was too fully occupied in shielding his unrepentant
protégé from the rain of mindbolts and missiles that ensued to give anything else
much attention.
Safe behind the rune Yr, the cause of all this disruption just sat and watched
in a bored way, and played with the gold acorn that dangled from the chain on
his wrist. It was a very delicate chain, though stronger by far than it appeared,
and although it still linked Loki’s hands together, it gave him freedom of
movement without ever allowing him to forget that it was there.
‘You’re mad,’ said Bragi, when the noise had died down. ‘We’re trying to
keep a low profile, and you want us to pose as a circus!’
Loki shrugged. ‘Best way,’ he said. ‘No one questions a travelling show. The
freakier the better. You’ll be welcomed with open arms. And as long as folk are
entertained, they’ll pay our way in food and supplies and wave us through the
outposts. Besides, you’ll get to play your guitar.’
‘Really?’ Bragi looked hopeful.
‘Queen of the Pigs?’ repeated Sif.
‘Unless you’d rather be the Bearded Lady—’
‘The bearded what?’
Ethel smiled. ‘You know,’ she said, ‘it might just work.’
‘Queen of the Pigs!’ protested Sif.
‘Let me hammer him,’ said Thor.
‘You’ll do no such thing,’ Ethel said. ‘He’s under my protection now.’ She
paused to allow the din to subside. ‘Think about it, all of you. If he is a traitor,
then the best thing to do is keep him with us, where he can’t do any harm. And if
he’s not’ – her expression darkened – ‘well, it won’t really matter to any of us
unless we get to World’s End in time.’
Loki gave Ethel a wary look. The Seeress had never been fond of him, not
even before Balder’s death, and he was mightily surprised that she should speak
in his defence.
‘Thanks,’ he said.
She smiled at him. But it was a curious, troubling smile, which did nothing
to reassure him. ‘And you, of course, would be Lucky,’ she said. ‘Ringmaster,
manager … general?’
Loki grinned. ‘Of course. Who else?’
Ethel kept on smiling.
And so the Trickster got his way, and it was with the keenest enjoyment that
he now set about allocating parts, going over details, and making sure that
everyone knew precisely what he wanted of them. Few of the gods warmed to
the idea. But short of charming every lawman, every outpost guard, every
suspicious innkeeper between the Hindarfell and the Universal City, short of
keeping their Aspects for seven whole, impossible days without the chance to
replenish their glam, they had to agree – reluctantly – that Loki’s way was the
fastest way.
Ethel remained as serene as before, saying little, but always alert. Loki found
it unnerving. Still, he thought, the Seeress had always been an enigma to him,
and this new Aspect of her was doubly so. Besides, he didn’t really care; he
wasn’t planning to stay around for long. As for Tribulation …
Loki had already seen one Ragnarók, and wanted no more to do with it. War
with Chaos … the End of the Worlds – this time around he meant to be far away
when all Hel broke loose. Maybe on a ship somewhere, on his way to the
Outlands. There were islands there, Loki knew, where no flake of snow had ever
fallen; where tropical fruit grew all year round; and where the most strenuous
thing a man did all day was pour himself another drink, or decide which of the
local girls was prettiest, or choose from a laden table precisely which delicacy he
wanted to taste next.
He deserved this, Loki thought. He’d already saved the Worlds once. This
time around, he promised himself …
The Æsir could manage without him.
FOUR WHOLE DAYS had already passed since Maddy and Jorgi arrived in World’s End.
In that time she had come to realize that her task was far from straightforward.
The Universal City was much larger than any town she had imagined or
dreamed. It stretched out like a patchwork quilt of squares and streets and
alleyways; of arches, cobbled courtyards, minarets, walled gardens and little
fountains. There were shops and markets, traders and thieves, street performers
and animal shows and off-duty sailors with money to burn. There were colleges
and cathedrals, which, though never as huge as Nat Parson claimed, nevertheless
managed to rise twice as high as the tallest tree, scraping the sky with their
gilded glass spires. There were statues of ancient dignitaries, long since stripped
of their gilding and streaked with soot and bird-lime. There were canals with
rows of houseboats crowded in their moorings; there were filthy slums standing
alongside gracious houses surrounded by trees. In one square was a marble
plinth on which stood a giant warlord of the Sea riding on a serpent, both
intricately carved in stone and surrounded by little jets of water that rose and fell
at intervals. Looking more closely, Maddy was almost sure that she recognized
Njörd’s features in the marble, though Perth assured her that this was one of the
great kings of old – a king of the Elder Age called Knut, whose power had been
so great that he could hold back the waves of the One Sea and raise its beasts at
his command.
Perth was full of stories. Maddy had no way of knowing whether any of
them were true, but all the same she was very aware of how much she needed his
guidance in this city of perilous wonders. She had not been there above an hour
before she realized that finding her sister would not be the simple task she had
assumed; with the truesight, it soon became clear that the city was filled with
signatures – some bright, some dim, all shuttling ceaselessly like threads in an
intricate tapestry. It might take weeks to find Maggie Rede – if, indeed, she
found her at all.
‘Ah – why do you need to look for her?’ Perth had been asking the same
questions over the course of the past four days. ‘Can’t we just do business here?
With your skills and mine, we could reach for the sky.’
Even in such a short time, Perth had proved himself a very apt pupil in the
use of the runes, picking up the fingerings with the same effortless ease that he
brought to picking pockets and palming coins. His own glam was almost as
bright as Maddy’s own, which led her to think that the rune he bore must be one
of the New Script. She named it simply Perth, and hoped that maybe Ethel could
help identify it more clearly, if ever she managed to bring the two of them
together.
But teaching Perth the runes took time. So did keeping him out of trouble.
Left to his own devices, Perth’s new skills would probably have landed him in
gaol within the week, and when she caught him cheating at cards by using the
rune Bjarkán to look at his opponents’ hands, she had to explain to her new
friend that runes were not to be trifled with.
Glam was a dangerous gift, she said, to be used only rarely, and in secret.
The days of the Order might be over, but there were still hangings in World’s
End.
Perth listened to the lecture with every sign of contrition, then went back to
doing precisely what he had before, using Fé to make fool’s gold or Kaen to
cheat at knucklebones, so that much of Maddy’s time was taken up in trying to
keep him under control.
Might as well try to tame Wildfire, she thought, and realized, with an aching
heart, how badly she missed Loki. The others too – all of them. She only hoped
they would understand – assuming she survived to explain – why she had misled
them, and why, when she could have gone to them for help, she had chosen to
act alone.
Teaching Perth was one of the reasons why Maddy had made so little
progress in the Universal City. The second reason was simpler. For the first time
in her life Maddy Smith was afraid. Oh, not of the dangers of the big city, or of
what she might encounter on her quest; but of what she might have to do when
she finally tracked down her sister.
Raised by a man who resented her for her mother’s death in childbirth; the
younger, plainer sister of Mae, the prettiest girl in the village, Maddy had spent
her childhood dreaming of finding her true family, the tribe that would accept
her for what she was. She had found it in the Æsir. She’d discovered a father in
Thor, a grandfather in Odin. But ever since Loki had told her the truth, Maddy
had longed for her unknown twin with a silent, desperate yearning. The thought
that she might have a sibling out there, born into the wrong family, dreaming the
same dreams and waiting for Maddy to find her, had sustained her throughout
the past three years. Even after the attack on Red Horse Hill Maddy had never
lost that hope. So instead of alerting the Æsir to the danger that threatened them
all, she had let the Trickster take the blame and fled alone to World’s End.
Now Maddy’s greatest fear was that her instinct had been wrong, that
Maggie was the enemy, and that by her actions she herself might bring about the
End of the Worlds. She wished that Odin’s ravens would come and tell her what
to do next. Or that Odin himself would speak to her again through Dream – but
the only birds she had seen so far had been the drab-looking pigeons that
infested the city, and her only dreams had been troubled, broken things that made
no sense when she awoke.
And so she stayed with the only friend she had managed to find in World’s
End. Perth knew the place like the back of his hand; plus, his work in the city
markets meant that Maddy would have the opportunity to watch lots of folk go
by. Some day soon, she told herself, one of them would be her sister.
Never give a sucker an even break.
Old Inlandic proverb
MEANWHILE, ON THE Ridings road, a spectacle the like of which had not been seen
since the Elder Age was making its way to World’s End just in time for
Ragnarók. Travelling briskly day and night, changing horses at every stop – six
hundred miles in seven days would be no small feat for those horses, even with
runes of endurance sewn into their harness – and with two performances daily,
Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus, now in its third day of existence, made
its way down from the Hindarfell, through the North Ridings towards World’s
End, performing in villages along the way – to wonder and applause from the
Folk.
A circus – even a pocket-sized one – tends to attract attention, and when it
boasts such enticements as (for instance) a Wolf Boy, a Queen of the Pigs, Helga
and her Huskies and the Most Beautiful Woman in the World, going unnoticed
generally ceases to be an option. Loki had understood this from the start, but he
knew that sometimes to hide in plain sight was easier than trying to pass unseen.
Loki was enjoying it immensely, of course. He was a natural showman. His
words kept the audience mesmerized, and with clever lighting and a handful of
cantrips he had them in the palm of his hand. He would have been happier still if
Sigyn had not been with him, but in spite of his efforts to free himself, she had
remained by his side, linked to him by the fine gold chain; either in her own
Aspect, or in the shape of the small golden acorn that she had assumed during
her flight from Malbry.
However, not even this could detract from Loki’s enjoyment. Add to the
main attractions Jolly and Sugar, in colourful costumes, driving in a little car
drawn by a pair of turkeys; the Wolf Brothers and Angie, in Aspect; the
Strongest Man in the World (that was Thor); Heimdall, in his hawk guise, in a
double-act with Njörd’s sea-eagle, and (or so the Trickster claimed) Lucky’s
Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus seemed guaranteed for success.
The gods and their associates had rather more mixed feelings. Freyja, in her
current role as the Most Beautiful Woman in the World, was naturally more than
satisfied. Lounging in full Aspect inside a gold-and-white tent, she held court to
a string of admirers who, with the help of a surreptitious charm or two, were
more than willing to donate supplies, money, gifts or whatever it was that Freyja
(or more often Loki) desired. Bragi, now billed as the Human Nightingale, was
delighted to spend his days singing and making music to a crowd of adoring
womenfolk. Even Skadi, in her role as Helga, with her Huskies, was willing to
tolerate the foolishness to a certain extent, although she was sure that, even with
horses at every post and the continued support of the Folk, Loki would fail to get
them to World’s End on time, and she was rather enjoying the prospect of seeing
the Trickster bite the dust – as he would, at dawn on the seventh day, if by then
they had not reached the gates of the Universal City.
Sif, however, was less pleased. Petula, Queen of the Pigs, had proved almost
as popular as Freyja herself, especially with the children, who always brought
along baskets of food, for Loki had assured the awe-stricken crowds that the
Queen of the Pigs consumed no fewer than fourteen loaves of bread per day, as
well as six bushels of apples, a side of beef, a leg of lamb, a smoked trout, a
raised chicken pie, a seed cake, a plum cake, five dozen jam tarts (Loki was
partial to jam tarts), a quart of milk and a dozen bottles of finest ale – and this, of
course, was winter-time, which, so Loki told them, was a time of fasting for the
Queen of the Pigs; otherwise she would be so heavy that even a team of oxen
would find it impossible to carry her.
This convenient story ensured that Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus
was always well-provisioned; although, of course, it also meant that Sif had
spent the past three days in a state of perpetual fury, during which time Thor had
wisely kept out of her way – that is, when he was not already engaged in lifting
hay-trucks, wrestling bulls, juggling anvils and performing all the other feats
expected from the World’s Strongest Man.
Their journey had been going so well. The roads had been mostly clear of
snow. Since passing the Hindarfell, they had managed to cover a hundred and
ninety miles – excellent going for northern roads – and by evening of their third
day were nearing the border into the Lowlands.
This border was marked by the river Vimur, and the only crossing place
within fifty miles was through a town called Rhydian. This was a trading centre
of some importance, an industrial market town filled with journeymen, farmers,
weavers, stonemasons, tanners, bargemen moving their cargo downriver towards
World’s End; and spanning the river at its narrowest part was the marvellous
Rhydian Bridge, known throughout Inland as one of the wonders of the Age.
No one remembered how old it was. Some claimed it was the work of
Jonathan Gift, the genius who had designed the cathedral of St Sepulchre.
Almost four hundred feet in length, suspended from four great stone pylons by
sixteen cables of twisted steel, the bridge had spanned the Vimur since before
anyone could remember, almost untouched by the passage of time. Legend had it
that there were ancient runes embedded in the bridge’s foundations that kept the
stones from crumbling, the sleek steel cables from weakening. Be that as it
might, the skills required to design and build such a marvel had long since been
lost in the mists of time, with the result that over the centuries Rhydian had
become the greatest town outside World’s End, a centre of trade and industry
second only to the Universal City itself.
By mid-afternoon, through a rising mist, they could already see the Rhydian
Bridge, marooned against the darkening sky. They could even smell the smoke
from the town and the tanneries on the banks of the river, a rank, unpleasant,
chemical smell; but to Loki – reclining on a pile of furs in the back of his wagon,
drinking from a bottle of wine and eating one of Sif’s jam tarts – that was the
smell of money.
Just the place for a circus, he thought. Folk with money and goods to trade
were always on the lookout for entertainment. This was no Uplands village,
trading in loaves of bread and bales of hay. Here there would be horses, gold,
furs, fine wines, perhaps even slaves. The people, though perhaps not as
sophisticated as those of World’s End, would have the kind of expensive tastes
that come with northern money. With luck, and the right kind of patronage, the
circus could ride on the takings for at least a hundred miles or so before having
to stock up again, which would put them well within crow’s flight of their
destination.
In any case, the travellers had no choice but to cross the Vimur by the
Rhydian Bridge. The detour to the next crossing place would mean most of an
extra day’s journey, all of it on minor roads, and Loki couldn’t afford to lose
even half a day of his intricately planned itinerary. This was already the third day
of their trip to World’s End. By dawn on the seventh he had pledged to lead them
through the city gates – which meant that they had to move fast if they wanted to
make it on time.
He wasn’t expecting trouble. Over three days the gods had proved more than
capable of dealing with the few setbacks they had encountered: a couple of
bands of outlaws, rapidly dispatched by Thor; an officious border patrol or two,
who had proved no match for Freyja’s charm; roads obstructed by mud-slides or
snow – in short, nothing unusual, and things had been going so perfectly that the
Trickster had allowed himself to become just a little complacent.
Now, with Rhydian in sight and, beyond it, the broad, easy Lowlands roads,
he had allowed his guard to slip …
That had been his one mistake.
At first it had looked so promising. First impressions count, and with this in
mind, the Trickster had taken great care with the three wagons that made up his
retinue, each one drawn by a pair of horses and emblazoned with these words, in
gold, against a scarlet background:
LUCKY’S POCKET PAN-DAEMONIUM CIRCUS!
A PARAGON OF EXCELLENCE!
BEASTS AND MARVELS!
NEW AGE CURES!
MYSTERIES OF THE ELDER DAYS!
COME ONE, COME ALL!
This somewhat boastful display had worked very well in other towns, and
the Trickster was pleased with the effect. The performers themselves flanked the
wagons – Thor, stripped to the waist to show his muscles, Sif riding alongside, in
Sow Aspect, in bonnet and frock. Next came Idun and Bragi – Idun throwing
flower petals at the crowd (as well as her healing skills, she seemed to have the
ability to produce flowers and fruit of any kind, effortlessly, in or out of season);
Bragi playing his guitar.
At the rear came Angrboda with Fenris and the Wolf Boys, all three in
Aspect, collared and chained, trotting obediently at her heels, while some way
ahead of the convoy, Jolly and Sugar – renamed Grumpy and Stumpy by Loki,
much to their indignation – rode in their turkey-drawn cart, throwing leaflets and
handfuls of candies into the crowds that lined the street …
At least, until they reached Rhydian.
But in Rhydian there were no crowds. No one came out to see the show. No
children ran behind the horses; no one laughed at the dwarves in their cart. Loki,
who usually led the procession, was at first intrigued, then troubled, then hurt.
What in the Worlds was wrong with these Folk? It wasn’t an excess of
Orderly zeal that kept the punters away from the show; there were no Laws in
Rhydian against a travelling circus. It couldn’t be lack of interest; unless these
Folk were a different race to all the others Loki had met, there ought to be plenty
of takers for beasts and marvels and miracle cures.
Finally, when they’d been in Rhydian over an hour and no one but a few
dogs, a road-sweeper and an old woman in a black bergha had turned out to see
the show, Loki asked the question.
‘What is it with this place?’ he said, addressing the crone, who was sitting on
the kerbside drinking a bottle of Ridings beer. ‘Is there nobody here who
appreciates the arts?’
The old lady shrugged and grinned at him, exposing a set of fine wooden
teeth. ‘A course there is, lad,’ she told him. ‘But ye’ll have to wait till sundown.
That’s when the town comes alive, see? That’s when folk come out to play.’
‘Oh,’ said Loki.
The crone grinned again. ‘But don’t ye be counting your chickens yet. We’ve
got a circus of our own. Right up by the Meridian Bridge.’ (She used the
oldsters’ term for the bridge, which made her one of the few left alive who
remembered Rhydian’s true name.) ‘Damn fine show it give too. Every day at
sundown. I bet they could teach ye a thing or two.’
‘You think?’ said Loki.
‘Aye,’ said the crone. ‘I think ye’ll go a long way afore ye find better than
Captain Chaos’s Carnival. But don’t you take my word on it. See for yourselves.
Be at the bridge at sundown. It’s going to be a Hel of a show …’
And at that the old woman flashed him a grin that showed every one of her
wooden teeth, and went back to drinking her Ridings beer.
SINCE HER LASTdisastrous encounter with the Old Man in the rock, Maggie had tried
twice more to question him. Both times she had failed to awaken so much as a
spark from the prisoner. Maggie blamed herself for this. The battle of minds
between them and the force of the blow she had struck him had left the stone
Head lifeless and dark, with no clue as to when – or if – its occupant might
reawaken.
Even so, a part of her was secretly relieved. Her last conversation with Odin
had left her angry and confused, racked with self-doubt and uncertainty, ready to
question even those truths that she had always lived by.
Her attempts to locate the Firefolk had been equally frustrating. At the
Whisperer’s request, she had tried several times to find them through Dream; but
either they had shielded themselves, or the turbulence from the rift between
Worlds had temporarily obscured them from sight.
To her relief, the Whisperer had shown a surprising patience. The Old Man
would speak eventually – it was only a matter of time. The Firefolk were no
immediate threat; sooner or later they would be found. Meanwhile Maggie
stayed in the penthouse, playing chequers with Adam, or talking, or practising
her runes, and the time slipped by almost peaceably, so that she sometimes let
whole hours pass without even a thought of the war, or the End of the Worlds, or
the Æsir, or the Old Man, or even the Good Book.
Every day Adam would spend an hour or two outside in the city, watching
their surroundings, buying supplies, and checking on the Red Horse. Maggie
always stayed indoors – it wasn’t safe, Adam said, for her to show her face
outside. When he returned, it was always with some little gift – flowers, or fruit,
or pastries, or a necklace of brightly coloured beads – which Maggie accepted in
grateful surprise. It had been so long since anyone had given her a present. She
wanted to give him something in return, but failing the new runes, or some kind
of map indicating the position of the Firefolk, Maggie had nothing to offer him.
Now, on her third day of idleness, she was feeling increasingly restless. The
day was bright and welcoming: spring was on its way at last, and suddenly
Maggie was desperate to stroll along Examiners’ Walk; to smell the scent of the
linden trees or maybe buy a pastry or two …
She glanced at the window longingly. Adam had said he’d be back by noon,
but the cathedral clock had chimed two and Maggie was getting hungry.
Surely, she thought, there could be no harm in opening the window a crack.
She pushed it an inch or two ajar, and the scent of the city flooded in – a
complex aroma of spices and ale, of perfumes and wood-smoke and ocean salt,
of garbage and flowers and roasting meat – and with it came the familiar sounds
of voices and hooves on the cobbled streets; of hawkers selling their wares; of
dogs and shrieking gulls and the wind across the rooftops; the multitude of city
sounds that Maggie had missed so terribly.
With one hand, she cast Bjarkán. If there was danger anywhere, the truesight
would reveal it. But nothing unusual showed itself, and so Maggie opened the
window a little wider and stepped out onto the balcony. It felt good to be outside.
She looked over the balcony and took a deep breath of the city air. The chop-
houses and coffee shops were all open for business, and the smell of cooking
rose from the streets, making Maggie’s mouth water.
There was a vendor just below her and his cry – ‘Sweet pastries! Fat Boys!
Marchpane for your lady!’ – made her mouth water all the more.
She could be there and back again in the blink of an eye, she told herself.
Gone just long enough to buy a couple of the fried, sugared dough balls that
World’s Enders called Fat Boys. It would mean leaving the Old Man for no more
than five minutes. Surely that would do no harm.
She flicked Bjarkán at the Old Man. It showed no sign of wakefulness.
Below her, in the crowded street, the vendor of pastries shouted his wares.
‘Marchpane! Fat Boys!’
Maggie turned towards the door. Five minutes. That’s all. What harm can five
minutes do? And with one last glance at the Old Man, she left the room, locking
the door, and ran down the steps into the street.
THE BIRDS WERE waiting as she came in, a sugared Fat Boy in each hand. Two
ravens, one perched on the window-ledge, one, with a white feather on its head,
actually inside the room, preening its feathers and watching Maggie with eyes of
a curious wedding-ring gold.
Maggie put down the Fat Boys on the bedside table. ‘Out! Out!’ she said to
the birds, waving her arms threateningly.
The ravens seemed quite unperturbed. The larger one cocked its head and
scratched at its wing in a languid way. The smaller bird – the one with the white
feather – looked at the Fat Boys by the bed and made a hopeful crowing sound.
Kaik! Kaik!
‘Not a chance,’ said Maggie. ‘Now will you both get out of here?’
The larger bird hopped onto the bed.
The smaller gave its raucous cry: Crawk. Kaik.
‘Get out,’ she said again.
‘Now that’s hardly bein’ hospitable,’ said a voice at Maggie’s side and,
turning, she saw that the raven had turned into a raggedy man, dark-eyed and
dressed in black, with a great deal of silver jewellery, sitting cross-legged on the
coverlet and watching her with a gleaming smile.
Maggie’s eyes opened wide. ‘Who are you? What do you want?’
‘Well, I wouldn’ae refuse a quick bite …’ He helped himself to a Fat Boy.
‘I’m Hughie, and this is Mandy, and we’ve come a long way tae talk wi’ ye.’
The raven finished his Fat Boy with a speed that was almost uncanny, and
tossed the other to his companion, who while he was speaking had assumed the
Aspect of a young girl with a streak of silver in her hair and a dragon-claw ring
in her left ear.
Kaik, said Mandy affably, eating the Fat Boy with lightning speed.
Maggie eyed her suspiciously. Could these two creatures be Firefolk?
Anything was possible. And there was something about the pair that reminded
her of the Red Horse: that hint of Chaos hidden behind an Aspect that seemed
almost ordinary – especially in World’s End of course, where even the most
Outlandish of gear barely raised an eyebrow. Each one had a tattoo on their arm
– a tattoo or a runemark, Maggie wasn’t sure which.
She summoned the rune Bjarkán and glanced at the pair through the
truesight. Like Sleipnir, their Aspects were different when viewed through the
circle of finger and thumb: no longer human, nor even birdlike, but some kind of
nightmarish hybrid of both, the black design on their arms now shining with
almost unbearable light –
Maggie quickly summoned Tyr, the warrior rune, behind her back. ‘What are
you? Demons? Firefolk?’
Hughie grinned and shook his head. ‘Messengers, hen. Just messengers.’
‘What do you want?’
‘To make a deal. To come to some arrangement.’
‘What kind of arrangement do you mean?’ The rune Tyr was still poised to
strike.
Hughie gave her a comical look. ‘Hen, if we wanted trouble,’ he said, ‘we
could have started some by now.’
Maggie’s eyes flicked towards the plinth, where the Old Man stood silent
under his sheet. Nothing seemed to have been disturbed. She allowed herself to
relax a little.
‘So what do you want?’
‘We want tae help. Hugin and Munin, at your service. Travellers through
Nine Worlds. Erstwhile messengers to the Auld Man himself, now in need o’
gainful employment.’
‘What kind of gainful employment?’ she said.
‘Anythin’ ye like, hen. We can travel through Death, through Dream. We see
things. We know things. Lots o’ things.’
Maggie eyed him suspiciously. ‘And you think I’m going to trust you? You
just told me you worked for the Old Man.’
‘Ach,’ said Hughie, ‘not any more. You’re the Rider of Carnage, hen. That
means we belong to you now.’
Maggie’s eyes widened. ‘To me?’ she said.
Mandy crawk-ed.
‘You mean – like servants or something?’
Hughie scratched his armpit. ‘Servants, spies, sentinels; carriers, shield-
bearers, outriders, batmen, purveyors of shiny things and generally jacks of all
trade. Aye. That’s the basic idea. So. What do ye say, eh?’
Mandy craw-ed and sniffed hopefully at the bedside table for Fat Boy
crumbs. Maggie found herself wanting to laugh. The creatures might well be
dangerous, with their mysterious runes and their ability to change into birds, but
most of all they reminded her of wild, chaotic children – strangely endearing,
full of fun, fizzing with restless energy.
She cast Bjarkán a last time. Once more she saw the creatures in Aspect;
once more she scanned their signatures. She saw a tendency to theft, a great deal
of mischief, some vanity and a constant craving for sweet things and shiny
objects – but there was no thread of malice there among those frenzied colours.
Whatever else they intended, the ravens meant her no harm.
‘How can you help me?’ she said at last. ‘Can you give me the new runes?’
Hughie shook his head.
‘Then can you wake the Old Man?’
He shrugged. ‘Sorry, hen.’
‘Then what exactly can you do?’
‘We can give ye the Firefolk.’
And at that Hughie reached into his pocket and brought out a crumpled ball
of pink paper, which he thrust at Maggie. For a moment his gold, inhuman eyes
fixed on Maggie’s grey ones. He dropped the ball of paper into her open hand.
Crawk, said Mandy. Crawk. Crawk.
Maggie unfolded the crumpled sheet. She saw a cheaply printed single page
advertising some kind of show:
LUCKY’S POCKET PAN-DAEMONIUM CIRCUS!
BEASTS AND MARVELS!
WONDERS AND FREAKS!
She frowned at the page in confusion. A circus? What in the Worlds could it
mean? How could a travelling circus be connected with the Firefolk? Then her
eyes widened, and she understood.
‘Is that how they’re doing it? Is that how they’re going unnoticed? How
close have they come? How long till they get to World’s End?’
Hughie scratched his head and crawk-ed. ‘They’ve come as far as Rhydian.
That’s a fair good speed, hen. A course, they have Loki to thank for that. He’s a
one that’s never short of a plan – if his life depends on it.’
Maggie’s eyes were still on the paper. ‘Will they make it here in time?’
‘Aye, no doubt, at this pace,’ he said. ‘Though perhaps there’s a way tae slow
them down – or stop them altogether.’
‘How?’
He seemed to hesitate. ‘Well, this may be a long shot …’ he said. ‘But there’s
something sleeping in Rhydian. Something that, if it were to awake, might just
provide the solution to your problem and ours.’
‘You mean, asleep like the Red Horse?’ said Maggie.
‘Not exactly. More like a trap, or a tripwire. I think ye’ll find that it’s more
than enough tae deal with the likes o’ the Firefolk. But …’ Hughie paused. ‘I
were ye, I wouldn’t say anything tae your friend, or to his little passenger. In
fact, I wouldn’ae mention us at all. Best not to let them know how ye happened
to call us.’
‘Call you? I did not!’ she said.
‘Oh, but ye did,’ he told her. ‘We’ve heard ye calling these past three days.
And then ye opened the window, and gave us an offering of cake.’
‘It wasn’t like that,’ Maggie said.
Hughie grinned. ‘Nevertheless …’
Maggie thought hard, still looking at the crumpled piece of paper. If Hughie
was right, and the Firefolk had come as far as the Northlands border, then
something needed to be done. By rights, she ought to tell Adam all this, but she
didn’t trust his passenger. The Whisperer had already tried to make her kill her
sister. What would happen if she told it about the Firefolk?
Frowning, she turned to Hughie again. ‘You said this thing would slow them
down. Like a kind of trap, you said.’
Hughie nodded. ‘Aye, hen.’
‘Is my sister with them?’
‘No.’
‘Then tell me what to do,’ she said.
He smiled. ‘Just dream a little dream.’
When Maggie awoke, the birds were gone and Adam was sitting beside her.
‘I must have fallen asleep,’ she said, with a glance at the open window. ‘I’m
sorry. I know I shouldn’t have—’
‘Did the Old Man speak?’ he said, and she saw the Whisperer in his eyes.
Maggie shook her head. ‘Not a word.’
‘And nothing else happened?’ The Whisperer’s voice was suspicious, and
dry as a handful of cemetery dust.
Once more Maggie shook her head, and any feeling of guilt she might have
had at deceiving Adam slipped away. The Whisperer was too dangerous for her
to confide in Adam now. Who knew what kind of punishment his master might
inflict on him, and all because Maggie Rede couldn’t keep her mouth shut?
Besides, what had she really done? Opened the window an inch or two? Bought
a couple of Fat Boys? Had a nap? Dreamed a dream?
She lifted her eyes to Adam’s and gave him her sweetest, most open smile. ‘I
had the most wonderful dream,’ she said. ‘Now, how about a kiss?’
And as she pulled him towards her and laced her hands together at the nape
of his neck, Maggie felt a surge of something inside too powerful for her to
express. She had no words for it; but she knew that she would rather die than see
Adam suffer because of her. If everything went to plan, she thought, the Firefolk
would soon be subdued, the Old Man would give her the new runes, and Adam
would be free at last.
And as for Odin’s ravens …
Maggie reached down into her pocket and felt the crumpled pink paper there.
As soon as she could, she told herself, she would throw it into the fire. No trace
remained of the two birds – no speck of sugar, no signature, not even a scatter of
Fat Boy crumbs to indicate that they had been there. Perhaps she had only
dreamed them, and all this was just a delirium brought on by a surfeit of Fat
Boys.
In any case, Maggie thought, all that was over now.
Adam didn’t need to know.
THE SUN WASsetting through the mist as Loki and the other gods made their way to
the Rhydian Bridge, the mass of its four stone pylons looming dark against the
sky. The mist was getting thick now, rolling off the river in waves. The streets
were ghostly with it; the air heavily charged with the scent of smoke.
‘Gods alive, it stinks!’ said Jolly.
For once, Sugar agreed with him. It wasn’t just the smoke, he thought, or
even the reek of the tanneries. It was something worse than either of those;
something like the stench of death.
The townsfolk seemed not to notice. They watched with no hostility, but no
apparent interest, while the circus approached the Rhydian Bridge. As the sky
darkened, so Rhydian lit; first with lamps by the side of the street, suspended
from metal lampposts; then with lanterns in windows; with torches, fires and
braziers, and strings of multicoloured glass globes, each containing a tea-light,
that were stretched from building to building, giving the town a carnival look.
Loki felt his spirits lift again. A carnival meant money to spend, wine to be
drunk, fat purses to be plundered. What if there was another circus in town?
Rhydian was big enough. And besides, the Trickster couldn’t see any carnival
hoping to compete with Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus.
What had the old woman said to him? That the town came alive at sundown?
Well, it was sundown, and sure enough, all along the riverside, Rhydian was
coming to life. Chop-houses and taverns were beginning to open their doors.
From one came a scent of mulled wine; from others, fresh bread, grilled fish,
fruit pies with cinnamon. The gods found their mouths watering; the meagre
supplies from their last stop mostly consisted of dried food and hay for the
horses, and the prospect of a home-cooked meal was suddenly very attractive.
Loki began to feel quite cheerful; and even the thought of competing with
Rhydian’s home-grown carnival felt as if it might turn out to be, not a chore, but
a pleasure.
The mist had thickened even more as the gods made their way to the foot of
the bridge. Now they could begin to grasp the colossal, solid scale of the thing:
those pylons reaching into the mist; those cables holding the structure in place
like a cat’s cradle of metal and stone. The far side of the bridge was in fog; only
the lights on the pylons remained visible, like fireballs in the darkness.
‘Gods, that’s impressive,’ said Thor (who, in his Aspect as Dorian,
appreciated a nice piece of engineering work).
‘I can’t see the other side at all,’ said Heimdall, squinting through Bjarkán.
‘This fog must be unusually thick.’
But Loki had other things on his mind. ‘So – where’s this other circus?’ he
said. ‘And how come we can’t hear it?’
‘I do hear something,’ Bragi said, summoning a cantrip. ‘It sounds like
someone playing a flute.’
Idun nodded. ‘I hear it too. It’s coming from down there …’ And she pointed
to some iron steps that seemed to lead underneath the bridge.
Loki took a step forward. There was definitely something down there. Now
that he knew, he could hear it too. A sound of many voices, muffled by the
weight of the fog; and music, distant music, and the scent of something delicious
…
He squinted into the luminous mist. ‘That must be the carnival,’ he said.
‘What say we go and check it out?’
The others seemed inclined to agree. ‘It’s under there,’ said Freyja, pointing
between the bridge’s feet. ‘Look, I can see the lights …’
The gods and their allies in Chaos left their wagons to take a look. Sure
enough, between the pylons was gathered a crowd of people. Visibility was poor,
and the crowd looked more like ghosts, but there were men, women and children
down there; and pastry vendors, beer stalls, pie-men, pedlars selling trinkets. The
smell of food was suddenly overwhelming.
‘This looks very promising,’ said Loki with his crooked smile. ‘We’ll go
down, set up the show, get ourselves a bite to eat and be off before midnight. I’m
starving.’
Fenris and the Wolf Boys growled their approval of the plan.
Jolly and Sugar, who had livened up at the smell of beer, now looked almost
cheerful.
Angie said, ‘They have animals.’
Sure enough, a rumbling sound, like penned beasts, came from below.
‘And a stage,’ said Freyja, looking down the steps in her turn. ‘And
something written there in lights …’
Once more Loki squinted into the mist, and found himself wondering why he
hadn’t seen it before. A large square panel, surrounded by glass globe-lights,
which proclaimed:
CAPTAIN CHAOS’S CARNIVAL OF CATACLYSM AND CATASTROPHE!
ALL YOUR WILDEST DREAMS BROUGHT TO LIFE!
SEE THE MIGHTY OLIPHANT!
THE MAGIC MIRROR!
THE MAN OF STEEL!
THE BEST IN NINE WORLDS, OR YOUR MONEY BACK!!!
Loki found himself caught between amusement and indignation. Clearly this
Captain Chaos had no small opinion of himself.
‘We can make a killing here,’ he told the others. ‘Wait and see. There must
be a thousand people down there – that’s a thousand purses ripe for the picking.
A thousand satisfied customers just waiting to show their appreciation in gold.’
Only Ethel looked doubtful. ‘I don’t think it’s a good idea,’ she said. ‘Can’t
we just cross the bridge and move on?’
‘What?’ said Loki. ‘And miss out on the biggest prize in the whole of the
North Ridings? Not to mention a decent meal …’
Heimdall nodded. ‘Let’s go,’ he said. ‘It’s just a pity we can’t take the
wagons.’
Ethel shook her head. ‘I’ll stay. You don’t need me for the show, anyway.
And I don’t like the look of those steps.’
Loki shrugged. ‘Well, please yourself. But I still think you’re missing out.’
And so gods and demons (and wolves and birds) made their way down the
spiral steps that led underneath the Meridian Bridge. It was a long way down,
and the steps were older and even more rickety than they had first appeared.
Clearly the ironwork under the bridge was not as well-maintained as it was
above, and the infrastructure made disquieting little ticking sounds as the party
descended.
But when they arrived underneath, they found a scene of such merriment that
all of them forgot their doubts. Loki had guessed at a thousand Folk – now he
reckoned twice that number, all crowded onto the space that ran under the stone
pylons – a broad stone walkway overlooking the water and lit by many lanterns
that were suspended under the bridge.
The effect, especially in fog, was like that of an enormous hall with food
stands, pedlars, entertainers of all kinds – fire-eaters, jugglers – all barking their
wares at the tops of their voices while the crowd moved placidly from one
entertainment to another, ooh-ing and aah-ing and tossing coins.
And there was the stage, surrounded by lights. An opulent red curtain was
drawn, and a man in a spangled coat and tall hat was announcing some kind of
performance. Freyja was already there, watching from the front row, her face as
rapt as a child’s.
Captain Chaos’s Carnival, thought the Trickster, and grinned to himself;
pausing only to snag a Fat Boy from a passing vendor’s tray, he pushed forward
through the cheering crowd to check out the opposition.
The first thing he did was cast Bjarkán. He wasn’t expecting trouble, but
information never hurt. What tricks did the circus have in store? Were there
trapdoors? Illusions? What was hidden behind that curtain?
But in the glare of the stage lights, Bjarkán had nothing to reveal. The tiniest
scrawl of a signature, something that might be a broken rune – but beyond that,
try as he might, Loki couldn’t make out the details. Still, he thought, it was
nothing much. Just a couple of cantrips. Nothing that might challenge him. He
settled down to enjoy the show.
Captain Chaos revealed himself to be a man of average height, with red hair
under his tall hat and an impudent, lopsided grin, to which Loki immediately
took exception. His manner was equally impudent, though he had an engaging
style and a slick turn of phrase and a comic air that set the audience roaring.
‘And now, for your delight and delectation,’ he said. (What a cliché, thought
Loki.) ‘All the way from the depths of Dream’ – a drum rolled, a guitar struck a
chord – ‘the delirious, delicious, utterly irresistible Diva of Desire, the
Deaconess of Delight, the one and only Dulcinea, the most Beautiful Woman in
the Nine Worlds!’
Freyja stiffened. ‘How dare he!’
Loki put a hand on her arm. ‘Shh,’ he said. ‘I want to see.’
‘How dare he!’ she said in a louder voice, slapping away the Trickster’s
hand. On her brow the rune Fé shone out in indignation. ‘Most Beautiful Woman
in the Worlds! That’s— How dare he! That’s me!’
Briefly Loki considered shutting her up with a cantrip. But the goddess of
desire in a rage was not someone to be trifled with, and if Loki felt that it might
be unwise for Freyja to intervene at that point, he wisely kept his thoughts to
himself. Some forces are unstoppable – a jealous woman is one of them. And so
he finished his Fat Boy instead, and settled down to watch as Freyja leaped in
full Aspect onto the stage and into the lights.
Captain Chaos seemed unmoved by the interruption. In fact, his grin
broadened a little. ‘Have we had the pleasure?’ he said, extending a welcoming
hand.
Freyja, blinded by the lights and finding a thousand pairs of eyes suddenly
fixed upon her, glared.
‘Ladies and gentlemen,’ he said. ‘It appears we have a challenge. For tonight,
for one night only, Dulcinea will share the stage with – er …?’
Loki, seeing Freyja ready to make a fool of herself, sprang up onto the stage
beside her. ‘Let me introduce you,’ he said. ‘This is the Lady Gylfa, from
Greenland. Gylfa the Golden, Gylfa the Great, the glorious Goddess of
Gorgeousness …’
Captain Chaos showed his teeth. ‘Very well. Name your stake. We’ll match
it. Winner takes all,’ he said.
‘Stake?’ said Freyja, bewildered.
‘Make a wager, lady. Best in Nine Worlds, or your money back. Isn’t that the
rule, folks?’
The audience roared its approval. Coins began to shower down onto the
boards of the little stage.
For a moment Freyja hesitated. Then she summoned the money-rune, Fé,
and flung down a handful of silver coins.
Captain Chaos raised an eyebrow, and Loki saw that under the dazzling
lights, Freyja’s coins had reverted back into the dreamstuff from which they had
come, leaving only a handful of dust that glittered on the wooden boards.
He hastily put a hand into his pocket and brought out a handful of real coins.
Captain Chaos grinned at him as they clinked onto the growing pile.
Once more the audience howled. Loki took a deep bow.
Captain Chaos followed suit. ‘All right. Now, folks. Let the show begin!’
And from behind the red curtain stepped a woman of such beauty, such
grace, that even the gods, who were used to such things, could not help but stop
and stare. A gleaming rune adorned her brow –
– it was the reverse of the rune Fé, a rune of fire and destruction – and though
afterwards no one who’d seen her could quite agree on the precise colour of her
hair, or the fabric of her dress, Thor stared so hard that Sif slapped his face; and
Fenny and the Wolf Boys almost drooled with longing; and Bragi’s jaw dropped;
and Idun glared; and Loki thanked his lucky stars that Sigyn was safe in her
acorn-cup.
And then Dulcinea started to dance to the languid sound of a violin, and
every note was a first kiss, and every step was a broken heart, and the audience
began to sway and moan in a kind of voiceless ecstasy …
For a moment Freyja stood her ground. In Aspect, she was dazzling. Her hair
was a winter sunset, her mouth a slashed pomegranate. It seemed impossible that
any woman could rival her …
But Dulcinea was like silk; like cream; like roses; like starlight. Next to her,
Freyja’s hair looked brassy and vulgar; her lips too full; her face too hard; her
waist too pinched; her eyes angry slits; her fists clenched into ugly knots.
‘Do we have a winner?’ said Captain Chaos with a grin.
The audience began to chant: ‘Dul-ci-ne-a! Dulcinea!’
‘Are you sure?’ said Captain Chaos.
The colour dropped from Freyja’s face.
‘Are you sure that’s who you want?’
‘Dul-ci-ne-a! DUL-CI-NE-A!’
Still she faced them. The chanting grew louder. Someone called out: ‘Get the
doxy off the stage! Let’s have Dulcinea!’
And at that, with a shriek of outrage, the goddess of desire fled, crackling
with runelight and wrath, to laughter and mocking applause from the crowd.
Thoughtful, Loki watched her go. It wasn’t that he had any sympathy for
Freyja’s humiliation. In fact, he quite enjoyed it. Still, there was something about
all this that made him a little uneasy. Perhaps it was those dazzling lights that
prevented him from using Bjarkán … He almost considered packing up and
leaving. After all, they still had supplies. The horses could last another night,
with runes of endurance to speed them on. After that there had to be plenty of
villages down the road that would be happy to see their show.
But the thought of letting a rival win was too much for Loki to accept.
Captain Chaos’s Carnival couldn’t be as good as it claimed. The best in Nine
Worlds, or your money back?
That sounded like a challenge. A bet.
And if there was anything he couldn’t turn down …
And so, without further resistance, the Trickster snagged himself another
couple of Fat Boys and prepared to face the enemy.
a small, narrow houseboat down by the docks, in a neighbourhood
PERTH LIVED IN
known as the Water Rats, a place where fishermen traded their wares. It was
lucky for Maddy that he did, for she had soon learned that Jormungand, even in
his Horse Aspect, needed more than just hay to sustain him.
On his very first day in World’s End the Horse of the Sea had munched his
way casually through half a dozen lobsters, a bucket of shrimp, a barrel of salt
herring and a whole fresh cod before Maddy could stop him, and was now under
orders to stay under the boardwalk, preferably in one of his smaller Aspects, and
to feed only by night, well away from curious eyes.
Perth’s suggestion that a fish-eating horse would help draw the punters in
was dismissed by Maddy, whose earlier assessment of him had only been
reinforced when she saw him in action. Perth could sell anything – from pieces
of rock to sacks of potatoes – and if they were stolen, then so much the better.
He also had no scruples about picking the pockets of his customers as they left,
and Maddy, trying to ensure that neither of them attracted the wrong sort of
attention, found the task harder and harder.
By the time she’d been in World’s End five days, Maddy was feeling
desperate. According to the Seeress, the End of the Worlds was in four days’
time, and still there was no sign of either the Old Man, or Maggie, or even
Odin’s ravens, who might have been able to guide her in the right direction. Jorgi
was worse than useless; lolling under the boardwalk by day, hunting for seals
and lobsters by night, he showed no sign of clairvoyance, nor any inclination to
help, and Maddy’s frustration grew and grew until she could barely eat, barely
sleep, in case she missed some vital clue to the problems that eluded her.
At night she paced. She gnawed her fists. She wrote out Ethel’s prophecy
and studied it interminably. She even took out her casting runes and tried to read
her fortune, but the runestones kept stubbornly landing face-down, so that finally
she put them away, half wondering whether all this – Perth, Maggie, her flight to
World’s End, Jormungand, all the events of the past three years – had simply
been a terrible dream, from which she could expect to awake at any moment to
discover that Odin was not dead, that Maggie was not her sister and that the
Apocalypse predicted by the Seeress was merely a chapter in an as yet unwritten
Faërie tale, to be told around a campfire to grandchildren as yet unborn.
Sadly, it was no dream; and Maddy was almost ready to give up hope and
rejoin her friends when something happened to change her mind.
It was fish-market day at the Water Rats. There were four of these markets
every week – one for fish, one for fabrics, one for flowers, one for fruit and
vegetables. Perth was helping out at a stall selling pickled herring (and lifting the
occasional purse, just to keep in practice). Jorgi was under the boardwalk as
usual, snapping up anything that happened to crawl his way. And Maddy, her
face half wrapped in a shawl (to try to stifle the smell of the fish), was sitting
watching the people go by and feeling almost sleepy with the noise and buzz of
the market-day crowd.
Suddenly she became aware of a plump little woman watching her. The
woman, wearing a black bergha, had been walking past with some haddock in a
basket. Now she stopped in her tracks and stared at Maddy with such furious
persistence that Maddy was jolted from her reverie.
‘So, madam!’ the woman said. ‘This is where you ended up! Hanging around
the Water Rats. I should have known it! Ha!’ And she gave a contemptuous little
sniff and forked the sign against the evil eye.
‘I’m sorry – do I know you?’ said Maddy.
‘Know me?’ said the woman. ‘I should think you do, ye saucy thing. Think I
don’t know ye, Maggie Rede?’
Maddy’s fatigue dropped away at once. ‘What did you call me?’
‘I called ye by your name, Maggie Rede,’ said the plump little woman
vehemently. ‘Ye may hide your head ’neath a shawl now, but I know what you’re
hiding.’
Maddy pulled away her shawl, deliberately showing her face. Her long wavy
hair spilled out around her shoulders.
The little woman’s eyes widened. ‘What? Your hair …’ she faltered. ‘It was
— How could—?’ Then she stopped, rubbed her eyes and, with an effort, said:
‘Beg pardon. My mistake.’
‘Did you think I was someone else?’ said Maddy, trying to conceal her
excitement. Clearly this woman knew Maggie Rede. Maybe she even knew
where she was.
She summoned a casual runecharm. Silver-tongued, alluring Logr took shape
between her fingers. ‘I’m sorry, Mrs … er?’
‘Blackmore,’ said the woman, still looking bewildered. ‘Mrs Blackmore, so
please ye, miss, and – beg pardon, but you’re the spit of her—’
‘This Maggie Rede. Who is she? And what exactly did she do?’
And under the soothing charm of Logr, Mrs Blackmore told her tale: how
she had taken the wretched girl in, given her a decent home, fed her, clothed her
and tried to bring her up properly; only to be repaid by Lawlessness, ingratitude
and deceit. She finished by telling Maddy how the girl had come home one
morning, having stayed out all night long, hair cut off like a savage’s, and that
terrible ruinmark at the back of her neck – and with a young man in tow, no less;
a young man with eyes like a demon’s.
But there Mrs Blackmore’s knowledge ran dry. She could neither say who
the young man had been, nor where the pair had run to; and finally Maddy let
her go, feeling at the same time cheered that at last she had news of her sister,
but disheartened that such a promising lead had turned out to be a dead end, a
light briefly glimpsed, then lost in the dark.
WAITING BY THE Rhydian Bridge, Ethel was feeling uneasy. There was no apparent
reason for this. Bjarkán had revealed no surprises. The bridge, though ancient,
was just a bridge. The space underneath the pylons was just a convenient
gathering place.
So what if the Folk of Rhydian were a little distant? What if the steps under
the bridge were old and somewhat poorly maintained? The Seeress had stronger
nerves than this, and was slightly annoyed that her weaker self – the woman who
had once been Ethelberta Parson – seemed to have developed an unacceptable
case of the jitters.
She had been waiting for half an hour when Odin’s Mind and Spirit flew
down to join her by the side of the bridge. Over the past few days Hughie and
Mandy had been occasional visitors to Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus,
but the Trickster had long ceased expecting them to make any kind of valuable
contribution. Sometimes they could be lured with fruit, or biscuits, or lumps of
sugar; but for the most part they did as they pleased, vanishing for the whole
day, then returning as if nothing had happened, cawing in their harsh voices –
Kaik. Kaik. Kaik.
Ethel liked the ravens. They were all she had left of her husband. The
Seeress part of her recalled when they had been seldom away from his side, as
much a part of Allfather as his blue cloak or his broad-brimmed hat. Ragnarók
had changed that, of course, as it had changed so many things. But while Hugin
and Munin still travelled the skies, she felt that there could still be hope.
She reached into her pocket and brought out a handful of raisins. Scattered
them onto the floor.
Ack-ack!
‘There you are, my tattered ones.’ She used one of Odin’s names for them,
and felt a surge of nostalgia. The ravens pecked at the offering, then pecked at
each other viciously.
When the food was gone, they shifted back into their human Aspects and
perched – Hughie on the left, Mandy on the right – on the two large ironwork
pineapples that adorned the bridge’s railings.
Ethel watched in mingled amusement and irritation. ‘Where have you two
been?’ she said.
Hughie shrugged. ‘Ach, here and there. World’s End. Dream. The usual.’
‘Any news of him?’
‘Maybe. We’ll know more in a little while.’
‘And the Rider of Carnage?’ Ethel tried to keep the impatience out of her
voice.
‘We’re workin’ on it. Give us time.’ Hughie gave a massive yawn. ‘It’s no so
easy, hen, ye know. It’s no like the auld days. Things have changed.’
‘I know,’ said the Seeress. ‘But time is short. And we have the small matter
of a prophecy to fulfil.’
‘Well, have ye considered,’ Hughie said, ‘that the prophecy may well be
fulfilled whether or not we do anything. I mean, it depends if ye take the view
that everything is predetermined, therefore it disn’ae matter what we do, or do ye
subscribe to the theory that all actions are governed by cosmic free will?’
He paused, having noticed a raisin that he and Mandy had overlooked.
Shifting to his raven form, he hopped down from his perch and pecked it up.
Then he shifted Aspect again, and came to stand by Ethel’s side.
‘I miss him,’ she said.
‘I know ye do.’
‘The prophecy doesn’t make it clear. Are we doing the right thing?’
Hughie put his hand on her arm. His silver rings gleamed in the lamplight.
‘Only time will tell, hen. Only time will tell.’
Suddenly Mandy, who still looked strangely birdlike in spite of her human
Aspect, crawk-ed.
‘What’s that, Mand?’
Ack-ack-ack. Crawk.
Hughie, who seemed to understand Mandy’s language no matter what,
listened, head cocked to one side. He frowned in concentration.
Mandy spoke again. Crawk. Her voice was harsh and urgent. Crawk. Ack-
ack. Crawk. Ack-ack.
Hughie looked back at Ethel. ‘Mandy says it’s time,’ he said.
Ethel nodded reluctantly. ‘It seems like such a risk,’ she said. ‘And we could
still lose everything …’
He shrugged. ‘When ye’re playing for everything, ye have tae risk losing
everything.’
She smiled. ‘You even sound like him now. Is he certain of this? Is he safe, at
least?’
Hughie shrugged. ‘Be sure of this: wherever he is, the Auld Man’s where he
wants to be.’
And with that, he resumed his raven guise, and both of Odin’s birds were
gone in a flurry of wings into the mist that poured from under the Rhydian
Bridge.
CAPTAIN CHAOS’S CARNIVAL of Confusion had proved to have several more tricks
hidden behind its red curtain. While Freyja alternately fanned herself and
indulged in mild hysterics, the artistes of Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium
Circus, shamed at the failure of one their own, now tried to redress the balance.
Never had they encountered such a demanding audience; never had they
experienced such humiliating defeat. Æsir and Vanir both shared in Freyja’s
mortification, and even the demons were keen to prove that their side was the
strongest; with the result that Captain Chaos – his grin now broader than ever –
was almost overwhelmed with folk ready to rise to the challenge.
The best in the Nine Worlds, or your money back! That had been the wager;
and the scatter of coins on the little stage had now become a carpet – a sliding,
chinking carpet of wealth that made the Trickster’s eyes shine.
The trouble with glamorous money, of course, was that it attracted attention.
It cost them glam to summon and, in a few hours, reverted back to the stuff from
which it had been made: dust, sand, ashes, stones. To use it meant risking
exposure – maybe even arrest – which was why the gods had had to resort to
working their way along the Roads.
If they won this wager, then they could pay their way to World’s End without
ever having to work another stroke – which was why, even now, Loki hadn’t
given up on the chance to win his money back.
After Freyja, the gods had discussed who should take the next turn.
‘I will,’ said Sif with a grunt, assuming her Battle-Sow Aspect. Freyja’s
lacklustre performance had filled her with the utmost contempt; and although
she deeply resented the role, she also knew that, as Queen of the Pigs, she had no
equal in the Nine Worlds in majesty, muscle and appetite.
The bet was duly made. The fee, which had doubled since Freyja, was paid,
and Petula, Queen of the Pigs, took the stage to cries of encouragement from the
crowd. Loki introduced her with his usual panache, and never before had Petula
been so regal, so hairy, so pink or so stout; never had she eaten so many jam tarts
at one sitting, or shown such exquisite pointe-work from her gleaming trotters.
Captain Chaos watched in silence. Then, as the audience howled for more,
he introduced his second act: Olivia the Oliphant, the Oligarch of Oliphants, her
trunk like that of the World Tree, her appetite unquenchable. The stage was too
flimsy to bear her; instead, she heaved her way through the crowd like a landed
whale, pausing only to devour thirty-nine trays of Fat Boys, a dozen barrels of
ale, a whole spit of roasted chickens and a small child from the audience –
retrieved at the very last moment from between Olivia’s toothless jaws, to
riotous applause from the crowd.
The decision was (almost) unanimous. Captain Chaos acknowledged the
merit of the challenger, but the winner was clearly Olivia, and Loki was left to
pay the bill for all that she and Sif had consumed (a sum that amounted to rather
more than even he cared to wager).
Next came Bragi, the Human Nightingale, paired with Linni, the Human
Lark. Bragi played his guitar and sang so sweetly that the audience wept; but
when his rival took to the stage (Linni was a beautiful woman with the runemark
Sól, reversed, on her breast), some of the more susceptible audience members
actually died, and even Skadi shed a tear (a thing Loki had believed impossible).
‘It wasn’t my fault,’ wailed Bragi. ‘I told you before. The strings are worn—’
‘Oh, shut up,’ snapped Heimdall, striding up to take the stage. ‘My name is
Hawk-Eyed Heimdall, and I’ll wager I can outshoot anyone you care to name.’
But the Captain’s champion was Eagle-Eyed Sam, and in spite of being
almost perfectly matched, Heimdall failed – and lost the bet.
One by one, the gods tried their luck, and one by one, they were outclassed.
Njörd, the Man of the Sea, who bet that he could out-swim any man alive,
lost a race against Freddy Finn, the Human Fish.
The Wolf Boys and Fenris lost against an act called the Mighty Cerberus.
Even Angrboda failed to out-charm Sassy, the Snake Charmer.
Enough was enough, Loki thought.
No, he wasn’t backing out. He’d lost too much to stop playing now. He’d
wagered their horses, their wagons, their food; and his only hope was to win
them all back before his people had to move on.
But what was he to play for? He’d already lost everything. Nothing remained
– not a coin, not a rag, not even the shirt on Loki’s back.
Still, this next encounter, he thought, was one that they were certain to win.
Beauty, Loki told himself, was surely just a matter of taste. And animal acts were
always notoriously unpredictable. But in a simple test of strength – no tricks, no
blarney, just sheer brawn …
What could go wrong? Thor was quite simply the strongest man in the Nine
Worlds. Even with a reversed rune, he could certainly knock the stuffing out of
any of Captain Chaos’s crew. It was therefore with a jaunty (if somewhat
premature) sense of victory that Loki now sauntered onto the stage and, without
even bothering to build up the crowd with his eloquence, announced the mighty
Thunderer.
Captain Chaos seemed impressed. He too announced his champion. The Man
of Steel faced the Thunderer in front of the scarlet curtain.
The test was a familiar one. Maddy would have recognized it from Fair Days
all over the North. A bell at the top of a painted pole attached to a simple
counterweight. On one side, a pulley and chain, allowing the weight to move
smoothly up and down the pole. On the other, a rubber pressure-pad. The test
was to hit the pad hard enough to send the weight rattling up the chain fast
enough to strike the bell. A wooden mallet was provided for the purpose.
Loki took one look at the mallet and laughed. ‘The Man of Thunder would
splinter this to smithereens with a single blow,’ he said to Captain Chaos. ‘Lucky
for you that he brings his own tools …’ And he indicated Jolly – in his Aspect as
Mjølnir – tucked neatly under Thor’s arm.
This was what made the bet safe, he thought. Thor, with his hammer,
Mjølnir, had no equal in the Nine Worlds. And although it was now clear to the
Trickster that Captain Chaos was not what he seemed, he felt certain that, in this
case, their champion was unbeatable.
For a moment Captain Chaos seemed just a little hesitant. He narrowed his
eyes at Jolly, and muttered a little cantrip. Then his grin returned and he said: ‘I
don’t see why not, friend. As long as my man can do the same. As it happens, he
too prefers to work with his own instrument.’
Loki, who knew for a certain fact that nothing was stronger than Mjølnir,
waved a hand in approval. The Man of Steel was big, of course – perhaps just a
shade taller than Thor – but size wasn’t everything. To start with, he was left-
handed, while Thor favoured his right hand, which gave him a slight advantage.
Plus, of course, Thor had the strength of a hundred men, and Mjølnir. There was
no way that he could lose – which was good, because this time the gods had
nothing left to stake.
They flipped a coin to see who went first. Thor won.
He pushed up his sleeves. Lifted Jolly. Struck the pad. The weight rattled
halfway up the pole, then fell back into place with a crash.
Captain Chaos shrugged. ‘First time. We’ll make it the best of three, shall
we?’
The second time, Thor hit the pad with every ounce of his considerable
strength. The weight rattled busily up the pole, almost – but not quite – touching
the bell.
A long sigh came from the crowd.
‘Better,’ said Captain Chaos. ‘We’ll give you another try. It’s fair. You’re
maybe not used to our machine.’
Thor gritted his teeth. Tightened his belt. Flexed his muscles. Cracked his
knuckles. Rubbed dust into his sweating palms to make sure Mjølnir’s shaft
didn’t slip. Raised his mighty hammer high and brought it down with awesome
strength.
The counterweight rattled up the chain – fast, then losing momentum. Only
five more links to go – four – three – two – one …
All the gods held their breath.
Ting!
The weight just kissed the bell.
A dropped pin would have made more sound.
But Thor had beaten the machine.
The crowd applauded. Thor made a bow. Loki wiped the sweat from his
eyes. And then it was time for the Man of Steel to take his turn at the challenge.
Loki watched with a little smile. Gods knew who this Man of Steel was, but
it went without saying that he was no match for Thor. The hammer he had
brought onstage was slightly larger than Jolly, but Loki was feeling on top of the
Worlds, and he simply applauded the Man of Steel as he took his turn with the
machine.
The gods and their allies in Chaos had crowded round the Trickster.
‘This had better work, you,’ said Heimdall, between his golden teeth. Loki
noticed that Heimdall was looking rather pale, and grinned.
‘Relax. You worry too much,’ he said. ‘There’s no way he’ll beat the
Thunderer.’
‘He’d better not,’ growled Skadi. ‘Because if he loses, we all lose. You
especially, Dogstar.’
Loki made a dismissive noise, noticing that Skadi too was looking a trifle out
of sorts.
‘You worry too much, all of you. Your faith in me is awesome. Now just lie
back. Enjoy the show. This is going to be lots of fun.’
The Man of Steel raised the hammer high.
The crowd held its breath …
The hammer crashed down. The chain rattled up the pole so fast that even
the Watchman’s eye couldn’t follow it. The bell gave a resounding clang – and
then, as if that wasn’t enough, shot right off the top of the pole towards the
underside of the bridge.
There came a distant metallic sound as the bell struck one of the bridge’s
struts, then, a few moments later, a splash as it fell into the river. The crowd
applauded like crazy; gold coins showered onto the stage and Loki went pale to
the roots of his hair.
Skadi gnashed her teeth.
‘Oops …’
‘Tough call,’ said Captain Chaos.
For a moment Loki considered flight. In Wildfire Aspect, he could probably
make it to the top of the bridge before the gods caught up with him. But Ethel
was there, with the wagons; and if she didn’t stop him, there was Njörd, in his
sea-eagle Aspect, and Heimdall, in his bird guise; not to mention the wolves and
Skadi, all of whom would be more than happy to take their frustration out on his
hide.
Heimdall gave Loki a derisive glance. ‘Well, that was lots of fun,’ he said.
‘Just the look on your face right now nearly makes up for the fact that you’ve
lost all our travelling gear on a bet!’
But Loki wasn’t listening. He suddenly felt incredibly weak. He must have
over-stretched his glam, because his legs wouldn’t hold him. He sat down on the
edge of the stage, feeling worse than ever. His head hurt; his vision swam; his
signature looked so faint that even Thor, who had left the stage with the intention
of breaking every bone in Loki’s body, thought better of it and sat down too.
Come to think of it, thought the Thunderer, he wasn’t feeling too perky
himself. It wasn’t often that he missed a chance to use his fists on the Trickster;
but really, the little guy didn’t look good. Thor hoped it was nothing catching.
‘Loki, you look terrible,’ said Idun, who alone of all the gods (except for
Sigyn, who didn’t count) still had faith in the Trickster. ‘Shall I get you some
apple?’
But Captain Chaos had jumped from the stage, looking more vibrant than
ever. His eyes were like stars, his teeth were like quartz and his sparkly coat was
dazzling. Never before had Loki seen someone who looked so completely alive
– and in spite of the encroaching mist, his signature was a rainbow arc broader
than a highway.
‘Time to pay up, folks,’ he said. ‘It was a good fight, but a deal’s a deal.’
Loki tried to stand up, and failed. ‘What did you do to me?’ he said.
‘Nothing,’ said Captain Chaos.
‘You’re lying,’ said the Trickster. ‘There’s something behind that curtain. A
glam – I thought I saw it before, but I couldn’t make out what it was. You tricked
us, somehow. Gods – dammit, my head!’ A spike of pain jabbed his temple; once
more his vision swam sickly.
‘If I were you,’ said Captain Chaos, ‘I’d quit while I was still moving.’ He
turned to the gods. ‘Time to pay up.’
‘What with?’ said Thor. ‘You’ve cleaned us out.’
‘Not quite,’ said Captain Chaos.
‘What do you mean?’ said Loki, who already knew the answer.
Captain Chaos smiled at him. ‘I think you know that, Trickster,’ he said. ‘I
own you now, body and soul. Pay up and your friends can be on their way. I
won’t try to keep them. But if you try to renege on our deal, I’ll keep you all.
You know I can.’
And now at last, through the haze in his mind, Loki realized the truth. He
turned to his companions, but knew that it was useless. Everyone who had taken
the stage was in the same position as he: listless, drained of their glam, signature
down to a low flame. No chance of shifting Aspects now, or trying to make a run
for it; even just walking away at this point might prove too much in their
weakened state.
Only Idun was untouched – Idun, who had not joined the game – and Loki
now grabbed onto her arm like a drowning man to a flung rope.
‘Please,’ he whispered. ‘Help me stand …’
It was the first time that Idun could remember the Trickster ever asking for
help. He must be really sick, she thought; and her gentle heart swelled with
compassion as she hauled him to his feet. Loki swayed, but stayed upright, and
turned to face the Captain, whose arm now bore the runemark Kaen, unreversed
and unbroken.
‘It’s a mirror, isn’t it? No wonder Thor couldn’t beat it. He was fighting his
own reflection – in Aspect, with Mjølnir. And Freyja – that was her own Aspect
she saw, another version of herself. That’s why we can never match you. That’s
why you were able to steal our glam—’
‘Steal?’ said Captain Chaos. ‘You gave it of your own accord. We had a bet,
remember?’ His grin broadened. ‘Whatever you did, you did to yourselves.
Haven’t you ever seen a bird knock out its brains against its own reflection in a
window pane?’
‘What is it?’ said Loki. Now that he’d stopped struggling, his strength was
slowly returning. Not enough to use glam, but at least enough to see straight.
‘What is it? Or should I say what are you?’
Once more Captain Chaos grinned. ‘Well, today I’m you,’ he said. ‘Or at
least a version of you. Tomorrow, who knows what I’ll be? I have to say, I
haven’t enjoyed a game as much since the End of the Worlds. A travelling
circus? That’s genius. I take it that was your idea?’
‘I asked what you were,’ said Loki. ‘Come on. You know I’m helpless.
You’ve taken everything I had. At least give me this. What are you?’
Captain Chaos looked at him. ‘My name was Svalinn,’ he said at last.
‘Remember Svalinn, the Sun Shield? I rode the skies with Sól, the sun. I
reflected her light all over the Worlds. Now I’m stuck in Northlands, Nowhere,
in the foundations of a bridge. Yes, that’s where they put me,’ the Captain said,
when Loki showed his surprise. ‘They found me, after Ragnarók, when I’d fallen
from the sky. They saw my runes and knew I had glam. And so they built me
into this bridge, and—’
‘And you’ve been here ever since. Like a spider in its web. And all these
people under the bridge’ – Loki indicated the crowd at his back – ‘they’re not
quite regular folk, are they? They’re all the folk you’ve collected over the last
five hundred years. All of them just reflections, shadows through a dark glass …’
His scarred lips twisted. ‘Well, congratulations,’ he said. ‘You got me good.
What happens now?’
The Captain gave his evil grin. My grin, Loki amended somewhat bitterly to
himself. Everything about him – the tricks, the talk, the treachery – was taken
straight from me. And now …
‘Now, of course, you can’t let me go. That’s it, isn’t it?’
It all looked horribly clear to him. The way in which they’d been drawn in:
the trail of breadcrumbs they’d followed there; the fog that had concealed the
trap; the glee with which the ancient being had assumed Loki’s features, his
manner, his style.
For a moment uncertainty crossed the Trickster’s features. How had they
fallen into the trap? He understood how the Sun Shield might have stolen glam
from the Seer-folk as soon as they entered its domain, but how had it known they
were coming? Who had alerted it to their approach? And how had it managed to
hide itself?
The Captain’s fire-green eyes shone. ‘I knew you’d figure it out,’ he said.
‘The thing is, I don’t want to let you go. Those others, maybe, but not you.
You’re the best fun I’ve had in five hundred years. And I don’t want to have to
go back to reflecting ordinary market-day crowds, or barges on the river.
Besides, a deal’s a deal,’ he said. ‘You played, you lost. I own you.’
Loki shot a desperate glance at the faces surrounding him. All were
impassive, save Idun’s, which was dewy with distress.
‘You can’t be serious,’ he said. ‘Besides, if you can keep the memory of what
the Shield reflects, then why do you need the original?’
‘Because it doesn’t last,’ said the Captain. ‘I operate on borrowed glam.
When it runs out, the image fades. I can’t live on shadows for ever.’
Once more Loki glanced at his friends. He could see where this was heading.
The audience had long since dispersed and returned to their entertainments – to
the jugglers and fire-eaters and pastry vendors that crowded the riverside; now
only Captain Chaos remained, facing the gods with a mocking smile. It would be
too much, Loki thought, to assume that the gods would fight for him.
What had the Captain compared it to? A bird knocking out its brains against
its own reflection?
‘Ah, come on,’ he said softly.
Freyja gave a contemptuous shrug. ‘You brought this on yourself,’ she said.
‘Don’t expect support from us.’
Sif bared her tusks. ‘If you think we’re all going to risk our lives to pay for
your gambling habit …’
Idun’s forget-me-not eyes were wet. ‘What are you going to do to him?’ she
said to Captain Chaos.
The Captain grinned. ‘Don’t worry,’ he said. ‘I’m not going to hurt Loki. I
mean, I am Loki in so many ways. Together, we could be fabulous.’
Loki thought about that for a moment, and realized that it was almost true.
‘You’d be safe with me,’ the Captain said. ‘No one could touch you any
more. Æsir, Vanir – not even Lord Surt could get to you. The End of the Worlds
could come and go, but you’d be safe as houses.’
‘Really?’ said Loki, sitting down.
‘Sure,’ said Captain Chaos. ‘I survived Ragnarók, didn’t I? I can withstand
the heat of the Sun. And if you get me out of here, then both of us can be free
again. Except that you’d be invincible. Which I don’t suppose you’d mind.’
Loki grinned. ‘No, I don’t think I would.’ At last he was starting to
understand what Captain Chaos wanted of him. After all, it wasn’t the first time
he’d encountered an artefact of the Elder Age that had gone rogue. He knew how
dangerous that could be – how dangerous, and how useful. The idea of owning
the Sun Shield – of possessing, rather than being possessed – was suddenly very
attractive. If he could remove it from the bridge and bind it into his service, then
all his worries would be in the past.
Of course, that might not be easy. The Captain’s thoughts mirrored his own.
It was more than likely that, while he was contemplating deceit, his image was
doing the same thing. Still …
I can beat him, Loki thought. Maybe not in glam, but in guile …
Idun was still looking concerned. She gave Captain Chaos a doubtful look. ‘I
don’t think you should trust him,’ she said. ‘I think he’s trying to trick you.’
Loki smiled. ‘Not so fast. Let’s explore what’s on offer.’
Behind her, the gods were recovering enough to take an interest. Heimdall
was looking suspicious again; Skadi’s long white teeth were bared.
‘Typical Trickster,’ Freyja said. ‘The rat, deserting the sinking ship.’
‘You’d better not run out on us,’ said Angie in a low voice.
‘Why wouldn’t he?’ grunted Sif. ‘It’s what the weasel always does.’
Loki glanced over his shoulder. ‘You’d have to get rid of them first,’ he said.
‘I don’t want you sharing power with them.’
Captain Chaos raised an eyebrow. ‘You’re sure your friends would leave you
behind?’
Loki raised his voice a little, just so the gods could hear him. ‘They’re no
friends of mine,’ he said. ‘You heard what they said a moment ago. You can’t
believe what they’ve put me through. Threats, torture, snakes, marriage – you
name it, they’ve done it. Twice, in some cases. Get them out of here, let them go,
and then we can talk business.’
‘Are you sure?’ the Captain said. ‘The deal is, I own you. If I let your friends
stay, then maybe one day they’ll pay back your debt. Otherwise you’re mine for
good.’
‘Fine by me,’ said Loki. ‘Come on – what are the others to you? I want them
gone, shadows and all. They cramp my style. Send them away—’ He broke off,
lowered his eyes and said: ‘I mean – send them away, Master.’
For a moment the Captain seemed uncertain. His eyes flicked from Loki to
the gods, then back to Loki once again. Then he nodded. ‘Fair enough. But
remember, I know you, Trickster. If you’re thinking of pulling a fast one …’
‘Why would I?’ Loki said. ‘Think of what you’re offering. I’d be crazy to
turn it down. Besides, you heard what they think of me. They think I’m a weasel,
a turncoat. A rat leaving a sinking ship.’ Once more the Trickster lowered his
eyes, not so much out of submission as out of the need to hide a grin. ‘Perhaps
they’re right to think so,’ he said. ‘I’ve never shown loyalty to anyone. Never
done anything except for myself. Perhaps I deserve to be cast aside. No one’s
ever loved me. I only hope’ – he gave a sniff – ‘that they can sometimes think of
me with something like affection. Perhaps when I’m gone, they’ll remember
what fun they had with Loki around, and say to themselves: He wasn’t so bad –
a little wild, perhaps, but—’
Jolly gave an explosive snort.
Idun burst into noisy tears.
The Captain looked at them thoughtfully, then addressed the Trickster. ‘I
guess you’re right,’ he said at last. ‘Folks, you heard. You’re free to go.’
For a moment the gods were bewildered, unsure what to do. Idun wept
steadily. Freyja looked abashed. Sugar blew his nose hard and tried to pretend it
was an allergy. Thor frowned at Loki. The dreadful suspicion that the Trickster
might actually have done something noble began very slowly to enter his mind.
He growled: ‘I can’t let you do this.’
Loki gave an inward curse and waved his arms at the Thunderer. ‘Go on! Get
lost!’ he cried. ‘Forget I was ever here, all right?’ He turned to Idun. ‘Get them
out. Give them some apple – whatever it takes – and get the Hel out of Rhydian.’
‘But – what about you?’ said Idun, wide-eyed.
‘Forget me. I know what I’m doing.’
Now, as Idun and the weakened gods fled from the stage and its glamours,
Loki looked up at his double and summoned his most ingenuous smile.
‘So. Tell me where it is,’ he said.
The Captain’s eyes narrowed. ‘The Sun Shield?’
‘Well, if I’m going to free us both, I’ll need to know where you keep it.’
The Captain gave a crooked smile. ‘All right,’ he said. ‘But there’s one little
thing …’ And he pushed back his shirt-cuff to reveal a golden acorn on a chain
around his right wrist – the mirror-image of the one Loki had been wearing for
the past five days. ‘What’s this?’
Loki winced. He’d been hoping to keep that secret – at least for a little
longer.
‘It’s … a lucky charm,’ he said.
‘Take it off,’ said the Captain.
‘Why?’
‘Just take it off,’ he said. ‘There’s something about it that bothers me.’
Privately the Trickster agreed; but something told him that in this case his
ball-and-chain might be useful. ‘It has … sentimental value,’ he said. ‘I’d rather
not remove it.’
‘Really,’ said Captain Chaos. ‘You don’t seem the type.’ And, summoning
the rune Kaen – now glowing, unreversed, on his arm – he levelled it at the
Trickster. A ball of lurid violet light took shape around his clenched fist, hissing
like a handful of snakes. ‘I know it’s a kind of glam,’ he said. ‘I can feel it on
me. So don’t try anything stupid – right?’ He thrust the fistful of purple fire
almost into Loki’s face. ‘A mirror has a thousand eyes. I won’t suffer if you’re
blind.’
Loki’s mouth went very dry. ‘All right, all right, it’s a glam,’ he said. ‘The
gods put it on me five days ago. It’s some kind of bindrune, that’s all I know.
I’ve tried to get it off, but I can’t. They had me chained to the wagon.’
The Captain raised an eyebrow. ‘So you’re a prisoner too?’ he said. ‘Why
didn’t you tell me that before?’
‘Oh, come on,’ said Loki. ‘Being led around like a dog on a chain – it was
hardly my proudest moment. Forgive me for not wanting everyone in the Nine
Worlds to have a good laugh at my expense.’
Close enough to the truth, he thought, for his captor to be deceived. Or so he
hoped – that fireball could do a lot of damage. For a moment the Captain
scrutinized him through Bjarkán. Then he seemed to relax again.
‘All right, I believe you,’ he said. ‘Perhaps we can deal with that later. For
now, we have a job to do.’ And, still holding the fireball, he began to explain his
plan to Loki, while above them, on the Rhydian Bridge, Lucky’s Pocket Pan-
daemonium Circus set off again at a rattling pace, and Odin’s Mind and Spirit
watched from underneath the Rhydian Bridge, black wings furled against the
dark, beady eyes unblinking.
ETHEL HAD NOT been at all pleased to discover that Loki had been left behind. ‘You
left him there? How could you?’ she said, when Heimdall explained the state of
affairs.
Heimdall looked sullen. ‘We had no choice. Besides, that’s what he wanted.’
Ethel tutted. ‘Since when did that matter? We need him!’
But Ethel was in a minority. Most of the others were inclined to consider
their loss a blessing. Sif was openly gleeful, while Freyja, dabbing her eyes with
a very small lace handkerchief, tried to pretend (unsuccessfully) that she wasn’t
utterly overjoyed at having abandoned the Trickster.
Thor looked guilty at having run; Bragi sang a mournful song; Fenny said,
‘That’s harsh, dude’; and Skadi was contemptuous, telling the Æsir she’d known
all along that Dogstar would make a run for it and heaping scorn on Idun, who
still seemed absurdly hopeful that Loki would soon catch up with them, maybe
on the other side …
‘In any case,’ Heimdall said, ‘why do we need him any more? I know you’re
fond of him, Ethel, but face it, he’s a liability. We don’t need him to reach
World’s End—’
‘That isn’t the point,’ said Ethel. Her features, usually serene, now looked
drawn and anxious. ‘I won’t go on without him. I’ll wait alone, if I have to.’
‘What if he doesn’t turn up?’
‘He will.’
‘Is that a prophecy?’ Heimdall said.
Ethel gave him a sharp look. ‘What do you mean?’
Heimdall shrugged. ‘You seem to know more than I do, that’s all.’
‘Prophecies are dangerous things,’ said Ethel, looking weary. ‘They start out
meaning one thing, and end up meaning the opposite. Loki was meant to be here.
At least, that’s what I thought …’
By now they were halfway across the bridge, leaving Rhydian behind. The
moon was high, the stars were bright, and the opposite bank of the river was
clear, while at their back, on the Rhydian side, the pale mist hung like a floating
wall, silent and oppressive. Everyone felt their spirits lift as they left the city of
ghosts behind, and even Heimdall shivered at the thought that, but for Loki, they
might all have remained there, drowned in shadow, weakened and lost, pale
reflections of themselves …
Heimdall swore under his breath. He hated the thought of being in any way
beholden to the Trickster. And yet, according to his personal code, he was. Even
if, as Skadi maintained, Loki had acted out of sheer self-interest, the fact
remained: he had saved them all.
The gods had reached the final pair of pylons when they felt a tremor from
under the bridge. It was a brief but violent jolt that rocked the entire structure,
jostling the wagons and making the horses prance nervously.
‘What in Hel was that?’ said Frey.
Behind them, the mist was eerily still. Not a sound, not a light, not a sign of
life. There might as well be no town at all; the bridge went on for ever.
There came a second, more violent jolt. This time the horses bolted, eyes
wild, hooves striking sparks against the road. One of the wagons lost a wheel;
the horses dragged it anyway, metal screaming on metal, scrawling a signature of
fire across the last few yards of the bridge.
‘What do you think?’ Heimdall said as they finally left the bridge. It was
shaking visibly now, the tremors coming more regularly. A distant clanging
sound could be heard somewhere behind the wall of mist, and as they watched
from the river bank, the gods saw the massive structure sag as if under terrible
pressure. ‘It’s Loki, of course, damn him to Hel. Who else do we know who
wreaks havoc everywhere he goes?’
Ethel smiled. ‘Told you,’ she said.
And so, hissing with frustration, the Watchman took to his bird form and
soared into the moonlit sky, while Hugin and Munin, finding their perch
suddenly unstable, shot out from under the Rhydian Bridge like Wildfire out of
Netherworld.
WHILE ALL THISwas going on, Wildfire himself was thinking hard. In spite of what
he’d told Captain Chaos, he had no intention of pledging allegiance to yet
another renegade artefact.
But the Sun Shield was a powerful glam, which – if he could control it –
would give him the kind of freedom he had only ever dreamed of: independence
from Asgard; physical security; protection from his enemies, be they from Order
or Chaos. It was a tempting prospect, and Loki was always willing to speculate
to accumulate.
But Captain Chaos had proved more dangerous than even the Trickster
anticipated, and now, hanging upside-down three hundred feet above the Vimur
River, from a rusty girder under a bridge that was ready to collapse at any
instant, Loki was beginning to realize that his plan was riskier than he’d thought.
The Sun Shield was positioned between the first two pylons of the Rhydian
Bridge, at an angle to the ground. It was convex, which meant that it reflected a
good part of the city itself, as well as the bank and the river, and although the
years had tarnished it, the runes upon it were clear enough: Bjarkán; Sól; Thuris;
Fé; Raedo; Úr; Kaen; Ár – powerful runes of protection and light to guard the
solar chariot.
At Ragnarók, the sun had gone out, thanks to the Devourers – Skól and Haiti,
now Skull and Big H – and their insatiable appetites. But the Shield was
indestructible; and, like Mjølnir, had found its way out of Netherworld, through
Dream and into the Middle Worlds.
At least, so Loki theorized; the Captain was far too busy to talk, and Loki
thought it more prudent to keep his reflections to himself. Now, after a long and
awkward climb, he was hanging upside-down in front of the solar mirror, while
his image, watching from the ground, guided him through what was rapidly
becoming a very tricky operation.
A large fishing net was spread out between the pylons, ready to catch the
Shield as it fell. The plan was for Loki to pull it free, using his glam if he had to,
drop it into the waiting net, then assume hawk guise and fly down from the
bridge to rejoin his companion.
‘If you could give me a hand …’ he said. ‘What are you, afraid of heights?’
Loki was not afraid of heights – at least, not in normal circumstances. But
climbing under a metal bridge that was nearly five hundred years old, then
hanging upside-down in front of a mirror-glam with a runecharm of Tyr in one
hand, then chipping away at the metalwork that held the ancient artefact in place,
with rust and soot falling into his eyes and the bridge losing stability with every
second that went by, Loki was starting to feel that perhaps he was nervous, after
all.
‘Get on with it,’ Captain Chaos said. ‘And remember: no tricks.’
‘No tricks.’ Loki was uncomfortably aware of how vulnerable he was in his
current position. With Kaen levelled at him from the ground, he was hardly
likely to try anything tricky – or so he hoped the Captain would think … at least
until it was too late. Clever of the Captain, he thought, to keep the upper hand
like this; using Loki to free the Shield meant that he himself could watch from a
position of safety, and that as soon as Loki dropped the Shield, he could retrieve
it and use it as fast as his borrowed glam would allow him.
But Loki had a different plan. He had no intention of dropping the Shield.
His double was cautious, and smart enough to anticipate some kind of trickery –
but Loki too was cautious and smart, and he had a suspicion that, once the
Captain had the Shield, he would have more than enough glam to dispense with
Loki permanently.
It was, after all, what he would have done, if their situations had been
reversed, and Loki was conscious of a twinge – no, not of remorse, but of pique
at being so very predictable.
For if the Trickster was vulnerable, Captain Chaos was far from secure. As
long as Loki’s image appeared in the Shield’s polished surface, his double had
the upper hand; but if he could slip behind the Shield and use it before the
Captain did, then Captain Chaos would be no more, and Loki would be free …
These were the dangerous ideas that were passing through the Trickster’s
mind as he chipped away at the Sun Shield. It was rather large for a shield –
about four feet across, perfectly round and inscribed with runes on its edge. The
rest of it was smooth as glass, though time had given its surface a kind of smoky
patina. If the mirror were removed, would the city come back to life? Would the
thousands of captured souls that were caught in reflection under the bridge be
freed, or would they just disappear? And what about the bridge itself? Would it
still stand when the Sun Shield was gone? And – perhaps more importantly –
would Loki have time to use it?
‘This bridge is falling apart,’ he said. ‘I don’t think it can take much more.’
Certainly the bridge seemed to know that the Shield was under attack.
Girders moaned, rivets popped, centuries of powdery rust began to fall from the
metal. It fell into Loki’s clothes and hair; it filled his mouth with the taste of
blood.
‘Hurry,’ said Captain Chaos.
Loki gave a deep sigh. He was starting to feel most uneasy. The Sun Shield
was more than an artefact; he’d already seen proof of that. Captain Chaos too
had proved to be far more than just a reflection. What would happen when the
Sun Shield was free? Would Captain Chaos then finally have a life of his own?
And what would happen to Loki himself when he was no longer needed?
Suddenly, through the falling rust, he thought he saw something under the
bridge. A dark shape – a bird, perhaps – was sitting on one of the girders. In no
position to cast Bjarkán, Loki nevertheless recognized one of Odin’s birds –
those annoying ravens that Ethel seemed to have adopted.
He hoped they weren’t trying to help him. The last thing he wanted at this
stage was anyone’s interference. He reached around the Sun Shield for
something to hold onto. The acorn that hung from his left wrist was now
concealed in the palm of his hand. He slipped it behind the Sun Shield and
started to whisper a cantrip …
The raven gave a sharp crawk and hopped a little closer, bringing down a
scatter of rust over the inverted Trickster. Loki saw that it had a white head,
which identified it as Mandy.
Crop it into the – crawk! it said.
‘What?’
Crop it. Into the creek. Gekkaway. Ack-ack! Mandy’s voice was urgent and
harsh; even allowing for the vocal limitations of her host body, the message was
unmistakable. Throw the Sun Shield into the river. Get away as fast as you can.
Loki dared not raise his voice in case Captain Chaos heard him. Instead, he
spoke in a whisper, barely moving his scarred lips. ‘Please! Just leave me alone!’
he said.
Mandy pecked at the girder. Crawk! Another pinch of powdery rust fell into
the Trickster’s eyes.
‘Ouch!’ He brushed the debris from his eyes, transferring Tyr to his right
hand. The Sun Shield was almost free now; it shifted slightly beneath his grasp,
and he felt the bridge shift accordingly.
‘Hurry up!’ said Captain Chaos.
‘Got it, I think,’ said the Trickster. He glanced back at the raven, and saw that
it had been joined by its companion. Two pairs of gold-ringed eyes fixed on him
in the darkness.
‘Listen, I don’t need your help,’ Loki said in the same careful whisper. He
knew that Captain Chaos’s hearing would be at least as keen as his own, and
he’d already seen how suspicious his mirror-image was of him. Once more he
hissed at the ravens: ‘Get lost! I can take care of this!’
Hughie assumed his human form, cross-legged on the girder. Hidden among
the shadows, he was almost invisible from the ground, his silver jewellery
hidden beneath the cloak of feathers that covered him.
‘We know what ye’re thinking,’ he said. ‘No you don’t,’ hissed Loki. ‘Please.
Do you want to get me killed?’ ‘You’re planning tae steal the Sun Shield and
keep it for yourself,’ Hughie said.
Loki’s scarred lips tightened. ‘So what?’
‘So – that’s verra dangerous. And what about your promise, eh? What about
the End of the Worlds?’
‘The Worlds can end without me,’ said Loki, looking down at the drop. ‘I’ve
seen the show before – and believe me, I’m in no hurry to go there again.’
‘But you’re needed,’ Hughie said. ‘You’re a part o’ the prophecy. Just throw
the Shield into the river, and get away as fast as ye can. Do anything else and
ye’ll come to grief.’
‘Who says?’ muttered the Trickster.
Hughie crawk-ed in frustration. ‘Will ye never do as ye’re told? The survival
of the Gødfolk depends on what ye do next!’
Loki shrugged (not easy to do when you’re hanging upside-down from a
bridge). Three hundred feet to the net, he guessed. It might take him three or four
seconds to fall. Three or four seconds, exposed, in mid-air, to flip the Shield
round and use it before Captain Chaos could intervene. Three or four seconds of
terrible risk; and even if he didn’t try to take control of the Sun Shield, what
would prevent the Captain from shooting Loki out of the sky the moment the
artefact was his?
He hissed: ‘Because the Gødfolk care so much about my survival …’
‘What are you whispering about up there?’ Captain Chaos’s voice was sharp.
‘I’ve got it,’ called Loki. ‘It’s coming free …’
Sure enough, the Sun Shield was coming away from its moorings at last.
With a crackle of runelight, the solar disc pulled away from the pylon, and at
once the bridge began to sag like a cart with a broken axle.
‘Throw me the Shield,’ the Captain said.
‘Throw it into the river,’ said Hughie. ‘That’ll distract him, and as ye do, ye
can make your getaway. Otherwise he’ll bring ye down …’
But the Trickster had another plan. Ignoring Hughie and Mandy, he
whispered a little cantrip. Behind the Shield, the acorn charm resumed its Aspect
as Sigyn. Cramped, confused and disoriented, she opened her mouth to scream—
‘Shh, Sigyn, please …’ he said.
Behind the Sun Shield, Sigyn’s eyes widened in stupefaction. ‘What are we
doing here?’ she said. ‘Where are the others? What have you done?’
‘Me? Nothing,’ Loki hissed. ‘Only saved everybody’s life, and risked my
skin into the bargain. Now do as I say, and everything’s going to be all ri—’
A purple fireball struck the bridge barely three feet above Loki’s head. Iron
girders splayed like straws from the disintegrating structure.
‘That was a warning shot, Trickster,’ called Captain Chaos from the ground.
‘I want that Shield, and I want it now!’
‘Hang on a minute!’ said Loki. Above him, cracks were appearing in the
bridge. Chunks of stone were dropping through into the river below them.
‘Sigyn, now! Turn the Shield—’
Ack-ack! said the ravens, taking wing as their perch fell away.
‘Turn the wha-aaahh!’ screamed Sigyn as the girder from which Loki was
hanging started to tear away in its turn. Three seconds more, and they would be
falling towards the Vimur.
The second mindbolt was not a warning. It struck an inch from Loki’s head,
firing off the Sun Shield and into the air above Rhydian. A smattering of violet
sparks, each one as lethal as a crossbow bolt, skidded across the damaged bridge
and fell into the water.
Loki had time to grab the Shield before he and Sigyn began to fall. Linked
fast by the Wedlock, they twisted and turned in mid-air; Loki trying to flip the
Shield, Sigyn hanging on for dear life, runelight flaring from her hands. Masonry
and twisted metal filled the air around them; Hugin and Munin flapped and
crawk-ed, trying to distract the Captain; while Loki’s double, on the bank, raged
and screamed in fury.
His third mindbolt hit Loki smack between the shoulders, and if Sigyn hadn’t
been shielding them both – not with the Sun Shield, but with Yr – it might have
been much worse for him. As it was, he fell, howling, in flames, right through
the net and into the river.
The water was fast and very cold. For a moment the Trickster lost
consciousness. Dragged under by the Sun Shield and by the weight of the
Wedlock, he felt the river’s terrible force crushing him and pulling him down; he
opened his mouth and water rushed in, filling his lungs, consuming him …
In different circumstances it would have been an easy trick for him to have
taken some different Aspect – a fish, perhaps, or a river-snake – and to swim to
the bank in safety. But the mindbolt had stunned him half senseless, his glam
was almost depleted; besides which there was the gold chain still fastened
around his left wrist, and Sigyn, now a dead weight, dragging him deeper under
the water.
The Sun Shield! Even now, the thought was foremost in the Trickster’s mind.
It must have fallen through the net; the undertow had taken it. He opened his
eyes, but the dark was so complete that he might as well have been blind. He
was moving fast too, dragged down by the undertow, breathing water, seeing
stars, crashing with tremendous force against a pile of driftwood—
More stars.
Stars? Ouch!
A hand in his hair, dragging him out. More hands on his body. He felt
himself being carried, then dumped onto his back on the river bank. Someone’s
mouth clamped over his own; air in his lungs like cold fire. His hair was singed;
his shirt was charred rags; his back was burning as if he’d been branded.
Now he could hear voices; voices that seemed to come from afar; voices that
he recognized …
‘Loki, talk to me …’
‘Is he alive?’
‘He is, worse luck. Quick, let me hit him before he comes round …’
Hastily Loki opened his eyes. In the starlight, a circle of faces, blurry at first,
came into view: Heimdall, Freyja, Ethel, Thor. Idun, whose voice he had first
recognized, was holding a sliver of apple. As always, she looked sweet and kind;
kneeling beside her, the Seeress too was watching him with a look of concern.
Then she slapped his face, hard.
‘Ouch!’ he said. ‘I’m conscious.’
Ethel said, ‘Just checking, dear.’
Loki sat up. ‘The Sun Shield …’
Ethel gave him one of her looks. ‘Sigyn’s fine,’ she said loudly. ‘Just a little
shaken, that’s all. I’ll tell her you were asking, though. You owe her your life, I
hope you know that. She was the one who dragged you to the bank. She was the
one who—’
‘What about the Sun Shield?’ Loki repeated urgently.
‘Fishbait. No time to recover it. It could be halfway to Hel by now.’ Ethel
lowered her voice again. ‘My ravens told me everything.’
‘Oh,’ said Loki. ‘I can explain.’
‘Don’t bother explaining,’ Ethel said, and went back to wait by the wagons.
They set off again within the hour; and the Trickster, who had fully expected
Ethel to tell everybody about his failed defection, was inclined to think that she
had let him off easily. Perhaps she thought he’d been punished enough – after
all, he’d lost the Shield – although, looking at her impassive face as she rode
alongside him down the road, Loki could see no softness there, or any sign of
affection.
He noticed that she now spoke to him only out of necessity; the rest of the
time she spent reading a book, or whispering to her ravens, and more than once
he found himself wondering uneasily how she could seem to hate him so much,
while at the same time protecting him.
Still, who really knows what an oracle thinks? the Trickster thought as they
trotted along, and soon his mind was on other things as Lucky’s Pocket Pan-
daemonium Circus left the ruined bridge behind and began the final leg of its
journey along the highway to World’s End.
Trust me. They don’t call it ‘wedlock’ for nothing.
Lokabrenna, 5:19
SEVEN DAYS HADnow passed since Maddy arrived in World’s End with high hopes of
finding the Old Man, solving the prophecy and contacting her sister.
None of those things had happened so far. Her search had proven fruitless.
Since meeting with Mrs Blackmore, there had been no further mention of
Maggie Rede, and the Old Man was as much of a mystery as it had been a week
ago. Jormungand was useless, preferring to spend his time by the docks than
helping Maddy in her quest. Even Odin’s ravens had failed to put in an
appearance.
Now, with only two days to go before the End of the Worlds, she was
beginning to wonder once again whether she shouldn’t simply go home when, on
the Friday market day – Maddy’s eighth day in the city – she saw something that
changed her mind. Or rather, she saw someone, and the sight of him made her
hackles rise just the same as they always had.
Impossible, she told herself. What would he be doing here?
And yet the young man reminded her so strongly of someone she’d known
before. The way he moved; the set of his jaw; the way his dark-blonde hair fell
diagonally across his forehead …
It couldn’t be. And yet it was.
He’d grown into a handsome young man – though his blue eyes were still as
mean as they’d always been when he was a boy, and his walk was just as
arrogant as he strode between the market stalls.
Adam? Adam Scattergood?
Maddy ducked behind a tent-stall selling kitchen hardware. Perth gave her a
quizzical look, but she gestured to him to hold his tongue. Through a gap in the
side of the tent she watched as the young man wandered past.
For a moment her heart almost stopped as he paused at a nearby fabric stall,
and fingered a roll of pale-yellow silk.
‘How much for this?’
The vendor, an Outlander woman in a blue veil, murmured a price.
Adam shrugged. ‘I’ll take it,’ he said, and threw down a handful of coins.
From her place at the side of the tent, Maddy caught the gleam of gold.
So Adam was wealthy, was he, now? His clothes were of fine quality, he
carried a sword at his side, and it was clear from his manner that he considered
himself above bargaining with traders. She wondered how he had come to
World’s End, and what could be his business there.
The Outlander woman was folding the silk. ‘Well? What are you waiting
for?’ Adam said. ‘Wrap it up, and quickly. I don’t want your dirty hands all over
it.’
Maddy thought the woman’s face turned a shade darker beneath her veil.
‘Special occasion, sir?’ she lisped.
Adam looked at her and smiled. It was not an entirely pleasant smile, but his
blue eyes gleamed with amusement. ‘Actually, it is,’ he said. ‘You see, I’m
getting married.’
said it aloud. Seeing Adam here at all was already enough
‘MARRIED?’ MADDY ALMOST
of a shock to her, but to hear that he was getting married – Adam, who as a boy
of twelve had liked to throw firecrackers at stray cats and stones at beggars –
even at gods – was too absurd to contemplate. Who would want to marry him?
And what was he doing here, anyway?
Perth was watching her curiously, a gleam of interest in his eyes. ‘Old
flame?’ he suggested, as soon as Adam had moved away.
‘Not even close,’ Maddy said, still following Adam with her gaze. She
hesitated, frowned to herself, then came to a rapid decision. ‘We’re going after
him,’ she said. ‘I want to know what he’s up to.’
‘But what about our business?’ said Perth.
‘Later,’ said Maddy. ‘Follow him first. And try to be inconspicuous.’
‘You really think it’s important?’ said Perth.
Maddy nodded. ‘It might be. Anyway,’ she added, ‘he’s rich. You can rob
him if you want to.’
Perth shrugged. ‘Fair enough.’ Robbery wasn’t really his game, but he was
always open to suggestions.
It was easy to follow Adam through the crowds and tents and market stalls. Less
easy by far were the open streets, the alleys and the walkways. The Universal
City was vast, and had been built on a grand scale: the main streets were broad
and spacious, with long, bare expanses of pavement, and only a row of linden
trees providing any cover. Maddy had grabbed from a passing stall a pink
bergha, which she now wore around her head in the manner of some World’s
Enders; it went poorly with her tunic and boots, which marked her as a
Northerner, but at least it hid her face, she thought, and she tried to keep well
behind Perth – swathed as he was in his blue robes – as they made their way
through St Sepulchre’s Square with its marble fountain and its great cathedral,
and straight on down Examiners’ Walk into the heart of the city.
This was the largest (and most expensive) shopping street in the whole of
World’s End, and Maddy began to feel very conspicuous as she and Perth
followed Adam past the rows of shops with coloured awnings – jewellers,
drapers, milliners, coffee houses and makers of clocks, sellers of crystal and
porcelain. So far Maddy’s time had been spent around the docks and the Water
Rats as well as the city’s milling slums, and this new face of World’s End came
as quite a surprise to her.
Here the pavements were twelve feet across and inlaid with decorations of
brass. Here there were carriages drawn by teams of horses, landaulets for
dowagers and racy high-perch vehicles for the young and fashionable set. Here
were ladies in bonnets made from the feathers of exotic birds; there were
swaggering young men in furs and wealthy Outlanders with their strings of
wives, veiled from head to foot in black, dark eyes modestly lowered.
There were servants of all races here, some running errands, some alone,
some carrying parcels in their master’s wake. Maddy noticed that many of these
carried the mark of a brand on their arm – not quite a rune, but a symbol like two
opposing arrowheads –
– and saw how easily it might have been changed – with iron and soot, or a
tattooist’s ink – from the mark of a prisoner to a new badge of freedom.
‘Perth, were you a slave?’ she exclaimed, almost forgetting in her surprise
that they were meant to be shadowing Adam.
Perth winced and pulled his scarf further over his nose and mouth. ‘That’s
right. Go on, tell everyone. I was a slave on the galleys. Have you any idea what
they’ll do to me if ever I get caught again?’
‘I’m sorry,’ said Maddy. ‘I didn’t know …’
‘Your friend is getting away from us,’ said Perth, with a nod towards Adam.
‘Oh,’ said Maddy, and quickened her pace.
The market crowd parted to let them pass.
NINE DAYS HAD passed since Maggie had first met Adam Goodwin in the catacombs
under the old University. Since then, a great deal had happened. In nine days
Maggie’s life had been completely overturned. She’d learned that the End of the
Worlds was nigh; had spoken with demons and with gods; had ridden through
Dream on a Horse of Fire and battled with the Æsir. The last of these had ended
in a battle of wills with the Old Man, during which the General’s glam had been
so thoroughly wiped out that barely a spark of consciousness lingered inside the
piece of rock. In spite of all her efforts since then, the Old Man remained
unresponsive, and the runes of the New Script stayed where they were, locked
inside that stubborn stone Head.
But something else had happened to Maggie over those nine days; something
so unexpected, so new that it cast all her other adventures into the shade. Maggie
Rede had fallen in love – headlong, purblind, thunderous love – and Adam had
asked her to marry him, that Sunday morning at eight o’clock in the cathedral of
St Sepulchre.
The Whisperer, surprisingly, had taken the announcement with very little
protest.
‘I see you’re both determined,’ it had said, in Adam’s voice. ‘I just hope it
doesn’t end in tears.’
‘Why should it?’ said Maggie. ‘You sound like my mother.’
‘Oh, let Me see. The End of the Worlds?’
‘I don’t see what that has to do with it.’
‘Well, one might argue,’ the Whisperer said, ‘that with war on the horizon,
with Chaos overrunning the Middle Worlds, with demons breaking out of Hel,
with the Riders of Lunacy and Treachery already on their way, and with the
runes of the New Script still locked up in there …’ It used Adam’s hand to
gesture at the Old Man, still silent under his dust-sheet. ‘With all of those things
going on, some folk might just expect you to have certain priorities other than
choosing fabrics.’
‘Adam and I are in love. Why wait?’
‘Why indeed?’ said the Whisperer.
The old, suspicious Maggie might have wondered why Adam’s passenger
had taken the news so readily. She might even have asked herself how her
forthcoming role as the Rider of Carnage was supposed to fit in with her role as
a bride; but the wild exhilaration of love had clouded her suspicions.
Besides, there was more to her change of heart than just the excitement of
falling in love. Maggie, who nine days ago had been more than ready to face the
foe; Maggie, who had dreamed of being a part of Tribulation, now found herself
dreading the idea of war. Some of her misgivings had come from the Old Man’s
revelations. Some of them had come from her meeting with Hugin and Munin.
But mostly it was the fact that, for the first time since the Bliss had taken her
family, Maggie Rede had something to lose – and the thought of losing Adam
now was just too cruel to contemplate.
This was the reason why Maggie had tried to ensnare the gods in Rhydian.
This was reason she hadn’t revealed the presence of Odin’s ravens. If the
Firefolk could be stopped from ever reaching World’s End, then war would
never happen, she thought; and the prophecy would stay unfulfilled.
And so, far from dreaming of war, the reluctant Rider of Carnage filled her
days with dreams of love and, as long as the Old Man slept, was almost able to
believe that battle was not inevitable.
As for the Whisperer, it was content. Its plan was working perfectly. The girl
was in its power now. The General was defenceless. And when it had the New
Script, and all the pieces were in place, then it would deal with the Firefolk –
though not before Odin had understood the extent of his defeat and humiliation;
not before he realized just how much he had gambled and lost.
As far as the Whisperer was concerned, waiting enhanced the pleasure. Two
days remained till the End of the Worlds; two days for the General to find his
voice. No doubt he still had a trick up his sleeve; no doubt he would try to talk to
the girl. The Whisperer expected it; that too was part of the plan. Maggie Rede
was no longer to be seduced by the Old Man’s promises. Maggie was a woman
in love. And that made her very vulnerable – as well as very dangerous.
Now, on the Friday afternoon, as the Whisperer made his plans and Adam
shopped for bridal silk, the subject of all this speculation was sitting by the
penthouse window, as she had for the past week, looking down into the streets
and feeling very bored.
A week of the same old scenery, the same instructions not to go out; a week
of nothing but waiting around while Adam made arrangements and she still kept
watch over the Old Man – who had not said a word since his attempt to charm
her, and who seemed unlikely to try again, at least until the End of the Worlds.
Not that that looked likely. According to the Good Book, Tribulation was
heralded by all manner of signs and portents: falling stars; rains of frogs;
showers of brimstone; tidal waves and thunderstorms. Right now, Maggie
thought, everything looked so ordinary. It had rained once or twice, but very
ordinary rain, grey with the soot of the city, and without a trace of brimstone or
even the smallest of amphibians. Sleipnir, munching oats in his stall, behaved
just like a regular horse. There was no sign of the Æsir; no sign of the Riders of
the Last Days. Even her dreams had been ordinary, dealing mostly with Adam.
But now Maggie suddenly found that she was feeling restless. Even the thrill
of a wedding to plan – such a romantic wedding too, just like in the old days of
chivalry – was not enough to compensate for the loss of her freedom. She
wanted fresh air; she wanted her books; but most of all she wanted the waiting to
be over – for Adam to be free at last, and all this a memory.
‘Why do I have to stay inside? Why can’t I go out with you?’ she had asked
Adam earlier.
He gave a narrow smile. ‘Always asking questions,’ he said. ‘I have a
wedding to arrange.’
Maggie sighed. ‘I suppose so. But—’
‘Don’t you trust me?’
‘Of course I do!’
And yet her mind refused to let go. She was filled with unanswered
questions. Cathedral weddings didn’t come cheap. How could Adam afford one?
How had he managed to arrange such a thing at less than a week’s notice? His
account of a last-minute cancellation had more or less convinced her; his refusal
to discuss arrangements – or to even let her out of the penthouse to go shopping
– she took as proof of his concern; even so, Maggie could not help feeling
slightly left out of the proceedings.
‘But couldn’t I come with you today?’
Adam’s smile was a little forced. ‘I’ve already told you, it isn’t safe. And
besides, someone has to stay and keep an eye on the Old Man.’
‘Oh. Him.’
Adam frowned. ‘Remember, Maggie, it’s dangerous. Don’t let it draw you in
again. Don’t talk to it in my absence. Just watch it, and tell me if it speaks.’
She nodded.
‘Good. Now wait for me. I’ll try to be as quick as I can.’
And so Maggie had waited, and tried not to feel anxious or impatient. The
truth was, the wedding itself was a matter of indifference to her. Maggie would
much rather have been married simply, without fanfare, than sit through a lavish
ceremony when so many things remained to be done. But Adam (a romantic)
refused to hear of anything but a cathedral wedding. If Maggie was going to take
his name, she deserved a proper ceremony. A crown; a veil of primrose silk;
flowers; brideys to throw to the crowd – in short, everything a young girl
dreamed of, and Maggie, who cared nothing for these things, was nevertheless
moved by Adam’s devotion to her, and had tried very hard to do as he said. But
solitude brought reflection of the kind that Maggie hated most, and now, as she
sat by the window, trying to imagine herself as a bride, the doubts that always
disappeared as soon as Adam was in the room returned like a swarm of summer
flies.
There was so much she didn’t yet know about the man she loved. Who was
Adam, anyway? How had he known where to find her? What did he do for a
living, and how could he hope to support them? Where was he from? Who were
his folk? What allegiance did he owe to the thing he called the Whisperer?
She turned away from the window. I’m just being foolish, she told herself.
Every bride in World’s End suffers from pre-wedding jitters.
And yet …
She looked at the plinth, where the Old Man’s head still stood, shrouded in
mystic darkness. Odin had tried to tell her something just before she had silenced
him. Since then, Maggie had come to regret the violence of her reaction. Now
she cast Bjarkán at the Head, hoping for a sign of life.
Are you awake? she whispered.
Nothing. Just the darkness.
Please, said Maggie. I need to talk.
And wasn’t that a gleam of response, deep in the heart of the stone?
Maggie’s own heart beat faster. Please. I won’t hurt you. Just talk to me—
A sound from behind her made her flinch. She turned to see a raven sitting
on the balcony rail. Another was perched on the window-ledge, the single white
feather on its head standing up like a warrior’s crest. As Maggie approached the
window, it pecked the glass impatiently.
‘You again!’ Maggie said, opening the window.
At once Hughie flew inside and assumed his human Aspect, looking very
pleased with himself. Mandy joined him in raven form, perching on his shoulder.
He was wearing a shiny pendant that Maggie hadn’t seen before; a round disc,
inscribed with runes, which caught the light like a mirror.
‘Ye said ye wouldn’ae talk to him,’ he said, with a glance at the Old Man.
Maggie shrugged. ‘I wasn’t,’ she said. ‘I don’t care if he never wakes up.’
Mandy crawk-ed.
‘No chance o’ that. Ye’ll have tae wake him soon enough. Ye’ll need the new
runes, for a start, before ye face the enemy.’
Mandy crawk-ed again. Ack!
‘Still, there’s time for that,’ Hughie said. ‘Good thing we’re here to help ye,
eh? The End o’ the Worlds is nigh, hen, and we have lots to talk about. The
Firefolk are on their way. The Rider of Lunacy joins them. There’s war and
carnage in the air, and everything’s going to be shiny!’
Maggie shook her head. ‘No thanks.’
‘No thanks?’ Hughie said. He cocked his head, looking more like a raven
than ever. ‘The End o’ the Worlds is coming, and you’re telling us no thanks?’
‘That’s right,’ Maggie said. ‘No thanks. I’ve had enough. I’ve fought the
Firefolk in Dream; I’ve stolen the Red Horse of Carnage; I’ve got the Old Man
trapped inside a piece of rock by the side of the bed. And this’ – she gestured
towards the Good Book, propped up against the bed-post – ‘all the time I
believed that this Book held the answer to everything. But it doesn’t, does it? I
used to believe in the Nameless; in the fight for perfect Order. But now there’s
no Order any more; only two sides that have been at war since before the Worlds
began. So what am I doing in all this? Who says I have to go to war?’
‘But hen—’ protested Hughie.
‘I am not your hen!’ Maggie said. ‘Now listen to me, both of you. I’m getting
married the day after tomorrow. Married. In the cathedral. Married to the man I
love. And nothing – not the End of the Worlds, not the Firefolk, not Chaos itself
– is going to get in the way of that. Have I made myself quite clear?’
Hughie and Mandy exchanged looks.
Hughie shrugged.
Mandy crawk-ed.
‘I’ll take that as a yes, shall I?’
‘Well, here’s the thing,’ Hughie said. ‘On Sunday morning – that’s the day
after tomorrow, hen, in case ye’d forgotten – there’s going to be war. The Seeress
predicted it. Which makes this the place for ravens and crows, not wedding veils
and bridey cakes. And the sooner you face up tae that—’
Crawk, said Mandy lugubriously.
‘Everyone keeps saying that,’ Maggie said impatiently. ‘War, war, the End of
the Worlds – that’s all anyone can talk about.’
Hughie cocked his head to one side. ‘You’re the Rider o’ Carnage, lass. D’ye
think ye can change the future? Reconcile Order and Chaos? Cancel the War of
the Nine Worlds? Rewrite the Book of Apocalypse? Shiny, if ye could, but no
verra realistic.’
Maggie made a face. ‘I don’t see why there has to be war.’
‘Aye, that’s what the God o’ War says. Funny, that. But we see more. We see
into all the Worlds, past and present, quick and dead, and we know all the
prophecies. The hand that rocks the Cradle rules the Nine Worlds, so they say.
It’s writ on the very Foundation Stone of the cathedral. And unless the Seeress
got it wrong, that hand belongs to you, hen, and you’re going tae need all the
help ye can get. Which is why we’re here.’
‘Well, thanks. But unless you want to be flower girls—’
‘Gods, aren’t ye the stubborn one? We can open Worlds, lass. We could open
the gates of Hel, or of Netherworld, if ye wanted it so.’
‘I don’t want to open gates. Or rock cradles, for that matter.’
‘What does it matter what ye want?’ Now Hughie was getting annoyed. ‘I
tell ye, it’s all written down. You’re the one, like it or nay. The key to the gate is
a child of hate, a child of both and of neither. That’s you, or I’m a pigeon. What
more do ye need, eh? Have ye any idea what will happen if the Rider o’ Carnage
disn’ae ride?’
Now Mandy, who had been watching the street, gave a cry of warning.
Crawk!
‘What is it, Mand?’ said Hughie.
Crawk, repeated Mandy. She looked as if she were trying to speak; raucous
words came out of her mouth in a language neither human nor bird.
‘Someone’s coming,’ Hughie said. ‘I’m guessing it’s your young man. Now
listen. This is important.’ He turned once more to Mandy. ‘Come on, ye can do
it, hen,’ he said, with an encouraging smile. ‘She disn’ae speak much,’ he
explained, ‘but when she does, folk do well tae listen.’
Mandy beat her dusty wings in mounting agitation.
Crawk! Ack-ack!
‘Come on, Mand.’
And now the raven began to speak. The words were harshly accented, but
nevertheless understandable, and Maggie found herself listening to the words of
a nursery rhyme she’d known as a child:
‘See the Cradle (crawk!)-ing
High above the town.
Down come the Firefolk
To bring the baby down.
All the way to Hel’s gate
Firefolk are bound.
Pucker-lips, a-pucker-lips,
All (crawk!) down.’
And then, as if human speech had proved too much of an effort, the white-
headed raven hopped down from its perch and made for the balcony window.
Hughie followed. ‘Ye heard what she said?’
‘Yes, but—’ Maggie protested.
‘No time!’ Hughie said, stepping out onto the balcony. ‘The Firefolk are on
their way. The End o’ the Worlds is coming. Soon ye’ll have tae make a choice.
Ye know how tae find us.’
Maggie opened her mouth to say that no, she didn’t know how to find them,
and besides, she had no intention of trying, but Hughie had already reverted to
bird Aspect, and before she could even find the words, both he and Mandy had
taken wing, and were nothing but specks in the city sky.
ADAM HAD SPOTTED the pair on his tail as soon as they’d left the market. He could
have shaken them there and then; all he had to do was to step into a hire carriage,
or walk into one of those elegant shops, or call for help and pretend he’d been
robbed. But the presence of the Whisperer that always lurked in Adam’s mind
warned him now to be cautious, and to allow the two that shadowed him to
follow his steps through the city.
Take care, boy, the Whisperer said. Don’t let them see you’re aware of them.
‘Why?’ said Adam. ‘Who are they?’
In his mind the Whisperer made a sound of impatience. Who do you think,
idiot? Now get us home, and quickly! We have no more time to waste!
So with Maddy and Perth in hot pursuit, Adam fled through the streets of
World’s End. He arrived to find Maggie waiting for him by the open window,
wearing an innocent expression. Perhaps a little too innocent, but Adam did not
notice it; he was too preoccupied with his own concerns.
‘Did the Old Man speak?’ he said.
Maggie sighed. ‘The Old Man – is that all you care about?’
‘No, but …’ Adam faltered.
‘I’ve been waiting here all day. You never ask how I spend my time. You
disappear for hours, and then all you can think of is that thing …’ She gestured
fiercely towards the plinth, where the stone Head stood impassively. She
suddenly felt angry – not with Adam, but with the Head; the Old Man who
refused to speak, whose stubbornness now stood in the way of Adam’s chance at
freedom.
In Adam’s mind the Whisperer tried to curb its impatience. For gods’ sakes,
boy, give her a kiss! The last thing I need right now is for her to be
uncooperative.
Adam gave Maggie his sweetest smile. ‘I bought you a present. I chose it for
you.’ He dropped his parcel of silk beside her. ‘Go on. Open it,’ he said.
Maggie felt her anger recede. Now she only felt guilty. Once more she
wondered whether she should tell Adam about the ravens. But the Whisperer
might be angry, she thought; it might even punish Adam.
She took the parcel and opened it. She looked at the roll of primrose silk, soft
as sunshine, sewn with pearls. This is my wedding veil, she thought, and her eyes
were filled with sudden tears.
‘I love it!’ she said. ‘And I love you!’
This time it was easier to forget the events of the afternoon. Prophecies and
nursery rhymes – even rumours of a war – were easy to forget about when faced
with such a gift as this.
‘It’s gorgeous,’ she said, unfolding it and wrapping it round her shoulders. ‘It
must have cost you the Nine Worlds—’
‘You’re sure the Old Man didn’t speak?’
‘Not a word. Why do you ask?’
‘I think we may have a problem. Someone may be spying on us. I’m almost
sure I was followed here.’
‘Spies?’ said Maggie doubtfully, thinking of the ravens.
Adam looked at her earnestly. ‘You think I wanted to keep you here while I
went out in the city alone? We can’t afford for you to be seen. And the Æsir will
do whatever they can to stop us being together.’
Maggie’s eyes widened. ‘Why would they do that?’
Adam shrugged. ‘A boy from the North marry one of the Firefolk? Their
pride would never allow it,’ he said. ‘If they find out, they’ll kill me, just as they
killed your parents and friends and everyone else you’ve cared about—’
‘Kill you?’ Maggie’s heart froze, and then began to stutter. Of all the fears
she might have had regarding her long-lost family, it had never really occurred to
her that the Æsir might want to hurt Adam. And for what? Their monstrous
pride, which refused to accept that a child of the Fire could learn to love a child
of the Folk?
‘What do you mean?’ she said.
Adam sighed. ‘I mean they want to claim you. Everything they’ve done so
far has been done for just that purpose. They cut you off from everything. They
killed your foster-family. They made sure you were all alone before they tried to
contact you. The only thing they didn’t predict was that you and I might fall in
love. But when they do find out – and they will – we’ll have to be ready to fight
them. And if their spies have followed me here …’
Once more Maggie thought of the ravens. Could they be spies? Of course
they could. But they had offered themselves to her, to Maggie, the Rider of
Carnage. They had shown her how to trap the Firefolk in Rhydian. But
according to Hughie, the gods had escaped. And if they found out about Adam
…
‘What do you want me to do?’ she said.
She knew the answer to that, of course. The ravens had predicted it. She
could no longer wait, she knew, for the Old Man to find his voice again. The
runes of the New Script were in that Head, waiting to reveal themselves.
Adam looked at her tenderly. ‘You know it’s time, don’t you?’ he said.
Maggie gave a long sigh. This was what she’d been dreading. Ever since she
had spoken with the prisoner inside the Head; ever since he’d told her of the
relationship between them, she had known that some day soon she would have to
break him. She would have to make the choice between torturing the Old Man
and risking the life of the man she loved. It was not a fair choice to ask her to
make. She hated the thought of making it. But the Æsir had threatened Adam. To
threaten Adam was to cross a line. If that meant war, then let it be war. The
Firefolk had declared it.
She turned to Adam once again, her eyes like little points of steel. ‘Will the
new runes keep you safe?’
Adam nodded.
Maggie smiled. ‘Then you’ll have them, I promise,’ she said. ‘This time he’ll
tell me everything.’
THE GOOD BOOK was still lying where Maggie had left it by the bed. A double turn of
the golden key, and the Closed Chapters lay revealed. On its plinth, the Old Man
stood in stony silence; but the spark of awareness that Maggie had seen earlier
through the rune Bjarkán remained like the gleam of a half-open eye.
Odin was awake, she knew, watching every move she made.
She opened the Book of Invocations, followed the script with her finger,
chose the relevant canticle and read the ritual words aloud:
‘I name thee Odin, son of Bór.
I name thee Grim, Gan-glàri …’
The words felt almost familiar now, like those of a well-practised song. This
time she did not stumble or mispronounce the secret names. On her neck, the
runemark Ác began to flare a silvery white.
Maggie? What are you doing?
The voice of the Old Man was deceptively gentle in her mind. Maggie
ignored it. Instead she focused on the words, making the runes flare like molten
steel, spinning them into a cradle of light.
Maggie. You don’t have to do this.
Maggie ignored the coaxing voice and steeled herself for a counter-attack.
The Old Man was sure to try something soon, once he knew her intention.
‘I name thee Ialk and Herteit.
I name thee Vakr and VarmaTyr.
I name thee Father of ravens.
I name thee one-eyed Wanderer …’
Now Maggie’s head began to ache. Her vision doubled; trebled; swam. The
light at the heart of the piece of rock started to flare like molten glass.
Please, it hurts, said the Old Man.
I’m sorry, said Maggie silently. I have no choice. It has to be done. I name
thee Father of Misrule—
Maggie! Please!
The cradle of runes was now so bright that Maggie could barely look at it.
The headache grew worse – a cap of pain tightening against her skull.
‘Stop it!’ Maggie cried aloud, and now, with all her glam, she tugged on the
cradle of runelight like a choke-chain on a dangerous dog. ‘A named thing is a
tamed thing—’
The voice in her head gave a howl of pain. Mercy!
But that was a sentiment Maggie could no longer afford. She looked up from
the Good Book and focused all her glam on the Head.
‘Thus are you named, and bound to my will.’
At last the struggle was over.
And now she turned to the Old Man in his net of runelight. ‘I’m sorry I had
to do that,’ she said. ‘But time’s running out. You know what I want. The runes
of the New Script …’
The prisoner gave a mental sigh. You could just have asked me, he told her.
Instead of subjecting me to all of this unpleasantness.
‘Yeah. Like you’d have told me—’
Of course I would, said the General. The New Script is your birthright. Like
your name – your true name – it is a thing of remarkable power. Be sure not to
give it away unwisely.
‘What do you mean, give it away?’
Oh, you’ll find out soon enough. I don’t have to be an oracle to know what
the Whisperer will ask of you next.
‘What’s that?’ Maggie said.
He’ll order you to kill me, of course.
Maggie protested. ‘I wouldn’t do that—’
Oh, but you will, said the Old Man. You’ll do it because you won’t have the
choice. I can even show you the runes you’ll use to send me into eternity.
‘The runes,’ she said.
Yes, Maggie. The runes.
And now, at last, they came. The runes. The new runes of the Younger
Script, all in their colours, like pennants in the wind.
Aesk and Ác, Eh and Ea, Ethel and Perth, Daeg, Wyn and Iar. Their colours
fluttered past so quickly that Maggie barely caught their names. But that didn’t
matter; she understood. She already knew how to use them. And she knew she
could summon them at any time and bend them to her purpose.
‘Nine runes. Is that all?’
No, there’s one more, said the Old Man. One last, most important rune – the
one that will change the shape of the Worlds—
‘What is it? Show me!’ she said.
Patience, Maggie, patience. The tenth rune is already in your possession.
Although you’re not aware of it yet—
‘How? Where?’ Maggie said.
Don’t be so impatient, girl, said the Old Man in his dry voice. If you’re going
to kill me, at least let me have my say first. A man may plant a sapling for any
number of reasons. Perhaps the man is fond of trees. Perhaps he needs the
shelter. Or perhaps he knows that some day soon he will need the firewood.
Plant your seeds with care, then. From every Acorn, an Oak may grow.
‘What’s all that supposed to mean?’ Maggie said when the Old Man fell still.
You work it out, said the Old Man. I speak as I must, and cannot be silent.
‘But who was the man you were talking about?’
I speak as I must, and cannot be silent.
‘Is it someone I know?’ she said.
I speak as I—
‘I do wish you’d stop saying that!’ Maggie looked at her hands. ‘Please. Tell
me what you’ve got to say.’
For a moment the Old Man paused, and the light inside the stone Head flared
in satisfaction. Maggie, he said quietly, I have been searching for you since the
end of the Age. It has taken me longer than I thought, but believe this. I never
forgot you. Not for a moment. All this time I’ve been trying to find a chance to
bring you home to your people.
‘My people?’ said Maggie, looking up. ‘The Firefolk killed my people.’
No, said the Old Man in her mind. The Nameless killed your people. The
being you call Magister, and which Adam calls the Whisperer, killed them all
with a single Word—
‘That was the Bliss,’ Maggie said.
There was no Bliss, said the Old Man. Just an army of ten thousand souls,
sent out to destroy the Æsir. Your sister saved the Worlds that day. But now the
Whisperer has you – the Rider whose name is Carnage – and now it means to
wipe out the gods and reclaim Asgard for itself—
‘You’re lying!’
I can’t. I’m an oracle.
For a long time Maggie sat silently, watching through the rune Bjarkán.
Through it, the Old Man blazed with light, but she could detect no thread of
deceit, nor even a flicker of a lie.
The Nameless had killed her parents.
The Whisperer was the enemy.
For a moment Maggie felt as if her whole life had been blown apart. The
Order; the Good Book; Tribulation; all the immutable truths that she had been
brought up to believe – suddenly it seemed that none of those things had been
exactly what she’d thought. It was as if someone had told her that the Nine
Worlds were not lodged in the branches of the World Tree, as she had always
believed, but were somehow floating around in the sky, suspended by nothing
but magic. It was appalling; it made no sense; and yet, she understood, it was
true.
The Whisperer had caused the Bliss. The thing that inhabited Adam was a
dangerous, vengeful entity sworn to destroy the Firefolk. The sister she had
never known had brought about the End of the Worlds, and saved the gods in the
process – and now the Old Man – her grandfather – wanted her to do the same:
to ride with them into battle and to help reclaim their lost kingdom …
‘So – what about Adam?’ she said at last.
What about him? said the Old Man.
‘The Whisperer said you’d kill him. That the Æsir would never stand to see
me marry a son of the Folk. Is that true? You want him dead?’
The Old Man glowed in his net of fire. Why should I want him dead? He
said. Maggie, I’m an oracle. This wedding isn’t going to take place. However
much you may want it to—
Maggie started to interrupt, but the Old Man continued.
So Adam isn’t our problem, he said. His passenger, on the other hand, is very
much our enemy. Remove one from the other, and Adam no longer concerns us.
Maggie struggled to understand what the Old Man was telling her. The Æsir
didn’t want Adam dead. And yet the wedding wouldn’t take place. How could
that be? she asked herself. How could that be, if Adam was safe?
Eagerly she seized upon the thought that was foremost in her mind. ‘Will you
swear not to hurt him, then? As soon as the Whisperer sets him free?’
Of course I will.
‘On your true name?’
On my true name, I swear it.
Maggie sighed. She knew enough to understand that the oath was binding.
Of course, if you kill me, all bets are off, the Old Man went on casually. In
fact, it’s more than likely that the others will come after you both. Your sister, in
particular. You’re very like her, by the way. Such a shame you were raised apart
…
And now a series of images flicked through her mind like a fortune-teller’s
pack of cards; of faces and places she almost knew …
A little girl with long, wild hair sitting in the crotch of a tree; the same little
girl, now older, flinging a rune at a boy with mean eyes and a damp patch on his
trousers. A girl on a hillside; a man with a pack sitting beside her, smoking a
pipe. The same girl, older, underground, looking down into a fiery pit where a
ball of molten glass bobbed up and down like a fisherman’s lure. The same girl
once again, on a plain that seemed to reach out for ever …
And now, somewhere in the city below, a man in a cloak and that girl again,
watching through the rune Bjarkán.
‘Is she here?’ Maggie said. ‘Is my sister here, in World’s End? Did she
follow Adam here? And what about the Firefolk? Where are they now? How far
away? How did they get out of Rhydian? And can they get to St Sepulchre’s in
time to stop the wedding?’
The Old Man sighed. I speak as I must, and— Yadda yadda yadda. I guess
you know the drill by now.
‘But what about the wedding?’
Odin sighed again. Please, Maggie. Try to concentrate. There’s more to this
than wedding cake. Worlds may rise or fall on this, and even the best-laid plans
may turn on as small a thing as a lover’s kiss.
And with that, the Old Man fell silent again, and Maggie Rede opened her
eyes.
‘What did it tell you?’ Adam said. Of course, he had heard only one half of
Maggie’s conversation. ‘Did it give you the New Script? What did it tell you
about me?’
Maggie shook her head, still dazed.
‘Well?’ said Adam impatiently.
Maggie looked into Adam’s eyes and saw the Whisperer burning there.
‘First, we had a deal,’ she said. ‘You were going to let Adam go.’
‘And so I shall,’ said the Whisperer. ‘Did you think I would break My word?
But you have a part to play in this. After that, the boy can go free.’
‘What do you mean? What part?’ she said.
The Whisperer gave a theatrical sigh. ‘Always with the questions,’ it said.
‘Very well. Let Me explain. In Dream, I am discorporate. But My consciousness
in the Middle Worlds requires a physical presence. Until now, My young friend
has served this purpose. But until I can move to a suitable host, I fear I must
impose upon his goodwill for just a little longer.’
Maggie thought about that for a while. ‘A suitable host?’ she repeated.
The Whisperer shrugged Adam’s shoulders. ‘Of course,’ it said. ‘You don’t
think I like being trapped in this pathetic body? I need something more
permanent.’
It pointed at the stone Head. Its glam was completely dark again now, and
only through Bjarkán could she see the net of runes that bound it. That anything
could live in there was already hard enough to accept; that Adam’s Magister
might choose to do so was almost inconceivable.
‘You’d go into that?’ Maggie said.
‘No, Maggie, not that. But something with glam.’ Adam’s eyes gleamed.
‘Something nice, with runes, perhaps …’
‘Like what?’ Maggie said.
‘Just leave that to Me. Suffice it to say that by Sunday night, both you and I
will have what we want.’
‘But – what about the Old Man?’
Once more the Whisperer shrugged. ‘Now that you have the new runes, we
don’t need it any more. When you’re ready, just say the word and send it to Hel,
where it belongs.’
‘You mean – kill him?’ Maggie said.
‘Well, of course,’ said the Whisperer. ‘This is Odin, General of the Æsir. Our
greatest, most dangerous enemy. What did you think we were going to do? Send
him to bed with a glass of milk?’
Now Maggie saw the trap she was in, and she cursed the Old Man inwardly.
Had he known this would happen? Of course. Could he have even planned it this
way? That too seemed likely. This was Odin, son of Bór. His deviousness was
legendary. Odin, whose plans were impenetrable; who, even at his weakest –
disembodied, a prisoner – knew how to prey on his victim’s mind.
She had to buy time, Maggie told herself. She had to find a way out of this.
To kill the Old Man was unthinkable – at least until she had found a way of
protecting Adam from the vengeance of the Æsir. But to disobey the Whisperer –
that, too was unthinkable. Adam was still in its power; it could tear his mind
apart—
‘What is it, Maggie?’
The Whisperer’s voice roused her from her unpleasant thoughts.
‘The Old Man told me you’d say this. He said that as soon as you had the
runes, you’d order me to kill him.’
‘Did he now?’ said the Whisperer silkily. ‘And … did he tell you anything
else?’
Maggie gave a little shrug. She hoped it looked petulant, rather than guilty.
She knew she would have to take great care what she told the Whisperer. Too
little, and who knew what harm it might do to Adam before she subdued it. Too
much, and she would relinquish control.
Yes, she would have to be careful, she thought.
‘Well, girl, what are you waiting for?’ said the Whisperer impatiently.
‘You’re getting married on Sunday. So give Me what I want – the runes – and I
will give you Adam. Do we have a deal?’
Stubbornly Maggie shook her head. ‘Not until you set Adam free.’
For a moment, there was silence. Maggie could feel the Whisperer struggling
to contain its rage. In a moment the thing would erupt, and Adam would be the
one to suffer.
But when it finally spoke again, its voice was calm, its colours subdued.
‘Maggie, why don’t you trust Me?’ it said. ‘A week ago you were on My side.
You believed in Me and the Order. A week ago you couldn’t wait to spill a little
demon blood. What did it tell you to change your mind?’
‘He hasn’t changed my mind!’ she said.
‘Then what did it say?’ said the Whisperer.
Maggie looked into Adam’s eyes. She hated to hide the truth from him, but
this was for his own good. If his passenger were to suspect that she was having
second thoughts …
‘He made a prophecy,’ she said. ‘Said I’d have to make a choice between my
Folk and family. And I’ve made my choice. If the Firefolk come here on Sunday,
I’ll fight. But I won’t let Adam be sacrificed. I want your word you’ll keep him
safe. We’ll be married in the cathedral at eight, and then – only then – I’ll give
you the runes and send the Old Man on his way.’
For a long time Adam was silent. ‘Sunday,’ he said.
She nodded. ‘At eight.’
‘And then you’ll give Me the New Script?’
‘I swear it. On my true name.’
For a moment Maggie sensed the almost frightening intensity of the
Whisperer’s satisfaction. ‘Very well,’ it said at last. ‘If that’s the way you want it.
Fine.’ And as Maggie watched, its presence withdrew, leaving only Adam there,
looking pale, but self-possessed.
She gave him a smile that Adam found almost chilling in its tenderness.
‘I did it,’ she said. ‘You’re going to be safe. And no one will stop our
wedding.’
Then she turned towards the bed and picked up the piece of yellow silk. She
draped it over her cropped hair; the late sun caught its folds and she was
transfigured, beautiful, a goddess in Aspect, eyes like the sun …
Of course, Adam thought to himself, love and the right kind of lighting can
make a beauty of even the plainest girl. Even so, he felt a stab of unease. She
looked so like her sister had, that terrible day on the shores of Hel. Beautiful and
dangerous, like something from an unnatural dream. One more day, he told
himself. Just one more day and he would be free.
The thought was such a pleasant one that Adam felt a surge of something
almost like affection, as you might feel for a stray dog that unexpectedly turns
out to be quite a useful ratter.
‘Maggie,’ he said, ‘you’re going to be the most beautiful bride in World’s
End!’
And then he kissed her, and once again Maggie forgot everything else but
Adam’s face – Adam’s lips, Adam’s voice, Adam’s eyes – while in the street
below, her twin looked for her through the rune Bjarkán, and the Old Man
slumbered, satisfied, nursing his dreams of Asgard.
NAN WAS NOT afraid of dreams. Dream was the lifespring of everything. Dream links
Order and Chaos, she knew; Dream links Death to the Middle World. A dreamer
may speak to the dead, walk with gods, build wonderful castles in the air.
And nothing dreamed is ever lost, and nothing lost for ever …
Seven days had passed since Nan Fey had become the Rider of Lunacy.
During that time she had followed the instructions relayed to her by the Auld
Man’s birds, waiting, with some apprehension, for the moment when she would
be called upon to act – though what exactly she was expected to do was still
something of a mystery. So far, all she had had to do was feed her cats and
Epona, look after her cottage and wait as the dreamcloud from Red Horse Hill
crept closer to the village.
In fact, it was no longer creeping at all. By Friday morning the cloud had
become a wing spread over the valley, casting its shadow from Fettlefields right
up to the shores of the Strond. Nan’s house was far enough away to give her a
few more days’ security; but Malbry was right in its path. Already, groups of
refugees had moved away as the cloud advanced – some as far as Little Bear
Wood – but most of Malbry’s villagers had never left the valley, and the thought
of leaving it now, even in the face of such danger, was too much for them to
contemplate.
Nan waited for as long as she could. But on the Friday evening, with the
dreamcloud blotting out the sky and drowning even the sound of the Strond with
its muted, hateful roar, she decided there was no time to lose. With or without
the Auld Man’s orders, she had to do something to help. Alone, out of Aspect,
she doubted whether she would be of any use to the villagers. But perhaps if she
rode Epona …
She put on her stoutest boots, her shawl and the hat she wore on festival
days. Then she went out into the yard to take a look at the Horse of Air.
In her present Aspect she seemed (to Nan, who had never actually ridden a
horse) much more daunting than she had when they had flown together through
Dream. She bore no saddle or bridle, either; and Nan surveyed her doubtfully
and wondered if she would carry her. A fall at her age could mean death; and this
seemed only too likely to Nan, whose brittle old bones feared the slightest shock,
and ached when it was raining.
Still, she told herself bracingly, a person who had flown through Dream in a
washing basket should have nothing to fear from an old mare, and she caught
hold of the Horse’s mane and, standing on an old tree-stump, whispered in
Epona’s ear:
‘Now then, old girl. We’re going to ride, nice and gentle, to Malbry.’
Epona tossed her head and whinnied.
‘Good girl,’ said Crazy Nan. And with an effort she put her old leg over the
white horse’s back and hoisted herself into place, keeping hold good and tight,
with her hands both clenched in the Horse’s mane.
‘There’s my good girl,’ repeated Nan as, without any further prelude, the
Horse of Air began to walk, then to trot, and finally to canter down the Malbry
road, while Nan held on for dear life, and the sound of the rift in Dream
increased gradually from a distant roar to that of a summer thunderstorm.
Above her, two ravens circled, but the thunderous sound of the rift in Dream
swallowed their cries, like everything else.
‘Good girl,’ Nan Fey said again, and, kicking up her heels, she rode the
White Horse of the Last Days straight towards the dreamcloud, while in World’s
End, the Auld Man slept, and a Rider whose name was Treachery prowled the
streets of the Universal City, still oblivious to the fact that the actual traitor was
somebody else …
EVEN ON THEHorse of Air, Crazy Nan took ten minutes to get into Malbry. In those
ten minutes the dreamcloud had crept three and a half inches closer to the gate of
the Parsonage; had further eroded a grain barn belonging to Tyas Miller; had
finished off a henhouse, including all its occupants; and discorporated a shaggy
brown dog that had been sleeping by the door of the church, where most of the
remaining citizens of Malbry and its surrounding hamlets now waited, wakeful
and terrified, mothers clasping their children, in expectation of the approaching
catastrophe.
Nan Fey had waited long for this. Ninety-odd years spent waiting for a time
when she would be needed at last, when her appearance would be welcomed
with sighs of relief, and not with cries of laughter and scorn. She was not of a
vengeful nature, but Malbry had not treated Nan well, and now that its fate hung
in her hands, she planned to enjoy her moment.
She circumvented the dreamcloud, which now towered forty feet over her,
left Epona on the far side of the church, and entered by a side door. The scene
that met her was pitiful. The church was lit with candles. More than two hundred
villagers sat huddled against the far wall. Some were children; some were old.
Some were farmers, trying hard to look tough. Some wept. Some prayed. Nan
saw Mae Smith – now Mae Dean, of course – who had been on a visit to Malbry
when the dreamcloud had cut off the road; and her new husband, Zebediah Dean,
a rather self-important young man expected to be the new Bishop. Matt Law and
his possemen were there – Tyas Miller, Dan Fletcher, Patrick Dunne, Jack
Shepherd, Ben Briggs – but even they looked wide-eyed and lost, faces pale,
hands outstretched, some still clasping possessions saved from their fallen
houses. A shiver of sound went through the church as soon as Nan Fey opened
the door; someone started a canticle, but immediately fell silent.
Instead all eyes turned towards Nan; and she found that in spite of those
ninety years of being the butt of everyone’s joke, she felt precious little
merriment at seeing the tables thus reversed. Another kind of woman might have
been tempted to crow a little, but Crazy Nan Fey had a good heart, and, seeing
the villagers’ misery, she raised her voice and called out to them as loudly as she
could:
‘Listen to me, everyone! I think I know how to help us!’
A silence greeted Nan’s words. Perhaps it was a measure of their collective
despair and wretchedness that no one laughed or scorned her words, but looked
at her with doubt and fear (and maybe a little hope too).
‘What can anyone do to help?’ That was Damson Ploughman from one of the
little smallholdings between Malbry and the Castle Hill Road. ‘My farm’s gone
into the devil-mist – aye, and all my horses too, and when my son went after
them—’
‘Aye!’ That was Mags, the ploughman’s wife, a lady who some folk called
lively (and others, just shrill). ‘The End of the Worlds is upon us, d’ye ken! And
it’s your folk that brung it here!’
‘My folk?’ said Nan Fey.
‘Aye, yourn. The Seer-folk!’
At this, a number of voices were raised in agreement. Mae Dean’s cries were
more strident than most (folk in Malbry had not forgotten that it had been her
sister who had started all this). Zeb Dean listened approvingly; he’d married
Mae (still a beauty) against his great-uncle Torval’s advice, and he was glad to
see that she, at least, had no divided sympathies.
‘There, there,’ he said, fondly taking his bride’s hand. ‘No need to fret, my
darling. I still have some influence here, and you can be sure that when this
comes to my great-uncle’s attention, the matter will be dealt with.’
Nan listened to the angry cries and shook her old head in reproach. ‘I thought
you’d a learned better’n that by now,’ she said, raising her own voice over the
din. ‘Can’t ye see it’s the Seer-folk that have aided ye these three years?’
‘Aye!’ came a mocking voice from the crowd. ‘Who rid us of the Order and
brought us Chaos in its place? Who brought demons from under the Hill, and
now this dream-mist to drown us? We should be on our knees right now,
thanking the gods for their mercy!’
That was Dan Fletcher, one of Matt’s posse, known in the valley as a cynic
and a freethinker; known to Nan Fey since he was a boy.
‘I remember you, Dan Fletcher,’ said Nan. ‘I can remember when you were
nobbut a lad, asking me about your dreams. You were allus dreaming in those
days, even when your ma thrashed you for it.’
‘Aye,’ said Dan, ‘and look where it got us! That mist came from off the river
Dream, and don’t you dare deny it.’
Nan smiled at him approvingly. Dan had always been clever, she thought,
and it was good that he was here. ‘I don’t deny it, Danny,’ she said, and a shiver
went through the assembled folk. ‘This is the start of the End of the Worlds, and
it starts, as it should, at the centre. The Seer-folk have left to march on World’s
End, the three Horsemen are on the ride, the river Dream has broken its banks
…’ She narrowed her eyes at the refugees. ‘Pucker-lips, a-pucker-lips. Ye surely
all know what that means.’
The villagers exchanged silent looks.
‘Aye. It means nothing can save us,’ said Dan. Beneath the swagger, his tone
was bleak. ‘We can run, we can hide, we can try to fight – it’ll all come to
nothing in the end. Nothing but mist and cinders.’
‘Wrong,’ said Nan. ‘Listen to this. The Cradle fell an age ago, But Fire and
Folk shall raise her …’
And now Nan quoted the prophecy the Auld Man had given her, trying to fill
her creaky old voice with the same quiet air of authority. It didn’t quite work –
because halfway through, Mags Ploughman piped up in her strident voice,
interrupting the Oracle’s words:
‘What are ye listenin’ to her for!’ she cried. ‘She’s allus been mad, y’kennet,
and now she’s in league with the Seer-folk! I say we chuck her into the devil-
mist, see what happens then, eh!’
‘Aye,’ came the voice of Mae Dean, forgetting her new refined ways and
slipping into dialect. ‘We’ll have none of yer imaginings here, ye crone!’
There were cries of ‘Aye!’ and ‘Chuck her in!’ And now came a dozen eager
hands clutching hold of Nan Fey, and a surge of people, goaded by fear, thrusting
her towards the door.
But Dan Fletcher stood in their way. ‘She may be as mad as ye say,’ he said,
‘but anyroad, you’ll do her no harm.’
For a moment it seemed as if they would: fists were raised; blows threatened;
someone kicked Dan in the ankle, and made him stagger.
But now Matt Law stood beside him; and Tyas Miller and Ben Briggs.
Violence seemed inevitable. Someone knocked down a statue. Someone else
picked up a spade. Nan pulled away from the lynch-mob and flung open the
church door into the dark, where Epona, the Horse of Air, stood like a phantom
in the mist.
Two tattered figures flanked her – Hugin and Munin, in true Aspect. Against
the wall of mist they looked like shadows from Hel itself. The angry mob gasped
and cowered.
‘Demons!’ said Zebediah Dean.
Nan looked at Hughie. ‘Ye took your time, ye two,’ she said.
‘And ye were told to wait, Nan Fey.’
Nan shrugged.
Mandy crawk-ed. Even in this Aspect, it seemed, she still had problems with
language.
Hughie reached around his neck, where a coin-sized pendant – some kind of
talisman – gleamed, reflecting the candle-light. He pulled the object over his
head and handed it to Nan Fey.
‘What’s this?’ said Nan.
‘A token frae the Auld Man,’ said Hughie. ‘Use it as ye see fit.’
And with that, he and his sibling changed into bird form, took wing and
disappeared into the mist.
Nan looked at the object doubtfully. It was round, inscribed with runes, and
in its mirrored surface she could see herself, upside-down, but altered,
illuminated …
Behind her, the crowd of villagers had begun to recover and regroup. Soon,
she knew, their fear would once more give way to the threat of violence.
But now Nan faced them in her new Aspect – the Rider whose name was
Lunacy – and suddenly she knew what to do, and she laughed like a child at the
ease of it.
‘This is madness,’ said Zeb Dean. ‘Are we to listen to fancies and tales from
a mad old crone and a couple of birds?’
Nan smiled. ‘Mad?’ she said. ‘Aye, mebbe I am mad. But Madness is one of
the islands of Dream, and I ken those waters very well.’
She lifted the pendant that Hughie had given her. From it, the light of the
candles now seemed to shine out as bright as the sun. It looked a little larger too;
no longer a coin, but a dinner plate.
And at that moment the broken rune Fé began to glow on Nan Fey’s
wrinkled forehead. It glowed a clear and luminous white, and as it glowed, it
seemed to shift, so that any villager who dared raise his eyes to the old woman’s
face saw the ruinmark glowing there, as it changed from a dull, defective rune to
a shiny bright glam of the New Script –
Mae gave a cry and shrank back. She knew a ruinmark when she saw one –
and she’d seen the one on her sister’s hand glow in just such a fearsome way.
‘Laws save us all!’ said Zeb Dean. ‘This should have been reported!’
But Dan Fletcher was watching Nan, a gleam of appreciation in his eyes.
‘What’s this, Nan?’ he said quietly. ‘What mischief have you been up to now?’
Nan grinned. ‘No mischief, I swear. I’ve sailed through the sky in a
washbasket, I’ve floated on the islands of Dream, I’ve ridden a Horse of Air
through the clouds and now I’ve come to help my Folk—’
‘Help us?’ wailed Mae. ‘Ye’ve damned us all with your dreaming!’
Nan wondered (and not for the first time) how any sister of Maddy Smith’s
could have turned out to be so brainless.
‘Listen to me!’ she commanded. ‘There never was aught to fear from dreams.
That was just a story set about by the Order, who rightly feared their power.’
The villagers looked doubtful at this, most of them having believed since
childhood that dreaming was terribly dangerous. Some (like Mae) had never
dreamed; others had done so in secret. One of these was Dan Fletcher, of course,
and now he looked at the Horse of Air, which was standing placidly nearby. Like
most of the villagers, he knew every horse in the valley, just as he knew their
owners, and this one was unfamiliar to him – besides looking strangely
insubstantial, like the pale reflection of a horse on a piece of floodwater.
‘Next you’ll be saying it came here through Dream.’
Nan gave him her mischievous smile. ‘Don’t you underestimate Dream,’ she
said. ‘Dream is a river that flows both ways, from Order to Chaos and back
again. Dream is the wellspring of creation; even Death is no match for it.
Nothing dreamed is ever lost, and nothing lost for ever – that’s the Auld Man
telling us that what’s destroyed can be rebuilt – aye, even castles in the clouds!’
‘Castles in the clouds,’ said Dan. ‘I’d settle for a bed and a meal.’
‘Would ye?’ said Nan, still smiling at him. ‘I recall you wanting more.’
Dan looked rueful. ‘What good are dreams now?’
‘I’ll show you,’ said Nan, mounting Epona with an agility of which, only
hours before, she would never have imagined herself capable. The mirror-glam
from Odin’s birds was now almost the size of the collection plate that Nat Parson
had passed around the church after every service. Nan had no idea what it was
for, but it was a glammy, for sure, she thought; and holding it in both her hands,
with both heels kicking the Horse’s flanks, Crazy Nan Fey urged Epona straight
towards the dreamcloud.
‘Don’t!’ cried Dan, taking a step.
But Nan just laughed. ‘It flows both ways!’ And at that she entered the
dreamcloud at a gallop, her long white hair streaming out behind her, and
vanished into the devil-mist without so much as a backward glance.
‘Now what?’ said Matt Law.
‘Now we wait – and pray,’ said Dan.
The dreamcloud was at the entrance now, fingering the doorstep. The Folk
had retreated to the church in the hope that it might provide sanctuary; but a
candlestick left on the doorstep and a copy of the Good Book had both dissolved
into twin piles of ash, and now the doorstep, worn to a shine by centuries of
worshipful feet, was starting to turn milky and fade …
And then a figure stepped out of the mist.
‘Demons from Chaos!’ Mae screamed; but Ben Briggs reached out his hand
and, bracing himself to lose it, grabbed hold of the ghostly figure and yanked it
through the doorway.
For a moment there was silence as everyone stared at the apparition.
Then Damson Ploughman gave a cry.
‘Gods! Thank gods!’ exclaimed his wife.
It was Sam, their vanished son, and for several minutes after that the Folk
were all too busy vying to touch the new arrival – pulling his hair and checking
his teeth and crowing in delight and surprise at the smallest thing he did – to
heed the protests of Zebediah Dean, who maintained that young Sam was a
demon in disguise, and that all of them would be double-damned, and that when
his uncle heard of this, there would be serious consequences—
‘Ah, shut yer pie-hole, Zeb,’ said Mags. ‘Does he look like a demon to you?’
‘Well, he’s ugly enough, for sure,’ said Damson, whose eyes were still
brimming.
Sam grinned. Everyone laughed – except, of course, for Zeb Dean and Mae.
‘All you have to do is dream,’ said Dan Fletcher in wonderment. ‘That’s what
she meant. That’s what this is!’
Sam nodded. ‘I think so. I remember going into the mist – then nothing else
until Nan Fey—’
‘But how did she do it, Sam?’ said Mags.
‘I think – I think she dreamed it, Ma!’
Dan turned on the villagers. ‘Well, what are we waiting for?’ he said. ‘If Nan
can do it, so can we!’
‘Us? Dream?’ said Mae Dean.
‘Why not?’ said Matt Law, never the most imaginative of men, but dogged
when he came to the point. ‘What more have we to lose now?’
There was a stir among the villagers, but still no one dared approach the
mist.
‘What? None of you even want to try?’ Dan Fletcher closed his eyes and
plunged into the dreamcloud, to return with a shaggy dog at his heels, a brown
shaggy dog, its coat still damp, its long tail wagging furiously.
‘Charlie! Oh, Charlie, you rascal,’ said Dan, grabbing hold of the unruly
hound. ‘I thought ye dead and done for, boy!’ Now, turning to the villagers, he
said: ‘See? We can do it. We all can. All we have to do is dream, and nothing
ever need be lost for ever …’
After that there was rush towards the edge of the dreamcloud. Imagining had
never been something that came easily, but that night the harvest exceeded any
that had ever been known.
Dogs, cats, horses, birds – all as real as young Sam Ploughman – began to
emerge from out of the devil-mist, popping into existence again like a row of
bubbles containing little magical pockets of being, released back into the Middle
World with just the same ease as they’d left it.
For a time, excitement made all of them a little mad. Even the cynics among
them were soon joining in the free-for-all, trying to recall lost ones, prized
possessions, fragments of their disrupted lives. Mags Ploughman reached into
the mist and brought out her mother’s music box, which she’d thought gone with
the rest of her things; Joe Grocer recovered his money-counter; children rescued
favourite toys. The people of Malbry soon found out that all they really had to do
was concentrate on what had been lost, to remember it in every detail, to call it
back from out of the mist, and sure enough it would come to them, like flotsam
on the water …
Matt Law’s posse was dispatched to make sure the church remained secure;
and before long it was noticed that the mist had receded an inch or so, leaving,
instead of the grass and stones that had surrounded the little church, a narrow
band of sediment that gleamed in rainbow colours. No one really noticed it. Folk
were too busy re-knitting their lives, inch by inch, stone by stone. And when
Nan Fey and the Horse of Air emerged at last from the dreamcloud, it was to a
most unusual sight: a church half filled with exotic paraphernalia, in which part
of a cottage (it belonged to Ben Briggs) had begun to appear, like a growth on a
tree; where a group of unsupervised children had managed to summon some
kittens and a red ball; and where through the roof (which had fallen in), a giant
oak was now growing, in the branches of which a flock of birds were singing as
if to raise the dead.
Nan Fey gave a little smile and patted the Horse of Air at her side. Soon
there would be greater things than birds and lost dogs to summon. The mirror-
glammy had shown her as much; it was not for nothing, she knew, that thoughts
were known as reflections. Too long had thinking and dreaming been considered
the work of idle hands. If the Sky Citadel were to be built, then dreams and
reflections would build it. And even if the battle were lost, she knew that the
Auld Man would be proud. Nan Fey had achieved what no one else could. Come
Hel, flood or Tribulation.
For the first time in five hundred years, the people of Malbry were dreaming.
If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
Old folk saying
MUCH AS SHE would have liked to believe that this was no more than a bad dream,
Maddy was not dreaming. Three hours had now passed since she and Perth had
followed Adam to the penthouse near Examiners’ Walk. There, the surprise of
her old enemy’s impending marriage had turned out to be nothing compared to
Maddy’s dismay on learning the bride’s identity.
Adam Scattergood and Maggie Rede? Adam and Maggie engaged to be wed?
Maddy realized at once that this must be part of some devious plan, although
how Adam Scattergood was involved remained a mystery to her.
Did Maggie know who Adam was? How had they met? Were they in love?
Could Adam really have feelings for the sister of his enemy? And how in the
Worlds could Maddy’s twin be in love with Adam Scattergood? Adam, whose
heart was as mean and sour as a late-November apple, doomed never to ripen,
but to fall as soon as the first frosts came?
Now she watched through the rune Bjarkán, hiding in the shadows, hoping to
catch a glimpse of her sister, or some clue as to what she was doing there. But
there was nothing unusual to be seen except for the Red Horse in the stables.
There had been no violence here – no sign of a struggle, no outbursts of glam –
and although she could make out Maggie’s trail, a brighter skein in the tapestry
of signatures that lined the road, there was nothing there to indicate that her
sister had lost her mind, or to explain what a child of Thor could see in Adam
Scattergood.
It had taken all Perth’s powers of persuasion to prevent Maddy from going
up to the apartment there and then and simply breaking down the door.
‘What do you think will happen,’ he said, ‘if you just go charging in?’
Maddy looked at him. ‘Yes, but—’
‘Listen. This needs careful thought. You don’t want her calling the Law on
us, or starting trouble, do you?’
Reluctantly Maddy agreed that maybe that wasn’t the best plan. ‘So what do
we do?’
Perth shrugged. ‘She knows you. If she sees you here, she’ll suspect
something. But if I can get in and investigate—’
‘You?’ said Maddy.
‘Why not? There isn’t a penthouse in World’s End that I can’t get into, and
out again. Trust me. I can do it.’
Maddy smiled. ‘Trust you? Perth, if you’re trying to pretend that this is about
anything other than wanting to steal the silverware, or whatever other valuables
might be lying around the place …’
Perth tried for a hurt look. ‘So shoot me,’ he said. ‘But you know I can. And
if a couple of candlesticks – or a purse, or a silver snuffbox – happen to
accidentally find their way into my possession – well, where’s the harm in that,
eh?’ He gave a broad and shameless grin, and not for the first time Maddy was
struck by his resemblance to Loki. The similarity was not so much in his
colouring or any of his features, but in the way he moved; in his eyes; in his
changing expressions. Loki’s older brother, perhaps; not quite as disruptive, but
still with that quicksilver spark in him, that tiny hint of wildfire.
It occurred to her that maybe this was how One-Eye must have been in his
prime, and a surge of nostalgia came over her. Had her old friend somehow
survived? Did her sister know if he had? And what was his connection with the
Old Man of the Wilderlands?
‘All right,’ she said, addressing Perth. ‘You go. But be careful. I don’t want
you getting hurt. Look, don’t touch, and then come back and tell me what you
see. Understood?’
Perth grinned. ‘Understood.’
‘And no candlesticks, or snuffboxes, or anything like that. All right?’
Perth shrugged. ‘Spoilsport.’
And so it was that, at sunset, a nondescript figure in drab brown climbed
quickly up onto a stable roof from a back alley off Examiners’ Walk, then up a
drainpipe, through a gulley, over a series of ridges, their tiles half eaten up with
moss, and finally onto a sloping roof overlooking the penthouse. Without his
coloured Outlander’s robes, Perth might have been a roofer, a chimney-sweep, or
even a slave; in any case, he was well concealed, wholly invisible from the
street, wedged comfortably behind a stack of chimneys.
He cast Bjarkán at the penthouse, and looked at the scene through his
fingers. For a moment he saw only light: the curtains were pulled so that only a
narrow slice of the room was visible to the naked eye, and even with the
truesight, all he could see were the traces of a signature that crisscrossed the
room, as if someone were pacing repeatedly behind the half-drawn curtains.
That would be Maddy’s sister, he thought. Only a Fiery left such a trail. He
narrowed the focus of Bjarkán and moved a little closer. Even from this vantage
point he could see little but her signature and her movements, which both
revealed agitation, and her shadow at the window, moving quickly to and fro.
Then came a sound of wings, and a bird landed on the chimney-stack just
above his head. A raven of peculiar size, which looked at Perth intently.
‘Shoo,’ said Perth.
Crawk. Crawk.
Now another bird joined the first; a second raven, this one with a white
feather on its head. It gave a harsh cry – Ack-ack-ack! – and pecked the larger
bird on the wing.
Perth forked a runeshape. The larger bird hopped from its perch. But instead
of flying away, it dropped right onto the rooftop next to him and, in a second,
had taken on the Aspect of a young man in black, with disreputable hair and a
broad grin.
‘That’s no verra polite,’ he said, sitting down cross-legged on the roof.
Perth considered casting Hagall, then decided against it. Even if the bird-
man could be deterred by such methods, the use of such a powerful glam would
alert the girl in the penthouse.
‘Who are you, and what do you want?’
‘Call me Hughie,’ said the bird. ‘And that’s my sister Mandy. Aides to the
Rider of Carnage, and all we want is to see that Rider all set for the End o’ the
Worlds – unless ye’ve got such a thing as a sugar lump tae spare, or mebbe even
a piece of cake—’
Kaik! Kaik! said the smaller bird, pecking at the chimney-pot.
Perth gave it a suspicious look. ‘The Rider of Carnage?’
Hughie grinned. To Perth, that grin looked about as real as a purse full of
glammy gold, but this was his chance to find out more about his new friend
Maddy and her mysterious sister. Perth didn’t know much about prophecies or
tales of the Elder Age, but he knew the Song of Three Horses from the Book of
Apocalypse, and it hadn’t taken him long to understand that the Black Horse that
Maddy called Jorgi, with its peculiar appetites and tendency to change Aspects,
was no horse at all, but some creature from Dream masquerading as a horse. And
here was Hughie talking about a Rider whose name was Carnage …
‘Who is the Rider of Carnage?’ he said. ‘Is it that girl in the penthouse?’
Hughie gave his gleaming grin. ‘Aye. She may be, if she rides …’
‘And what has that to do with me?’
‘I think it may have everything.’
Perth took a moment, thinking hard. Did Maddy know about all this? From
his point of view, his new friend had been most annoyingly secretive. Since
arriving in World’s End she had told him almost nothing of her family, her
origins, the source of her mysterious glam. Who was the girl that she had come
to find? What was the Old Man of the Wilderlands? How did a girl from the
Northlands come to know so much about runes? What did Perth really know
about Maddy? That she was new to the city; that she had a glam and knew how
to use it; that she had powerful enemies.
Could she be one of the Riders? Could Jorgi be the Black Horse? It seemed
to Perth that maybe he was. And the more he thought about it, the more likely it
seemed that some kind of gain could be had from all this: treasure from World
Below, perhaps, or knowledge for which the right person might pay.
‘Tell me,’ Hughie said at last. ‘Have ye ever heard of a thing called the Auld
Man o’ the Wilderlands?’
Perth nodded. It was a phrase that he’d heard Maddy use a number of times,
but he still had no idea what it was. A person? An object? A little of both?
‘What is it?’
‘A treasure,’ Hughie said. ‘A treasure out of World Below, more precious
than gold and rubies.’
‘Is that so?’ Perth said. ‘And do you know where it is?’
‘Aye. It’s right there, in that penthouse.’
‘Really?’ said Perth.
Mandy crawk-ed.
‘And what do you want from me?’ he said.
‘We want ye to steal it,’ Hughie replied.
‘Steal it? But you said you were—’
‘Aides to the Rider o’ Carnage. Which means we serve the interests of the
Rider. Even when the Rider herself disn’ae know where her interests lie.’
‘And you’re telling me the Rider needs—’
‘A thief,’ finished Hughie. ‘A verra good thief.’ His grin widened more than
ever. ‘One who could climb to the balcony in the middle of the night. One who
could get in without a sound, and take the Auld Man from where it’s hid. One
who could undo the ties of glam that bind it without alerting anyone. And finally,
one who could carry it back to safety, where no one could find it, and start
collecting the rewards—’
‘What rewards?’ said Perth.
Hughie made a vague gesture. The silver rings on his arms made a pleasant
little clinking sound. Perth, who knew how to estimate the value of a silver ring
without even measuring it, felt a pleasant shiver run from his fingertips to his
money-belt.
‘Anything ye like,’ said Hughie. ‘Gold, glam, your heart’s desire …’
‘My heart’s very demanding.’
‘And the Auld Man’s verra obliging,’ said Hughie. ‘As long as ye’re verra
discreet.’
Once more Perth gave the matter some thought. Should he tell Maddy about
this? Certainly she would want to know. But what did he really owe her? Clearly
she too was after this prize that gave a man his heart’s desire – why else would
she have sent him here without even telling him what it was?
He considered Maddy Smith. He liked the girl. He really did. But friendship,
in his experience, was rarely a sound investment, whereas money in the hand …
well, that was something he understood. And much as Perth regretted having to
deceive a friend, the thought of obtaining his heart’s desire was enough to lull
his conscience. It wasn’t as if anyone was going to get hurt, after all.
He summoned the rune Bjarkán again and looked through the penthouse
window. Through the curtains he saw the four-post bed, a velvet coverlet, a
plinth, the filaments of runelight that marked the occupant’s movements, and a
ball of something blue that glowed …
‘Is that it?’
Hughie nodded. ‘Aye.’
And now he could almost hear it too: a faint, small voice at the back of his
mind that whispered his name – Perth, Perth …
‘It talks!’ he said.
‘It does more than that. But first ye have to set it free.’
‘Set it free?’ Perth said. ‘Why? Is it a prisoner?’
‘Aye, friend,’ said Hughie. ‘A slave.’
For a moment Perth considered the job. It didn’t look too difficult. The
obvious entry-point was the balcony; the greatest risk, the fifteen feet of open
space between the target and the bed. The best time was during the small hours:
the girl would be asleep, and he would make his escape across the roof. It all
seemed quite straightforward; an easy little burglary. Of course, the climb wasn’t
easy, and he would have to be very quiet …
‘Well?’ said Hughie. ‘Do ye have a plan?’
Perth smiled. ‘I always do.’
THAT NIGHT, UPin the penthouse, Maggie was forming plans of her own. She waited
till Adam had fallen asleep, then she quietly slipped out of bed. The Old Man
was dark on his shadowy plinth; she guessed that he too was sleeping.
Good, thought Maggie. Let him sleep. This time her quarry was elsewhere.
And thanks to Odin’s ravens she knew just where to find them. On the road to
World’s End, somewhere south of Rhydian, Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium
Circus was preparing its final performance.
She cast the rune Bjarkán – Dream – and let her consciousness slip away.
This time she knew just what she was looking for; and her mind drifted easily
into Dream, skimming its waters delicately, like a sea-bird hunting for fish.
It was so much easier now than before; Maggie almost surprised herself. The
Rider of Carnage needs no Horse to dip into the world of Dream. All she needed
was to know exactly how far the Firefolk had come; the rest of her needs could
be summoned into being just as easily as the snake that had almost killed Loki
on Red Horse Hill.
Ah. There.
There it was. The Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus, travelling down the
World’s End road. Maggie moved in eagerly, taking in every detail.
So, she thought. This is my family. She almost smiled at the thought of it –
the Queen of the Pigs, the Strong Man, the Wolf Boys, the Human Nightingale –
as a child may smile at a character from a familiar story, well loved, well
remembered … until she remembered why she was here.
A voice in her head spoke dryly. And why’s that, Maggie? it said. Think you
can stop them? Is that it?
Maggie opened her eyes. ‘Who’s there?’
The Old Man, on his plinth in the dark, flickered with something like irony.
‘What are you saying?’ Maggie hissed. ‘That no one can stop the Firefolk?’
Oh, they can be stopped, said the Old Man. But that won’t stop Tribulation.
The Rider of Carnage will ride, it says. It doesn’t say: ‘After the wedding the
Rider of Carnage will hold a champagne reception, followed by country dancing
and bridey cake.’
‘What?’ said Maggie, wholly confused.
It doesn’t matter, the Old Man said. What I mean is, we all have our part to
play in this. Adam included, more’s the pity – though if you ask me, I don’t
understand what you see in him anyway. A child of the Folk. That child of the
Folk. That little, conniving, weaselling—
‘Stop it!’ she said. ‘Stop saying those things! I love him!’
The Old Man’s voice in her mind took on a terrible patience.
Maggie, you don’t love him. You don’t even know him. To start with, his
name isn’t Goodwin. It’s Scattergood. Did he tell you that? Did he tell you that
for the past three years he has sought to destroy your family? That he’d stop at
nothing to see us laid low? That he doesn’t love you – and never did – and that
this wedding was all his master’s idea?
Maggie was scornful. ‘How could my wedding be part of this?’
Not your wedding, the Old Man said. But the wedding gift …
And now, in her mind, Maggie saw another series of flickering images, like
pictures in a scrapbook. Herself – a little older perhaps – her hair once more
covered with a bergha. But not one of the white scarves worn by the maidens of
World’s End. It was black – a widow’s scarf – and on her knee she was holding a
child – a boy with the mark of the Firefolk.
For a moment Maggie could hardly breathe. ‘You can’t know that,’ she said.
‘Nobody could know that. I thought … but it’s too soon to be sure—’
The Old Man’s glow intensified. Don’t be foolish. You knew from the start.
From the very moment you lay with him. You felt it. You knew because I knew.
The child you bear – the fruit of the Oak – will determine the fate of the Æsir.
His runemark – the gift – is the ultimate rune. The tenth rune of the New Script.
And now the Old Man recited the prophecy of the Seeress:
The Cradle fell an age ago, but Fire and Folk shall raise her
In just twelve days, at End of Worlds; a gift within the sepulchre.
But the key to the gate is a child of hate, a child of both and neither.
And nothing dreamed is ever lost, and nothing lost for ever.
‘Is that what this is all about?’ said Maggie, forgetting to lower her voice.
‘Are you suggesting that Adam knew this was going to happen? Perhaps you
think he planned it this way, just to get hold of that ruinmark?’
The Old Man sighed. I don’t think. Remember, I’m an oracle. But whether
your son will live to be a gift to the gods, or to their enemies – well, Maggie,
that’s up to you.
For a long time Maggie stood silently next to the darkened stone Head. The
runemark Ác at the nape of her neck flared like a patch of fever.
For a moment what the Old Man had said had almost made a kind of sense –
the way that Adam had sought her out; the way his master had used her, first to
recover the Red Horse and then to seek out the Old Man. And when she rebelled,
it had played her, exploiting her new-found sympathies, threatening her new
friend while Adam himself played on her loneliness, flattered and cajoled her,
letting her think that he loved her …
But of course, the Old Man would say that.
Would he? But he can’t lie …
He wouldn’t have to lie, she thought. All he had to do was bend the truth to
his purpose. This was Odin, after all – Odin the master manipulator. By
predicting that the wedding would not take place, by playing on her fears and
desires, by carefully feeding her scraps of the truth, taken out of context and
from his own unique point of view, he’d hoped to erode her sympathies, to fill
her with hope and doubt and mistrust, and to finally swing her allegiance back
towards the Æsir.
It all made perfect sense, she thought. The Old Man wanted her loyalty. He
wanted her child – his great-grandson – to be a child of the Æsir. And his pride –
his legendary pride – would not allow a child of the Folk to play any part in his
dynasty. So Adam’s name wasn’t Goodwin? So what? A man can change his
name, she thought, for any number of reasons. That didn’t make him a liar, or
mean that he didn’t love her. He’d sworn to destroy the Æsir? So had Maggie
herself, once. That didn’t make him dishonest, or throw any doubt upon their
love. Quite the opposite, she thought. If, after all that, he could still love the
child of his enemies, then didn’t that make Adam better than they were? Didn’t
it make him more honourable?
And so she dismissed her dark thoughts, like a bad dream that seems real for
a time, then fades away into nothingness. Love is not a candle that can be
snuffed at the first breath of doubt, and Maggie was young and optimistic
enough to believe that, if there had been deception, then it had come from the
Whisperer, and not from her betrothed.
Separate Adam from his malignant passenger and everything could be started
afresh. Adam, Maggie and their child: a perfect, unbroken circle of three. A
family to replace what was lost; and now that she was going to be a mother,
surely the wedding must go ahead—
Suddenly she heard a sound outside, on the balcony. Someone was trying –
quietly – expertly – to open the bedroom windows.
Maggie summoned the rune Hagall, sharpened it to a point in her hand. She
didn’t know who the intruder was, but he had come at a bad time. Maggie was a
mother now. It didn’t matter that her child was barely a quickening. It didn’t
matter that her son was the key to the fate of the Nine Worlds. Some fierce and
primitive instinct had been awakened inside her.
She stepped into the shadows and waited.
IT WAS LONG after midnight when the lights in the penthouse finally dimmed.
Someone was finding it hard to sleep, and Perth didn’t want to make his move
before he was sure of being unobserved. It was cold up on the rooftop; even the
leather tunic he wore was not enough to keep out the chill. Perth shivered; his
fingers ached – he stuck them under his armpits.
So far the plan was straightforward enough. As soon as he was sure that
Maggie and her young man were asleep, he would climb to the penthouse. Using
a rope and crampon, he would swing himself onto the balcony; open the window
in silence; creep over to the plinth; slip the Old Man into a satchel slung across
his back; and make his escape the way he had come.
But as far as Perth was concerned, stealing the Old Man without getting
caught was just the initial stage of it. The second, rather more dangerous part
was getting away from Maddy; over the rooftops seemed the best bet, although
Perth wasn’t sure how long he would have before she got impatient and realized
the deception.
Finally the lights went out. He waited an hour longer. Then he climbed onto
the balcony, opened the window (it was locked, but Perth had brought his tools)
and stepped soundlessly into the room. His eyes took a moment to adjust to the
darkness. Outside, the moon was full. A slow and regular breathing came from
the vast canopied bed. He took a step towards the plinth, where he had seen the
ball of blue light—
And stopped, frozen. A figure in white was standing beside the bed. A girl –
cropped hair and big, dark eyes, holding a sliver of fire in her palm.
His first thought was astonishment at how like Maddy the girl was. He’d
known they were sisters, of course, but even so, he found himself unprepared.
But for the hair, which was cut very short, she was Maddy to the life: the same
stubborn mouth, the same vivid face, the same look of fierce concentration …
She spun the fiery thing at Perth. Perth dropped; hit the floor. The weapon –
some kind of mindbolt, he thought – went over his head and struck the wall.
There was a crash and a flare of light; Perth sprang towards the plinth, forking Yr
to protect himself. His hand was actually touching the thing that Maddy called
the Old Man – and then something hit him in the back with dizzying, spectacular
force, and he went down, seeing stars, onto the floor of the penthouse.
The Old Man fell with him, and narrowly missed crushing his skull as he hit
the floor. As it was, it glanced off his shoulder and rolled to a halt beside him.
Perth swore and lashed out in pain; on his arm the runemark Perth lit an
ominous rose-red. He saw the girl standing over him, one hand extended,
holding the glam, the other clasped over her belly.
‘Put it down,’ said the girl.
Perth’s eyes flicked to the rune in her hand. It was Hagall, the Destroyer. No
time to cast a protective glam; if she hit him, he was toast. Of course, that was
true of the girl too: if she fired a mindbolt now she wouldn’t have time to protect
herself. His glam might knock her down – but hers would probably pulverize
him.
The thing was: did she know that?
He got up very slowly, still holding the rune in the palm of his hand. Perth
and Hagall faced each other head to head, like hammers.
‘Drop the glammy,’ said the girl.
‘Why don’t you drop the glammy?’ said Perth.
‘Because this is Hagall, the Destroyer,’ she said. ‘If I decide to hit you with
this, you’re going to have more than a headache.’
‘Well, this is Perth,’ retorted Perth, with rather more confidence than he felt.
‘Perth, the – er – the All Powerful. And if I hit you with that, then …’
Maggie looked sceptical. ‘Well?’ she said.
‘Well, it won’t be pretty,’ said Perth, edging towards the window.
Maggie’s eyes flickered. The hand at her belly moved protectively
downwards.
‘You look a lot like your sister,’ said Perth.
‘Yes, I’ve been told that before,’ Maggie said. ‘Is she the one who sent you
here?’
Perth nodded.
‘To kill me?’
‘No.’
She glanced at him through the rune Bjarkán. For a long time she said
nothing. Bjarkán lit her face with a clear blue light; in her hand the rune Hagall
shone with its lethal silvery glow. Finally she banished the runes and levelled her
granite-gold gaze at Perth.
‘Go back to my sister,’ she said, ‘and tell her I’m not going to war. Tell her
that when Tribulation comes, they’re going to be short of a Rider.’
‘You’re letting me go?’ Perth said.
Maggie nodded.
‘Just like that?’
She gave a rueful little smile. ‘Would you rather I knocked you about a bit
first?’
‘Er, not particularly,’ said Perth.
‘Then just deliver the message,’ she said. ‘And if I ever see you again, I’ll
kill you. Do you understand?’
It must be some kind of a trap, Perth thought. The girl must have known he
was bluffing. With his shoulder still numb from the blow he’d received, he
guessed there was one slam left in his glam, after which he was hers for the
taking. And yet she had chosen to let him go …
‘Why?’ he said.
Maggie seemed about to reply. Then came a sound from the four-post bed.
Maggie flinched. Perth summoned his glam. Adam had finally woken up.
‘What’s going on?’ he said.
Perth turned to run.
‘Maggie, stop him! He’s getting away!’
Perth’s foot struck against the Old Man’s head. Quickly he bent to scoop it
up …
And at that, Adam grabbed the first thing that came to hand – which
happened, ironically, to be a silver candlestick – and threw it as hard as he could
at the intruder. It hit Perth on the side of the head. A glancing blow, but painful.
He staggered; instinctively he discharged his mindbolt against the wall.
Runelight exploded onto the scene; through a haze of pain Perth recognized
the fair young man from the marketplace. He flung another mindbolt – instinct
taking over from fear – and a spray of red sparks like firecrackers scattered
across the bedroom.
Adam shielded his face with his arm; Maggie cast Yr to protect them both;
and, throwing the Old Man into the satchel that was slung around his shoulder,
Perth closed his eyes and ran full-tilt at the little balcony.
He didn’t use the rope, but simply hurled himself into the night, arms
wheeling, legs pumping; two hundred feet to the cobbles below and nothing but
moonlight to cling to.
But Perth did not fall; a dozen feet down he caught hold of a loose piece of
guttering, and, in spite of the pain in his shoulders and back, managed to haul
himself up into a lead-lined gulley; from there onto a ridged roof, then down a
slope, round a chimney-stack, and across the rooftops like a cat, the Old Man in
the satchel bouncing against his hip as he ran, until at last he could run no more,
and slid down a drainpipe into the back of an alley that ran alongside a drainage
canal.
Here he stopped to catch his breath. That had been too close, he thought. If
he’d known how the girl could throw her glam, he might have thought twice
before breaking in. As it was, he’d been lucky, he told himself. He’d escaped
with nothing but bruises; had managed to steal the Old Man and get clear of
Maddy all at the same time.
He was feeling rather pleased with himself, and had almost decided to
celebrate in one of the local taverns, when a voice at his back said: ‘Stop in the
name of the Law!’ and a hand fell on his shoulder.
Perth froze. His glam was all gone; he had no strength to run or fight. He
turned: two lawmen, with weighted sticks, were standing in the alley mouth. The
third, with a hand on Perth’s shoulder, eyed the satchel suspiciously. Had they
seen him on the roof? If so, he was in trouble. If not – and this seemed more
likely – then maybe he could brazen it out. He tried for a smile.
‘Officers. How can I help?’
The lawman closest to him growled, ‘What’s in the bag?’
‘What? This?’ said Perth. He opened the satchel that hid the Old Man, taking
care not to move too fast. Some lawmen had been known to be over-zealous with
their nightsticks, and Perth had no intention of giving them the least excuse to
use them. The Old Man in the satchel looked just like a lump of rock – a piece of
volcanic glass, perhaps, or a block of cinder.
The lawmen inspected it closely, with identical looks of suspicion.
At last: ‘What is it?’ one of them said.
Perth looked hurt. ‘It’s a sculpture. Can’t you see? It’s a stone head. I mean,
it isn’t finished, but surely you can see the craftsmanship. The nobility of the
features. The loftiness of the brow. The craggy wisdom of the nose—’
‘And these?’ The lawman indicated the tools that Perth had brought with
him: the glass-cutting knife; the jemmy; the small hammer for breaking and
entering.
‘Those are the tools of my trade,’ said Perth. ‘Can’t you see I’m an artist?’
And such was his air of injury that even the Law was taken in, as the three
officers looked solemnly at the stone Head and acknowledged that, yes, it did
have a certain something, and that Perth was free to go.
And then, just as they were about to leave, one of the lawmen – an older
man, with cold blue eyes under his hat – dropped his gaze and stiffened. Perth
had rolled up his coat sleeves when he’d broken into the penthouse. Now, in a
sliver of moonlight, the runemark showed against his skin as clearly as a splash
of ink.
‘What’s this?’ said the lawman.
‘That’s an Outlands tattoo,’ said Perth.
‘It looks like a brand,’ said the lawman. ‘A slave brand that’s been tampered
with.’
Perth could see his position weakening rapidly. The lawmen, already
suspicious, had now discovered his runemark. In a moment one of them would
suggest that he accompany them to the roundhouse …
He turned to run. It seemed the best plan. He might even have made it too,
without the Old Man and the satchel. But the lawman’s hand caught the satchel
strap, and in the second it took to release it, the other two lawmen had moved in
close. Before Perth could summon his glam, or even think of a plausible lie, one
of those weighted sticks had caught him on the side of the head, and within
seconds his hands were cuffed, and he – and the contents of the satchel – were
on their way to the roundhouse.
Ten minutes later, stripped of his tools and of anything else that might help him
escape, Perth was sitting in a cell underneath the roundhouse at St Sepulchre’s
Gate. His head ached, his hands were cuffed, and through the trapdoor that led to
the cell – a dark and windowless hole in the ground – the arresting officer read
him his rights as set down in the Book of the Law.
Of course, as he pointed out, if Perth really was a runaway – a fact that
would surely emerge under Examination – then he had no rights anyway, and,
unless he was claimed by his master, would end up in the mines, or on the
galleys, or, more likely, the gallows, which was undoubtedly where such as he
belonged.
Perth said nothing. He’d learned that in these circumstances silence was
always the best reply. So far he had refused to give the lawmen anything – not
even his name – which might just buy him a day’s respite, he hoped, before the
giant machine of the Law returned in force to crush him. By then he hoped to
have thought of a plan. It wasn’t the first time he’d been in a cell, and he fully
understood the need to play it soft, and carefully.
‘Lost your tongue, eh, scally?’ said the lawman nastily. ‘You’ll be lucky if
that’s all you lose once the Courts have done with you.’
Still Perth said nothing.
‘Sure you don’t want to give us your name? We’ll get it out of you anyway,
so you might as well save us the trouble.’
Perth pretended to go to sleep.
‘All right then,’ said the lawman. ‘But if you want to eat, or drink, or sleep
under a blanket – and I’m warning you, it gets chilly down there – you’re going
to have to give us your name.’
Once more Perth said nothing.
Annoyed by his prisoner’s lack of response, the lawman concluded this little
speech by tossing a heavy object through the trapdoor. It almost hit Perth – it
was meant to – but he saw it coming and dodged, and the thing hit the floor with
a dull thud.
In the dark it was hard to determine what the object actually was; but just as
the lawman shut the trap, he paused to deliver his parting shot and, in doing so,
solved the mystery:
‘Oh, and by the way,’ he said, ‘here’s your precious sculpture.’
PERTH SAT DOWN on the floor of the cell and reviewed the situation. All in all, it
didn’t look good. The cell was six feet square, baked earth, windowless, dark,
and smelled as if something had died there. Most likely the previous occupant,
Perth told himself sourly; and so far the chances of its current tenant’s continued
survival didn’t look at all promising.
He cast the rune Bjarkán and took a look at the décor. For a moment or two
Bjarkán revealed little that Perth’s nose hadn’t already told him, but now he saw
the Old Man, the mysterious object that had landed him in this fix in the first
place, gleaming with runelight and bindrunes, its blue heart glowing like a ball
of thread woven with strands of starlight.
He reached out with his bound hands. The Head felt warm, as if touched by
the sun. It brightened at the contact, a rose-coloured glow appearing where his
fingers pressed the rock. He pulled his hands away; the glow dimmed. He
touched the rock; the glow returned.
Perth. Perth.
That voice. That whispering voice. He thought he might have imagined it.
What in the Worlds had he stolen?
Once more he peered at the Old Man through the circle of finger and thumb.
It looked like no gemstone he’d ever seen, though the ravens had called it a
treasure. But they had also called it a slave, and now Perth understood what they
meant: there was a consciousness trapped within the rock, something that
whispered in his mind—
PERTH! WE DON’T HAVE TIME FOR THIS!
He pulled back his hands as if they’d been burned. The voice in his mind was
louder – much louder – as soon as he put his hands on the rock; when he took his
hands away, the voice went back to a comforting drone.
Perth. Listen to me, Perth.
Cautiously he extended his hands. Touched the rock with his fingertips. Once
more the trapped blue heart pulsed in its web of runelight.
Thank the gods for that, said the voice with a trace of irritation. In case you
hadn’t noticed, neither of us has much time. Now I want you to listen—
‘Hang on,’ said Perth. ‘And what do I get?’
There came a chuckle from the rock. You get the chance to listen to me. What
did you want? Three wishes?
‘Well …’
We’re talking about Ragnarók. The war between Order and Chaos. The
chance to make better Worlds—
‘Fine,’ said Perth. ‘But what’s in it for me?’
Gods, you sound like my brother. The Old Man sighed. Very well, he said. Do
as I say and I’ll give you whatever your heart most desires. All right? Is that
enough to tempt your grasping little soul?
Perth shrugged. ‘It’ll do. But I’m warning you: my soul may be little, but my
price—’
Understood, said the Old Man. Unlimited wealth. Ultimate power. Runes to
charm any woman – or man. Adventure. Excitement. Freedom—
‘Freedom?’ said Perth.
The Old Man glowed. Of course, he said. Come closer, Perth, and listen …
MEANWHILE, BACK IN the penthouse, Maggie Rede seemed strangely unmoved, both
by the theft of the Old Man and by the rage of the Whisperer.
She had not attempted to follow Perth as he fled across the rooftops, nor had
she seemed at all concerned as Adam’s dark passenger vented its fury, hurling
objects across the room, tearing at the drapes, breaking ornaments and generally
behaving like a drunken bard following a particularly unsuccessful performance.
Why did she let him get AWAY? it howled.
Adam asked the question.
Maggie shrugged. ‘We’ll get him back. I had other things on my mind.’
‘Other THINGS?’ snarled the Whisperer. ‘What kind of things? Your
wedding dress? Canapés for the party, perhaps? You practically hand over the
Old Man to some sneak-thief from the rooftops, and you have the nerve, the
almighty GALL—’
Maggie’s only response was to give Adam a long and measuring look.
‘Is your name really Goodwin?’ she said.
Adam stared at her. ‘Of course. Why do you ask?’
She smiled at him. ‘Because,’ she said, ‘when our son is born I want him to
have his father’s name. A name that he can be proud of. Be that Goodwin … or
Scattergood.’
Adam’s mouth opened, but nothing came out. In his mind, the Whisperer had
suddenly fallen very still.
Be careful, boy. She knows …
But how?
‘That’s why I let him go,’ she said. ‘I couldn’t risk him hurting our child.
You see that, don’t you?’ Her voice was soft. ‘You understand why I couldn’t
fight?’
Adam nodded silently. In fact, he was even more confused. How had Maggie
even known she was carrying a child? Was he supposed to congratulate her?
Why was the Whisperer in his mind capering like a lunatic?
‘You spoke to the Old Man,’ he said. ‘That’s how you knew, isn’t it?’
Maggie nodded.
‘What else did it say?’
For a long time Maggie said nothing. Instead, she looked at Adam’s face,
trying to understand what had changed.
A week ago, that face had seemed as noble as it was handsome. The face of a
hero from one of her books, honest, brave and true. But now, somehow, the mask
had slipped; and she could see behind his features to the mean-eyed boy who had
pissed his pants when Maddy had hit him on Red Horse Hill. She could see his
confusion now, his weakness and his terrible fear.
That was the Old Man’s gift to her, and she knew, with a painful twist of the
heart, that she would never be able to see Adam in quite the same light again.
But Love is the greatest of glamours, making folk see what they most want
to see, rewriting the past, gilding the future, making the ugly beautiful. To a
lover, any vice becomes a hidden virtue; any betrayal a challenge. Adam was
only human, she thought. And yes, perhaps he had lied to her. But now that they
were a family, surely things would be different. And what was a storybook hero
compared to the father of her child?
‘Don’t lie to me any more,’ she said. ‘You can’t build a marriage on a lie.
And now that you’re going to be a father, you have to be responsible.’
‘B-but … how? I mean, what did he tell you?’
She shrugged. ‘That doesn’t matter now. It only matters that it’s true. And
that you love me …’ She looked at him with such intensity that Adam felt his
knees go weak. ‘You do love me, don’t you?’ she said.
‘Yes,’ said Adam. ‘Yes. Yes.’ And he nodded so emphatically that his teeth
almost rattled in his head.
‘All right. Good,’ said Maggie, and smiled. ‘That’s really all that matters. We
have a wedding to think about, and one more day to prepare for it—’
‘But what about the Old Man?’ said Adam in a trembling voice. ‘We can’t let
him fall into enemy hands. What about the New Script? What about the
Firefolk? And what about me, Maggie? What about me?’
Maggie smiled. ‘Don’t worry,’ she said. ‘Let me handle all that. And as for
you’ – here Adam knew that she was addressing the Whisperer – ‘all I want of
you is your word that you won’t try to interfere. This wedding is going ahead as
planned. I don’t care what the Old Man says. I won’t have my son telling folk
that his parents were married over the broom. Is that understood?’
Adam’s head nodded vigorously.
‘Good,’ said Maggie. ‘That’s settled then. Now – Adam. You deal with the
wedding. We still have things to organize, and I don’t want anything going
wrong at the last minute. Everything’s going to be perfect. Nothing’s going to
spoil my day.’
‘B-but …’ stammered Adam. ‘What about you?’
Maggie gave him a tender look. He really was just a boy, she thought. A
frightened and uncertain boy, as new to all this as she was. Perhaps he had
deceived her. Perhaps he’d lied to her – at first. But now that they were a family,
everything was bound to change.
The old, suspicious Maggie would have cast the rune Bjarkán at this point, if
only to know that his love was true. But the Maggie who had let the Old Man go
rather than risk her unborn child had no need for that kind of proof. Love is built
on trust, she knew; to question trust was to murder love.
And so she took his love on trust, and found herself loving him even more.
‘Don’t you fret about me,’ she said. ‘Of course, I’ll be working too. But I
don’t want you getting hurt. This business of mine might be dangerous.’
Adam’s eyes widened. ‘What will you do?’
‘What I should have done from the start.’ Maggie turned to him and smiled.
‘I’m going to deal with the Firefolk.’
Adam and his passenger watched as Maggie went onto the balcony. The
moonlight shone on her cropped hair, giving her a silver crown. The runemark at
the nape of her neck glowed with an eerie intensity.
For a moment she stood there in silence, barefoot, in her nightdress. Then
she murmured a cantrip and held out her arms to the night.
For a long time nothing happened. Then came a sound of beating wings.
Two ravens – one with a white head – alighted on the balcony rail. They
looked at Maggie and crawk-ed – Almost as if they were talking to her, Adam
thought uneasily.
In his mind the Whisperer hissed and writhed like a nest of snakes. They are
talking to her, it said. Hel’s teeth, how did she summon them? How did she even
know about them?
Adam could sense how badly his passenger longed to eavesdrop, and how
afraid it was to do so. He tried to hear what Maggie was saying, but caught only
the raucous cries of the two ravens, and a few broken phrases in Maggie’s voice
of something like a nursery rhyme:
‘See the Cradle rocking
High above the town.
Down come the Firefolk
To bring the baby down.
All the way to Hel’s gate
Firefolk are bound …’
It made no sense to Adam at all, and Adam found he didn’t care. One more
day, and he would be free. The rest was none of his business.
He’d always known Maggie was dangerous. He’d sensed that almost from
the start. But this was a different Maggie Rede to the one he’d found in the
catacombs; the lonely, suspicious little girl who’d wanted nothing more than to
follow him. That girl was gone, and for the first time in over three years Adam
Scattergood felt afraid of someone who wasn’t the Whisperer.
Something had changed her. What had she said? You’re going to be a father?
How could she know that, anyway? How could anyone possibly know?
Whatever the reason, Adam thought, there was something new in Maggie’s
eyes; a dark and murderous knowledge that had not been there the day before. It
frightened him, and not for the first time he offered up a silent prayer to
whatever gods might be listening:
Please, don’t let her find me out …
Because whatever she might have been once, Maggie Rede had undergone a
kind of transformation. It was like watching a milkweed pod that had ripened
slowly throughout the year suddenly burst and release its seeds into the hungry
summer wind.
What had the Old Man said to her?
What was his dark passenger’s plan?
And what were those birds, those ravens, whose language she seemed to
understand?
Adam didn’t want to know the answer to either of these questions. He’d had
enough of oracles – and of talking birds, and glamours, and dreams – to last him
a dozen lifetimes. But one thing he was certain of: he couldn’t afford to anger
her. She was no longer the Maggie he’d known; the one who had been such easy
prey.
Somehow, in barely an hour, she had become the Rider whose name was
Carnage.
THE LAST TIMEMaggie had ridden the Red Horse through Dream, the Whisperer had
guided her steps. This time things were different. This time Maggie herself was
in charge. Dreams no longer frightened her. Maggie had learned that even Dream
was just another World to explore – a World in which she was powerful enough
to challenge even the gods themselves.
While Maddy was waiting for Perth outside in the alley behind the
penthouse, Maggie was already making plans. By the time she was ready to
leave, the moon had dipped below the city rooftops, and the first fine strands of a
pale pre-dawn had begun to cling to the horizon.
Maggie pinned her bergha in place and went down to the stables, where the
Red Horse of the Last Days was placidly eating a bag of oats.
He looked up and snorted at her approach.
Above the stables, in Aspect, Hugin and Munin were circling.
Ironically it had been the birds that had given Maggie the idea. An idea for a
plan that both the Whisperer and the Old Man himself might have dismissed as
impossible – a plan that would solve all her problems, contradictory as that
seemed; so that in just one move, the war would be stopped, bloodshed
prevented, Adam freed, and their child born into a world at peace.
Rhydian had been a mistake. Somehow, the Firefolk had escaped. But this
time, Maggie told herself, there would be no confusion. This time not even the
Trickster would see the trap as it closed upon him – or at any rate, not until long
after it was too late. This time there would be no escape; no confusion; no mercy.
Beside her, Adam’s passenger was showing signs of restlessness.
‘I demand you tell Me what’s going on!’ it complained, in Adam’s voice.
Maggie gave Adam a tender smile. ‘Trust me. I know what I’m doing,’ she
said. ‘Take care. I’ll be back as soon as I can.’
‘But I’m going with you—’ the Whisperer said.
‘No, not this time,’ Maggie replied, and then, with a cantrip of Ós, she was
off, ignoring the Whisperer’s protests as it tried in vain to enter her mind.
She turned her attention once more to the birds that circled and crowed
overhead. They’d said that they belonged to her. But would they really obey her
commands?
Crawk.
As she rose, in Aspect, to join the course of the river Dream, she found that
she could hear them dimly in the back of her mind.
Of course we’ll do what ye say, hen.
You’re the Rider o’ Carnage.
‘Then take me to the Firefolk!’ Maggie said, and she and Sleipnir rose above
the city streets like St Sepulchre’s Fire, and vanished into the early mist that was
rising from the World’s End road.
They caught up with the Firefolk some thirty miles from the city. Their colours,
filtered by the mist, flared up into the rosy sky. For a long time Maggie did
nothing but watch as Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus drew closer along
the World’s End road, the three little red-painted caravans moving along at a
steady pace, three wolves bringing up the rear, a sharp-eyed hawk observing the
road.
That was their Watchman, she already knew. The first thing she would have
to do was to hide herself from his piercing gaze. That mist would do it, she told
herself; if only it were thicker …
She murmured a cantrip of Isa.
A chill seemed to descend from the clouds. The thin bright gilding on the
horizon faded to a tarnished grey. The hawk seemed to sense a change in the air
and flew down onto one of the wagons, where it resumed the Aspect of
Heimdall, huddled under a wolfskin cloak.
Now Maggie cast the rune Bjarkán and looked through its lens at the enemy.
They were already so close, she thought. Closer even than she’d feared. How
had they managed to get there in time? How much did they already know?
‘This had better work,’ she said, ‘or they’ll be in the city by nightfall.’
Hughie crawk-ed. It’s the only way.
Once more Maggie looked down at the Firefolk through the rune Bjarkán.
They looked so harmless, so helpless now, with their little caravans. From one of
the wagons she could hear the lilting sound of Bragi’s guitar, a scatter of bright
little notes in the grey, and a sudden sadness came over her, a fleeting desire to
join the group in spite of the discord she sensed within …
No, she had not had a change of heart. She still rejected her ancestry with
every drop of her demon blood, but something inside her mourned the choice she
had to make – the family she had made with Adam, or the family she had never
even met.
No one chooses their family, Maggie Rede told herself. Hers was wicked
through and through; a nest of thieves and murderers. She’d read all about them
in her books; she knew their crimes, their betrayals.
And there they were at last, she thought. Completely at her mercy. It would
be easy to ride them down, to cut them all to pieces – and yet she could not do it.
She was, after all, a mother now. A mother should not be a murderer. And
how could she explain to her son that she’d killed their people as they slept?
And yet, when they reached the city gates …
Pucker-lips, a-pucker-lips, all fall down. Maggie knew what that meant. It
meant the Apocalypse, the End of the Worlds, the second Tribulation; all the
things she’d once desired, and which now she rejected with all her heart. The
Rider whose name was Carnage wanted nothing more than to see her child born
into a world at peace, and to live with her husband, quietly, away from the noise
of the Universal City.
It seemed at first glance impossible. The Rider of Carnage was fated to ride
as soon as the Firefolk entered the gates. But if she joined forces with the gods,
the Whisperer would kill Adam. And if she stood against them, then she would
be forced to destroy the Old Man, at which point the Æsir would take their
revenge, with Adam once more as their target.
She had not forgotten the vision that the Old Man had shown her: the picture
of herself, with her child, wearing a widow’s black bergha. Whichever choice
Maggie made would put Adam in the line of fire …
Unless the gods never reached those gates …
And now at last, thanks to those birds and their rhyme, Maggie had a plan so
simple that she wondered why she’d never thought of it before. She barely had
to do anything. Just a series of glamours, and Adam and their child would be
safe.
Maggie whispered a cantrip of Raedo – Reid kveda rossom vaesta – and
fingered the rune with her left hand.
And now, with a click of her fingers, Maggie reversed the Journeyman rune,
and began to draw the silver skeins of mist through the circle of finger and
thumb. As she did so, she began to sing another cantrip of Raedo:
Rad byth on recyde, rinca gehwylcum …
Below her, the white cloud thickened and churned. Marsh-lights flickered at
its heart. The ravens shuttled busily through the mist, tracing a scrawl of
runelight, while Sleipnir, in his fiery Aspect, spanned the sky like St Sepulchre’s
Fire, his long legs reaching from horizon to horizon.
The result was like a cat’s cradle of light in every imaginable colour, from
which a column of mist was spun like pale wool on a spindle.
And on the road to World’s End, the Firefolk vanished into the cloud, and
Sleipnir’s eight legs spun spidery webs, and Odin’s Mind and Spirit swooped
with ever-increasing frenzy, and sun and moon and stars went out, as Maggie
Rede went riding.
MADDY HAD WAITED till first light for Perth to come down from the penthouse roof.
Even then, it was a measure of her belief in her new friend that it took her till
after breakfast to understand that he wouldn’t be back.
She had found herself a place to wait at the window of a coffee shop. There,
she had breakfast – bacon and eggs and a pot of strong World’s End coffee – and
kept watch over the penthouse. But as the sun rose over St Sepulchre’s Gate and
the city returned to life, Maddy began to realize that something must have gone
terribly wrong. Perth should have been back hours ago; and, watching now
through the rune Bjarkán, Maddy could see his signature slashed across the
building’s façade, along with some splashes of runelight that told an eloquent
story.
Climbing up the fire escape that ran around the back of the building, Maddy
took a closer look. There had been a struggle, she saw. Perth had fought with her
sister. Perth’s rose-red signature was clear, and Maggie’s was unmistakable. But
what was that third signature-trail, and why did it seem so familiar?
Could it be the Old Man?
And was the Old Man the Whisperer?
Until now she had been certain it was. And yet those colours were somehow
wrong. The Whisperer’s trail had been harsh and bright, like lightning in a
bottle. But this was something different – different and unmistakable – those
splashes of runelight, kingfisher-blue, and that trace in the air of Raedo, reversed
…
One-Eye?
Odin?
Could it be? Maddy could barely believe it. And yet her old friend’s
signature was scrawled across the rooftops. Raedo, reversed, in his colours.
Which meant that the being he had called the Old Man, the thing he had ordered
her to find, was none other than his own self, embodied, like the Whisperer, in
that piece of volcanic rock.
Maddy’s head was spinning now. She sat down on the fire escape. Why had
Odin not told her the truth? Why had he misled her? Where was Perth, and why
had he run? Was he hurt? Was he lying low? Or had he simply turned his coat,
and delivered One-Eye into enemy hands?
Maddy sat for a long time, trying to make sense of it all. She had none of
Perth’s climbing skills. Impossible to follow his path across those perilous
rooftops. But the Old Man’s signature, she hoped, should be possible to find,
especially now the trail was fresh; and so she returned to Examiners’ Walk to
search for traces of her friend.
It was no simple task, she found. The Universal City was always thick with
signatures, and even a trail like Odin’s or Perth’s could easily be lost in the
crowd. Hours passed: not a trace of the pair. Maddy grew tired, disheartened and
cold. She had walked around in circles for hours without picking up so much as
a broken cantrip. Noon struck in Cathedral Square. Still no sign of her vanished
friends. According to Ethel’s prophecy, she had less than twenty-four hours to go
before Ragnarók and the End of the Worlds, by which time she needed to find
Perth, retrieve the Old Man, ride the Black Horse of Treachery and find out why
her sister was marrying Adam Scattergood …
Face it, she thought. It’s impossible. I’ve failed them. I’ve failed everyone.
At lunch time she bought flatbread and sour herrings from one of the stalls in
St Sepulchre’s Square, and sat down by the fountain to eat them. As she did so,
her eye was drawn by something pinned to a notice board nearby.
This board was a public display space usually taken up by wedding
announcements, market times, lost dogs, property auctions, Court rulings and
Cleansings. Normally Maddy would not have paid very much attention to these,
but this time a sign at the top of the board caught her eye. The sign read:
SLAVE AUCTION THIS SUNDAY AT 8.00
UNIVERSITY MAIN QUAD
And so on, at fifteen-minute intervals, until five o’clock, which was when
the evening service began. Weddings were lucrative business in the Universal
City, and that fifteen-minute cathedral ceremony could cost as much as five
hundred crowns – the price of a coach-and-four, or the rent of a penthouse suite
for a month.
She shook her head impatiently. ‘I know about that already,’ she said. ‘What
matters now is saving Perth.’
Hughie frowned. ‘No. Your friend can look after himself. What matters now
is your sister and this wedding that she’s planned. That ceremony must not take
place. No matter what ye have tae do.’
‘Who says?’
‘The Auld Man. Who do ye think?’
By now Maddy had forgotten all about keeping her voice down. ‘To Hel with
the Old Man!’ she cried. ‘I’m sick of following orders! Sick of being kept in the
dark! Sick of prophecies! Sick of dreams! Sick of fish-eating horses and cake-
eating birds! So you’d better tell me what’s going on, because otherwise I shall
wring your neck!’
Hughie waited patiently until Maddy had run out of breath.
‘Feeling better, hen?’ he said.
Maddy found that, actually, she was.
‘Then listen to me. Listen to him. This is what he wants you to do.’
And Hughie explained the General’s plan, while Maddy listened in silence,
her face growing paler and paler.
Suddenly the Saturday crowds seemed to her like an army of distant ghosts;
the bright dome of the cathedral like a tarnished shield in the sun. Nothing felt
real to her any more. Her head felt like a Fair Day balloon; her heart was a
drumbeat that filled the Worlds.
‘And this is what he wants?’ she said, when Hughie at last fell silent.
‘Aye,’ said Hughie.
‘I don’t understand.’
‘He disn’ae need ye to understand. He simply needs ye to do as he says. Will
ye, Maddy? Do as he says? Will ye trust him, Maggie?’
‘I’ll try.’
Hughie gave a sigh of relief. ‘Shiny.’
Maddy almost laughed. If asked for suitable words to describe the current
dreadful state of affairs, shiny would not have made the list.
She looked at Hughie hopefully. ‘But he must have another plan? Since
when did the General not have a plan?’
Hughie shrugged. ‘This is the plan. Beyond that, there’s nothing. If this
wedding goes ahead, then we lose everything: Asgard; your sister; the future of
the Firefolk. And there’s no one else to stop it but you, and only one way to do
it.’
‘Are you sure there’s no other way?’
‘The General was verra clear. If ye want to save the Worlds, you have to kill
Adam Goodwin.’
AS CRAZY NAN had already found, in Dream, time has no meaning. Seconds can
stretch into minutes, to hours; hours can pass in the blink of an eye. Maggie, on
Sleipnir, had no idea how much time remained to her; but as she skimmed the
islets of Dream for traces of her quarry, she could feel the weight of Worlds
gathering like thunderclouds; a surge of something about to break that filled the
air around her with barbed little notes of static.
So far it had gone better than Maggie had expected. But dealing with the
Firefolk had been the easy part of the plan. Now came the second throw of the
dice: her move against the Whisperer.
Maggie had known from the start that this would be the hardest task of all.
The Whisperer was already alert to every suspicious movement; and Maggie
knew that if she failed, Adam would be its target. She needed the Old Man; and
for that, she needed to track down the man who had stolen it from the penthouse.
Her brief encounter with Perth had left her filled with curiosity. He looked like
an everyday scally; a rooftop sneak-thief of the kind that World’s End had in
abundance. But his glam was one of the new runes, and he knew her sister.
Whoever he was, Maggie thought, he was proving hard to find. She’d
searched through Dream for what seemed like hours without so much as a sign
of the thief, or of what he’d stolen. Was he shielding the Old Man? Did he know
she was hunting him?
Now, as she searched in vain for Perth, Maggie began to feel very tired. The
effort of her ride through Dream had taken its toll on her weakened glam. Her
ravens had vanished long ago; even the Red Horse was starting to show signs of
fatigue.
She clenched her fists in frustration. Where was he? Didn’t he sleep? Had no
one seen his face that day?
And then she found it – a wisp of dream, no bigger than a speck of down. A
lawman off the night shift, reviewing his list of arrests for the day. The man was
no dreamer, but he had sensed a strangeness in one of his prisoners. The memory
had lodged in his mind; had become this broken fragment of dream.
Maggie grasped it eagerly. There was Perth, locked in a cell below the city
roundhouse. She frowned. That was annoying. There was no sign in the
lawman’s dream of either her sister or the Old Man, but Maggie was sure that by
the time she and Sleipnir had finished with him, Perth would be more than
willing to cooperate.
And so she spurred the Red Horse out of Dream into World Below, where the
labyrinth that for three years had been her playground and hideaway was about
to become the scene of one of the Middle World’s greatest escapes.
IT WAS LATE afternoon in World’s End. Almost twelve hours had already passed
since Maggie had disappeared into Dream – a deeply troubling length of time for
Adam and his passenger.
Where is she? WHERE IS SHE?
The Whisperer’s voice, angry at first, had dropped to a kind of plaintive
drone. Adam ignored it. He didn’t care. In fact, if he’d heard that Maggie Rede
had met with a fatal accident, he wouldn’t have cared at all – but for the fact that
she’d promised him freedom from his passenger.
He had watched from his balcony as the sun rose high over the Universal
City, and listened to the distant sounds of tradesmen, carts on the cobblestones,
birds singing, delivery boys – all the familiar sounds of a life that now seemed
very far away.
He found it hard to imagine ever going back to that life – harder still to
remember that he had once been part of it. For the first time in many months he
found himself thinking of Malbry. He’d been so eager to escape; to experience
life in the city. Now he remembered Red Horse Hill, and Little Bear Wood, and
the river bank where he and the other boys had played throughout the long sweet
summers of his childhood. He thought of his mother and the Seven Sleepers Inn
and his own little room under the eaves, and his toy soldiers lined up on the
windowsill, and the plum tree that grew by his window.
All of it seemed so distant now – he’d had dreams that felt more real – and
he was aware of a pain in his chest, a dull, low throbbing, like a bruise. Adam
was not much given to thinking about his feelings. If he had been, he might have
recognized that dull pain as homesickness. The Whisperer did recognize it, and
its contempt was scathing. But over three years Adam had learned to tune out the
sneering Voice in his head.
And so he just sat by the window and waited for Maggie to come out of
Dream, unaware of the tears on his face, or the fact that his fists were so
painfully clenched that his fingernails had scored the skin. In fact, he was so lost
to the world that, when Maggie finally came home, it took him a moment to
understand that she was not part of some waking dream, but the person he had
promised to wed the following day at St Sepulchre’s.
She looked terrible, he thought. Her clothes were scorched, she was missing
a shoe, her bergha had been torn off. A cut above her eyebrow had bled into her
cropped hair; there was a bruise on the side of her face; her knuckles were
shredded and bleeding.
‘What in Hel happened?’ Adam said.
Maggie gave him a tired smile. ‘Rough ride. I need to rest. Is there anything
to eat?’
Adam looked around the room. ‘I … could get something from one of the
chop-houses. But—’
‘Good,’ said Maggie. ‘I’m starving. But I’ve done it. I’ve dealt with
everything.’
In Adam’s mind, the Whisperer was seething and buzzing with outrage. Am I
to be her servant now? Am I to be at her beck and call? I DEMAND that she
tells Me what happened! Tell her I will not be kept in the dark!
Adam relayed the message as tactfully as he could. ‘My master was
wondering …’
‘I know,’ she said. ‘Tell him I did it. I fixed the Old Man. That’s all it needs
to know.’
‘But how? Where is it?’ Adam wailed.
She shook her head. ‘I blasted it. Sent it to Hel, like the Magister said.’
‘WHAT?’ said the Whisperer. ‘You did what?’
Maggie could see Adam’s passenger watching her through Adam’s eyes. It
felt as though she were looking into a pit of snakes and spiders.
Speaking low in Adam’s voice, it said: ‘But I wanted to see it done.’
‘I know you did,’ Maggie said. ‘If I could have brought him back—’
‘To have him in front of Me, helpless, fully aware of what he had lost,
knowing that I and I alone was the one who caused his downfall. THAT was
what I wanted, girl. THAT was what you and I agreed.’
Maggie could see the Whisperer’s rage building with every syllable. She
knew she would have to be careful now: the creature was horribly alert, and
would strike at the first sign of weakness. She faced it unflinchingly, even
though her heart was ready to burst with fear, and addressed it in a voice that
was calm almost to the point of indifference.
‘That would have been a bonus,’ she said. ‘But we have bigger fish to fry.
We can’t afford the luxury of gloating over our enemies.’
Adam’s eyes widened in disbelief. ‘Are you presuming to lecture ME?’
‘Not at all,’ Maggie said, still holding the Whisperer’s furious gaze. ‘But you
know the Old Man was dangerous. You saw how he tried to turn me. I couldn’t
afford to let him live.’
She indicated her ragged self. ‘Look at me, I’m exhausted,’ she said. ‘A
battle of wills would have finished me. And so I did what had to be done. I kept
my promise. And you’ll do the same.’
For a long time the Whisperer glared at her from Adam’s eyes. Coolly,
Maggie held its gaze, knowing that everything hung on this: her future with
Adam; her child; her life. In twenty-four hours, she told herself, when she looked
into those eyes, there would only be Adam looking back. The passenger would
be gone for good, and there would be no more lies, no more fear …
‘And now I need to eat. To sleep. I need to have a hot bath. Tomorrow’s my
big day and I don’t want to see or hear from you till then. Do you understand
me?’
For a moment longer the Whisperer paused. Maggie could feel its anger, but
there was something else as well: something like amusement; almost like
satisfaction.
‘You’re growing up at last,’ it said. ‘Odin would have been proud of you.’
Then it withdrew, and Adam was back, his blue eyes wide and fearful.
‘You really did it? You killed that thing?’
‘I don’t want to talk any more,’ Maggie said. ‘Please, Adam. Leave me
alone.’
At the back of his mind, his passenger’s Voice whispered a silent warning.
No more questions. Do as she says. We can’t have her risking the baby.
Adam shrugged. ‘All right,’ he said. ‘I’ll go and get you something to eat.’
Maggie turned to hide her relief, and started to run the bath. Hot water
splashed into the tub from a tap in the shape of a silver swan.
‘Then get me a dozen Fat Boys,’ she said. ‘And some roast lamb, and some
fried rice – and bean soup – oh, and chestnuts. Pork dumplings, if they have
them. Flatbread with olives and anchovies. Bacon rolls. Spiced chicken. Fish pie.
Sausages. Fruit cake. And jam tarts. I’ve got such a craving for jam tarts …’
One day more, she told herself as Adam followed her instructions. After that
she would be free. A wife; a mother; a child of the Folk. The Rider of Carnage
would be no more, and all the events of the past nine days – her sister, the Red
Horse, the Old Man – could be folded back into the Book of Words where they
belonged, and just as quickly forgotten. As long as she could be strong enough.
As long as this worked …
Please, make it work!
And as Adam scoured Examiners’ Walk for all the items on Maggie’s list, the
reluctant Rider of Carnage stepped into the claw-footed bathtub and washed
away the dust of Dream in a million rose-scented bubbles. After which, when
Adam returned, she managed, in spite of her fatigue, to do more than justice to a
meal that would have put the Queen of the Pigs to shame, then finally collapsed
into bed, and slept without dreams until morning.
THE SUN HAD set on Cathedral Square, but Maddy had never felt less like sleeping in
her life. Long after Odin’s birds had gone, she had remained by the fountain,
watching the Saturday market-folk go by in a kind of dream-haze. As the
shadows lengthened, the crowds began at last to disperse; but even as the people
left, the square was alive with their signatures: vendors, hawkers, jugglers,
thieves; sightseers, dancers, entertainers of all kinds. The day’s last wedding
procession went by – the bride in white, with her long saffron veil, laughing and
throwing flowers.
Maddy watched her go inside, hand in hand with her betrothed. Their
signatures rose in the darkening air, entwined like columns of starlight.
That could be my sister, she thought.
She found that she was trembling. Tears were running down her face. She
must have been crying for some time, she thought, because her skin was raw
with it. Maddy Smith, who never cried, who never flinched at anything.
Pull yourself together, she thought. This is no time to fall apart. What was it
Crazy Nan used to say? Desperate times call for desperate plans …
But what kind of desperation was this? Since when did one of the General’s
plans involve her killing an innocent?
Well, perhaps not an innocent, Maddy thought with a wry smile. But Adam
was no threat to the gods. He was just an innkeeper’s boy. To kill him would be
murder – and if Maggie really loved him, then it would break her sister’s heart.
Could she do that to Maggie, even if the Worlds depended on it? And if she
could, then how could her twin ever forgive the Æsir?
Maddy took a deep breath. Odin had asked her to trust him. But how could
she trust him when clearly he didn’t trust her? If only he’d given a reason, she
thought, instead of issuing orders in that typically imperious way.
If the wedding goes ahead, then everything we’ve fought for is lost.
But how could the wedding go ahead? The gods were only a few miles away.
By morning they’d be in the city and the second Ragnarók would begin. The
End of the Worlds was not going to wait for one little girl to get married.
Especially if that little girl was also the Rider of Carnage …
Maddy frowned. What would happen, she wondered, if the Rider of Carnage
didn’t ride? Could this be what Odin feared? This war was just a means to an end
– its purpose: to regain Asgard. Could this be his way of making sure that
Maggie was ready to fulfil her part of the prophecy? And if so, what about
Maddy herself? Was she too just playing a role? Or could it be that both of them
were nothing more than pieces – counters on a chequer board, set up by a master
player whose only thought was to win the game?
Odin would never do that, she thought. That would be too cruel.
And yet, as her heart protested, the rational part of her knew that he could.
Maddy knew Odin far too well to be blinded by her feelings for him. He could
be cruel, manipulative; he could even be treacherous. Hard as it was to admit it,
Odin had a long history of betrayal, violence and deceit. And now that he was
back in the Worlds – albeit inside a stone Head – she guessed that he might be
willing to do almost anything to regain his stronghold, his Aspect.
Maddy looked up and was startled to see that night had fallen on the square.
A few bright stars pierced the sky; to Maddy they looked bleak and cold. She
was hungry again, and tired, and stiff; stretching her limbs, she realized that she
had been sitting there thinking for hours. And yet she felt better; lighter,
somehow. As if she had come to a difficult truth. Her face took on an implacable
look, which, if Adam had seen it, he would have recognized instantly.
Now was the time, she told herself, to decide who she really wanted to be.
The Rider of Treachery? Maggie’s twin? Odin’s grandchild? Perth’s friend? The
future of the Æsir? The defender of the Folk? Or something else entirely –
something she’d chosen for herself?
Maddy stood up and started to walk. She knew just where she was going.
Finally she’d had enough of messengers and mind games. Whatever her role in
this circus, she would be no one’s instrument. If she had to choose between
betraying her sister and betraying her tribe, then she was done with minions.
The ravens could go to Hel, she thought.
Maddy needed to talk to the Head.
When the ’bow breaks, the Cradle will fall …
Northlands nursery rhyme
OVER FIVE HUNDRED years had passed since the creation of the Universal City. The
man who designed it was long gone; and the skills that had gone into its
construction had been forgotten for centuries. But nothing is ever lost, they say,
and if Maggie Rede had paid more attention to the contents of those dry old
histories, instead of studying tales of adventure, she might have remembered the
name of a certain architect, once a Professor of Mathematics at the University of
Immutable Truths, who, at the end of the Winter War, had almost single-
handedly re-designed and rebuilt World’s End, beginning with a single stone
from the fallen Citadel, and, topping it with spires and domes, had renamed it the
Universal City.
This man’s name was Jonathan Gift, and after his death he had been
entombed in the city cathedral, whose giant crystal roof-dome had been his most
ambitious undertaking. But by the time the Order emerged, the name of Jonathan
Gift had been forgotten, and only his legacy had remained. His sepulchre – the
Foundation Stone – had become a place of reverence throughout World’s End
and the Southlands.
Carved with runes and canticles that no one now remembered, the
Foundation Stone of World’s End – or the Kissing Stone, as it soon became
known – had acquired a mythical status. Folk came here to be married, or
blessed, to kiss the Stone for good luck; and there were reports of miracles, tales
of unexpected cures – of voices and visions of Worlds Beyond.
These tales had become so widespread that at last the Order had declared
Gift a saint – Saint Sepulchre, of the Holy Fire – and in the Good Book told the
tale of how he, with the help of the Nameless, had rebuilt the city in seven days,
on nothing but fasting and canticles.
Odin could have told them more. But right now Odin had problems of his
own – his death being only one of them. Loki too knew the truth, although right
now he had more pressing concerns than filling in the gaps in World’s End
history. On the sixth day of their journey, with the spires of the city almost
within sight, Lucky’s Pocket Pan-daemonium Circus had come to a frustrating
halt.
That morning had brought a ground-mist that rolled over them as they
approached. At first it had caused them no concern; the road was broad and well-
travelled, and though they could barely see the verge, they all knew where they
were heading.
But the mist was cold and persistent; it robbed them of their energy. Hughie
and Mandy, in raven form, who until then had been in the air, settled on top of
the wagon, feathers plumped against the cold. Angie joined them, in bird Aspect,
bright colours muted in the fog. The demon wolves slunk closer and whined;
even Jolly lost some of his natural aggression and stumped along behind his
master, muttering darkly to himself.
‘More fog,’ grumbled Heimdall, moodily casting the rune Sól. ‘I thought
we’d left that in Rhydian.’
Loki shot him a dirty look. ‘Like I needed reminding of that.’
Heimdall didn’t see the look, hidden as it was in the mist. In fact, beyond
Sól’s influence, there was nothing to be seen, even through the rune Bjarkán, but
a maze of jumbled signatures, and the mist that dampened everything.
‘All right,’ said the Trickster. ‘Let’s see what this looks like from the air.’
And so Odin’s ravens were duly dispatched to survey the terrain from above.
Hours later, they had not returned, and the mist showed no sign of lifting.
The gods travelled slowly. Hours passed. The mist, if anything, thickened.
Finally night began to fall.
‘Are we nearly there yet?’ said Jolly, whose stomach had been telling him
that dinner time was long overdue.
‘Yes, for the ninth time,’ said Loki.
Ethel gave him a sidelong glance. ‘Something wrong?’ she asked him.
Loki shrugged. ‘No, not at all. What could possibly be wrong?’
In fact, he was feeling uncomfortable. The absence of stars made it hard to
be sure, but Loki was almost certain that they should have reached the city by
now. That morning they had seen it – its spires, its docks; even the ocean, for
gods’ sakes – rising at them from out of the mist like one of the skerries of
Dream – and now …
Nothing. Just endless road.
Something was wrong, he told himself; and as they continued through the
fog (which showed no sign of lifting) he started to feel a growing unease
somewhere between his shoulder blades. He blamed it on his frayed nerves, on
the night, on fatigue, and then hunger; but when the Watchman called a halt
some three or four hours later, Loki was finally forced to admit that on the only
road to World’s End, the gods had somehow lost their way.
Everyone blamed him, of course.
‘This is ridiculous,’ Freyja said. ‘We’ve been going in circles for hours and
hours!’
‘Not in circles,’ Loki said. ‘There’s only one road. We’re on it.’
‘Then why aren’t we bloody there yet?’ said Jolly, who wanted his dinner.
Loki shrugged. ‘Don’t look at me. I wasn’t driving. Maybe Shorty went to
sleep.’
Sugar shot him a dirty look. ‘I did not go to sleep,’ he said. ‘And do not call
me Shorty.’
‘Well, I say we just make camp here,’ suggested Njörd sensibly. ‘In the
morning the fog will be gone, and we’ll be able to find our path again.’
‘In the morning?’ Loki said.
Heimdall bared his golden teeth.
‘We can’t be more than a few miles away,’ said Frey.
‘So why not keep going?’ Loki said.
‘Why don’t we take a vote?’ said Njörd. ‘See what everyone else thinks?’
Loki looked down at the sandy ground and considered his situation. He
already had a good idea of what everyone else would say. For six days he’d
played his role to full and shameless advantage, forcing them all to dance to his
tune, on the understanding that if he failed to get them to World’s End within the
time agreed, then Heimdall’s reluctant protection would cease. To wait until
dawn would be to admit a defeat of which the consequences, he guessed, might
not be pleasant.
But now another possibility suggested itself in the Trickster’s mind. He knelt
down to inspect the terrain; scratched out a sample of the soil. The road ahead
was sandy, speckled with mica and pieces of quartz. No vegetation grew nearby;
nor was there anything to suggest how they could have strayed off the road to
World’s End.
Hiding his growing anxiety, Loki stood and addressed the smirking
Watchman. ‘Our little agreement stands till dawn. That means officially, I’m still
in charge.’
Heimdall raised an eyebrow. ‘And …?’
‘And if you remove my authority,’ said Loki with his crooked smile, ‘then
regrettably, all bets would be off, including any – ahem! – penalties for failure to
deliver.’
Angie grinned. ‘I said he was smart.’
Loki shrugged. ‘It’s only fair.’
‘Does that mean I can’t hammer him?’ said Thor.
Heimdall scowled. ‘Not yet,’ he said.
‘When can I hammer him, please?’ said Thor.
‘At dawn on the seventh day, of course,’ said Angie, her grin broadening.
‘Which means that you still do as I say,’ Loki said, ‘unless you declare our
agreement void. So I say, keep on walking.’
For a moment Heimdall glowered at him. Did Loki have a plan, he thought,
or was this just a play for time? He quickly fingered the rune Bjarkán, and was
rewarded with a split-second glimpse of Loki’s unguarded colours – a flash of
unease; a flare of deceit; a silver plume of bravado – before Loki managed to
shield himself, using a form of the rune Yr, though not before Heimdall had
concluded that Loki was bluffing, after all.
There was no plan. The Trickster was lost – just as lost as the rest of them.
Sometime during the night, he guessed, Loki would probably try to escape – in
bird form, or in his Wildfire Aspect – and Heimdall would be waiting for him.
The prospect was so enjoyable that he actually smiled, showing his golden teeth
to full advantage as he said: ‘All right. You win.’
‘I win?’ said Loki, slightly nonplussed.
‘Yes. We’re in your hands. At least, until tomorrow.’
Loki was looking uneasy now. ‘You’re sure? I mean, we could all use some
sleep …’
‘No, I wouldn’t dream of it,’ said Heimdall in his sweetest voice. ‘I mean,
you’ve led us all this far – it’s only fair that we allow you to finish what you
started. Unless you want to admit you’re lost …’
‘I know exactly where we are.’
‘Terrific. There’s no problem, then.’
Loki smiled between clenched teeth. His mind was racing furiously. He’d
managed to gain a little time, though to what advantage he did not know. On the
plus side, he had until dawn. On the other hand, if he was right, then that might
be a long time coming.
Alone – except for Sigyn, of course – Loki considered his options. Any
attempt at escape, he assumed, would result in swift retribution. Still, if his
suspicions were correct, then they might have strayed so far from their path that
escape was no longer on the cards. For Loki had recognized that road – its sandy
soil, its fugitive gleam, the chill that covered everything.
‘Why me?’ howled the Trickster, burying his face in his hands. ‘Why do
these things always happen to me?’
‘There, there,’ Sigyn said, putting a gentle hand on his head, and it was a
measure of Loki’s distress that in that moment of anguish, even the sympathy of
the most annoying woman in the Nine Worlds was not altogether unwelcome.
Because if he was right, he told himself, then he did know where they were
heading. Somehow, on the way to World’s End, their path had been diverted. It
led to a place where dawn never broke, a road on which they might travel for
years without ever reaching anywhere.
This wasn’t the road to World’s End at all.
This was the road to Hel.
AFTER LEAVING ST Sepulchre’s Square, Maddy made for the Water Rats. There she
found Jormungand under the pier, looking even more sluggish than usual. The
Serpent Aspect he seemed to prefer was rather less conspicuous there, plus he
was able to indulge his taste for shellfish without attracting undue attention.
Maddy assumed from his bearing that he had been out hunting seals all day,
which explained his bloated appearance and apparent disinclination to do
anything but gape and loll (and vent an occasional fishy belch).
There was no point, Maddy knew, in trying to appeal to his sense of shame.
Jorgi had no work ethic to speak of, and if he didn’t want to move, there wasn’t
much she could do to force him. However, she could try.
‘Jorgi, I need your help,’ she began.
Jorgi gave a monumental belch that shook the entire boardwalk.
Maddy squared her shoulders. ‘Seriously, Jorgi,’ she said. ‘I really, really
need your help.’
Jorgi’s display of indifference was almost overwhelming.
‘Come on,’ said Maddy bracingly. ‘You’re the Black Horse of Treachery, for
gods’ sakes. You’re one of the harbingers of the Last Days. You can’t just hide
under the pier and eat yourself silly all the time …’
Jorgi gave a loathsome shrug.
‘Please,’ said Maddy. ‘We have to find the General. For that, we have to
rescue Perth. And Perth is in the roundhouse. Which means I need your help to
get in. Because obviously I’m not just going to march in there and demand his
release, am I? Whereas if you take me through Dream – Jorgi, are you
listening?’
Jorgi opened one eye.
‘That’s better. I promise you that when we’re done, you can have all the fish
you want. But now we have to look for Perth. Got that?’
Jorgi resumed his Black Horse Aspect, looking even more disreputable than
ever. He smelled quite strongly of fish too, although compared to his Serpent
Aspect he was positively fragrant. His long black mane was greasy – probably
with seal blubber, Maddy thought – but he seemed docile enough as they set off
at a slow trot towards the city roundhouse.
This was situated some ten blocks away from St Sepulchre’s Square, in a
complex known as the Armouries. The Order had used it as a training centre for
young prentices, away from the distractions of the University. Now it was a
prison, a barracks, a weapons store and a place of execution.
It was also the site of a passageway that led from under the Armouries to the
Magisterial Quad, which ran alongside the University Library. Even in the
Order’s day, very few people had known about this; now only one person knew –
the person responsible for the scene that faced Maddy and Jorgi as they
approached.
Maddy saw the runelight even before she saw the fire. Her sister’s signature
in the sky was like a giant’s handwriting – huge, unformed, unmistakable. It lit
the sky above the Armouries like a second sunset – astonishing splashes of
runelight that lingered over the rooftops, staining the buildings ochre and red,
blotting out the stars.
There had been a battle here, Maddy knew; and recently. In the distance, a
smell of smoke and the dark-red glow of a building on fire. She urged Jorgi on
through the narrow streets until she reached the heart of the Armouries – the city
roundhouse on Capital Square, where she stopped to take in a scene of purest
carnage.
The roundhouse was gone. Two walls still stood, but the building itself had
been torn apart. Maddy had heard of earthquakes – usually in the far North – that
had had the same effect as this: deep fissures in the earth, buildings reduced to
piles of stone. Timbers scattered like jackstraws; fire; the air still thick with dust.
Whatever had happened, she told herself, must have been only hours ago: the
fires were under control now, the scene still ringed with lawmen.
One saw her coming. ‘Keep clear,’ he said. ‘Some of these buildings may
collapse.’
‘What happened?’ said Maddy.
The lawman shrugged. ‘We don’t know. Maybe an earthquake.’
He did not mention runelight, or glam, which Maddy found unusual; most of
these lawmen had served the Order at one time or another, and should be more
than familiar with the signs of magic. Maddy took this to mean that the man was
deliberately avoiding telling her the truth – and why should he? She was nobody.
Just a girl from the Northlands.
Still, she had to know about Perth. Had he been in the roundhouse when the
attack had taken place? And if so, how could he have survived? Gods, the place
was rubble. All she could hope was that he had been in transit to some other
location at the time, or at least that his end had been quick.
‘Did anyone escape?’ she asked. ‘Did any of the prisoners …?’
But the lawman seemed not to be listening. Jorgi had caught his attention.
The smell, perhaps; or the fishy eyes; or the unappealing way he moved. Maddy
suddenly realized that this was no place to be noticed. There might still be folk
here who recognized glamours at work; an inner core of lawmen who still
remembered the Order.
‘That’s a very unusual horse.’ The lawman’s voice was cool and bland.
‘Yes. He belongs to a relative.’
‘What is it, some kind of Outlands breed?’
Maddy nodded. ‘I think so.’ She started to bring the Horse round – but the
lawman’s hand shot out suddenly and grabbed hold of Jorgi’s bridle.
‘I think you’d better come with me, miss,’ he said, and that was when Maddy
knew that she wasn’t just going to slip away: there was a look on the lawman’s
face that told her all she needed to know.
‘Is there a problem?’ she said, fingering Isa behind her back.
‘We’ve had reports of a fugitive, miss. A young lady fitting your description,
and riding a most unusual horse. We have reason to believe that this young lady
may have been responsible for – er – damage to city property.’
‘Really?’ said Maddy. ‘How terrible.’
She glanced up to see three more lawmen making their way towards her.
Another moment and she would be surrounded. She knew she ought to be gone.
But Maddy was torn between the instinct to flee and the need to know more:
‘What did she do?’
‘You really don’t know?’ said the lawman. He was a man of middle years,
tall and broad-shouldered in his uniform. His greying hair was neatly tied back.
His eyes were a cold and piercing blue.
He looks like an Examiner.
Of course, that wasn’t possible, Maddy told herself at once. The Examiners
were all gone. But the Order did have guards, she thought; a network of spies
and enforcers. Who knew how many were still left? Who knew what secrets they
possessed?
‘It was a red horse,’ the lawman said (though Maddy no longer really
believed that this man was a lawman). ‘A red horse, and now a black—’
His hand fastened around Maddy’s wrist. His eyes locked with hers. ‘I know
you,’ he said. ‘There’s something about you. Something uncanny. Just like that
fellow I brought in today. The one who wouldn’t give me his name …’
Maddy suddenly realized that he was trying to charm her. Not with the Word,
but with the sheer force of his personality. Behind her, the three other lawmen
were barely a dozen feet away. In a moment they would be on her.
She summoned Isa, the Icy One, and flung it at the lawman. At once, the
man was frozen in place. His comrades held back, startled, and in the moment it
took them to react, Maddy had grabbed Jorgi’s bridle, and, kicking her heels into
his sides, she cried: ‘Jorgi! Get us out of here!’
There followed a moment’s confusion. Shadows blurred; runelight flashed;
the air was suddenly filled with dust. Darkness fell – a darkness so dense that
Maddy could almost touch it. It felt powdery, like soot; it even smelled like stale
smoke.
Jorgi had once more changed Aspect to that of the World Serpent. Maddy
could feel his mane in her hands; it was like holding onto a fringe of dead squid.
Then he stopped, and Maddy slid from the Serpent’s back onto cold stone.
‘Where is this? Dream?’
She was still blind. Casting Sól, she found herself in a brick-lined
passageway, feathered with cobwebs, soft with dust.
‘Haven’t we been here before?’
Maddy’s voice echoed against the stone, and she began to understand. This
wasn’t Dream. They were underground. Jorgi must have taken them underneath
the city, just as he had the day they arrived. This was one of the passageways
that led to the University, unused since the end of the Order, cocooned in the
dust of centuries.
‘Well done, Jorgi!’
She realized that they were under the Armouries. A section of the
passageway had partially collapsed ahead of them, spilling stone and bricks and
rubble into the vault below. And now, looking through the rune Bjarkán, Maddy
saw something that made her cry out. A signature, a recent one – faint but
recognizable – running alongside the pile of rocks and leading into the darkness.
Perth?
And wasn’t there something else too: a silvery trace of the rune Ác that cut
through the shadows like a blade, and with it, a scrawl of kingfisher-blue that
could only belong to the General?
So that was how Maggie had done it, she thought. First through Dream, on
Sleipnir, and then through the underground labyrinth to strike where least
expected.
‘Jorgi, I could kiss you! If only you didn’t smell so bad.’
Jorgi belched and expanded his Aspect to fill the whole of the passageway.
Now he looked like a giant slug – slimy and very pleased with himself.
‘Can you take me where it leads?’ Maddy indicated the trail.
Jorgi shrugged again and began to move through the passageway. Maddy
held on as hard as she could; pressing herself into Jorgi’s side as he oozed past
various obstacles. Their progress was slow and slimy, but the World Serpent was
agile and surprisingly good at squeezing through small spaces. Before long they
had left the Armouries, and were working their way down a tunnel that was
largely free of signatures – except for that triple trail that led into the darkness.
Now Maddy followed the trail on foot. Perth’s glam was very faint. The
traces that overlaid it were dazzling in comparison, the spackle of runelight
against the walls like the sign of some violent eruption. There must have been a
fight, she thought. But who had been the victor?
She found Perth a hundred yards further down, in a place where the roof had
partly collapsed, curled up, almost hidden beneath a pile of rubble and dust; for a
moment Maddy was sure he was dead.
She gave a cry and started to clear the debris; under it, her friend lay still. His
glam was so low she could barely see it, even through the rune Bjarkán. Barely
conscious; smothered in dust; torn and bruised and bleeding. And yet he was
breathing; he was alive.
Perth coughed. ‘Water. Please.’
Quickly Maddy found a place where water had seeped through the ceiling. It
looked clean; she collected some between her cupped hands and made him
drink. It seemed to revive him; he coughed again and sat up with an effort.
‘What is it that the slave dreams?’
Maddy frowned at him, puzzled. ‘What?’
‘It’s an old riddle we used to tell, when I was in the galleys. What is it that
the slave dreams? The slave dreams of being master. I thought of it just a
moment ago, for the first time in years and years.’ He put a hand to his head. ‘It
hurts. I must have hit it on something.’
‘No kidding,’ Maddy said. ‘What happened? You look terrible.’
‘There was an altercation.’ Perth looked up at Maddy and grinned. ‘One
minute I was in my cell, trying to get some much-needed rest, then boom! I tell
you, if I’d known it was going to be so much trouble, I wouldn’t have stolen that
Head for the Worlds.’
Maddy was trembling with relief. ‘I should have told you the truth,’ she said.
‘You could have been killed. If you had …’
Perth shrugged. ‘If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.’
Maddy felt her heart clench. ‘I had a friend who used to say that.’
‘Really? What happened?’
She shook her head. ‘Never mind. It’s over now. And if my sister has the
Head …’
Perth looked surprised. ‘But she hasn’t,’ he said.
Maddy stared at him. ‘What?’
He grinned. ‘I told you. There was an altercation. And I have to say that I’m
disappointed by your assumption that, in a fight between me and a little girl, the
little girl would always win …’
Maddy’s head was spinning. ‘Please, Perth. For gods’ sakes, stop talking!’
Perth assumed an injured look.
‘You don’t mean you’ve still got it?’ she said.
Once more Perth grinned. Reaching behind him into the pile of rubble, he
pulled out a piece of volcanic rock that Maddy remembered only too well. She’d
last seen it on the plains of Hel, when Sugar had thrown it into Dream …
For a moment her heart was too full to speak. She reached out to take the
stone Head. Was it really the General? Could he tell her what to do to avert the
coming Apocalypse?
With trembling hands, she took it. Then, summoning the rune Bjarkán, she
looked into its stony heart.
‘Odin? One-Eye? Are you there?’
No reply. Not a trace of glam.
‘It’s Maddy. Odin, are you there?’
Still there came no answering gleam.
She tried again, with all her glam, but Bjarkán revealed no sign of life. No
cantrips would awaken it; Maddy grew hoarse from trying.
At last, when she had tried every rune, every cantrip she had learned, Maddy
finally understood. The Head was simply an empty husk. Not even the faintest
glimmer remained. The rock was a rock, and nothing more.
Whatever had been inside was gone.
THERE’S AN OLD Northlands saying that goes like this: When lies don’t help, try
telling the truth. Loki knew it well, of course, but much preferred his own
version, which was: When lies don’t help, tell better lies.
Loki was an excellent liar. Having realized where they were heading, he had
decided to play for time, and, assuming an air of insouciance, had assured the
anxious gods that everything was going to plan.
‘What plan?’ Skadi said. ‘Your plan to get us nowhere?’
Loki waved a cheery hand. ‘We’re going to leave the wagons behind.
They’re only holding us up,’ he said. ‘Those who can take bird Aspect will; as
for the rest, you can leave them to me.’
The Æsir looked doubtful at this. Vanir and Chaos folk could change Aspect
at will; but they, with their broken runemarks, were quite unable to do so.
‘You’re playing for time,’ Skadi said. ‘This is a trick to split us up so you can
make your getaway.’
Loki shook his head. ‘Please. Just how far do you think I’d get?’
‘All right. What’s the plan?’ she said.
Loki shrugged. ‘Just wait and see.’
The gods spent the next few hours trying to work out how Loki could fly
Ethel, Thor and the Queen of the Pigs across an indeterminate stretch of
countryside – not to mention their weapons, of course, and the clothes that the
Vanir would certainly need when resuming their human Aspects.
No one believed he could do it. In fact, Thor was looking forward to the
moment when Loki at last admitted defeat, and he could finally hammer him.
‘You’re going to change their Aspects,’ said Idun, who, with Bragi, liked a
good tale, and had joined in the guessing game with enthusiasm (she was in fact
the only one who still believed Loki’s promise). ‘You’ll turn us all into acorns
and carry us into the city.’
Loki shook his head. ‘No.’
Idun looked at him, wide-eyed. ‘All right. You’re going to ask the Tunnel
Folk to build a magnificent flying machine …’
Loki sighed. ‘Wrong,’ he said.
Bragi made a suggestion. ‘You’re going to summon Jormungand, your
monstrous son, to take us into the city through Dream …’
‘Nope,’ said Loki. ‘Wrong again.’
In fact, this would have been an excellent solution, but for two simple
drawbacks. One, Loki had no idea how to summon Jormungand. Two, the World
Serpent was far more likely to crunch him up like a fish-biscuit than to help him
in any way.
No, Loki’s solution was simpler. He was planning to run away.
The only obstacle to this was attached to his wrist by the Wedlock; and Loki
knew that if he fled, Sigyn would certainly raise the alarm, after which he didn’t
rate his chances of survival.
He’d tried everything he could – everything but the truth, of course. Nothing
had worked. Sigyn was impervious to flattery; to argument; to charm or tears or
declarations of love. She was reasonable, but adamant; and Loki was keenly
reminded of the woman who, five hundred years before, had collected the
droplets of poison dripping from the fangs of the snake that Skadi had hung
above his face, while sweetly but firmly refusing his pleas to release him from
his manacles.
Finally the lies had run out. They’d marched the whole day and most of the
night, and still there was nothing to be seen – not the dawn, nor the sea, nor
Odin’s birds, nor the battlements of the Universal City. The road ahead was
endless, the landscape around them was swimming in fog, and even Thor was
getting tired, which made him all the keener to hammer the cause of his
annoyance.
Only Sigyn still seemed to believe that Loki really had a plan; which Loki
found so annoying that finally he turned her back into an acorn and called a halt.
‘Er, listen, folks,’ he told the gods. ‘I haven’t quite been straight with you.
The good news is that I know where we are. The bad news is …’
‘Do tell,’ said Thor.
Loki told them the bad news.
After that, he sat and waited for the noise to die down. After five minutes or
so, it did, and once again he tried to explain how this time it really wasn’t his
fault.
‘I know how it looks,’ he admitted.
‘It looks like a trap,’ said Heimdall, narrowing his steel-blue eyes. ‘It looks as
though you led us here on a fool’s errand, talked about plans, and basically
wasted as much time as you could to keep us away from things at World’s End.’
‘Well, I didn’t,’ said Loki.
‘Please. Let me hammer him,’ said Thor.
‘I’m telling the truth,’ Loki insisted.
‘Let me hammer him anyway.’
For a moment Loki stood up, trying to hold back the angry gods. ‘Please!’ he
yelled. ‘Just listen to me! I think I know what’s happening here!’
Little by little the noise died down again, barring some muttered invective.
Then Loki took a deep breath and summoned all his eloquence.
‘I know that most of you hate me,’ he said, ‘and none of you really trust me.
But please, just think for a minute.’ He spread his hands appealingly. ‘How could
I have done all this? Opened the Worlds, taken us through, created this fog to
confuse everyone …’ He shrugged. ‘I’ve never had the kind of glam it would
take to play a trick like that, and even if I had, I’d be burned out by now. So
before you play jump-rope with my spine—’
‘You could have had help,’ said Heimdall.
‘Yes, because I have so many friends,’ Loki told him bitterly. ‘Tell me, does
anyone remember what happened last time I was here? I called in a favour from
Hel, who swore that she’d kill me if I ever showed my face here again, so trust
me when I tell you that I’m not exactly thrilled to be back.’
‘He has a point,’ said Angie, who until then had been silent. ‘You told us you
knew what was happening,’ she said, addressing the Trickster.
‘Yes, but you’re not going to like it.’
Ethel raised an eyebrow. ‘At this stage,’ she said quietly, ‘I don’t think you
have much to lose. Why don’t you tell us?’
Loki gave his crooked smile. ‘I have to admit, you got me,’ he said. ‘You got
me good and proper. The Wedlock …’ He glanced at his wrist, where Eh still
gleamed, with Sigyn, in her acorn form, dangling from the end of the chain. ‘I
assumed all that was Skadi’s idea, to keep me out of mischief. But it wasn’t, was
it, Seeress?’
Smiling, Ethel shook her head.
‘Of course, I should have known something was wrong. Since when did you
care what happened to me? Since when did you try to protect me? You’ve
always hated my guts. And perhaps – just perhaps – I deserved it. So why would
you, of all people, help me? At first I thought it was because you needed me to
get to World’s End. But that wasn’t the reason. You needed me for something
else. Something no one else knew about.’
Ethel’s brown eyes shone. ‘Well done. I wondered if you’d work it out.’
‘Well, Trickery is my middle name. And I knew Angie couldn’t be working
alone. That runemark of hers could only have come from someone with access to
the New Script. Someone who can cross between Worlds. Someone who can
speak with the dead. Someone who’s an oracle …’
Ethel smiled. ‘Go on,’ she said.
‘It was a good performance, though.’ Loki’s grin was cold and hard. ‘You
had me completely fooled. I thought there was nothing left in the Worlds that
had the power to surprise me. But you – you, with your tea and cake and shall-I-
be-Mother? – gods! What an act! If only I’d known …’
‘Known what?’ said Thor.
‘Haven’t you worked it out yet? The Oracle predicted this. She knew we
were coming here all along. Perhaps she even brought it about. She knew,
because she’d made a deal. That was why she needed me.’
Loki was looking beyond them now, to a point ahead on the road. ‘I see a
Rainbow riding high; of cheating Death the legacy. Cheating Death. I should
have known.’
He raised his voice and called through the mist. ‘A life for a life, Hel, isn’t
that right? Isn’t that the currency of choice? Wasn’t that always your bargain?’
For a moment no one answered him. Then the mist began to roll away,
leaving the road ahead of them bare, and the landscape around them familiar.
They had all seen Hel’s kingdom before, and yet the barren scale of it, the
sickening wasteland all around and the sky like a lid on a cauldron filled their
hearts with fear and dismay. Nothing relieved its emptiness; no desert of the
Middle Worlds could mirror its bleak magnificence.
And now there was someone standing ahead of them, a woman with a face
like the moon that changed as she moved it left and right, and a smile like a
mouthful of broken bones as she turned her dead eye on the Trickster.
It had been years since Hel the Half-Born had felt anything remotely like
enjoyment. And yet, she thought, this might qualify. To see Loki like this, at her
mercy, betrayed by one of his own kin. Her dead eye lingered on him. It saw so
much more than her living one. Fear, hatred, anguish, despair – these were the
colours that Hel loved most, and they were present now in abundance.
But when he spoke, the Trickster’s tone was as light and mocking as ever.
‘So tell me – who is it?’ Loki said. ‘Who am I redeeming today? Golden Boy?
Too obvious. Besides, he’s too much of a goody-two-shoes to get involved with
something like this. No, it has to be someone else. Now let me guess – who
could it be? Who could be worth such a sacrifice?’
Ethel shrugged. ‘You got me,’ she said. ‘Believe me, it’s nothing personal.
You all heard the prophecy. The future of Asgard depends on this. If I could have
thought of another way to bring my husband back from the dead—’
‘So, you made a deal with Hel. My life for the General’s. Was this your idea,
or his?’
Ethel smiled. ‘A bit of both.’
‘Well. You got a bargain.’
Loki looked around at the circle of gods. From their expressions it was clear
that most of them agreed with him. Only Idun seemed distressed; her blue eyes
went from Ethel to Loki, then back to Ethel again, as if she expected one of them
to pull off a mask and shout, Surprise!
‘This isn’t happening,’ she said at last. ‘Ethel would never betray one of us.
Not even to save the General. Not even if it was Loki …’
‘Idun, sweetheart,’ Loki said, ‘we’re gods, not saints. Everyone lies.
Everyone cheats. Everyone scores off everyone else. Well, maybe not you. What
I don’t understand is this: how did we get here, Seeress? You can’t have brought
us to Hel on your own. You must have had help from someone.’
Ethel just smiled.
Loki thought hard. ‘The ravens!’ he said. ‘Odin’s messengers. They can
travel from World to World – through Death, Dream and Damnation. They must
have acted as go-betweens. My darling daughter did the rest. And Angie – I
thought you liked me …’
The Temptress shrugged. ‘Oh, sweetheart, I do. But I wanted my hall in
Asgard. I wanted to be on the winning team. And I wanted this …’ She showed
him the runemark on her arm, gleaming in its violet light.
‘So protecting me was just a ruse to ensure I survived to cement your deal.’
Loki appealed to the party of gods. ‘You’re really going along with this? You’re
going to watch them sacrifice me? Sif, we’ve had our differences, but …’
The goddess of grace and plenty smiled. ‘You bet I’m going to watch,’ she
said. ‘I only wish we had popcorn.’
‘Thor,’ said Loki. ‘We’re old friends …’
Thor shrugged. ‘What choice do we have? It’s either you or the General.’
‘Heimdall … Bragi … Tyr …’
The Watchman showed his golden teeth. ‘We’ll tell everyone you died
bravely.’
‘I’ll write you an epic poem,’ said Bragi.
‘Idun … Njörd … Freyja. Please …’
One by one the gods turned away. Sugar gave him a rueful look. Jolly spread
his hands and grinned. Idun wiped away a tear. Bragi played a sad little tune.
Angrboda blew him a kiss.
Fenris said: ‘Tough call, dude.’
‘Well, thanks a bunch,’ said the Trickster. ‘It’s nice to know who your friends
are. And to think I risked my life for you!’ His green eyes narrowed suddenly.
‘That’s why Maddy isn’t here. You guessed she wouldn’t play along. So you sent
the ravens to lure her away with some half-baked story about her twin.’ He gave
a bitter little laugh. ‘I wondered why you were helping me, Seeress, offering me
your protection. I thought you’d decided to give me a break. Maybe even
forgiven me. Turns out you needed a sacrifice …’
Ethel shrugged. ‘Forgiven you? You caused the death of my only son. You
think I’m going to let you off?’
‘That was a misunderstanding—’
‘A life for a life,’ Ethel said. ‘It’s time to keep our bargain.’
Hel took a lurching step forward. Even through her living eye she could see
that Loki was afraid. A shiver of pleasure ran through her, and she paused to
savour the moment a while. Pleasures were so very few, here in the Kingdom of
the Dead. And if the End of Everything was as close as it was rumoured to be,
then she meant to enjoy every pleasure she could before the darkness claimed
them all.
She raised the binding rope of runes that was her most powerful weapon.
Woven from the rune Naudr, it gleamed with a livid malevolence.
‘I made you a promise, Loki,’ she said. ‘I made it right here, three years ago.
And Hel always keeps her promises – as I’m sure you already know …’
And with that she flicked out the rune Naudr, which wrapped itself tightly
around Loki’s neck. Tugged at it. Loki fell to his knees. Once more Hel closed
her living eye and concentrated on Loki’s signature. Through the rune Bjarkán it
shone, a skein of violet against the dark. Now Hel extended her withered hand
and grasped the violet filament between her skeletal fingers. It brightened as
Loki struggled in vain to pull himself free from the stranglehold of Naudr. It was
impossible, he knew. Death conquers all – even Wildfire.
He looked up at the circle of gods. Naudr, the Binder, bit into his throat. He
tried to speak – to plead his case – but the binding rope had cut off his voice.
‘A life for a life,’ Hel intoned, bringing the violet skein to her mouth. ‘Odin,
son of Bór, arise!’
There was a moment of anticipation. Then another. In the deserts of Hel, the
bone-white wind blew drifts of dust across the dunes.
‘Odin, son of Bór,’ said Hel, ‘Father of Thor, General of Asgard, Allfather of
the Middle Worlds – I summon you to life! Arise!’
Once again, nothing happened. The wind keened over the bitter ground. The
dead, sensing something momentous, distressed the chilly air in droves. But no
one arose. The dead stayed dead. Odin was not among them.
Ethel turned to Hel. ‘Oh. This is rather embarrassing.’
‘What?’ said Hel, looking confused.
‘Well, clearly my husband isn’t here.’
‘Impossible,’ said Hel. ‘He died. You saw him die, all of you.’ She tugged at
the rope around Loki’s neck. ‘You promised me. We had a deal …’
‘But you can’t keep your side of it. Why would I give you Loki?’
‘So – take somebody else,’ said Hel, beginning to look agitated. ‘I’ll give
you your son Balder, if you like. Or anyone. But Loki’s mine!’
For a moment Ethel looked down at the Trickster, on his knees. Naudr had
robbed him of his voice, but his eyes still pleaded eloquently. She shook her
head. ‘I don’t think so,’ she said. ‘Our deal was for Odin. No one else.’
The living side of Hel’s face took on a look of disbelief. ‘No,’ she said. ‘He
belongs to me. This time I don’t care if the Nine Worlds end …’
And, like a seamstress trimming loose thread, she nipped at Loki’s lifeline
with teeth that were white on one side of her mouth, worn black stumps on the
other.
The Trickster uttered a blasphemous prayer as he felt her sever his life.
Goodbye, cruel Worlds!
He closed his eyes …
And opened them to find himself looking up at Hel’s living profile, her
features now distorted with anger and bewilderment. Between her fingers, his
signature shone as bright and unbroken as ever.
‘What went wrong?’ Heimdall said. ‘I thought you were supposed to cut his
life, not floss your teeth with it.’
‘Does this mean Loki doesn’t die?’ said Sif, looking disgusted.
Ethel smiled. ‘Apparently so. As we have already seen, Death’s guardian
cannot break her word without suffering serious consequences.’
Once more, and with growing impatience, Hel tried to break the violet
thread. Nothing happened. The signature glowed. She tore at the thread with her
fingernails …
‘Do you mind? That tickles.’ Loki had loosened the binding rope, and was
now sitting cross-legged on the sandy ground, looking more confident than he
felt. He still had no idea why Hel had failed to take his life, but his keen sense of
the ridiculous had temporarily suspended his fear.
He looked up at the circle of gods now staring at him in surprise. Only Ethel
seemed unmoved, her face serene as always.
‘Of cheating Death the legacy,’ quoted Loki, with a smile. ‘Of course. I see
now. Cheating Death. You pushed her to this, Seeress. You cheated Death. You
pushed Hel into breaking her word, using me as bait. Did you plan this from the
start? Did you know this would happen?’
Ethel shrugged. ‘Hel’s always had a bit of a moral blind spot where you were
concerned. I wonder why.’
Now Hel’s living features were dark with rage. Even her dead side looked
angry. It occurred to her that the only time she ever felt rage was when the
Trickster was around. How could he have cheated Death? What could be
protecting him?
She focused her blind eye on Loki.
There! How could she have missed it? Almost invisible around his wrist,
something glittered. A golden chain. Hel had been too preoccupied with gloating
over her enemy to notice the chain, or the little charm that dangled from it – a
gleaming golden acorn. Now her all-seeing dead eye registered its significance,
and she ground her teeth together in wrath as she saw the Wedlock.
She glared at Ethel. ‘What’s this?’ she said.
Ethel gave her gentle smile. ‘Security, of course,’ she said. ‘In case you tried
to renege on our deal.’
A cantrip, and the acorn charm turned back into Loki’s ex-wife.
‘Sweetheart, what have they done to you?’ she wailed, on seeing the
Trickster. She rounded in fury on the gods, a fierce, diminutive figure with a
flushed round face and blue eyes flashing like angry stars. ‘You cowards!’ she
shrieked. ‘How could you? After everything he’s done for you, how could you
treat the poor angel this way?’
The gods – even Heimdall – looked taken aback.
Ethel said: ‘Well done, my dear.’
The poor angel grinned and looked up at his wife. ‘I never thought I’d say
this,’ he said, ‘but Sigyn, it’s great to see you.’
Hel’s mouth twisted as she focused once more on Loki. ‘I may not be able to
kill him,’ she said, ‘but I can make sure he never leaves. And if the rest of you
ever want to find your way back, then I suggest you give him to me.’
Sigyn drew herself up to full height. It wasn’t very impressive, but she stood
fast between Hel and Loki, her face set in determination.
‘Are you out of your mind?’ said Hel.
Stubbornly Sigyn shook her head.
‘I’m warning you. Get out of my way—’
‘Not on your life,’ said Sigyn.
And now the Guardian of the Dead looked up and saw a light in the sky; a
light that shone with the force of a sun. And for the second time in five hundred
and three years her ancient heart leaped in surprise as something bore down on
the plains of Hel; something that looked – though it couldn’t be – exactly like an
old washing basket, gleaming with unearthly fire …
MAGGIE AWOKE THAT morning feeling tired and unrefreshed. That was to be expected,
of course. It was, after all, her wedding day. She could expect to be feeling
jittery, especially in her condition. It was also the morning of Ragnarók, and the
dawn sky was apocalyptic in rose-gold and marshmallow-pink, though Maggie
was naïve enough to take this as a good sign.
Maddy knew just what it meant, having been raised in the rustic North. Red sky
at night, shepherd’s delight. Red sky in the morning, shepherd’s warning. There
might not be many shepherds in the Universal City, but on the day of the End of
the Worlds, she thought, everybody might do well to take heed of that old wives’
saying.
It had been dark when she and Perth had returned with Jorgi to the Water
Rats, and by then neither of them felt much like talking. Perth was exhausted, his
glam burned out, his body covered in bruises. Maddy was equally drained, her
hope of avoiding the inevitable dashed by the loss of the Old Man. Only Jorgi
seemed cheerful – probably at the prospect of another night’s hunting for seals –
and, on arrival, promptly assumed his Serpent form and slid back into the water.
Maddy did not try to stop him. The Rider of Treachery needed no horse for what
she had to do the next day; although her heart sank at betraying her twin, the
General had given her no choice but to murder Adam Scattergood.
That night she had tried to sleep, but sleep had never been more elusive.
Guilt, grief and worry kept her awake, and by three in the morning she was so
wide awake that she abandoned all hope of rest and got up to prepare for
treachery.
Perth, on the other hand, was deeply asleep, and did not stir when she
entered his room – not even when Maddy cast the rune Sól and, in its glow,
looked at her friend. She would have welcomed his company in the task that lay
ahead, but he looked so innocent as he slept, his head at a childish angle, that she
was reluctant to wake him.
And so she went alone to Examiners’ Walk, as the first light of the Last Day
began to colour the eastern sky, and, shivering, waited in the alleyway for
Maggie to make her appearance.
Maggie too had been awake since well before first light. Even though she had
never been vain, there was pleasure to be had in bathing and pampering; in the
choosing of scent; in the painting of palms with ochre in the traditional designs;
and finally, in the pinning of the white bergha around the head, upon which the
wedding veil would lie beneath its garland of roses.
It was almost a quarter to eight.
‘Aren’t you ready yet?’ said Adam, pacing the floor of the penthouse.
Maggie turned and looked at him. Handsome in his white silk, his fair hair
cut in the latest World’s End fashion, he looked just like an angel. A little pale,
perhaps, she thought – though that was understandable. All young men were
nervous on their wedding morning.
‘Nearly,’ she said. ‘How do I look?’
She slipped on her veil – the one she had made from the yellow silk that
Adam had brought – and, placing the rose garland on her head, looked at her
reflection.
Adam smiled. It was not an especially friendly smile, but Maggie, still
watching her mirror-self, failed to notice its lack of warmth. She was thinking of
the ceremony soon to be held at St Sepulchre’s, when she and Adam would stand
before the Kissing Stone and declare their love in the ritual words of the Good
Book:
Adam too was thinking of the words of the wedding ceremony. He had no
idea why his passenger should find them so important, but in his mind the
Whisperer was almost swooning with excitement. It would soon be over now.
His passenger would be gone. And so Adam smiled at his bride-to-be, and said
in a voice that trembled with anticipation:
‘Darling, you look ready.’
In the street below, Maddy didn’t feel ready at all. The day was going to be
perfect, she thought: the red sky had veered to angelic blue; the sun was shining;
there were no clouds. In just a few minutes, she told herself, the bells of St
Sepulchre would ring, and Maggie Rede would say her vows of marriage to
Adam Scattergood.
A wedding, even a modest one, always attracts attention, and Adam, it
seemed, had spared no expense. A piper, a drummer, a flower-decked carriage, to
be drawn – by none other than the Red Horse of the Last Days – to the cathedral
of St Sepulchre, where the couple would be wed in front of the Kissing Stone,
according to a tradition dating back over five hundred years.
A little crowd had already gathered around the wedding carriage, dancing to
the piper’s tune; most were children, hands held out and clamouring for brideys
– the little heart-shaped biscuits traditionally thrown to the revellers.
Maddy’s heart sank lower still. This wasn’t going to be easy. The idea of
murdering a young man at his own wedding was bad enough; to do it in a crowd
of children, any one of whom might be hit, was almost unthinkable. But those
were the General’s orders, clear and unambiguous, and whatever chance she
might have had to question his plan had been lost.
She wished that he were with her now. She didn’t want to do this alone.
Everything about it felt wrong, but with so little time till the crucial event,
Maddy could think of no other way of preventing her sister’s wedding.
It was already ten minutes to the hour. The bride was more than fashionably
late. For a moment Maddy dared to hope that Maggie might have changed her
mind, that somehow she might have realized the terrible mistake she’d made …
And then came a mighty cheer from the crowd, and the bride and groom
made their appearance.
Maddy stared at them from her hiding place in the alleyway. Maggie wore a
yellow veil and carried a basket of brideys; Adam was resplendent in white. The
little crowd cheered as they emerged, the children clamouring for brideys, and
the piper began to play a sprightly traditional tune called The Kissing Dance,
which Maddy recognized at once from weddings in her own village.
She moved a little closer, out from the mouth of the alleyway. Drawn in by
the trail of children, mesmerized by the vivid faces, the rosy flush on her sister’s
cheek, the way she laughed and traded jokes with the folk who now lined
Examiners’ Walk – some crowding the carriage, others simply waving at her –
Maddy joined the little gathering, and she needed no truesight to tell her that this
was no performance. Her sister’s happiness was real; she practically glowed with
excitement.
Could Adam have changed? Maddy thought. Could it be that the mean little
boy had turned into someone her sister could love? Could it be that he loved
her?
No. The thought was unbearable. The only way she could do this was if
Adam were a genuine threat; but the more she tried to picture it, the more she
seemed to remember that distant day on Red Horse Hill, when she had flung the
mindbolt and Adam had wet his pants in fear …
In a moment the procession would leave. It would have to be done soon.
Done soon and done right; there would be no second chance. She moved a little
closer. The wedding carriage was now no more than twenty feet away from her,
and, approaching, Maddy lowered her head, as if to pick up one of the brideys
that had fallen to the cobbles, and started to summon the rune Hagall.
But – a quirk of Fate, perhaps – the gesture that should have concealed her
attracted Maggie’s attention. The girl froze just as she was flinging a handful of
brideys into the crowd, and as Maddy glanced up instinctively, she found herself
looking into a pair of grey eyes as gold-flecked and curious as her own …
For less than a second her own eyes went wide.
Startled, Maggie caught her breath.
Something passed between them – a force much greater than Aesk or Ác –
that flashed across their twin consciousness. Adam, seeing Maddy there,
flinched and instinctively threw up his arm. Same old Adam, Maddy thought,
and started to raise the mindbolt …
But Maggie was reaching out her hand, a shy little smile on her lips. ‘Oh,
Maddy, I knew you’d—’ she began.
Looking back later, Maddy knew that this had been her moment. This – this
second of readiness, this ultimate test of her loyalty.
And she failed it, the rune Hagall discharging harmlessly into the ground just
as Maggie saw what was happening.
‘Maggie, wait …’ Maddy said.
But Maggie was already out of reach. Her eyes, so hopeful a moment before,
now blazed with betrayal and horror. She raised a fist that was suddenly bristling
with runelight.
‘I thought you were different,’ she said. ‘I thought you were on my side.
Turns out you were one of them, just like that thing said you were …’
And, hurling a fistful of cantrips, she urged the Red Horse of Carnage on,
and drove him at a brisk trot down Examiners’ Walk, scattering the little crowd
(the children still calling for brideys), the runes snapping like firecrackers all
across the cobbled street, the drummer and piper running behind, the garland
slipping from her head to tumble into the gutter.
The Folk all reacted in different ways.
Someone shouted: ‘Fireworks!’ Others went on dancing. Others gaped into
the sky, aware that they’d seen something strange, but unable to put it into
words. Some heard the voices of people long dead; some laughed, a little wildly;
some wept – but then, doesn’t everyone cry at weddings?
Maggie looked back once, wild-eyed, deathly under her veil. Then both she
and Adam were gone.
MADDY WATCHED AS the wedding carriage clattered away down the road. Her mind
was a blur of misery. What now? She’d ruined everything. She’d failed the
General and the gods. But to ask her to murder a human being, even Adam
Scattergood …
Had Odin really believed she could? He was certainly capable of
ruthlessness, deceit, coldness, even cruelty. But he’d always had a soft spot for
the Folk, and Maddy wondered if even Death could have changed him so much
from the man she knew.
Odin, I’m sorry. I let you down.
But it was too late for regrets, she knew. So many chances already lost. So
many missed opportunities. And with so little time, even guilt was a luxury that
would have to wait. It was too late to save Odin now. Too late to do what he’d
ordered her to; but perhaps not too late to intervene.
She’d been unable to kill Adam Scattergood, but might there not be another
way to divert the path of Chaos?
If only I knew where to start, she thought.
But maybe she did, she realized. Why had she not seen it before? It had been
staring her in the face ever since she came to World’s End. There all along in the
prophecy, like a finger pointing up at the sky:
The Cradle fell an age ago, but Fire and Folk shall raise her
In just twelve days, at End of Worlds; a gift within the—
Mimir the Wise had been waiting for this since long before Tribulation. His
plans had been thwarted once before, but his giant ambition had never waned.
Now the moment had almost come when Mimir the Wise would take his place
among the ranks of the Æsir; the culmination of five hundred years of hate and
thwarted ambition – his enemies vanquished, his kingdom rebuilt, himself reborn
as Allfather.
And all this with a single kiss …
The Kissing Stone of St Sepulchre was larger than Maggie had expected. A piece
of black volcanic rock, five feet thick and twelve feet high, and inscribed, like
the pipes of the organ, with runes that ran up and down its surface like neat little
columns of ants, too small for Maggie to decipher. On the near surface, a
smoother patch marked the spot that had earned the Kissing Stone its name: for
five hundred years pilgrims and penitents, brides and grooms had kissed the
place in which a mark – like a stone kiss – had been cut deeply into the rock.
And now the Bishop read aloud the ancient wedding canticle. Maggie and
Adam repeated the words – Adam’s voice trembling a little, Maggie’s clear and
confident:
Of course, it had never occurred to Maggie that, like everything in the Good
Book, that simple little canticle might be a thing of power. To Maggie, it was just
a tradition, like the brideys and the wedding dress. The Whisperer knew better,
of course, and its fierce old heart rejoiced.
‘Now you may kiss the Stone,’ said the Bishop, a middle-aged, ambitious
man, who, like the Shriver, the Confessor, the Steward and the five machinists,
now had only seconds to live.
Maggie knelt to kiss the Stone. It felt curiously warm to her touch, as of
some vestige of heat remained from the long-dead fires of its creation. There was
a kind of vibration too; and a hum like that of a hive of bees, which moved up
through her fingertips and set her heart a-fluttering.
She looked up at Adam and saw him transfixed. Her young heart swelled
with happiness. All the doubts she’d ever had – her fears, her insecurities –
vanished as she saw Adam’s face illuminated with rapture.
Of course, Adam’s joy had nothing to do with making his vows to Maggie.
But something had happened, all the same; something that made him want to
shout and scream and dance like a savage.
After three years of slavery the Whisperer was finally gone. Gone for ever,
Adam thought. No more darkness. No more dreams …
He looked down at his new wife and almost didn’t hate her. His eyes were
bright, his face was flushed, he felt reborn to perfect bliss …
Maggie kissed the Stone …
And then –
All these things happened at once:
The glass dome of St Sepulchre split right down the middle, revealing a sky
that in its turn was split into halves, one dark, one bright, with Bif-rost as the
dividing line, like a shield against the night.
A sound like the slamming of every door that had ever existed in the World
erupted into the cathedral.
A single titanic bolt of glam shot out from the heart of the Kissing Stone,
sending a ripple of runic energy to all points of the compass at once. At the same
time a beam of light emerged from the carving that looked so much like a kiss …
And the Bishop, his colleagues – in fact, every living being in the place, with
just one single exception – instantly collapsed to the ground, nose and ears
gushing blood. The Bishop was dead in a second, along with the Confessor, the
machinists, the Shriver, the cathedral’s substantial colony of rats – and, of
course, Adam Scattergood, who had just enough time to remind himself to never
trust an oracle before he was expelled from his body with the force of a
crossbow bolt and projected towards the surging black cloud that had already
swallowed half the sky, and which, with his newfound perspective, he could now
identify as Dream in its most chaotic Aspect – known to the Folk as Pan-
daemonium, the World of Countless Demons.
among the Inland Folk: Sticks and stones will break my bones, but
THERE’S A SAYING
words can never slay me. How ridiculous, Loki thought as he watched the
approaching cloud. Words were far from harmless. A well-placed word can bring
down a foe; a speech can take down an empire. The Trickster knew the power of
words – they’d saved his life a thousand times – but he also knew that, like
himself, words could be misleading. They liked to hide, to reverse themselves, to
warp and turn into something else.
Take that word: Apocalypse. Passed down through generations of Folk; a
word of power and mystery, the sense of it lost over the years until only the
children knew what it meant, in skipping songs and playground games:
Once more Loki considered the black cloud. It wasn’t really a cloud, he
knew, any more than Dream was a river, but there was a kind of comfort in being
able to see it as something familiar. Its shadow, now less than a mile away, had
already breached the city walls. In the shadow there was a void. The shadow
eclipsed everything.
He glanced over at the parapet of the Bridge, where Æsir and Vanir waited
and watched. None of them were talkative. Thor’s Hammer was at the ready;
Frey stood by with his mindsword. Freyja was in her Carrion form, bat-winged
and skull-headed. Even Sif was in armour. Skadi and Njörd stood side by side
with Angie and her demon wolves. Ethel waited to give the word as soon as
action was required. Sigyn was standing behind her, her rune Eh at the ready in
the shape of a golden binding rope very like Skadi’s runewhip.
All looked tense but focused, waiting in that oppressive silence that heralds
the bloodiest battles.
Only Tyr seemed uncertain. Outwardly resplendent in his Aspect as god of
war, he was still Sugar-and-Sack at heart, and the red and gold of his signature
was tinged with the grey of anxiety. He glanced at Loki nervously. ‘What are we
waiting for?’ he said.
Loki shrugged. ‘Why ask me? I’m not in charge. If I were, I’d be running
like Hel, instead of awaiting the inevitable.’
Sugar looked even more nervous. ‘You mean – you think we can’t possibly
win?’
‘Sure we can.’ Loki grinned. ‘With a couple of armies, a fortress, perhaps –
and maybe a flying pig or two?’
‘Oh,’ said Sugar.
‘Feel better now?’
‘Not as such.’
Ethel smiled. ‘It won’t be long now.’
‘And that’s a good thing?’ said Loki. ‘Look, you said you had a plan. In fact,
you mentioned the General’s plan. So, if you have the General tucked away
somewhere – which I very much doubt – now’s the time to reveal him.
Otherwise, running sounds good.’
‘Too late for that,’ said Ethel. ‘Besides, I trust the General.’
‘Well, I have issues with trust,’ said Loki. ‘Especially where my life is
concerned.’
Sigyn, who had followed all this with the indulgent look of a nursery nurse
looking after a fractious patient, now put a hand on Loki’s arm. ‘I’ll look after
you,’ she said. ‘There’s nothing to be afraid of.’
‘Well, that’s terrific,’ said Loki. ‘Because nothing’ – he pointed at the cloud –
‘is exactly what’s coming after us. And— What in Hel is that?’
For just at that moment there came a blinding burst of light and a massive
explosion that rocked the Bridge, throwing Æsir and Vanir off-balance and
vaporizing the few white clouds that marked the sky under Bif-rost. Loki flung
himself onto his belly with his hands over his head. Thor gave a snarl of rage
and prepared to wield Mjølnir. Sugar-and-Sack was astonished to find his new,
glamorous hand working by itself, mindsword at the ready.
Ethel simply smiled, and said: ‘Good.’
‘Why? What’s happening?’ Loki said. ‘Are we under attack?’
‘No.’ She shook her head. ‘Not yet. But soon. Which is why, when we get
the signal, we are going to have to work quickly.’
‘Doing what?’ Sugar said.
‘Building,’ said Ethel. ‘As fast as we can, because when that shadowcloud
gets here, we’re going to need protection.’
At that, Loki’s eyes began to gleam. A slow smile touched his scarred lips.
He looked up at the shadowcloud, now only a few dozen feet away. Soon it
would be on top of them, eclipsing the light from the Sun Shield, obliterating the
runelight that shone from the heart of the Kissing Stone. They might be able to
hold it back for five or ten minutes, maximum. But whether that would be
enough …
‘Building,’ said Sugar. ‘Building what?’
‘Asgard,’ said Loki softly, and grinned.
, Maddy and Perth raced for cover as glass showered down
OUTSIDE THE CATHEDRAL
over the streets like hail. Above them stood the Rainbow Bridge, the one
remaining barrier between Order and Pan-daemonium. Looking over her
shoulder now, Maddy could see the shadowcloud; a wall of darkness at her back,
moving inexorably towards the cathedral.
Once, when she was ten years old, Maddy had seen an eclipse of the sun.
Others had stayed in their houses, afraid, or had huddled together in the church
as Nat Parson told them bastardized tales of demon wolves that ran through the
sky. But One-Eye had explained it to her: the movements of the sun and moon,
and the dance they performed together. How quickly it had moved, she thought.
How quickly the moon’s shadow had raced across the valley. And how cold it
had been, she remembered; how cold and strange the light had been as the sun
turned to blood at midday.
The shadowcloud was not as fast. And yet she could see it approaching –
moving as fast as a man can walk – towards the ruined cathedral. Both she and
Perth could outrun it, she knew: Perth was mounted on Sleipnir; Maddy was
riding Jormungand – and getting the worst of the deal, she thought, because
though Sleipnir simply looked freakish, Jormungand smelled terrible.
But Maggie was still in the building – dead or alive, she did not know – and
inside, the Kissing Stone still shone, projecting a column of dazzling light
towards the heart of the rainbow, where the Sun Shield caught its rays and
projected them outwards like a cradle in the sky.
Perth flung up the rune Yr as a shield against the blinding light; Maddy did
the same with Ác, the rune she had learned from her sister.
They came to a halt some distance away in one of the side streets off
Cathedral Square, from which they were able to observe the collapse of the
dome of St Sepulchre and everything that followed it. On every side, the Folk of
World’s End clutched at their gushing noses and fell to their knees as the
aftershock of what had occurred at the Kissing Stone reverberated throughout
the Universal City, bringing carnage in its wake.
Some, closest to the centre, died. Most had survived the initial attack, but
were seized with panic and, seeing the sky, ran for their homes, or went insane,
or fled raving in search of someone to blame. Some blamed the Faërie; others
the old gods; others the wave of foreigners. Some fell to their knees and prayed,
remembering tales of the Bliss. Shops were looted; people were robbed, old
scores settled under cover of Chaos.
Disaster always strengthens faith, and in the city the old beliefs that had been
so quickly eclipsed by greed now returned to new life. Mrs Blackmore, Maggie’s
old landlady, rapidly rediscovered prayer, donned a black bergha and fled
through the streets, screaming that this was Last Days, and that everyone should
repent or be Cleansed. The lawman who had arrested Perth remembered the girl
on the Red Horse, and called his remaining colleagues to arms. The Outlanders
and traders who had settled themselves so comfortably in the old University
found themselves being attacked on all sides by native World’s Enders, who, like
most people in crisis, afraid and in need of a scapegoat, had decided to punish
the foreigners for the coming Apocalypse.
And in the middle of it all Perth simply sat on his Horse and smiled like a
gambler wagering his last coin.
It was a look that Maddy knew – she’d last seen it on Odin three years ago,
on the shores of Hel – and she knew only too well what it meant.
She glanced at the ruined cathedral, shielding her eyes from the column of
light. ‘What happened?’ she said. ‘Is my sister dead?’
It seemed more than likely: the building was wrecked, its dome collapsed
like a rotten egg. No movement came from the rubble; and, looking through
Bjarkán at the scene, Maddy could see no signatures, no sign of anything left
alive; just that eerie finger of light pointing into the turbulent sky …
And then there it was, that fugitive gleam, shining through the drifting dust.
The colour of Maggie’s presence, her glam, silvery-white against the destruction.
Heart pounding, Maddy moved to urge Jormungand towards the source of the
signature—
‘Don’t,’ said Perth.
‘Why not?’
‘Just don’t.’ He looked more than ever like Odin now. ‘You disobeyed me
once before, and all the Worlds will pay the price. But forsake your duty now,
and everything we’ve worked for is lost. Your sister’s alive. Be glad of it. If you
want her to stay that way, then we have a prophecy to fulfil.’
‘But I thought that my sister was meant to be the Rider whose name was
Carnage. The Seeress practically said so!’
‘Never trust an oracle.’ Now he had Odin’s voice too; Maddy’s eyes began to
sting. ‘Your sister’s part in this is done. For good or ill, the child of hate has
opened the gate to Asgard. Our job now is to protect it.’
‘How do you know?’ Maddy said.
‘Because I was dead,’ Perth replied, ‘and that gives quite a unique
perspective on things. Now, if you don’t have any more questions …’
Maddy looked up into the sky. ‘I don’t understand. How could my sister have
done all this? She was only here to get married …’
Perth shrugged. ‘You think so?’ he said. He gestured towards the cathedral.
‘The Cradle fell an age ago, but Fire and Folk shall raise her; in just twelve
days, at End of Worlds; a gift within the sepulchre.
‘Cathedral. Cradle. Such similar words. You think that was just a
coincidence? And what about the architect? Where do you think Jonathan Gift
found the means to build this place? And who do you think instructed him?’
Maddy’s eyes widened. ‘The Whisperer?’
Perth nodded. ‘Exactly,’ he said. ‘The Universal City wasn’t just built on the
ruins of Asgard. It was built from the ruins of Asgard. And the thing you Folk
call the Kissing Stone – inscribed all over with runes of power – that was the
First Stone of Asgard, the Foundation Stone of the Sky Citadel, linked through
Bif-rost, the Rainbow Bridge, to every one of the Nine Worlds.’
He frowned at Maddy impatiently. ‘For five hundred years that stone has lain
here, waiting for someone to awaken it. Jonathan Gift knew what he had. He
made sure the Stone was kept safe, deep in the heart of the city. For five hundred
years the Order guarded it, not understanding what it was. But the Nameless
understood. It knew, and it watched, and bided its time, waiting for someone to
come along – someone with sufficient glam to speak the Word and release the
power.’
Maddy stared. ‘My sister,’ she said. ‘But why would the Nameless – the
Whisperer – want to rebuild Asgard?’
‘To own it for itself, of course,’ said Perth with a twisted smile. ‘In spite of
all his power in World’s End, Mimir was a prisoner. Bodiless and robbed of his
glam, he could never hope to escape. Ending the Worlds was one way out; but
far better, if he could manage it, was to steal an Aspect from one of us, and use it
to get into Asgard.’
‘One of us?’
He nodded. ‘That’s right. Preferably someone like you, whose rune was
intact and full of power. He tried with you in Hel, and failed. But now—’
‘He has my sister?’ she said.
Perth put a hand on her arm. ‘There’s nothing you can do any more. Maggie
gave herself willingly. She spoke the words on the Kissing Stone; the words
inscribed for that purpose over five hundred years ago. And then she sealed the
oath with a kiss …’ He sketched the runesign in the air –
that was what started to happen, of course, as the last of the Bridge disappeared,
tumbling Sun Shield and dreamers into the empty, merciless sky.
At the same time the shadowcloud gave a seismic shudder, spitting the Vanir
into the air like seeds into a hurricane. Loki shifted to bird form and shot off over
Asgard, carrying Sigyn between his claws as a golden acorn. The Vanir
scattered, some stunned by the blast, some swept aside by the turbulence. Chaos
had finally understood the danger their dreams represented, and had slammed its
doors against them with all the force it could summon.
Maddy gave a moan of dismay and looked up at the Cradle. No longer
ephemeral, it shone like a glacier in the sun, rising glamorous from the clouds in
a thousand glassy turrets and spires. It was by far the most wonderful thing that
she had ever seen or dreamed: a city in the Firmament, all ringed about with
northlights. But still it wasn’t finished, she sensed, as Jormungand moved in and
out of Dream, so that if she stopped to save her friends, the whole delicate,
intricate structure might dissolve just like the Rainbow Bridge, leaving nothing
to cling to but vapours and clouds.
She looked up to where Perth and Sleipnir stood on the city’s battlements.
The General’s Aspect was very dim, his glam burned down to nothing at all.
Through the rune Bjarkán she could see that he was barely conscious. Nan too
was at a halt; Dream is a devourer of glam, and the energy required to build had
already taken most of hers. Maddy’s own glam was down to a spark; but she had
come late to the battle and, with luck, a little remained. Enough for just one more
attempt – one last, desperate flight of fancy …
Time! I need more time! she thought. A second, even a second more …
She saw the black bird shadow rise. Sugar was riding Fenris. She gave a cry
as the shadow fell, and Sugar glanced at her, his golden eyes alight, his hand
extended towards the shadowcloud. His glamorous arm reappeared as soon as it
touched the fabric of Dream, and for a second – maybe less – his Aspect was
that of Brave-Hearted Tyr, his signature flaring a brilliant red, mounted on a
demon wolf with fur that crackled with runelight.
Fenris opened his jaws wide. The Devourer faced the Destroyer. For a
second the shadow faltered, and Maddy plunged once more into Dream …
She felt the tip of the black bird’s wing graze her shoulder as she passed.
There was no pain, but her arm went numb and her glam dipped like a dying
flame. She ignored it and reached for the final time into the seething heart of
Dream.
And now at last Maddy dreamed of her friends. She dreamed of the Seer-folk
and Firefolk; of the Trickster with his crooked smile, the Watchman and the
Thunderer, the Seeress and the General, the Healer and the Poet, the Huntress
and the Man of the Sea. She dreamed of Bright-Haired Sif, of Frey and Freyja,
of Crazy Nan Fey – and especially of Brave-Hearted Tyr, who had once been
Sugar-and-Sack, a cowardly goblin from Red Horse Hill, and who had fearlessly
given his all to earn her that last precious second of time.
Spurring Jorgi out of the cloud, she felt the bird shadow come down again,
so close that it clipped her left heel. Numbness engulfed her; but Maddy sped on,
trying not to think of her friends plummeting through the air to their deaths;
summoning Aesk, the Lightning Ash, with every flicker of glam she had left.
But instead of the flare of runelight there came the dry click of a breaking
twig as Aesk, the Ash, guttered and died.
The rune had failed.
It was over.
Maddy stared at the mark on her palm. She knew its shape better than
anything; she’d had it since the day she was born. A rusty runemark – a blemish,
they’d said – that had given her the power of gods.
But now it had changed, and in her fatigue and confusion it took her an
instant to understand why it looked so strange and unfamiliar –
It was reversed.
‘No, please,’ Maddy said, in sudden comprehension. ‘Not now we’re so close
…’
And now she saw a black bird’s wing emerging from the seething
shadowcloud. Surt, the Destroyer, in Aspect, was entering the Middle Worlds …
‘No!’ said Maddy once again, and spurred Jormungand at the cloud. No
matter that, with her rune reversed, she didn’t have any hope of success. All she
could think of was: If I don’t try something, at least, then Sugar will have died in
vain …
The thing that was not really a bird sensed her approach and halted. It had no
feelings of pleasure or pain – in fact that ancient intelligence had no feelings at
all of the kind that Maddy could have identified – but it did possess a cold
curiosity, even a kind of humour.
Scrutinizing the girl and the snake, it concluded that they posed no threat,
and began to move forward once again, summoning its vast resources to
annihilate the last of those who sought to resist it.
Now Maddy lifted her right palm with its rusty, faded mark. Aesk, reversed,
gave out barely a glow. She climbed off Jorgi’s back and gave him one last
whispered instruction. Then, with her left hand, she summoned Bjarkán, and
stepped into the mouth of Chaos.
FROM THE BATTLEMENTS of the Sky Citadel the General looked on helplessly. Hugin
and Munin wheeled frantically around his head; Sleipnir was tethered close by.
They had come so very close, he thought. They had almost won the war. But
now it was over. The Cradle would fall. Surely nothing could save them now …
And then he saw something far below; a gleam from out of the darkness.
World’s End was mostly in shadow now, its spires and turrets fallen. But still
there remained that point of light, so dim that he might have imagined it – a
single speck of brightness, like a mote against the dark.
Maggie Rede, thought the General. That glam could belong to no one else.
His mind, always on the alert for anything that might be useful to him, began to
consider the girl’s potential. Above him, his Mind and Spirit, looking
increasingly agitated, gave harsh cries of encouragement.
So – Maggie was alive, he thought. What of it? Well, she still had glam. But
for her to use it on his behalf – that was surely too much to expect. Unless …
Perth’s undamaged eye widened.
Of course!
He turned to look at Sleipnir. The Red Horse stood on the battlements, his
weirdly elongated legs spanning most of the hectic sky.
Perth gave a little smile and turned to address his ravens. ‘Go,’ he said. ‘You
know what to do …’
And so, at the speed of Dream, the Horse whose Rider is Carnage shook his
mane of runelight and plummeted down towards World’s End.
ALL THIS HAPPENED so much faster than the time it takes to tell. But time is not
always objective. A second can stretch for minutes – for hours – depending on
the circumstances.
Dreamtime is one of these; so are moments of pain; and so, as the Thunderer
now realized, is the interval between falling from a great height and the
inevitable moment of impact – for it seemed to him that he had been falling for
half an eternity, rather than the six seconds or so that had actually passed since
Bif-rost went down.
World’s End hurtled towards him now with the speed of Jormungand
crashing through Dream. It made him feel slightly nauseous, and he closed his
eyes – which were watering from the icy wind – and tried not to count the
seconds.
One. Two. Three. Four …
Surely the ground couldn’t be far.
Five. Six. Seven. Eight …
Thor opened a cautious eye. Then another. Jolly, who had shifted to his
inanimate Aspect as soon as they had begun to fall, reverted to his goblin self
and looked around in puzzlement.
‘Oy – what’s goin’ on ’ere?’
Thor blinked. He was flying. Below him was Jorgi, his Aspect now that of a
black sky-dragon, undulating through the air like heavily greased lightning. He
had already picked up the rest of the Æsir, who clung to his spiny back and mane
with varying expressions of unease; for the present the Serpent was on their side,
but his motives had never been clear to them.
Above, a red-and-purple bird, eccentric both in proportion and design,
fluttered and tumbled along in his wake. The Serpent’s flight had generated a
great deal of turbulence, but this was nothing compared to the shadowcloud now
descending over Asgard. It filled the sky, spanned horizons, leaving only the
narrowest band of light between itself and the battlements of the Sky Citadel.
Chaos must still be uncertain, thought the Thunderer as he sped through the
sky towards Asgard. As well it might: they could have won. Even now, set one
foot on Asgard’s completed battlements, and his Aspect, as well as those of his
friends, would be instantly restored. But as yet Asgard wasn’t complete, and all
of them were out of glam. They’d lost Tyr in the shadowcloud; the Fenris Wolf
had fallen. The Sun Shield was lost; the General spent. Even Nan was out of
dreams. And as for Maddy …
He sought her now, frantically, without success. Her signature streaked the
darkening sky, vanishing into the shadowcloud.
Thor’s heart gave a desperate lurch as he realized what Maddy had done. She
must have known that Jormungand needed time to get away, so she had sent him
after the Æsir while she remained to hold back the cloud.
For a moment the Thunderer was torn between grief and a choking pride.
He’d never wanted a daughter; had hardly bothered to hide his dismay when
Modi, his long-lost son and heir, had turned out to be Maddy instead; and he’d
felt nothing but disgust when the second son of the prophecy, Magni, had proved
to be not only a traitor, but a second daughter (which was worse).
Now he felt profoundly ashamed. Maddy had made a gesture so brave and so
generous that he hardly understood it himself, and now there would be no chance
to explain, or to tell her that no son of his could have made him half as proud.
‘I wish I could have told her …’ he said, unaware he was speaking aloud,
still less of the tears that rolled down his face and into his fiery beard.
‘Told who what?’ said Jolly.
Thor sighed. ‘Oh, nothing,’ he said.
They hurtled towards Asgard.
DOWN IN THE city, Maggie had reached the site of the old University. But the
buildings that had first housed scholars and historians, then the devotees of the
Order, then the traders and merchants who had rushed in after the Bliss, were
now filled with refugees – terrified and cowering.
Some were native World’s Enders; some were the foreigners Maggie
despised. Some were wealthy; some were slaves; some were old; some, children.
But in the face of the shadowcloud, everyone was equal. Equal in terror, equal in
grief. Race, money, influence – none of those things mattered now. Fear had
united World’s End at last. Fear, and the need for a scapegoat.
The thought gave Maggie a bitter kind of pleasure. This is what it feels like,
she thought. Everyone in the same boat. Everyone has lost someone: a friend, a
child, a relative. A woman was sitting on the floor just under the pulpit that
concealed the secret entrance to the labyrinth under the University. Quite a
young woman, Maggie saw, tangled hair over her face, singing a little rock-a-
bye. There was a baby in her arms, bundled into a blanket.
Instinctively Maggie fingered Bjarkán – but she didn’t need the truesight to
tell her that the baby was dead.
The woman looked up at her hopefully. ‘Are you a healer, lady?’ she said in a
heavily accented voice. She was an Outlander, Maggie saw; her hands were
tattooed with Outlandish designs. She held the bundle out to Maggie. ‘Please.
My baby. My baby is sick.’
‘Your baby’s dead,’ said Maggie. ‘I’m sorry. I can’t help you.’
Maggie had thought she was empty inside after watching Adam die, but the
wail that the Outlander woman gave changed her mind immediately. She put a
hand to her own belly, where the germ of a new life was already so strong in her
that she could actually feel it there, calling out to her, whispering; and the love
she felt for that tiny life was greater than anything she’d ever felt. Greater than
her love for Adam; greater than her need for revenge. She knelt down beside the
Outlander woman and took one of her hands.
‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I’m so sorry.’
The Outlander woman looked up at her. ‘Do you have a child?’
‘Not yet,’ Maggie said.
‘Then you don’t know,’ said the woman, and went back to her singing and
rocking. Maggie heard the words of the song:
She tried to feel inside herself for something to comfort the woman. Of
course, Maggie had had no formal instruction in how to cast runes. But she was
a child of the Fire, and now she reached for the fingerings that might soothe a
mother’s grief.
With new-found skill, she fingered Bjarkán, the rune of revelation and
dream. Then came Sól, the Bright One: sunshine and renewal.
‘Close your eyes,’ Maggie said. ‘You must be so tired. Try to sleep.’
Then she sketched Madr, the rune of compassion, on the woman’s forehead –
and crossed it with Úr, the Mighty Ox, to give her strength and endurance.
The runes flared briefly, then dispersed. The Outlander woman closed her
eyes. Maggie knew that runes alone could not compete with the death of a child,
but sleep itself was a healer of sorts, and Dream, she knew, was a haven for those
for whom the waking world has become unbearable. She watched as the
Outlander woman began to drift slowly into Dream, and with a last gentle touch
of her hand Maggie drew the new rune Gabe – a gift – in the air above her.
The woman would sleep now, Maggie thought. Sleep and, if she was lucky,
dream – and if she never awoke from the dream, then perhaps it would be for the
best. Because something was coming – a darkness – from which Dream might be
the only escape.
She opened the entrance to World Below concealed beneath the pulpit.
‘What’s that?’ said the woman sleepily.
‘That’s where I’m going,’ she told her. ‘Come with me, and you might
survive.’
It suddenly seemed very important to her to save at least someone from the
disaster. She stood up and addressed the refugees. ‘There’s a hiding place under
the city,’ she said. ‘I’ve been there before. You’ll be safe with me. Anyone want
to come along?’
Silence.
‘Someone? Anyone?’
Still there was silence from the group. The Outlander woman was asleep.
Others shielded their faces or made the sign against evil. Everyone had seen her
cast her glam at the Outlander woman.
And now Maggie understood for the first time that the runemark that shone
from the nape of her neck did more than give her powers; it marked her for ever
as one of a tribe that had devastated World’s End more times than the Folk could
remember – a tribe that had wiped out the Order and had now brought this Chaos
onto their heads.
‘It’s all right!’ she tried to explain. She took a step towards them.
A man who looked like a country parson moved to intercept her. ‘Get back to
Netherworld, demon!’ he cried, and pushed at her with both hands.
He took her by surprise; Maggie fell, and at that moment she felt the runes
forming at her fingertips – Hagall, Isa, Naudr, Úr – and, with them, a searing,
blinding rage, a rage that exploded out of her with uncontrolled ferocity.
‘How dare you touch me!’ Maggie said. ‘How dare you put your hands on
me! I ought to kill the lot of you …’
And for a moment she almost did; the mindbolt levelled and ready to strike
at anyone who dared to move …
The parson saw it and held out his hands. ‘Lady, mercy …’ He dropped to his
knees.
The others just stared in horror at her, looking like frightened children.
Maggie gave a stricken cry and dispersed the runes against the floor, hard
enough to crack the marble.
I am a demon, she told herself. I could have killed them – I wanted to …
For a moment, she saw herself as they did. A monster, shorn, bare-headed;
black with the dust of destruction; that ruinmark gleaming from her skin and her
dead eyes like those of a murderer.
And am I not a murderer? If I had listened to the Old Man, wouldn’t Adam
still be alive?
The thought came from somewhere inside her; some deep and secret place of
hurt. It dragged at her heart – her cold, dead heart – and suddenly her eyes were
wet.
The eyes of the Folk were merciless. Staring now at the monster, the freak;
staring in horror, in hatred, in fear; but mostly in growing hostility. They had no
idea of Maggie’s strength; her glam aside, she looked just like any other
seventeen-year-old girl; but filthy, ragged, and now weak.
A little boy threw a stone.
It missed, but Maggie was startled. She looked up to see the refugees
gathering their forces: sticks; knives; chunks of rock.
‘Please. I don’t want to hurt you …’ she said.
Another stone flew. This time it hit. Maggie felt a pain in her wrist. The pain
was sharper than the glam that had sliced into her palm; it came as a surprise;
once more she felt a wetness on her face.
She summoned her glam again. A shield made up of Yr, the Protector.
Several stones bounced off the shield as the little crowd grew bolder.
‘Stop this,’ Maggie said. ‘You don’t know what you’re doing!’
Now a knife glanced off the shield; a man’s face, distorted with rage,
pressing against empty air.
The parson had found his courage again. ‘Pray, pray!’ he urged the crowd.
‘The demons are powerless against prayer!’
Once more Maggie tried to protest. But their voices rose against her – a
babble of cries in which she repeatedly heard the words: demon, Fiery, Order,
Cleansed.
Suddenly the crowd fell still. Their gaze moved upward, a hundred eyes
suddenly reflecting the sky.
The Cradle of St Sepulchre’s Fire blazed down onto World’s End; and now,
through the broken ceiling of the derelict University, they saw an eight-legged
nightmare descending on them, with a mane of runelight, a tail of fire and
spidery legs that spanned the sky.
Maggie recognized Sleipnir at once; but Sleipnir in his primary Aspect was a
fearsome sight indeed, and once more the group of refugees shrank away and
covered their eyes. Some made the sign against evil; some prayed aloud; some
wailed; some called for their mothers; some wept.
‘Ach, typical Folk,’ said a voice. ‘Never know what’s good for them.’ And
now, astride the Red Horse, Maggie saw Hughie and Mandy, both of them in
human Aspect as Sleipnir alit on the cracked marble floor. ‘Still, nae harm done,
eh?’
Crawk, said Mandy. No harm. Crawk!
Hughie gave his brilliant smile. ‘We’ve come tae pick you up, hen.’
‘Pick me up?’ said Maggie.
Hughie looked apologetic. ‘Well, what with the End of the Worlds, the Auld
Man thought ye’d be safer up there …’ He nodded up at the Cradle that burned
and rocked in the hectic sky. ‘Besides, your sister needs your help.’
Maggie made a dry sound that might have been laughter, or a sob. ‘My
husband’s dead,’ she told him, feeling the runes once more beginning to itch
against her palm. ‘You think I care what happens to her? Or any of the Firefolk?’
‘Ach, I’m sorry for your loss.’ Hughie tugged at the silver ring that dangled
from his earlobe. ‘But ye can see how popular ye are now with the Folk of
World’s End. We are your true family. We love you for ever, no matter what—’
‘You?’ said Maggie.
Hughie shrugged. ‘We speak for the Auld Man. We’re his Mind and Spirit,
ken? He says no hard feelings for the wound ye gave him when ye glammied
him in the face. Perhaps he deserved it a little, he says. And scars, of course, add
character.’
‘That was him?’ Maggie said, curious in spite of herself.
‘Aye, or one of his Aspects. He sends his regards to his grandchild. He says
he doubts ye’ll meet again.’
And with that Hughie remounted Sleipnir, while Mandy reverted to raven
form.
‘Seems a shame for the wean,’ he said, almost as an afterthought.
Maggie’s hand crept to her belly. ‘What?’
‘Well, I can see you not wantin’ to live, but I thought you might do it for the
wean. I meant the baby,’ he said helpfully, dazzling Maggie with his smile.
‘What do you mean?’ Maggie said.
He indicated the shadowcloud. ‘What did you think it was, eh? Rain, to make
the flowers grow? That’s Chaos coming for all of us, lass, with Surt himself as
vanguard. When that cloud covers Asgard, then all the Worlds will come to an
end, and no one – not you, not me, not even Death herself – will survive. Surely
ye’ve heard the prophecy:
Maddy really knew what he’d meant: without Jorgi to keep her afloat, she was
tumbled and turned this way and that like a bundle of rags brought in on the tide.
Above her, the black bird shadow, poised like the sails of a deathly ship; beneath
her, the multiplicity of Dream, in all its confusion and splendour.
Why am I still alive? she thought. What can Chaos want of me?
The answer came almost immediately – though not in words, of course.
Words are the language of Order; but in Chaos the language is that of sensation
alone; wordless; in corruptible. To Maddy it felt like plunging into a sink of ice-
cold water; every nerve, every sense, every part of her was immersed in that
knowledge, so that the spoken word seemed clumsy by comparison, while the
clever fingers of Chaos now turned her over and over, unravelling her secret
thoughts like a spindle laden with wool.
The presence that did this was nothing like any creature of Maddy’s
experience. She sensed its curiosity, its alienness, its caution. Its rage was
overwhelming; and yet it was an impersonal rage, like thunderstorms and
earthquakes, untainted by contact with Faërie or Folk; cool; remote; relentless.
Dreamingdreamingdreamdream … There were no words in the presence’s
voice; just a buzz of conscious static, something like a swarm of bees. Sleepsleep
perchancetodream … still turning her over this way and that; unwrapping her
like a parcel …
What do you want? Maddy tried to say.
Dreamdreamdreaming. Dream. The buzz of static intensified, urging her to
surrender. She began to feel her mind give way; her subconscious begin to
unravel. The best way to know an enemy is to understand his dreams, she
thought; and on that realization (which came in a burst of memories: herself at
four, on Red Horse Hill, asleep and dreaming of goblins) came a sudden
understanding: Chaos was trying to enter her mind, not in the way the Whisperer
had, by force of personality, but by a process of close inspection and slow
analysis that, when complete, would give away not only Asgard’s defences, but
the inner workings of those who had built it …
It doesn’t know, Maddy thought. It doesn’t know how helpless we are …
She hid the thought as best she could inside another memory – a dream of
running through the woods on all fours, like a hunting wolf. A ghost moon
capered overhead; the earth was fragrant underfoot. Maddy lifted her head and
howled …
In the distance, another howl seemed to answer Maddy’s cry. It sounded
familiar – not part of the dream – and her heart gave a lurch of surprise and
hope.
Fenris? Fenny? Is that you?
The cry came again, so distantly that she could barely hear it at all. The static
in her mind increased – dreamdreamdreamDREAM – until all Maddy really
wanted to do was dip under the black bird’s shadow and feel nothing any more
…
Dream. Dream of Asgard. Dream … And now she could feel her mind
coming apart, dropping her secrets like petals from a blown rose. Here was
Asgard’s gateway, with its double row of pillars. Here was an orchard of cherry
trees, the petals scattered in the wind. Here was a tower, there a lake; and Maddy
could feel them dissolving away as Chaos reclaimed what she had stolen. She
tried to keep what was dearest to her hidden closest to her heart, but even so, it
would not be long before it had taken everything.
They’d been close – so very close! But this was surely the end of the line.
She could feel her mind letting go, like a man holding onto a high branch, losing
his grip, a finger at a time. Soon there would be nothing left. Nothing but
forgetfulness. Was that really so bad?
Here a smile from an old friend. There the shadow of a rose. Runes, cantrips,
memories; everything dissolved like smoke, leaving nothing but darkness.
Goodbye, Sugar-and-Sack, she thought. Goodbye, Jed Smith. Goodbye, Mae,
goodbye, Nan, goodbye, Malbry and Red Horse Hill. And Maggie, my sister,
wherever you are – I wish I’d known you better …
And then, from behind her, there came a sound like the beating of giant
wings. It’s over, she thought with a kind of relief. No more fighting. No more
loss. I’m sorry, Odin – Perth, my old friend – but this is as far as I can go …
And now, at last, the black bird shadow descended once more. Maddy didn’t
even look up. Why bother to look? There was nowhere to go. She closed her
eyes and tried to hold onto those last small fragments of memory:
The scent of bonfires in fall-time. A red-haired young man called Lucky. A
journeyman with his travelling bag. Wild geese over the mountains. A shape – a
blemish – on her hand that somehow meant something important …
And then Maddy heard a rushing sound, and opened her eyes in
astonishment as someone said: ‘Oh no, you don’t,’ and something hard rammed
into her side, knocking her out of the black bird’s shadow just as it grazed the
heel of her boot …
And now she was hurtling out of the shadowcloud at a speed that even
Jormungand might have found hard to match. Instinctively she clung to the mane
of the creature that had rescued her. It was Sleipnir, she remembered; the Horse’s
name was Sleipnir. And on his back were the ravens, Hughie, Mandy and …
‘Maggie?’
Maggie gave her a sidelong glance in which Maddy read both anger and a
grudging kind of pride. ‘What in the Worlds were you doing?’ Maggie said.
‘What did you think you could do here alone?’
Maddy shrugged. ‘I wasn’t exactly overwhelmed with options.’
‘Well, you were lucky. Lucky I got here in time.’ She looked at Maddy again,
and said: ‘Do you know your rune’s reversed?’
Maddy nodded. ‘I know,’ she said.
‘Pfff,’ said Maggie scornfully as, with a giant stretch of his spidery legs,
Sleipnir bore them out of the cloud. Above them, the Cradle was rocking like a
rowing boat in a high wind, with the gods – now in their human Aspects again –
looking down from the battlements.
Crazy Nan saw Maddy and cheered. ‘I knew it!’ she cackled. ‘You made it!’
Perth was standing next to her, with Hughie and Mandy, who had flown to
join him as soon as they had left the shadowcloud, perched upon his shoulders.
Behind him, Loki – now back in human Aspect, and therefore clad in nothing
but skin – offered a desperate, blasphemous prayer to any deity who might care:
Please, don’t let me die like this – naked and married, for gods’ sakes …
‘Dream, Maddy, dream!’ he yelled.
Perth’s voice rang out in support. Soon the others were joining in, their
voices rising thinly above the sound of the approaching shadow.
Maddy turned to Maggie. ‘I can’t. You have to help me!’
Maggie nodded. ‘Take my hand.’
Maddy did, and a bolt of glam passed between the sisters. It was like being
hit by a thunderbolt, Maddy thought to herself as it struck; she stumbled, half
blinded, as Ác, the Thunder Oak, lit up like summer lightning.
At the same time Aesk, the Lightning Ash, lit up with sudden intensity. It was
reversed, but still it shone; and now the tiniest spark of glam began to take shape
at her fingertips. Not enough to build a bridge, or to raise a citadel, but maybe –
just maybe – enough to dream …
‘Come on, Maddy! Dream!’ said Thor, leaning over the battlements.
‘You can do it, sweetheart!’ said Sif.
Maddy closed her eyes and dreamed. At her side, Maggie did the same. Their
dreams were strangely similar, if only they had known it. Both dreamed of
places they’d loved – Maddy of Little Bear Wood in the spring; Maggie of her
catacombs. Both of them dreamed of absent friends: Maddy remembered Sugar-
and-Sack; Maggie, Adam Scattergood. And both of them dreamed of Inland – its
little hedges and winding roads; farms and markets; cities and towns and, most
especially, the Folk …
Nothing dreamed is ever lost, thought Maddy, opening her eyes as, from out
of the shadowcloud, came something dark and hungry and huge – not a black
bird shadow, but—
‘Fenny!’ cried Skull and Big H, dancing on the parapet. ‘Aw, man, we
thought you were dead!’
Fenny was still in Devourer Aspect, fangs bared, eyes aflame. He leaped
onto the parapet, then turned to the black bird shadow that now dipped out of the
dreamcloud, and opened his jaws in a silent snarl.
‘Do it, Maddy! Do it now!’ he growled, and faced the Destroyer.
And so Maddy summoned her last spark of glam, reached for her last
precious fragments of Dream, and hurled them at the Citadel with every bit of
strength she had. Maggie joined her glam to Maddy’s, and for a time Oak and
Ash stood together beneath the Cradle.
Will it be enough? Maddy thought. Or will it be too little, too late?
She looked back at her sister. Maggie’s gaze was fixed on a point somewhere
above the Citadel, and her face was distorted with concentration. The silvery
light of Ác, the Oak, streamed and flared from her body, shooting from her
fingertips, her eyes, even the ends of her hair. But there was something else,
Maddy saw: Ác was no longer alone. Another signature was there, almost hidden
inside the light, a filament of rose-pink, like a worm in a baby’s eye …
And then there came a sudden flare of northlights over Asgard. The whole of
the Cradle blazed with a light so bright that it almost blinded her. A burst of
music accompanied it: Bragi’s guitar was back in tune, and he was already
celebrating.
Above the Citadel, Jormungand formed an arch of victory.
Crazy Nan danced a little jig.
Hugin and Munin wheeled and soared, crawk-ing to each other.
Heimdall reached for his spyglass to scrutinize the shadowcloud. He thought
he could already see a change – the tiniest hint of translucency. That might have
been wishful thinking, of course, except that it had ceased to advance; it simply
stood there, glowering, less than twelve feet from Asgard’s gates.
On the parapet, one by one, the gods felt their primary Aspects return. Loki
found himself fully dressed, with the rune Kaen (no longer reversed) shining
from his signature. Odin, both his runes restored, drew himself up to his full
height. Thor shot Mjølnir into the cloud; the black bird shadow faltered and
stopped.
They felt its confusion – What’s this? – its triumph faltering into dismay.
Once more Thor struck with Mjølnir. Its brightness turned the shadowcloud a
dusty, bloated purple. The black bird shadow began to retreat, the flame of its
wings changing colour to match.
‘What’s happening?’ said Maggie.
Maddy shook her head. ‘I think that when we finished the Cradle, we weren’t
just building a fortress. We were trying to re-establish Order in the Nine Worlds.
We remade the First World, where the Æsir can take back their Aspects and push
back the shadows of Chaos …’
Maggie looked at the black bird. It had almost withdrawn, but for a single
wing-tip. Fenris, his Devourer Aspect fearsome to behold, made a lunge at the
tip of the wing. There was a tearing, rending sound. The black bird vanished into
the cloud.
‘I think it lost some feathers,’ she said.
Maddy grinned. ‘I think it did.’
Sleipnir was moving faster now, ready to take the sisters home. Fenris, snarling,
jaws agape, gave one last snap at the shadowcloud and leaped back onto the
battlements, his Aspect changing from that of a demon wolf to that of a pale
young man in World’s End garb, wearing an earring shaped like a skull.
‘Fenny! Dude!’ The Wolf Brothers were delirious with happiness. ‘You
totally owned that shadow-thing …’
‘I mean, you were, like – grrr, woawr—’
‘Fierce!’
‘Yeah! Totally fierce …’
‘Why are they talking like that?’ Maggie said, stepping down from Sleipnir’s
back onto Asgard’s parapet.
But Maddy had something else on her mind. She stepped up to the Fenris
Wolf, who was already on his way to explore his new hall in Asgard – as
imagined by the Wolf Brothers, and lavishly decorated with skulls (as far as the
Wolf Brothers were concerned, skulls were the design concept of the future).
He saw her coming. ‘Er, yeah …’ he said.
Maddy knew what that meant. ‘You’re sure?’ she said in a small voice,
thinking that maybe he was wrong, that Sugar might somehow have survived, as
Odin had on the shores of Hel. He was a creature of Faërie, she thought. Chaos
should have been in his blood. And Fenris had survived, after all …
Fenny shrugged. ‘I’m sure,’ he said. ‘He did pretty good for a noob, though.’
Maddy nodded silently. Tears were burning her eyelids. It seemed so very
hard to believe that Sugar-and-Sack was gone for good. Odin’s death on the
shores of Hel had left her under a cloud of grief; but the death of the little goblin
felt like a bruise on Maddy’s soul. Perhaps because Sugar had been the final link
between Asgard and Malbry; or maybe simply because of the fact that a
cowardly goblin from under the Hill had shown the heart of an oliphant.
At Asgard’s gates, the shadowcloud was already starting to move away. A
pale glow in the eastern sky had begun to light the horizon. A brisk little wind
started to blow; soon, Maddy thought, all traces of the shadowcloud would be
blown away.
Maggie was looking down at World’s End. Soon that too would be clear of
the cloud. The survivors would start to rebuild in their turn. Maybe this time they
could create a wiser, kinder, happier place. Maybe this time they’d get it right.
All around Maddy came sounds of celebration from the gods. As Order re-
established itself, all her friends hastened to explore what lay in the new Asgard.
Built from memory and Dream, it was not the same as the original Sky Citadel,
although of course it had Aspects of that. But it also had Aspects of World’s End,
including the whole of St Sepulchre’s Square, the fountain and the cathedral, as
well as a stretch of the Water Rats (probably dreamed up by Perth); and Aspects
of Malbry, including Red Horse Hill in late summer and several of its houses,
among them the Parsonage, which Ethel had dreamed slightly larger (and with
that new wallpaper she’d always been meaning to hang).
There was a version of Jed Smith’s forge, transformed into something a little
more grand, with a series of dressing rooms for Sif and a large, vaulted
banqueting hall for when Thor’s friends came round. There was also a chamber
for Jolly, who, retaining his goblin Aspect, had demanded a place of his own, not
too far away from Thor, but well-supplied with plenty of ale and some pies, in
case he got peckish.
Angie had her own hall, as promised, close to Ironwood, which the Wolf
Brothers had brought (at least in part) and positioned not far from Skadi’s
domain – a natural habitat for wolves.
In fact, all the gods and their allies had imagined their ideal surroundings,
which meant that the new Sky Citadel was a strange and colourful patchwork of
mountains and caves, turrets and tunnels, fragments of city and rural retreats, all
packed into an area which, if it had been forced to obey the strictest rules of
space and scale, might have covered, at best, a few square miles.
Luckily the rules of Dream are fluid, like its substance, and given that
Asgard was built from dreams, everyone had what they dreamed of most. Bragi
had a concert hall, Idun a series of gardens and groves. Heimdall had a
lighthouse, Skadi a labyrinth of caves. Njörd had an underwater hall, Frey a
banqueting hall, Freyja a hall of mirrors. Nan had her old cottage, her cats, her
spinning wheel and Epona. And Perth (as well as his hideaway at the Water
Rats) had the University, now even grander than before, with a bell tower for his
ravens and a personal study and library in which to retreat when the
responsibilities of office became too demanding.
Only two people had no hall: Maggie, because she had come too late to
contribute anything much more than glam; and Loki, who had never had a hall in
Asgard in the first place, and whose energy had mostly gone into trying to break
the Wedlock.
Of course, he’d failed to do that, and now he found himself standing in front
of the place that Sigyn had dreamed for them. It looked like the cave by the
Sleepers, but larger and more practical, with a little cabbage-patch by the door
and a stream running behind it. It was simple and cheerful and modest – in fact it
was everything that the Trickster most despised – and yet there was something
pleasant about it, something almost relaxing.
He glanced at the Wedlock on his hand. Even in Aspect, he couldn’t take it
off. But maybe he could live with that.
He took a step towards the door. Sigyn was sitting inside, on a chair. Her
long brown hair fell loose onto the shoulders of her white dress. Once again Loki
thought how very beautiful she was. It wasn’t a typical thought, and might have
disturbed him in different circumstances, but today he was feeling unusual – But
after all, he told himself, it isn’t often that you come back from the dead, beat
Hel at her own game, give Pan-daemonium a kicking, and rebuild Asgard, all in
a day …
Sigyn looked up as he came in. ‘Sweetheart,’ she said. ‘What took you so
long?’ She stood up and kissed him on the mouth. The sensation was really quite
pleasant, he thought – after all, it had been five hundred years since anyone had
wanted to do anything with his mouth except perhaps to shut it for good.
He closed his eyes. Sigyn’s hands linked together in the small of his back
and pressed, and for the first time in over five hundred years the Trickster
surrendered to something like …
Love?
And then came a sound from behind them, and Loki’s eyes snapped open
again.
In the doorway, hand in hand, stood two little boys – aged maybe three or
four, with bright red hair and eyes of identical flame-green. Loki recognized the
boys he’d seen in the dream he’d shared with Sigyn; and thinking back five
hundred years, he thought of his sons, and how they had died so long ago, and
how he’d seen them in Hel’s domain …
They killed us, they’d told him that day in Hel. They killed us both because of
you.
Loki shook his head. ‘No. They died. Sig, it’s impossible.’
Sigyn smiled. ‘They died,’ she agreed. ‘But Hel was open, its Guardian fled
– and besides, didn’t the prophecy say: Nothing dreamed is ever lost, and
nothing lost for ever?’
A terrible thought occurred to him. ‘You don’t think Balder might be back?’
‘Stranger things have happened.’
Not for the first time that long, hard day, Loki was at a loss for words. ‘So
now I’m a father again?’ he said. ‘Because we all know how that works out …’
Sigyn laughed. ‘Sweetheart,’ she said. ‘You’re so negative. You get a chance
to start again, with a wife who thinks the Worlds of you, two lovely children and
your dream home – and you’re being all passive-aggressive about it. Now come
and say hello to the boys, and I’ll make a start on dinner.’
Loki’s mouth went suddenly dry. Perfect, he thought. It sounds perfect.
‘Well, what are you waiting for?’
‘Er – gotta check on Maddy,’ he said; and, shifting to hawk Aspect as if all
Hel were on his tail, he fled from his dream home with barely a pang of regret,
having decided right at that moment that perfection was really not his style – and
landing five minutes later by a small and somewhat familiar part of what had
once been Little Bear Wood, where Maddy was sitting alone by a tree and
sobbing as if her heart would break.
‘What’s up?’ said Loki, reverting to Aspect (of course, fully clothed in
Asgard).
Maddy turned her face away.
Loki sat down on the mossy ground. ‘You’re not going home?’ he said at
last.
‘This is it,’ Maddy said, with a listless gesture. ‘Everything I could save, at
least: Red Horse Hill, and Little Bear Wood, and my father’s cottage, and the
Seven Sleepers Inn, and that funny little crossing place on the road to Farnley
Tyas …’
Loki shrugged. ‘Each to his own. Apparently, mine is a dream home.’ He
looked at the Wedlock on his hand. ‘I’m going to build myself a shed,’ he told
her with a sudden grin. ‘Preferably somewhere a long way away …’
Maddy gave a tired smile. ‘I can’t believe Sugar’s gone. I still half expect to
see him, you know, peering out from behind a tree.’
Loki grinned. ‘A cellar, more like. Especially if there’s an inn nearby.’
Maddy’s eyes widened. ‘What did you say?’
‘I said—’ began Loki. ‘Hey, where are you going?’
Maddy was already on her feet. ‘The cellar,’ she said in a choking voice.
‘That’s it, Loki – the cellar!’
The cellar was dark and smelled of rats. Loki wasn’t at all impressed.
‘Well, if I were building a dream home, I’d try to fix it up, at least.’ He
glanced at the brick-lined floor, where a hole the size of a fox-hole gaped, and a
messy strew of rubble, earth, pieces of brick and broken kegs littered the storage
area. ‘Must have had a party,’ he said, tapping one of the empty kegs. ‘Looks
like someone had a good time.’
But Maddy wasn’t listening. Instead, she knelt at the mouth of the hole,
heedless of dust and spiders, and whispered something into the dark.
‘I name you Smá-rakki,’ she whispered.
Silence. Just the empty house.
‘A named thing is a tamed thing,’ said Maddy. ‘Sugar-and-Sack – oh please,
if you’re there …’
There came the smallest of movements from behind the pile of kegs. Maddy
turned, her eyes alight.
‘It’s only a rat,’ said Loki.
Maddy stood up, shaking her head. ‘I know rats,’ she whispered. ‘Sugar, are
you there?’ And then she pushed the keg aside (finding it suspiciously light),
revealing a small bewhiskered face and eyes of a curious wedding-ring gold
beneath a battered helmet. Maddy saw that the runemark Tyr no longer shone
from his signature.
‘Now I know what yer going to say, miss.’ The goblin held out his furry
hands. ‘But I swear – on my Captain’s life – I dunno what happened to all this
ale—’
‘Sugar!’ cried Maddy, sweeping him up.
‘Oy!’ protested the goblin.
‘I thought you were dead!’ Maddy said, beginning to cry all over again.
Sugar gave her a cautious look. Clearly she was crazy. But she did have a
powerful glam, and …
‘Captain?’ he said as Loki emerged from the shadows under the cellar steps.
Loki grinned. ‘None other,’ he said. ‘Back from the dead, and fabulous—
What in Hel are you crying at now?’ That was to Maddy, who couldn’t seem to
control her tears, although she was half laughing too at the look of confusion on
Sugar’s face.
‘He doesn’t remember, does he?’ she said, wiping her eyes with the back of
her hand.
‘Remember what?’ said Sugar.
‘Oh, nothing,’ Maddy said. ‘Just that you helped save the Worlds – twice.
That you took on the Aspect of Brave-Hearted Tyr, that you rode against Surt on
a demon wolf, that you died in battle, that you were my friend …’
Sugar’s eyes were like saucers now. ‘I did all that?’
‘All that, and more.’
Sugar eyed her doubtfully. ‘That ale must be stronger than I thought. You
sure you haven’t had some yerself, miss? ’Cos ale can have very narsty effects
on them as isn’t used to drinking it.’
Maddy smiled. ‘I’ll bear that in mind …’
‘I don’t mind bein’ your friend, though.’
‘That’s all right, then,’ Maddy said.
She went back out into the sunlight.
NOW A SINGLE figure remained standing on Asgard’s battlements. As the shadow
slowly cleared and Æsir and Vanir explored their new territories, Maggie Rede
was left alone, looking down on World’s End. The Rainbow Bridge, once more
rebuilt, spanned the gap between earth and sky in a dazzling band of coloured
light. And as the shadowcloud dispersed, rain fell softly on World’s End.
A tremendous feeling of weariness now fell like a blanket over her, and the
tears she had not shed for Adam now began to run down her face. Not really for
Adam, Maggie thought; or for the ruins of World’s End, or even for her unborn
child, who would never know his father …
A shadow fell on the parapet. Someone was standing behind her. A tall
figure, blue-cloaked, his eyes half hidden beneath his hat. There was a scar
across his left eye, where Maggie’s glam had struck him; it looked just like the
rune Raedo, and shone with a dim luminescence.
Odin in Allfather Aspect still looked a lot like Perth. Maddy, if she’d been
there, would have known that he also looked like One-Eye; but younger,
stronger, and yet more alone, remote and somehow forbidding. Hugin and Munin
fluttered down onto the battlements and crawk-ed.
‘So. You got what you wanted, then,’ Maggie said, still looking down at
World’s End.
This is what the Firefolk see, she told herself silently. Little fields. Little
streets. An ocean like a cloak of blue. How small it all is! How very small!
Odin gave a weary sigh. Idun’s fruit might heal his wounds, but it could do
nothing for his aching heart. ‘Yes. I got what I wanted,’ he said. ‘At a price. And
you?’
‘A hall in Asgard. You promised me. And safety for my baby.’
‘I keep my word,’ said Odin. ‘Even though the child you bear may live to
make us both sorry.’
Maggie looked up at that. ‘My sister said that my child was possessed. That
the Whisperer was just using me to get back into Asgard.’ She lowered her voice
and went on. ‘Just as it used Adam,’ she said, ‘to get to the runes in the Kissing
Stone.’
Odin shrugged. ‘She may be wrong.’
‘You don’t think so, do you?’ she said.
‘No, Maggie. I don’t think so.’
Maggie considered Odin’s words. Something inside her believed him – was
actually convinced of the truth. And yet what she felt for the tiny life that was
growing steadily inside her was so overwhelming, so potent, that the truth was
barely relevant.
Whatever it might one day become, whatever might be wrong with it, this
was her child – Adam’s child – and she would protect it with her life. Anything
that possessed it – as Adam too had been possessed – would first have Maggie to
deal with, and that would be no easy task. Maggie Rede, as once was; then
Maggie Goodwin; Magni, the Oak; and now, at last, Maggie Scattergood, widow
and mother of World’s End.
‘I’m keeping my child,’ said Maggie.
‘Of course you are,’ Odin said.
‘And I’m calling him Adam, after his father.’
Odin gave a twisted smile.
‘But as for that hall in Asgard’ – she lifted her granite-gold eyes to his – ‘I
don’t think I’m going to need it right now. At least, not for a while.’
Odin said nothing, but his good eye was alight with speculation.
Maggie went on: ‘You promised me that the Firefolk would do no harm to
me, or my son.’
Odin nodded. ‘You have my word.’
‘Then take me home,’ Maggie said, stepping down from the parapet. ‘Tell
my sister I said goodbye, and tell her not to look for me. I’ll find her if – when –
the time comes.’
Odin looked at her. ‘Home?’ he said.
Maggie nodded. ‘Where else would I go? That’s where I want my son to be
born. In World’s End, where his father died. Besides’ – she gave a wry little
smile – ‘who else is there to rebuild the place? To unearth the library, raise the
dome, reopen the University – after all, if I can raise Asgard from Dream,
World’s End should be a piece of cake.’
Odin gave a low laugh. ‘You’re very like your sister,’ he said.
‘Tell her I’ll see her again some day.’
And at that Maggie stepped onto Bif-rost, and with a quick flick of the rune
Raedo – the rune of roads still to be travelled, of riders in the wake of the storm,
of journeymen and explorers and gods – she was gone, down the rainbow and
into the mists of World’s End.
‘BUT WHY?’ SAID Maddy once more when she arrived to find Maggie gone. ‘Why
would she do that? Leave this place? Leave her friends, her family! For gods’
sakes, she’s seventeen. She’s pregnant. She’s completely alone. And if we’re
right, the Whisperer—’
‘If we’re right, then World’s End is the best place for her,’ said Odin in a
calm voice. ‘If the Whisperer has taken hold of her child, then all we can do is
try to keep that child from entering Asgard. Because if it ever finds its way here,
and Mimir regains his Aspect, then we will have civil war on our hands, and the
Order for which we fought so hard will descend once more into Chaos.’
Maddy was silent for a while. ‘Oh,’ she said. ‘It’s not over, then.’
‘Maddy, it’s never over.’
They sat for a while in silence, watching the light bloom over World’s End.
The shadow had completely dispersed; the rain had stopped and now the sun
shone faintly through the ring of white clouds that hedged the Sky Citadel.
‘How long do we have?’ she said.
‘Till what?’
‘Till it happens again.’
He shrugged. ‘Who knows how these things happen? The Worlds have ended
so often before. So many gods have been and gone. Order and Chaos have their
tides, just as the One Sea ebbs and flows. We may have hundreds of years before
Chaos bursts its banks again. What the Hel are you grinning at now?’
She smiled. ‘It’s just that it sounds kind of funny, with you still looking so
like Perth and sounding so like One-Eye.’
He shrugged again. ‘Maddy, we’re gods. We have to be all things to all men.
I’m Odin, Allfather, son of Bór. I’m also the Rider of Carnage. To you I was
One-Eye. Then I was Perth. Now I’m all those things, and more.’
Maddy sighed and closed her eyes. The sun was warm on her eyelids. It felt
so safe, so familiar. She might have been on Red Horse Hill, lying on her back in
the grass, chewing a stem of clover and listening to the crickets sing. Instead she
was miles above the Worlds in a Cradle built from runelight and dreams.
‘We’ve come a long way from Red Horse Hill,’ she said, unaware that she’d
spoken aloud.
‘Not as far as you’d think,’ he said. ‘Remember, you brought it with you.’
Maddy smiled. ‘So I did. Want to come with me? Smoke a pipe? Watch the
clouds from the Horse’s Eye? Dream a little dream? Waste time? Play cards? Or
doesn’t Allfather do those things?’ she said, a little wistfully.
‘Maddy, I’m sorry. I don’t think he does. Allfather has work to do. But as for
Perth—’ He broke off and gave her a flash of his salesman’s smile. ‘Perth is
never too busy to dream. Perth never turns down a game of chance. And as for
wasting time with you – what better way to waste it?’
They took the long way to Red Horse Hill. By then the light was almost
gone. A band of luminescence had appeared against the western sky. It
shimmered, moving gently, like the sails of a giant ship, shifting from green, to
pink, to blue as it sailed across the Firmament.
‘Northlights,’ Maddy said. ‘I’ve always wanted to see them. You know,
they’re supposed to bring good luck?’
‘Bring it on,’ said Perth.
Acknowledgements
Not all heroes get a chapter – or even a verse – in a story. And yet, without them,
a story is like a stage without lighting or sound – just a group of characters,
talking to themselves in the dark. So, thank you to all the engineers; to Philippa
Dickinson and Sue Cook, my editors, for their patience and precision; to Jennifer
Luithlen, my agent; to Anne Riley, my P.A.; to Mark Richards who looks after
my website; to copy-editor Sophie Nelson and jacket designer Dominica
Clements. Thanks also to Anouchka, for knowing when to turn on the lights; to
Kevin for building the scenery; and to all the reps and retailers who work so hard
(and for little reward) to keep my books on the shelves. Special thanks too to
Wardrobe Mistress Becca Marovolo, who knows and loves these characters
almost as well as I do.
Most of all, thanks to you, the audience, for your applause, your affection
and your continued ability to take these books on trust, one by one.
About the Author
Runelight is the second title to feature the Norse gods; the first, Runemarks, was
Joanne’s debut fantasy novel published by Random House.
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