Going to the pool, Gunnar began to
wash his bleeding arms. “Yes, Old Gunnar
knew you would be here, Jack Odin, for it was writ
in runes of silver long ago that a man will go to
the gates of death and brave Old Nidhug the dragon
there to find his maid.”
“And how is she, Gunnar? Where is she?”
But the dwarf did not answer for a
few minutes. He stared moodily into the coals,
and then feeling behind him in the dark he found a
bright shirt and struggled into it. “I
was getting ready to take a bath when the thing came
at me,” he explained simply.
“Gunnar! Where is Maya?”
Gunnar’s big hand squeezed Odin’s shoulder.
“Steady, lad. I wish I
knew. I wish I knew. But you are here now,
and we will go hunting together. For you are
my friend and Maya is my friend. And I swore
by my sword, the Blood-Drinker, to her father I swore
it. And to Jul. That I would look after
her. But I failed. And is my word no stronger
than a puff of wind? I have sworn a new oath.
I will find her. Even though we go farther than
the graveyard of stars or beyond the gates
of hell, maybe I will find her.”
There was a sob in the squat man’s
throat and Jack Odin could see by the light of the
flickering coals that Gunnar had aged. His face
was more seamed. The knots of muscle at each
jaw were larger. His hair was gray-streaked and
thinner. But those huge shoulders were huger still,
and the big gnarled hands kept closing and unclosing
as though they were grasping at a throat.
“We will go together, then,” Odin said.
“But tell me ”
“Then swear it by my blade.”
And Gunnar took the long sword and harness up from
the sand where he had left it.
“My people do not swear by the sword.”
Gunnar cursed. “The tongues
of your people are like two-edged knives. I have
had enough of them. But you are not like them,
Odin. I said before that you were a throwback
to the men of old-time, when they went berserker together,
or followed the whale’s path in their dragon-headed
ships. Here, swear by the sword, my sword.”
And Jack Odin reached forward and
touched the sword and swore that he would go with
Gunnar even to the edge of the stars
“Now,” Odin pleaded. “Tell
me what happened down there.”
“It is a long story. And
not a pretty one, either. Have you anything to
eat?”
Odin produced some bread and jerked
beef. As they sat there, with the coals winking
red eyes at them, Gunnar told his tale between wolfish
bites.
“Grim Hagen planned well.”
(So Gunnar began). “He planned well, and
even yet I hope to kill him.
“That was an evil day when you
and Maya decided to go back to outer-earth. An
evil day. Some of Grim Hagen’s men snared
Maya with their thons. There was much fighting.
We killed many but many got away.
“I should have known from the
black scowl which Grim Hagen had worn those many months
that he would not be stopped by one defeat. You
will remember, Odin, how I told you of the little
flying machines that we strapped on our backs in the
old days and went sailing through the air. They
were outlawed. But during the time that Grim
Hagen held the tower he must have found the plans
for the flying machine, or maybe even one of the machines.
For when his men attacked us, each one had such a
machine. And each man carried dozens of little
glass eggs. When they threw them they exploded
and dissolved nearly everything for twenty foot around.
“Oh, we fought. We killed
many. But it is hard to fight the hawk. One
by one they blew up our ships. Then, carrying
Maya and a few other prisoners with them, they flew
out to sea like a flight of evil birds no,
not birds, for not even the hawk is evil. What
was the word that you used for the leather-winged,
toothy things that live in the forest?”
“Dactyls,” Jack Odin prompted.
“Yes, that’s it,”
Gunnar said as he stared into the fire. “Dactyls.
I like that word. It has an evil, bloody ring
to it.”
He stopped talking to take a huge
bite of stale bread that nearly choked him. Then
he continued his story.
“Meanwhile, in the city of the
Scientists, the same kind of fighting had been going
on. We learned later that when Grim Hagen’s
men winged their way in from the sea, his army had
already retaken the Tower. Ato and his soldiers
were scattered. Half of them were dead. So,
after scattering their explosive eggs across the city,
and killing the very old and the very young, Grim
Hagen and his men took refuge in the Tower and prepared
to withstand our siege. They had learned much
from their first defeat, and this time they held it
well.
“As soon as we could patch up
our ships, we came a-following and joined forces with
Ato’s soldiers. We assaulted the Tower day
after day. Until the ground and the walks around
it were black with our dried blood. But they
held out. Not once did they try a counter-attack.
We should have guessed at what Grim Hagen was planing.
But we didn’t until one of the prisoners escaped.
His name was Zol, and he was a friend of Maya’s
father. Poor fellow, he is dead now, but if we
of Opal went in for monuments we would build one a
mile high for Zol. He told us that Grim Hagen
was readying the Old Ship for flight into space.
Also, he planned to leave the sea gates open.
“Zol saved us. Or saved
some of us and a part of Opal. Ato began training
divers against the day when the tunnel would be flooded.
We moved as many people as we could onto the ledges
high up on the walls of Opal. We got our great
pumps ready to cope with the flooding.
“Also, Ato and I renewed our
assault upon the Tower. But they bested us.
They had learned too many of the old secrets.
Most of the young men of the Neeblings died there
against the walls. That is how we keep our promises,
Nors-King.
“But Old Gunnar had a trick
or two left. Remember the tale that I read to
you in the throne-room of Baldar. The first
of the Brons to enter the world of Opal were soldiers
sent from some blasted planet in outer space to find
a new home. They could fly their ship, but they
knew nothing of the science and the magic that had
gone into it. We of the Neeblings learned that.
And we Neeblings were their historians for a thousand
years. Also, it was we who pieced together what
little is known of their trip through space. And
this is why:
“We of Opal have always kept
up with the world above us. About thirty years
ago there were some popular stories in your land about
Tani of Ekkis
whose people came through the void in a spaceship.
They traveled slow, and this is how they made the
trip. They had discovered something which kept
most of the crew under suspended animation for years
upon years. That tale was not far from right.
For the Brons too had a capsule, red like a ruby, which
made them sleep for a score of years. There was
an antidote, a yellow liquid like curdled flames.
Three drops into the veins and the sleeper would awake.
That is how they made the trip. Only a pilot,
a co-pilot, a navigator, and a chief engineer were
ever awake at one time. Their log-books were
brief. But we of the Neeblings have them.
“So,” (Gunnar continued,
drawing a huge forearm across his moist blue eyes)
“I persuaded Zol to go back to the Tower.
I might as well have run him through, but he was our
best and last hope. Wolden gave him a tiny cube,
no larger than a ring-case. In it was a crystal
with a number of silver wires woven into it, but it
was a good transmitter. Better than yours, Jack
Odin. For a week we heard from him daily.
“I say it was a week. We
were working the clock around and our little sun was
misbehaving again. It was a feverish week, not
measured by day and night, for the sun would wink
on and off as though it were getting ready to give
up.
“For a week we heard from Zol.
He gave the ruby capsule to Maya. She sleeps
and will continue to sleep for twenty years unless
the antidote which looks like curdled yellow flame
is given to her. I have it. Grim Hagen may
kill her or cast her adrift in space, but he cannot
awaken her. That hound of hell can taunt her
no more. She sleeps, until Gunnar stands by her
side.
“Then Zol sent us his last message.
Maya was sleeping. He was barricaded in one of
the rooms of the Tower, and Grim Hagen and his men
were battering down the door. From what we heard
in the next few minutes, I suppose that the door gave
way and Zol died. Then Grim Hagen’s voice
came to us, screaming in rage. He had all that
he wanted. Even though our princess slept, he
would take her into space with him. And she would
awaken some day with the smoke of plundered worlds
in her nostrils. Yes, she would awaken to
be his slave, even as he had promised us that night
in Maya’s home when we fought. And I wish
I had killed the beast then. But Zol was dead
and there was no sense in listening to this man’s
ravings, so we turned off our radio. And that
is the last we ever heard from Grim Hagen.
“It was the next day when he
opened the sea-gates and trundled the ship out upon
the floor of the sea. We had done all that we
could to be prepared. But it was not enough.
“The water came pouring in upon
Opal. Half of the people died. Many had
taken refuge in ships, and I doubt if a single ship
survived that night. Yes, just as the water came
flooding in, our little sun went out. We fought.
The waters flooded both Valla and the Scientists’
City. Here it rose nearly to the top of the Tower.
There were only a few forests and meadows in the land
that were not flooded. These were high up against
the walls. As for the creatures of the deep,
the reptiles and amphibians, most of them were dead.
Many crawled into the ancient caves and fled upward.
Most of them died.
“That is nearly all. We
know now that Grim Hagen and his ship, with all his
prisoners and loot, took off from the bed of the sea
with a flourish which was just like Grim Hagen.
“Meanwhile, Ato and his crews
got the gates closed and started the pumps. Only
a few men of that crew are alive today, for the tunnel
was radio-active at that time. It was weeks before
the pumps could force the water back into the Gulf.
Most of our plants were lost. My men and I have
been foraging in the world above for these and
have helped ourselves to your cattle when we could.
“The waters are back to their
old level, but they left a soggy, ruined world behind
them. There is a deal of work to be done before
it will be like the world that you knew. And
our sun is of so little use that it can scarcely dry
out the sloughs.
“Meanwhile, Wolden and his men
are working on another ship. Even a larger ship
than the one which Grim Hagen stole. They work
day and night. Grim Hagen took his choice of
our treasures. He stole our princess, and he
killed millions. We are going after him, even
if he drives to the edge of space. And I am going
because of a promise I made long ago, and because
of the love that I have for Maya. And because
of you, Jack Odin. The sword is forged now.
It is white-hot upon the anvil. The sparks leap
out like stars as the hammer of the smith clangs down.
And I will follow Grim Hagen as far as a man can go even
a league beyond the outer shell of space or
a day’s journey beyond the grave.” (So
Gunnar’s tale was ended. And the two sat
there in silence, watching the coals wink out, and
feeling the all-devouring dark coming back into the
cavern.)
“Then I will go with you,”
Jack Odin told Gunnar. “To fight at your
right side until we find my princess ”
“And until Grim Hagen is dead,”
Gunnar added. “For he is a noisome leaven
that will pollute all of space that he touches.”
The last coal went back to ashes.
Odin turned on his light, and Gunnar blinked in pain
at the sudden glare. Then they went onward and
downward, past columns of limestone that were already
old when the world was young.