Snow-Walker

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by Catherine Fisher


  “Don’t be sad, Kari,” she said. “It’s all over.”

  Surprised, he managed to smile back. “Yes. It’s over. Tell Wulfgar what you’ve seen. Tell him we’re coming home.”

  Fading before their eyes, she reached out to touch him. “All of you? Are you all coming?”

  “All of us.”

  And then the chair was empty, and Jessa imagined with sudden clarity the girl lying in that bed in the hold—how she would be waking now, sitting up, stiff and hungry; how she would stumble downstairs, into the silence and cold of the hall, to Wulfgar....

  “What about the others?” she asked aloud.

  “Gudrun’s spell faded with her,” Kari said. He sat down against the wall, knees up. “They’ll all be waking now—the noise and warmth will come flooding back. All their souls will return to them; the hold will be as we always knew it—busy, warm, alive.”

  “In fact, by the time we get back,” Skapti said slyly, “they’ll have forgotten about it.”

  “And us,” Jessa muttered. “It’s a long way.”

  “Indeed it is. And there are places we’ll go a long way around,” Brochael rumbled.

  They all laughed and fell silent.

  After a moment Kari got up and went out into the hall. Brochael gazed after him uneasily.

  “Let him go,” Skapti muttered.

  “He’s too quiet. I thought he’d be … happy.”

  Skapti rubbed his unshaven chin. “Give him time, Brochael. All his life she’s been there, a threat, a torment. When a weight comes off your back, you’re often too stiff to stand up at once.”

  It was Jessa who went after him, much later. She found him standing at the side of the bier, looking down, quite still. Beside him, Jessa was silent a moment. Then she said, “Where is she, Kari?”

  He twisted the frayed end of his sleeve around his fingers. “I don’t know, Jessa,” he said finally. “I stole her soul and locked it into a crystal, locked it deep, with tight spells. But he’s taken it back into that world, it’s lost there, and I don’t know how to find it again.” He looked up intently. “Perhaps Moongarm was wise. Now she’s neither dead nor alive. Because I couldn’t have killed her, Jessa.”

  They turned and walked back into the little room. Brochael looked up at them.

  “We leave tomorrow, after we’ve all slept. Unless you want your kingdom.”

  Kari laughed suddenly. “Grettir can have it. Thrasirshall is my kingdom. And you’re its only subject.”

  They all laughed then, Brochael hearty with relief, and the sound echoed in the empty rooms and halls of the palace. Jessa thought that it was a strange, new sound here, and wherever they were the White People heard it with surprise. She caught Hakon’s eye.

  “You never got around to naming your sword.”

  “Ah, but I have.”

  “Tell us then.”

  Awkwardly he touched the hilt. “You’ll laugh.”

  “No, we won’t.”

  “Well, at first I thought of Bear-bane....”

  Despite herself, Jessa giggled.

  “Not bad,” Skapti conceded.

  “And then Snake-stabber. But I didn’t think that was any good....”

  “It’s not.”

  “So I thought of Dream-breaker.”

  “Why that?” she asked.

  “Because in my dream I fell from the bridge, but the sword saved me.” He smiled at them shyly. “What do you think?”

  “It’s a fine name,” Skapti said.

  Kari nodded, and Brochael laughed. “I never thought we’d make it then.”

  “Oh, I did,” Jessa said, putting her arms around them both. “I always did.”

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter-opener quotations in Book 1 are from “The Words of the High One”; those in Book 3 are from “Voluspa” (translated as “The Song of the Sybil”); both from Norse Poems, edited and translated by W. H. Auden and Paul B. Taylor (Faber and Faber Ltd, 1983); reprinted by permission of Faber and Faber. The Book 2 chapter-opener quotations are from Beowulf, translated by Michael Alexander (Penguin Classics, 1973), reprinted by permission of Penguin Putnam.

  Read on for a preview of

  Catherine Fisher’s

  electrifying book

  The Oracle Prophecies:

  The Sphere of Secrets

  So the rumors were true. And these were elephants.

  Their enormous bodies amazed Mirany. In the evening heat they stood in a great semicircle, twelve beasts, tails swishing, vast ears rippling irritably against flies. On their backs were towers, real towers of wood with gaudy painted doors and windows, within which the dark-skinned merchants sat on jeweled palanquins tasseled with gold.

  From her seat before the bridge, on the left side of the Speaker, she watched the animals through the twilight. A huge full moon hung over them, the Rain Queen’s perfect mirror, its eerie light shimmering on the emptiness of the desert, the fires on the road, the black ramparts of the City of the Dead. A breeze drifted her mantle against her arm; someone’s thin silver bracelets clinked. There was no other sound, except, far below, the endless splash of the sea against rocks.

  The central elephant was lumbering forward. Its great feet, heavy with bangles, thudded into the soft sand, the swaying mass of silver chains on its neck and ears and back brilliant in the moonlight. It wore a scarlet harness of tiny bells and immense pearls, the largest dangling between its eyes, a fist-sized, priceless lump.

  Behind the mask, Mirany licked sweat from her lips. The eyeholes restricted her view, but she could see the Speaker, Hermia, and the rest of the Nine, the girls sitting rigid as if in terror, their bronze masks smiling calmly as the enormous beast neared. Next to her in the line, Rhetia fidgeted. The tall girl was alert, watching the crowd. Her fingers, light as dust, touched Mirany’s wrist. “He’s looking at you,” she whispered.

  On his pale horse, Argelin should have been easy to find. But he sat in shadow, armor gleaming, the bodyguard of sixteen huge men that never left him now, armed and facing outward. Mirany smiled sourly. There were probably others in the crowd. The general was taking no chances. And yes, his helmeted eyes were turned her way. Quite suddenly she felt exposed, unprotected. But she was as safe here as anywhere, these days.

  Hermia stood. Hurriedly, Mirany and the rest of the Nine rose with her, and as the elephant came closer over the cooling sand, the smiling masks glinted under their feathers and jeweled headdresses, all color draining in the pearly light.

  The great beast reached the bridge, and bowed its head. The smell of it was hot and rank, of dung and perfumes, and Mirany saw the myriad folds and wrinkles of its dusty skin, the sag of its belly as it lowered itself. She drew her breath in. For the elephant was kneeling before the Speaker. It knelt clumsily, and the thud of its great limbs in the sand sent vibrations across the wooden bridge. The rider, hidden behind the vast headdress, flicked a hand and spoke; the elephant lay right down and lifted its trunk; then it made a sound that chilled the night, a terrible brazen roar.

  Hermia did not flinch, though one of the Nine—probably Chryse—made a moan of terror. Argelin’s horse started nervously. The elephant looked along the crescent of the Nine. Its eye stopped at Mirany.

  It recognizes you, the god remarked in her ear.

  Recognizes?

  As a friend. They are considered very wise, Mirany. Their memories are older than any other beast.

  It has such small eyes, she thought, deep-set and shrewd. As she answered she seemed almost to be speaking to the animal. “Where have you been for so long? I thought I’d never hear you again.”

  Gods have a world to run. I have been busy.

  “We need you! Things are going wrong.”

  From the wooden howdah on the elephant, a ladder unraveled and a man climbed down. He was tall and bearded, wearing a robe of white and gold, so stiff with pearls it looked almost rigid. He put his hands together and bowed over them.

  “What is it you seek her
e?” Hermia’s voice rang across the desert.

  “I seek the wisdom of the Oracle. I seek to hear the words of the god.”

  “From what land have you traveled?”

  The answer was solemn, and measured. “From the east where the sun rises. From the Islands of Pearl and Honey, over the deep sea we bring the gifts and request of the Emperor, the Exalted, the Wise One, to the Bright god of the Oracle.”

  The masked face nodded. “How have you prepared?”

  “By fasting, by lustration, by purification. By three days of meditation. By washing three times in the silver pool.”

  “What is your name?”

  “Jamil, Prince of Askelon, companion of the Peacock Throne.”

  Hermia raised her manicured hands. Crystals glinted from her fingernails. “The wisdom of the god is infinite,” she said. “The day is auspicious, the hour a sacred hour. Enter the precinct of the Mouse Lord.”

  Formalities over, the Prince turned and beckoned, and two more men, identically dressed, climbed down from the elephants and joined him. Behind them, Argelin’s line of soldiers closed up.

  The pearl merchants took out jewel-handled swords and thrust them dramatically into the sand; then they walked forward to the bridge. Without a word Hermia swept around and led the Nine and the three strangers on to the Island. They had sailed in a week ago, a fleet of vast caravels that were anchored now in the harbor, all but blocking it. Their wives wore brilliant colors, their children bracelets of pearl. The whole population of the Port had been thronging the wharfs for days, fingering the bales of merchandise, the cloth, foodstuffs, gems, ivories, exotic fruits—bartering, stealing, arguing, tasting. Even on the Island Mirany’s sleep had been broken by the bizarre trumpeting of the elephants, terrible and fascinating.

  Walking now under the moon, she said in her mind, “Do you already know what they want to ask?”

  I know.

  “And will she give them the right answer?”

  He laughed, a quiet sound. But all he said was, The palace is full of such wonders, Mirany, and all for me. Music and silver gaming boards and food—such sweet tastes! And there are tiny fish in the garden pools with snouts and trailing whiskers!

  For an instant the voice was a boy’s, full of delight. Mirany shook her head, dismayed. “Listen to me! Don’t you know Oblek is missing!”

  About the Author

  Catherine Fisher is the author of many acclaimed novels, including THE ORACLE BETRAYED: Book One in The Oracle Prophecies, which was a finalist for the Whitbread Children’s Book Award. She lives in Newport, Wales.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author and artists.

  Other Works

  THE ORACLE PROPHECIES:

  BOOK ONE: THE ORACLE BETRAYED

  BOOK TWO: THE SPHERE OF SECRETS

  DARKHENGE

  Credits

  Cover art © 2004 by Steve Stone

  Copyright

  Snow-walker

  Copyright © 2004 by Catherine Fisher

  This collection first published as The Snow-walker Trilogy in 2003 in Great Britain by Red Fox, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books.

  First published in 2004 in the United States by Greenwillow Books.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  The right of Catherine Fisher to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her.

  * * *

  Snow-walker / by Catherine Fisher.

  p. cm.

  “Greenwillow Books.”

  Originally published in 1993–96 in Great Britain by The Bodley Head Children’s Books as three separate books: The Snow-walker’s son, The empty hand, and The soul thieves. Summary: The Snow-walker Gudrun came from the swirling mists and icy depths beyond the edge of the world to rule the Jarl’s people with fear and sorcery, but a small band of outlaws will fight to the death to restore the land to its rightful leader.

  ISBN-10: 0-06-072476-5 (pbk.)

  ISBN-13: 978-0-06-072476-4 (pbk.)

  EPub Edition © JANUARY 2012 ISBN 9780062193780

  [1. Fantasy.] I. Fisher, Catherine. Snow-walker’s son. 2004.

  II. Fisher, Catherine. Empty hand. 2004. III. Fisher, Catherine. Soul thieves. 2004. IV. Title.

  PZ7.F4995Sn 2004

  2003056864

  [Fic]—dc22

  * * *

  First American edition, 2004

  First Eos edition, 2005

  Visit us on the World Wide Web!

  www.harpereos.com

  Back Ad

  Hc 0-06-057157-8

  Pb 0-06-057159-4

  Hc 0-06-057161-6

  Read Books One and Two in

  the Oracle Prophecies trilogy

  The Oracle Betrayed

  When timid Mirany is chosen to serve the High Priestess, she is unprepared for the dangers of her exalted position. She joins forces with Seth, a young tomb-robbing scribe who knows the secrets and hidden passages of their land. Every twist and turn in this heart-stopping epic is filled with unforgettable surprises.

  The Sphere of Secrets

  Mirany. Seth. Oblek. The Jackal. The Fox. Hermia. Rhetia. Their futures are in the hands of a small child with a soul that is older than time. Will the secrets of the silver sphere be revealed in time to save the Two Lands?

  www.harperteen.com

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