The Wizard

The Wizard by Gene Wolfe Page A

Book: The Wizard by Gene Wolfe Read Free Book Online
Authors: Gene Wolfe
Tags: Demonoid Upload 4
Ads: Link
Who would want to live here? The boar, obviously. But I knew the boar must die. There would be meat tomorrow. Meat not only for Gylf and me, but for Bold Berthold, Gerda, and Uns. Meat even for the hulking young man who had crept so near our camp. The young man (call him by his name, I told myself, he has one) his suffering mother had named Heimir in the hope endearing him to the Angrborn, the young man who lay starving in his cave in the hills. A man of his size, a man who might weigh half as much as Cloud, would require a lot of food, food difficult to find in this barren land. True Angrborn were even larger and could eat only because slaves worked their farms. Dog and boar were nearer now; I heard saplings break, an angry pop-pop-pop my ears accepted as a single sound. Quite suddenly it came to me that King Arnthor would have been wiser to send the Angrborn bread and cheese. Then that Lord Beel's embassy was doomed, that the Angrborn could never stop raiding the south for slaves because the Angrborn would starve without slavesthat no Angrborn could grow or kill enough for himself, a wife, and a child or two. They were too big and needed too much. One never saw their wives anyway. The boar broke cover and the arrow went back to my ear and sped away. The boar, black as tar in the moonlight, snapped at its shoulder, splashed through the shallows to midchannel, turned to defy Gylf, fell to its knees, and rolled on its side. The water carried its body a step or two from the point at which it had died, but no farther. Gylf emerged from dark undergrowth. "Good shot!" "Thanks." I unstrung my bow and slung it behind me. "Did he hurt you?" "Never touched me." Gylf waded into the water to drink. Skinning and gutting the boar took an hour or so. I cut off the head and forelegs (one of which Gylf claimed) and got the rest up on my shoulder. Our return was slower than our departure had been, but the distance was not great. "Talking." In order to speak, Gylf had let the foreleg fall. Instinctively, he put a paw on it. "Hear 'em?" I shook my head. "Don't know her." He picked up the foreleg and trotted forward. She rose as Gylf approached the fire, and for a moment I felt she would never stop risingtousled blond hair that hung to her shoulders, a lean face that seemed all jaw and eyes, a neck as thick as my thigh, wide sloped shoulders and high breasts half hidden by a scrap of hide. Arms thick and freckled, fingers tipped with claws. Long waist, broad hips under a ragged skirt, and massive legs with knees so skinned and bony that I noticed them even by firelight. "Hello," she said in a voice deeper than a man's. "Are you Sir Able? Hello. I'm Hela, her girl. She said it would be all right. Is that food?" Gerda stood too, her head below her daughter's waist. "You're not mad are you, sir? II shouldn't of, I know. Only sheshe's still. . ." "Your child." "Yes. Yes, sir. My baby, sir." This last was said without a hint of irony. Uns sat up and goggled at Hela. Berthold had clambered to his feet and was groping with both hands. "Hela? Hela?" Hela took a step backward, although she was a full three heads the taller. "Bert won't harm a hair of you," Gerda told her softly. "Hela." A groping hand found her. "I'm your father, Hela. Your foster father. Didn't Gerda never speak of me? Bold Berthold?" I laid the boar's body on the ground beside the fire. "You were gone 'fore I got to Bymir's, and Bold Berthold that was, was gone too. Blind Berthold now. It's what they did. But the same that was, Hela. The same as loved your ma long ago." She crouched and embraced him. "Ah, Hela," Berthold said softly. "Ah! Ah, Hela!" There was no tune to these words, yet they were music. "Maught us cook a bit a' dat, sar?" Uns was at my side, holding green sticks. "I'd think you'd want to go back to sleep." "I'se main hungert, sar." When I hesitated, he added, "Won't take but wat ya let me." "Take all you want. Will you cook some for Berthold?" "Yessar. Glad ta. Fer her,

Similar Books

Morgan's Wife

Lindsay McKenna

DoubleDown V

John R. Little and Mark Allan Gunnells

Purity

Jonathan Franzen

The Christmas Quilt

Patricia Davids