Lögberg-Heimskringla - 16.12.1994, Side 16

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 16.12.1994, Side 16
16 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 16. desember 1994 The twelfth installment of an unpublished novel by Ragnhildur Guttormsson, discovered and edited by Kirsten Wolf, Chair, Dept. of Icelandic, University of Manitoba. The story so far: GrímkelTs son, Hörðr, has decided to go abroad with his father’s blessing, an indication that the rift between father and son may be beginning to heal. CHAPTER XII Indriói and the Ea^le By Ragnhildur Guttormsson Edited by Kirsten Wolf orbjörg spent many an hour in the little dell on the bank of the Salmon river overlooking Silver Falls. Few knew of this grass-lined dell as a young birch growing close to the entrance concealed it from view. It was a slender birch with silky-smooth, cream- coloured bark, and long, fine twigs dark- red and flutteiy. When the wind played with them, the leaves sounded like many little children softly clapping their hands, but not all at the same time. Sometimes when the wind was in a teasing mood, it bent the birch forward until it looked like a little green-clad fairy standing on tip-toe and holding out her hands to the falls below for some of their jewelled mist. Often she would see a slender youth on the other side of the swift-flowing river, spearing salmon. Sometimes he would wave his hand to her, but she did not wave back. A well-bred maiden did not encourage familiarity from strangers. Today she had brought her spindle and was spinning fine woollen thread over the edge of the cliff when she noticed the eagle overhead. Poised on wide, motionless wings it was scanning the river below for salmon. Free, strong, and fearless it sailed the blue deep above as did Hörðr the seven seas. He had been gone now for two years, and already stories of his valour were being told at the Alþingi. His bold adventures were also told in many a manor-house during the twilight evenings of the long, northern winter; the heroic deeds of a brave viking looking for treasure, and the fame that goes with it. Suddenly the eagle dropped like a plummet down to the surface of the river, a short distance below the falls. Fascinated, Þorbjörg watched, expecting the eagle to rise at once into the air with its prey. But the eagle did not rise. Instead it flapped its wings helplessly, as if chained to the rocks in the bed of the river. Þorbjörg soon guessed the reason. It had sunk its talons in a salmon too heavy for it to lift and could not free itself. Eagle and salmon were locked together in a death struggle which boded ill for both. A sense of horror swept over Þorbjörg. In her thoughts she had linked the eagle with Hörðr. It must be saved! But how? She could do nothing but look on. She knelt on the bank watching in agony the apparently hopeless struggle down below. She saw the white chuming of the waters as the salmon frantically tried to rid him- self of his fatal burden. A movement on the opposite bank caught Þorbjörg’s eye. The unknown youth was climbing down the steep rocky wall of the chasm. Again she 'watched breathlessly, her anxiety divided between the slender youth and the distressed eagle. Hanging unto the rock, the stranger stepped from one craggy shelf to another; sometimes loose stones crum- bled from the ledges and fell echoing into the gorge; but his hold was firm, and he felt carefully around for a sure foot-hold. At last he reached the bottom, and Þorbjörg breathed again; but that was only half the battle. Eagle and salmon were in mid-stream now, whirling in a veritable dance of death. “Hurry! Please, hurry!” She heard herself shouting. Poised behind a large rock, the youth threw a gleaming object toward the strug- gling pair, which seemed to bury itself in the salmon. By means of a thong fastened to it, he slowly pulled the flapping pair up unto the flat rocks. Once on dry land, the eagle seemed to regain its strength. Wrenching its claws free from the salmon and with a few mighty strokes of its broad wings, it lifted itself into the blue of the sky, then flew towards its home in the mountains. The boy, head thrown back, stood for a long time gazing after the eagle; the large salmon, glistening like a bar of sil- ver, lay forgotten at his feet, a king’s ransom. Þorbjörg’s eyes also followed the eagle. She was still kneeling on the bank, and tears of relief were running down her cheeks. Then she waved her thanks to the unknown hero, and he waved back. It still seemed to her as if it had been Hörðr he had saved. Next day when Þorbjörg came down to her retreat by the river, the unknown youth was lying full length on the grass. His brown eyes laughed up at her, as she drew back. “I don’t bite,” he said. “Thank you for saving the eagle,” said Þorbjörg, perching daintily on a rock. “That was nothing,” the youth said loftily. “Oh, do you save eagles every day?” Þorbjörg asked a bit quizzically. “This was my first one, but when you want another saved, just call me,” he laughed. “I’ll remember that,” Þorbjörg THOR by W.D. Valgardson lllustrated by Ange Zhang $14.95 laminated paper over boards PUBLISHER Groundwood Books Write to: : 585 Bloor Street. W., Toronto, Ontario M6G 1K5 Traveling On into the Light by Martha Brooks $16.95 cloth cover replied. Then after a slight pause, “Guðríðr, my foster-mother, tells me it’s a good omen to save an eagle; it means that the Norns feel friendly towards you.” “I hope she’s right. If the Noms are against you, nothing can save you.” He spoke gravely. “Yes.” This with emphasis from Þorbjörg. “I know who you are,” said the youth after a short pause, “You are Þorbjörg, the daughter of Grímkell, chieftain-priest at Ölfus Lake.” “I guess you also know that when I was a baby I was carried from house to house in a beggar’s scrip,” Þorbjörg said bitterly. “Yes,” said the boy. Then in a lower tone,- “I’ve always felt so badly about that.” “You? Why should you feel badly about that?” “Because it must be so painful for you to have to remember that.” “Yes, it is. But nobody has ever said that to me before.” Þorbjörg’s eyes filled with tears. “Don’t weep. It doesn’t matter any more.” “Why?” “Because.” A stubbom silence. All of a sudden Þorbjörg seemed also to feel it did not matter any more. “Who are you?” she asked. “ I am Indriði from Indriðastaðr,” he answered. “I came down to the river to spear salmon. See the harpoon I made.” Þorbjörg examined the simple device admiringly. It was made from bone, beautifully polished. “That’s what helped you save the eagle,” she said. “You know how to throw it, too,” she said, as she handed it back. “I’ve practised with it,” Indriði said simply. “But I must go now, and I’ll not comeagain, until... until...” “Ontil what?” asked Þorbjörg impa- tiently. “Óh, nothing,” answered Indriði somewhat testily. “But I’ll ride to the Alþingi next summer.” “My foster-mother has promised that I shall go next summer. I want to get news of my brother Hörðr.” ‘T’ll see you at the Alþingi next year and tell you the news.” “Next year at the Alþingi!” e.choed the rocks, as Indriði slipped over the edge and climbed nimbly down into the craggy chasm. “Next year at the Alþingi,” whis- pered Þorbjörg softly to herself, as she watched him cross the swift-flowing river and climb up the opposite bank. Then he turned and waved at her, before he walked away. This time she waved back. Þorbjörg told nobody about Indriði’s visit. She felt that telling about it would somehow spoil it. Later that summer Little Grímr died suddenly in his sleep. After that Guðríðr seemed to need her more and more as her mind wandered after her husband’s death, so Þorbjörg did not ride to the Alþingi. But next summer, when Þorbjörg was seventeen, Guðríðr insisted that she go there with her stepmother Sigríðr who had invited her. To Be Continued January 13/95

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