All this happened while Grim Hagen
was rushing toward Odin and Maya. A thin trickle
of blood was flowing down the corner of Hagen’s
mouth. Odin heard the voices. Out of the
corner of his eye he saw some men go down. The
room felt cold now, and a thin breeze was going through
it, as though blown gently across the star-spaces.
He saw a light dart down toward Grim Hagen.
But at that instant Grim Hagen reached
him and swung his sword. Jack Odin stepped aside.
His foot slipped upon the unsteady planking of the
improvised balcony. He thrust for Grim Hagen’s
throat, but his blade went high and wide. It
gashed Grim Hagen from the lower corner of his chin
clear back to the jawbone. Blood streamed and
as Odin slipped to his knee Grim Hagen swung again.
Then Maya was between them, both hands
grasping Hagen’s sword-arm. Hagen’s
free hand closed about her wrists. He swung her
aside and the point of his sword came down to rest
upon her throat.
“Now,” Grim Hagen screamed,
and his voice was the shriek of a man who has nothing
left to lose. “Let no light come near me
and Maya or we die together. Wolden, I caught
scattered words about your work as I fled through
space. I held the stars and planets in my hands
and I flung them away, for they were no more than
the sparks that fly out from flint. They were
worthless and I flung them away. And there was
nothing to match my desire. Not even Maya.
Now, listen, if you care for her life.”
The descending lights hesitated and
drew back. Jack Odin righted himself and chanced
a thrust at Hagen. The thrust failed as Grim Hagen
moved Maya between them.
“No more of that, Odin.
Drop your sword or she dies. Drop it now!”
And Odin lowered his hand and let
his sword fall to the table beneath him.
Grim Hagen continued: “The
ship is yours. This world is yours. Let me
have your secret, Wolden. I would not care to
be with such as you. I would laugh at space with
the comets. I would make the stars cringe.
I would watch the generations go by like falling snow.
I would ”
“No, you would be like Lucifer,
wreaking his vengeance upon the planets,” the
voice of what had been Wolden interrupted in a whisper.
“No, Grim Hagen, even if I gave you what you
asked, all space would seem as hell to you.”
Grim Hagen smiled an evil smile.
“So. But it is I who make the bargain.
Even yet. Maya goes with me. Remember!”
But at that instant Maya got one hand
free and thrust the sword aside.
It was all the time that Jack Odin
needed. Reaching forward he grasped Grim Hagen’s
sword with his bare hand. It cut to the bone.
And then he had Hagen’s wrist with his free
hand. He twisted. A bone cracked and he shook
the blade from Hagen’s grasp. Maya leaped
to one side. Then Hagen’s fingers were
pushing Odin’s face back and Odin was clutching
at Hagen’s throat.
They stood there swaying. Then
they tumbled down the rude stairway of tables that
Ato had fashioned for his last stand.
They rolled to the blood-stained floor
beneath. And Odin never knew how either of them
survived the fall.
The lights hovered above them, waiting
for an opening. Maya took up a fallen sword and
came following after.
Grim Hagen’s fingers were feeling
for Odin’s eyes. Odin got a bloody fist
against Hagen’s face and shoved him back.
Then he rolled on top of him and got the man’s
throat between his hands. Hagen’s fists
worked like pistons as he beat at Odin’s face.
Odin felt the blood dripping down upon his hands and
upon Hagen’s throat but he held on. At the
last, Grim Hagen screamed and clawed like an animal.
And then it was over. The hands stopped clawing.
There was one last sob of pain and hate that was cut
off in the middle. Then Grim Hagen was still.
And Odin, with his face dripping blood, held on while
Maya and the others struggled to tear his hands free
from the man he had killed.
With the death of Grim Hagen the fight
was over. None of Hagen’s Brons or Aldebaranians
were left. The Lorens threw down their arms and
swore loyalty to Val.
A cot was improvised for Ato.
The lights hovered around him, whispering cheerfully
and ignoring all others.
Val, Odin and Maya tried to count
the survivors. Of the fifty who had lived through
the fighting, only eighteen were Brons. The rest
were Val’s men.
“There are a hundred more on
the two ships,” Maya told Odin. “Oh,
Jack, we have Nea to thank for most of this.
Nea and Wolden. After you and your men left,
Nea took her Kalis, as she called them, and some of
her people. They came through the barrier and
made their way to the Old Ship. They surprised
the few guards that Grim Hagen had left. They
freed me and the other prisoners. Then we got
our little army together and came to help. Without
Nea, it could never have been done.” She
buried her face on Odin’s shoulder. “Oh,
Jack, when we were kids together we used to laugh at
her.”
He patted her shoulder comfortingly,
for he could think of nothing to say. He had
seen soldiers like Nea cast-offs from their
home-towns gallantly going to their deaths. It
was something that he could not understand. And
being honest, he had nothing to say.
Clean-up was begun. Jack Odin
left Val of the Lorens to take over. Then he
rushed to the stairway where last he had seen Gunnar.
The fires had burned out. The steps were blackened.
A few smoking corpses were still upon the stairs.
Odin’s face was covered with
blood. His strength was nearly gone. But
he went up the stairs two steps at a time, his spent
breath whistling through his bloody nostrils.
There at the top of the stairs he
found Gunnar. And Gunnar’s dead lay thick
about him.
Gunnar had moved himself to a sitting
position against one of the railings. His chin
was upon his great chest and his eyes were closed as
though he slept. But when Odin knelt beside him,
he opened one eye and looked up with a twisted smile
upon his broad face. One side of his face was
barely recognizable. Gunnar was badly burned.
He had been thrust through at least a dozen times.
But Gunnar lived.
“Eh, Nors-King,” he whispered,
sitting up straight as Odin steadied him in his arms.
“It was a long time to wait. And I thought
sometimes that I would not make it. But I held
on, for I knew you would come. Oh, it has been
a long wait and it took all my strength.”
“As fast as I could,”
Odin answered in a choking voice. “As fast
as I could, O Chief of the Neeblings. For Ragnarok
is past, and the tree of life still reaches into the
stars. The twilight is past and new suns and new
earths are quickened. And Gunnar still lives.”
“Part of him.” Gunnar
blinked his good eye. “What happened down
there? Oh,” he gasped in pain, “to
have missed the fighting!”
“Maya lives and I live.
Ato is wounded. Wolden came at the last to help
us, Gunnar. We won. And I have killed Grim
Hagen with my bare hands, even as I promised.”
“Good, Nors-King. I knew
always that one of us would kill him. Oh, it was
a grand fight. But Gunnar will sharpen his sword
no more. There was a ford near my father’s
house where the clear water ran fresh over the stones.
That might help me. But it is far away. And
my father too. You tell Freida that we did not
make the long trip in vain.”
“If I can,” Odin promised.
“Oh, you can. For we have
won the stars and nothing is beyond us except
youth, maybe.”
Gunnar closed his eyes and slept for
a few minutes while Odin held him in his arms.
Then Gunnar awoke.
He smiled at Jack Odin and murmured:
“To awake on the sea of the stars ”
Jack Odin had heard Gunnar sing those
words before. They belonged to an old Norse lullaby
that Gunnar’s mother had crooned to him when
he was a little boy.
Then Gunnar died.
And Odin knelt over him, tears streaming down his
broken face.