HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
Now the night came down upon Mosfell,
and of all nights this was the strangest. The
air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It
was so silent, moreover, that, did a stone slip upon
the mountain side or a horse neigh far off on the
plains, the sound of it crept up the fell and was
echoed from the crags.
Eric and Skallagrim sat together on
the open space of rock that is before the cave, and
great heaviness and fear came into their hearts, so
that they had no desire to sleep.
“Methinks the night is ghost-ridden,”
said Eric, “and I am fey, for I grow cold, and
it seems to me that one strokes my hair.”
“It is ghost-ridden, lord,”
answered Skallagrim. “Trolls are abroad,
and the God-kind gather to see Eric die.”
For a while they sat in silence, then
suddenly the mountain heaved up gently beneath them.
Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman’s breast,
and left them frightened.
“Now the dwarf-folk come from
their caves,” quoth Skallagrim, “and great
deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to
the upper earth by a little thing.”
Then once more they sat silent; and
thick darkness came down upon the mountain, hiding
the stars.
“Look,” said Eric of a sudden, and he
pointed to Hecla.
Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy
dome of Hecla was aglow with a rosy flame like the
light of dawn.
“Winter lights,” said Lambstail, shuddering.
“Death lights!” answered Eric. “Look
again!”
They looked, and behold! in the rosy
glow there sat three giant forms of fire, and their
shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was
a loom of blackness that stretched from earth to sky,
and they wove at it with threads of flame. They
were splendid and terrible to see. Their hair
streamed behind them like meteor flames, their eyes
shone like lightning, and their breasts gleamed like
the polished bucklers of the gods. They wove
fiercely at the loom of blackness, and as they wove
they sang. The voice of the one was as the wind
whistling through the pines; the voice of the other
was as the sound of rain hissing on deep waters; and
the voice of the third was as the moan of the sea.
They wove fearfully and they sang loudly, but what
they sang might not be known. Now the web grew
and the woof grew, and a picture came upon the loom a
great picture written in fire.
Behold! it was the semblance of a
storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship fled before the
gale a dragon of war, and in the ship were
piled the corsés of men, and on these lay another
corse, as one lies upon a bed. They looked, and
the face of the corse grew bright. It was the
face of Eric, and his head rested upon the dead heart
of Skallagrim.
Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim
saw the sight of fear that was written on the loom
of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then,
with a laugh like the wail of wolves, the shapes of
fire sprang up and rent the web asunder. Then
the first passed upward to the sky, the second southward
towards Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell,
so that the brightness of her flaming form shone on
the rock where they sat by the cave, and the lightning
of her eyes was mirrored in the byrnie of Skallagrim
and on Eric’s golden helm. She swept past,
pointing downwards as she went, and lo! she was gone,
and once more darkness and silence lay upon the earth.
Now this sight was seen of Jon the
thrall also, and he told it in his story of the deeds
of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on
Mosfell, waiting for tidings of what came to pass.
For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung
to each other. Then Skallagrim spoke.
“We have seen the Valkyries,” he
said.
“Nay,” answered Eric,
“we have seen the Norns who are come
to warn us of our doom! We shall die to-morrow.”
“At the least,” said Skallagrim,
“we shall not die alone: we had a goodly
bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying
methinks. It is not so ill to die thus, lord!”
“Not so ill!” said Eric;
“and yet I am weary of blood and war, of glory
and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone.
Light fire I can bear this darkness no
longer; the marrow freezes in my bones.”
“Fire can be seen of foes,” said Skallagrim.
“It matters little now,” said Eric, “we
are feyfolk.”
So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling
much brushwood and dry turf over it, till presently
it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all the space
of rock, and heavy shadows against the cliff behind.
They sat thus a while in the light of the flames,
looking towards the deep gulf, till suddenly there
came a sound as of one who climbed the gulf.
“Who comes now, climbing where
no man may pass?” cried Eric, seizing Whitefire
and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down
again with white face and staring eyes, and pointed
at the edge of the cliff. And as he pointed,
the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink,
and the hands of a man grasped the rock. But
there was no head on the neck. The shape of the
headless man drew itself slowly over the brink, it
walked slowly into the light towards the fire, then
sat itself down in the glare of the flames, which
shrank away from it as from a draught of wind.
Pale with terror, Eric and Skallagrim looked on the
headless thing and knew it. It was the wraith
of the Baresark that Brighteyes had slain the
first of all the men he slew.
“It is my mate, Eric, whom thou
didst kill years ago and whose severed head spoke
with thee!” gasped Skallagrim.
“It is he, sure enough!”
said Eric; “but where may his head be?”
“Perchance the head will come,”
answered Skallagrim. “He is an evil sight
to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him,
though I love not the task?”
“Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide;
he does but come to warn us of our fate. Moreover,
ghosts can only be laid in one way by the
hewing off of the head and the laying of it at the
thigh. But this one has no head to hew.”
Now as he spoke the headless man turned
his neck as though to look. Once more there came
the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the
darkness on either side. Eric and Skallagrim looked
up and knew them. They were those of Ospakar’s
folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head Heights; all
their wounds were on them and in front of them marched
Mord, Ospakar’s son. The ghosts gazed
upon Eric and Skallagrim with cold dead eyes, then
they too sat down by the fire. Now once more there
came the sound of feet, and from every side men poured
in who had died at the hands of Eric and Skallagrim.
First came those who fell on that ship of Ospakar’s
which Eric sank by Westmans; then the crew of the Raven
who had perished upon the sea-path. Even as the
man died, so did each ghost come. Some had been
drowned and their harness dripped water! Some
had died of spear-thrusts and the spears were yet
fixed in their breasts! Some had fallen beneath
the flash of Whitefire and the weight of the axe of
Skallagrim, and there they sat, looking on their wide
wounds!
Then came more and more. There
were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had slain upon
the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English
wars, and all that company who had been drowned in
the waters of the Pentland Firth when the witchcraft
of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda to her wreck.
“Now here we have a goodly crew,”
said Eric at length. “Is it done, thinkest
thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?”
As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed
man drew near. He had but one arm, for the other
was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side
was red with blood.
“Welcome, Earl Atli!”
cried Eric. “Sit thou over against me, who
to-morrow shall be with thee.”
The ghost of the Earl seated itself
and looked on Eric with sad eyes, but it spake never
a word.
Then came another company, and at
their head stalked black Ospakar.
“These be they who died at Middalhof,”
cried Eric. “Welcome, Ospakar! that marriage-feast
of thine went ill!”
“Now methinks we are overdone
with trolls,” said Skallagrim; “but see!
here come more.”
As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came,
and with him Koll the Half-witted, and others.
And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and Skallagrim
had slain, or who had died because of them, or at their
side, were gathered in deep ranks before them.
“Now it is surely done,” said Eric.
“There is yet a space,”
said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side of the
fire, “and Hell holds many dead.”
Even as the words left his lips there
came a noise of the galloping of horse’s hoofs,
and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman,
for her golden hair flowed down about her white arms.
Then she slid from the horse and stood in the light
of the fire, and behold! her white robe was red with
blood, a great sword was set in her heart, and the
face and eyes were the face and eyes of Gudruda the
Fair, and the horse she rode was Blackmane, that Eric
had slain.
Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
“Greeting, sweet!” he
said. “I am no longer afraid, since thou
comest to bear me company. Thou art dear to my
sight ay even in yon death-sheet.
Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and
cold in the earth at Middalhof, but, like a loving
wife, thou hast burst thy bonds, and art come to save
me from the grip of trolls. Thou art welcome,
Gudruda, Asmund’s daughter! Come, wife,
sit thou at my side.”
The ghost of Gudruda spake no word.
She walked through the fire towards him, and the flames
went out beneath her feet, to burn up again when she
had passed. Then she sat down over against Eric
and looked on him with wide and tender eyes.
Thrice he stretched out his arms to clasp her, but
thrice their strength left them and they fell back
to his side. It was as though they struck a wall
of ice and were numbed by the bitter cold.
“Look, here are more,” groaned Skallagrim.
Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty
space to the left of the fire was filled with shadowy
shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was Gizur,
Ospakar’s son, and many a man of his company.
There, too, was Swanhild, Groa’s daughter, and
a toad nestled in her breast. She looked with
wide eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda’s ghost,
that seemed not to see her, and a stare of fear was
set on her lovely face. Nor was this all; for
there, before that shadowy throng, stood two great
shapes clad in their harness, and one was the shape
of Eric and one the shape of Skallagrim.
Thus, being yet alive, did these two
look upon their own wraiths!
Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out
aloud and their brains swam and their senses left
them, so that they swooned.
When they opened their eyes and life
came back to them the fire was dead, and it was day.
Nor was there any sign of that company which had been
gathered on the rock before them.
“Skallagrim,” quoth Eric,
“it seems that I have dreamed a strange dream a
most strange dream of Norns and trolls!”
“Tell me thy dream, lord,” said Skallagrim.
So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened
in silence.
“It was no dream, lord,”
said Skallagrim, “for I myself have seen the
same things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder
sun is the last that we shall see, for we have beheld
the death-shadows. All those who were gathered
here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge.
And the mist-shapes who sat there, amongst whom our
wraiths were numbered, are the shapes of those who
shall die in the great fight to-day. For days
are fled and we are sped!”
“I would not have it otherwise,”
said Eric. “We have been greatly honoured
of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around
us and above us. Now let us make ready to die
as becomes men who have never turned back to blow,
for the end of the story should fit the beginning,
and of us there is a tale to tell.”
“A good word, lord,” answered
Skallagrim: “I have struck few strokes to
be shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge
in thy company. Now we will wash ourselves and
eat, so that our strength may be whole in us.”
So they washed themselves with water,
and ate merrily, and for the first time for many months
Eric was merry. For now that the end was at hand
his heart grew light within him. And when they
had put the desire of food from them, and buckled
on their harness, they looked out from their mountain
height, and saw a cloud of dust rise in the desert
plain of black sand beneath, and through it the sheen
of spears.
“Here come those of whom, if
there is truth in visions, some few shall never go
back again,” said Eric. “Now, what
counsel hast thou, Skallagrim? Where shall we
meet them? Here on the space of rock, or yonder
in the deep way of the cliff?”
“My counsel is that we meet
them here,” said Skallagrim, “and cut them
down one by one as they try to turn the rock.
They can scarcely come at us to slay us here so long
as our arms have strength to smite.”
“Yet they will come, though
I know not how,” answered Eric, “for I
am sure of this, that our death lies before us.
Here, then, we will meet them.”
Now the cloud of dust drew nearer,
and they saw that this was a great company which came
up against them. At the foot of the fell the men
stayed and rested a while, and it was not till afternoon
that they began to climb the mountain.
“Night will be at hand before
the game is played,” said Skallagrim. “See,
they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder
among them is Swanhild in a purple cloak.”
“Ay, night will be at hand,
Skallagrim a last long night! A hundred
to two the odds are heavy; yet some shall
wish them heavier. Now let us bind on our helms.”
Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept
up the paths from below. Now that thrall who
knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men,
and already they climbed the watercourse and drew
near to the flat crest of the fell. But Eric
and Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat
down by the turning place that is over the gulf and
waited, singing of the taking of the Raven and of
the slaying in the stead at Middalhof, and telling
tales of deeds that they had done. And the thrall
and his six men climbed on till at length they gained
the crest of the fell, and, looking over, saw Eric
and Skallagrim beneath them.
“The birds are in the snare,
and hark! they sing,” said the thrall; “now
bring rocks and be silent.”
But Gizur and his people, having learned
that Eric and Skallagrim were alone upon the mountain,
pushed on.
“We have not much to fear from two men,”
said Gizur.
“That we shall learn presently,”
answered Swanhild. “I tell thee this, that
I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep.
I may sleep little now that Gudruda is dead, for that
which I saw in her eyes haunts me.”
Then they went on, and the face of
Gizur grew white with fear.