"What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?" said Odin.
"My life," she answered.
"Good," he said; "for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die, and let thy death be his cause of death." And Odin sang this song:
"Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken To the dread Allfather"s word: When the gale of spears" breath gathers Count not Eric midst the slain, Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered, Wedded, at Gudruda"s side-- Then, Maidens, scream your battle call; Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to speak with Odin"s voice, saying:
"Then, Maidens, scream your battle call; Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her, with shattered shield and all besmeared with war"s red rain, stood gold-helmed Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she looked on him trembling and amazed.
"Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?" she said.
"I am no dream, surely," said Eric; "but why lookest thou thus on me, Gudruda?"
She rose slowly. "Methought," she said, "methought that thou wast dead at the hand of Skallagrim." And with a great cry she fell into his arms and lay there sobbing.
It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold pillowed on Eric"s war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears of joy; but not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous rage, then crept away, and hid herself where she could see no more, lest she should be smitten with madness.
"Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?" said Gudruda. "I thought thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and he spared thee to me for a little."
"Well, and that he hath, though hardly," and he told her all that had happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on his horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the gra.s.s and knew the colour of the cloak.
Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with each--for of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more sweet that this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold, alive and at our side.
And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and love, till Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed, for he could not come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must ride round the shoulder of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with toil and hunger, and Skallagrim grew weary of waiting.
"Go!" said Gudruda; "I will be there presently!"
So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
"Well, lord," said Skallagrim, "hast thou had thy fill of kissing?"
"Not altogether," answered Eric.
They rode a while in silence.
"I thought the maid seemed very fair!" said Skallagrim.
"There are women less favoured, Skallagrim."
"Rich bait for mighty fish!" said Skallagrim. "This I tell thee: that, strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane and mine also."
"Things foredoomed will happen," said Eric; "but if thou fearest a maid, the cure is easy: depart from my company."
"Who was the other?" asked the Baresark--"she who crept and peered, listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and talked with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?"
"That must have been Swanhild," said Eric, "but I did not see her. Ever does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he must be her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much with witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart mis...o...b..s me of this matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!" And Eric turns and gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty falls, and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full of joy, and there she sat and let the splendour of the night and the greatness of the rushing sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the setting sun, poised, as it were, on Westman"s distant peaks, and here sped the waters, and by that path Eric had come back to her. Yea, and there on Sheep-saddle was the road that he had trod down Goldfoss; and but now he had slain one Baresark and won another to be his thrall, and they two alone had smitten the company of Ospakar, and come thence with honour and but little harmed. Surely no such man as Eric had ever lived--none so fair and strong and tender; and she was right happy in his love! She stretched out her arms towards him whom but an hour gone she had thought dead, but who had lived to come back to her with honour, and blessed his beloved name, and laughed aloud in her joyousness of heart, calling:
"_Eric! Eric!_"
But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda"s voice and guessed Gudruda"s gladness, and jealousy arose within her and rent her. Should this fair rival like to take her joy from her?
"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?_"
See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those boiling waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet Gudruda"s he could never be.
"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?_"
Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all would be ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see--none save the Grey Wolf"s; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done.
Who could call her to account? The G.o.ds! Who were the G.o.ds? What were the G.o.ds? Were they not dreams? There were no G.o.ds save the G.o.ds of Evil--the G.o.ds she knew and communed with.
"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?_"
There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the sunset-glow shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild crept--crept like a fox upon his sleeping prey.
Now she is there--
"_I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!_"
Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again fell to calling aloud to the waters:
"Eric! beloved Eric!--ah! is there ever a light like the light of thine eyes--is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?"
Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered into her. She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
"Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss," she cried aloud, and with all her force she thrust.
Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly at a little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the shelving bank. Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the waters of the Golden Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of evening, lowered the pitiless face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath her and saw. Pale with agony she looked up and saw, but she said naught.
"Let go, my rival; let go!" cried Swanhild: "there is none to help thee, and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy marriage-bed in Goldfoss!"
But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous eyes.
"What! art thou so fain of a moment"s life?" said Swanhild. "Then I will save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer thus!" and she ran to seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering beneath its weight to the brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs. s.p.a.ce yawns beneath her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky glows above. She sees Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his horse"s galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry comes to his ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to him.
He leaps from his horse, and even as she looses the stone, clutches Swanhild"s kirtle and hurls her back. The rock bounds sideways and presently is lost in the waters.
Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda"s white face gleaming in the gloom.
Down he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
"Hold fast! I come; hold fast!" he cries.