Until Thy Wrath Be Past

Until Thy Wrath Be Past by Åsa Larsson Page B

Book: Until Thy Wrath Be Past by Åsa Larsson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Åsa Larsson
Tags: Fiction, Mystery
Ads: Link
doubt he will soon see the familiar rocks and clearings. But before long they come to a swamp that he has never seen before. Spindly, stunted pine trees are growing in the middle of it. Beard lichen hangs from the branches, looking burned. Where on earth are they?
    “We’re lost,” Hjalmar Krekula says to his brother. “We must retrace our steps.”
    They retrace their steps. But after an hour or so, they find themselves on the edge of the same swamp.
    “Let’s cross over it,” Tore Krekula says.
    “Don’t be silly,” Hjalmar Krekula says.
    He is worried now. Which way should they go?
    They hear a cow lowing in the distance, very faintly.
    “Hush,” he says to Tore Krekula, who is prattling on about something or other. “It’s Star. It’s coming from over there.”
    If they can find the cows, they will be able to get home. Star will find the way as milking time approaches.
    But after only a few steps, they realize that they can no longer hear any lowing. They cannot follow the sound. Neither of them is sure where it came from.
    They lie down in a clearing to rest. The moss is dry and the sun is warm. They feel sleepy. Hjalmar Krekula is no longer on the verge of tears; he is just tired. He drops off to sleep. Tore Krekula’s legs twitch, and he says something in his dream.
    Hjalmar Krekula is woken up by his brother shaking his arm.
    “I want to go home now,” Tore Krekula whimpers. “I’m hungry.”
    Hjalmar Krekula is also hungry. His stomach is rumbling. The sun is low in the sky. The forest is filled with different sounds. The heat drains away from the trees, making them crackle. The noise is almost like footsteps. An eerie sound must be a barking fox. It is chillier now, and the boys are cold.
    They set off aimlessly.
    After a while they come to a creek. Kneeling down, they fill the mugs they have with them. Drink until they are no longer thirsty.
    Hjalmar Krekula thinks.
    What if this is the same creek that flows past Iso-Junti’s farmhouse on the edge of the village?
    Hjalmar Krekula had once thrown pieces of wood into the creek. They had floated off in the direction of the Kalix. So, if they follow the creek upstream, they should find themselves in the village.
    Always assuming it is the same creek, of course. They could well be following one that goes somewhere else.
    “Let’s go this way,” Hjalmar Krekula says to his brother.
    But Tore Krekula does not like being told what to do. Nobody is going to tell him which way to go. Except his father, perhaps.
    “No,” he says. “Let’s go that way.”
    He points in the opposite direction.
    They start arguing. Tore Krekula’s opposition makes his older brother certain that following the creek upstream is the best thing to do.
    Tore Krekula refuses absolutely. Hjalmar Krekula calls him a stupid brat, tells him he is being idiotic, that he must do as he is told.
    “You don’t tell me what to do,” Tore Krekula howls.
    He starts blubbering and shouts for his mother. Hjalmar Krekula slaps him. Tore Krekula punches Hjalmar Krekula in the stomach. Soon they are both on the ground. The fight does not last long. Tore Krekula does not have a chance. Age wins the day. And Hjalmar Krekula is big.
    “I’m going now,” he bellows.
    He is sitting on top of his brother. Lets go of his arms, but grabs them again when Tore Krekula tries to hit him in the face. The younger boy gives up in the end. He has lost the fight. But not the battle. When he eventually stands up, he marches off resolutely in the direction he had chosen to begin with.
    Hjalmar Krekula shouts after him.
    “Don’t be an idiot. Come with me! Now!”
    Tore Krekula pretends not to hear. After a while Hjalmar Krekula can no longer see him.
    At eleven fifteen that night Hjalmar Krekula comes to the main road to Vittangi. He starts walking along it, and just over an hour later a truck stops and picks him up. It is one of his father’s trucks, but his father is not driving it. The driver is

Similar Books

The Pendulum

Tarah Scott

Hope for Her (Hope #1)

Sydney Aaliyah Michelle

Diary of a Dieter

Marie Coulson

Fade

Lisa McMann

Nocturnal Emissions

Jeffrey Thomas