Read Land of the Silver Dragon Online
Authors: Alys Clare
I
do
hope he knew it was true.
Gurdyman greeted me with a smile and a hot meal. As soon as I set eyes on him, I felt a huge stab of guilt: just how long, I wondered, had he been worrying about me?
He didn't look like a man who'd been tearing his hair and pacing the midnight hours away, though, and I berated myself for exaggerating my self-importance. He'd probably been so preoccupied with his work and his experiments that he hadn't even missed me.
Sitting in the courtyard, gobbling down the (excellent) food, I felt his gaze on me and dropped my head, embarrassed, hoping he didn't perceive the turbulence of my thoughts.
He did. I felt a cool hand on my shoulder, and he said softly, âHrype sent word when you returned to the village. I gather there have been further dramas, but your presence back here with me suggests they are now over.'
I looked up at him. âThey are,' I said.
He nodded. âFinish your meal,' he said calmly, âthen you shall tell me all about it.'
It was he, in fact, who began the narration. He said, as I was gathering myself to begin, âA moment, Lassair.'
Something in his tone alerted me. I looked at him closely, and saw an odd expression on his face. If it didn't seem so unlikely, I'd have said he felt guilty.
âI know something of what has been happening,' he said, staring down at his hands folded in his lap. âRather a lot, in fact; Hrype has told me much.' Now he met my eyes, and his emotion was all too clear. He
was
guilty, and he was also in some anguish. âI â we â owe you an apology, Lassair. Hrype and I knew about your treasure, and, although we had no idea precisely what it was, we knew it was of value to a mariner such as Skuli. Hrype learned of his existence, and we knew â or, I should say, we guessed â that it was he who had come searching for it.'
They
knew
? In my amazement, I could only manage one word: âHow?'
âConcerning Skuli,' Gurdyman said, âHrype, as I dare say you know, has mysterious contacts in many places, not a few of which are on the coast. I imagine that gossip concerning a man such as Skuli would spread among the Norse mariners and those with whom they trade, and Hrype is very good at uncovering what he wants to know. Concerning matters closer to your own kin â' now his tone became grave â âyour grandmother Cordeilla confided the secret of your father's parentage to Hrype as she was dying, as now you will be aware. Hrype knew, too, that some precious object had been left in her care by her lover, and he guessed that it had been entrusted to Edild, although he never discussed it with her. Our guilt,' he went on, âHrype's and mine, is because, had we explained to Edild that danger threatened, in the shape of a very forceful and slightly deranged giant determined at any cost to get his hands on the treasure, then it is highly likely she would have shared her part of the secret with Hrype. Had that been so, you would not have been abducted and put in such danger.'
I felt deep pity for him. It was quite clear his guilt was eating into him. I could see two objections to what he had just said, and, pausing briefly to arrange my thoughts, I voiced them.
âThere is no need for guilt,' I said, trying to keep my voice calm. âFor one thing, there's no reason why Hrype and my aunt pooling their information would have stopped any of what happened subsequently. Unless you're suggesting that Hrype should simply have given Skuli the stone, then he'd still have gone on the rampage while he searched for it. We could, I suppose, have warned the households he ransacked and the people he killed and hurt, although we'd have had to know exactly where he was going to look.'
I drew a breath, then said, âThe second thing is personal to me.' I hesitated. Was this really the moment for levity, when two women were dead and the toll of death and maiming might very well have been a lot worse?
Oh
, I thought,
why not?
âDear Gurdyman,' I said softly, âI have, as I dare say you know, been to Iceland and back. Believe me, I would not have missed that for the world.'
His eyes rounded. âYou
enjoyed
it?' he said, his incredulity making his voice almost a squeak. âAll the way across those furious, icy seas in an open boat, and an uncertain welcome when you got there?'
âBut I thought you ...' I'd been about to say that I thought he'd told me he had travelled extensively in his youth, so surely he would understand. Something in his face, however, warned me not to. Perhaps the contrast between the free-roving spirit he had been when young, and the old man living his life within his own four walls as he was now, was something of which he preferred not to be reminded.
âI loved being on board Malice-striker,' I assured him instead, âonce I'd got over the seasickness. And my welcome in Iceland could not have been warmer.'
âWell, they are, after all, your kinsfolk,' Gurdyman muttered. He risked a small smile, then a larger one. âYou really are not angry with us? With Hrype and me, who should have entrusted you with what we suspected?'
âNo,' I said very firmly. âNot in the least.'
Now he was beaming. âIn that case â' he leaned forward and poured chilled white wine into our cups â âtell me the whole story.'
He must have been bursting with impatience to see the shining stone, probably from the moment I walked into the twisty-turny house, but he restrained himself. It was only when I had finished my tale that he said in a whisper, âMay I be allowed to see this magical object?'
I went to fetch it from where I had stowed it, with my satchel, up in my attic room. I laid it on the table in the courtyard, and slowly, reverently â half, I admit, reluctantly â unwrapped the sacking.
As the sun's rays fell upon it, the shining stone shot out a great flash of gold. Gurdyman made an odd sound â a sort of gasp â and instinctively drew back. Then, his eyes wide with wonder, he leaned forward and very gently touched the smooth, glassy surface with the very tips of his fingers.
I waited. I could see he was deep in thought â lost in it, indeed â and I did not want to interrupt.
Finally, after what seemed a very long time, he said softly, âCover it now, Lassair, if you would.'
I did as he asked.
He sat looking at the sacking, so intently that it was as if his eyes were trying to penetrate through to the stone. Then he drew a shaky breath and said, âRemind me where this came from.'
I closed my eyes, the better to remember how Freydis had described that strange land where Thorkel acquired the stone. It helps, I find, that I'm training to be a bard, for my memory seems to be developing the facility to recall bits of other people's narratives. Especially the dramatic parts.
âThorkel sailed to the land behind the sun,' I said, eyes still shut, âdriven by a prophecy that he would cross the endless seas and come to a land of liquid gold. He described this land to his crewmen, telling them it was a place of brilliant light and colour, where they worshipped strange spirits under a sun so hot that men's skins turned brown, and where the fierce, hungry gods had to be appeased with the blood of the people.' I opened my eyes. âI don't know where that land is,' I admitted. âNobody in Iceland actually said, although Hrype said it was in the west.'
And, I could have added, I had been hoping and praying ever since hearing the story that somebody else would elucidate; somebody, in fact, who was now sitting across the table from me.
As if he knew exactly what I was thinking, Gurdyman smiled. Then he reached over to his work table and picked up a large rolled parchment. Even as he untied the ribbon that held it in its roll, I knew what it was.
I waited while he spread it out.
It was the map I had seen before, but now it was twice as big, for another whole section had been stuck to its left-hand side. I leaned forward, trying to take it all in at once.
Gurdyman was pointing at a dot about halfway across the new section, high up towards the parchment's upper edge. âThis represents Iceland, where you have lately voyaged,' he said. I nodded encouragingly, eager to hear more. âHere â' his finger moved left and up a little â âis Greenland, although men say it is covered in ice and snow, and there is little green to be seen. Here is Helluland â' he had moved left again â âand here Markland, and, below it, Vinland.' Now he moved down and a little to the right.
The names that Hrype mentioned
, I thought, remembering. I stared at where Gurdyman was pointing. The wavy line that I knew represented the edge of the land ambled on down the page, moving generally left, but there were no details and no more carefully written words.
Feeling my spirits sink in disappointment, I looked up at him and said, âIs that it? Is that all?'
â
All?
' I heard him echo, with an ironic laugh. âLassair, if you only knew the toil, the head-scratching, the quill-biting and the pain it has taken to work it out this far!'
âI'm sorry,' I said instantly, âI didn't mean to diminish your achievement. It's just that ...' I stopped.
Just that I was hoping to see exactly where Thorkel went ashore and returned to his ship a changed man
sounded hopelessly optimistic and rather naive, so I kept it to myself.
I think Gurdyman understood, anyway, for he patted my arm in an absent-minded but kindly way, then said, âThe lands where your ancestor sailed may be a mystery to us, but I do know what your stone is, or, at least, I believe I do.'
âYou know what it is?' It was more than I could have hoped for.
âWould you like me to tell you?' Now there was a definite glint of mischief in his eyes.
What a silly question. Since I could hardly say that, I simply replied, âOh, yes please!'
I wondered if he would need to look at or hold the stone again, but it seemed not. âThis is also known as a shining mirror,' he began, indicating the stone in its wrappings.
Yes
, I thought excitedly.
Freydis referred to it in those words
. âIt is properly called obsidian; that is the name bestowed upon it by the lifelong student of natural history who observed at first hand its method of formation. But I am wandering from the point.' He frowned in thought, then went on: âYou will never guess, Lassair, where and how it originates, and so I shall tell you.'
He turned to his work table, rummaging among the parchments until he found the piece of vellum he used for the rough notes and jottings he habitually makes while a line of thought is coming to fruition. He smoothed it out, then dipped his quill in the ink horn and swiftly drew a little picture.
I stared at it as it formed beneath his skilful hand. It was cone-shaped, and the cone had steep, regular sides. Its base flattened out either side into smooth lines, and I realized he had drawn a hill, or perhaps a mountain. The top of the mountain had a cut-off appearance. Once he was satisfied with the outline, he dipped the quill again and a sudden explosion of straight and wavy lines appeared, as if the insides of the earth were pouring out of the mountain's summit.
âThis, Lassair, is a volcano,' he said, still drawing. âIt is named for Vulcan, who was the Roman god of the forge and its fire. Volcanoes form where the molten rock within the earth has no more room to expand, and comes blasting out of the weakest point in the cone.'
â
Molten
rock?' I repeated. Surely not ...
âYes indeed. Melted,' he said firmly, clearly picking up my incredulity. âRock heated to so high a temperature that it becomes liquid.'
â
Liquid?
' I was finding this very hard to accept. Surely he was wrong?
âWhen this substance encounters water,' he went on, sensibly ignoring my interruption, âwhen, for instance, it flows into a lake, a river or the sea, it cools very quickly â and what do you think happens?' He turned to me enquiringly.
âEr ...'
His little sigh was all but inaudible. âIt is only molten because it is very, very hot,' he said patiently. âAs soon as it cools, itâ'
âIt turns back into rock!' I cried triumphantly, suddenly seeing what he was explaining.
âIt does indeed!' He beamed. âBut its nature is forever changed from what it was, for the cooling process is too fast for it to resume its former nature.' His eyes strayed to the sacking-wrapped object, and I guessed he was visualizing the shining stone. âIt is as if, through the medium of fire and water, rock has been turned to glass ...' His eyes seemed to slide out of focus, and I sensed he was lost in some private reverie.
An aspect, indeed, of what he had just said was reminding me of something he'd once taught me; something very, very important. I forced myself to concentrate, and out of the depths of my mind I heard a whisper:
alchemy
.
I left Gurdyman to his meditation as long as I could bear. When he showed no sign of returning his attention to me, and to the here and now, eventually I said softly, âGurdyman?'
He turned to me, his expression hazy, as if he was still absorbed in whatever he had been contemplating so deeply. âLassair!' It seemed to come as a surprise that I was there.
I should have left him to his thoughts, but my anxiety was too great to let me. âIs the shining stone dangerous?' I hissed in an urgent whisper. I was very afraid: the stone had come into being via an arcane, magical process that I didn't even dare think about; it had the power to summon spirits; it forced you to face up to your true self; it had almost driven Thorfinn out of his mind, and Skuli had been prepared to kill in order to get his hands on it.
And I had just asked Gurdyman if it was
dangerous
!
With a visible effort, he came back to me. âIt is an object of very great power,' he said, âbut you already know that, Lassair.' He studied me keenly. âIts power is neutral: it is neither good nor bad. It will do what it does, and it is up to whoever holds it to channel the power.' He paused, perhaps sensing that I did not fully understand. Then he said, âImagine, if you can, a magnificent horse; a stallion. He is swift, strong, eager, and his strength far outweighs that of any man who would try to ride him. One man tries, but he is overconfident and tries to master the stallion with harsh bit, spurs and whip. A second man tries, but he has taken the trouble to become an expert rider; moreover, before he even attempts to mount the fierce stallion, he spends a long time getting to know the animal. Once he feels that he has sufficient respect for the stallion's nature, he mounts him, and the two remain bonded for life.'