She smiled. “Will you come see me?”
“I shouldn’t.”
“You will. We can talk then.” She brushed aside the sword of Herdsman, Auri’s son, came to Lockridge and kissed him again. “Farewell, Lynx.”
“Take her off!” he rapped. “Bind her. Be careful, though. She must not be harmed.”
“Where shall she be kept, Father?” Arrow asked him.
Lockridge prowled a little beyond, into the square before the Long House. Hu’s body looked shrunken at his feet.
“In there,” he decided. “Her own place. Post a guard outside. Lay out the dead and do what you can for the wounded.”
He watched her until she had been led through the doorway.
War pealed in his ears like the pulse within him. On an instant, he could no longer be still. He ran through the village and shouted.
“Avildaro men! Sea People! We have come to set you free! The witch is fallen. They fight for you out in the meadows. Will you lie there and strike no blow for yourselves? Come out, whoever is a man!”
And they came: household by household, hunters, fishers, riders of the sea, they gathered beweaponed around the newcome deliverer. He called his sons to join. They went fifty strong through the holy grove and fell upon the Battle Axe ranks.
And broke them.
When the last chariot lay splintered and the last Yutho was chased out onto the heaths, Lockridge ordered all captives brought before him. Mostly those were women and children, who stumbled through the desolation of their hopes. But Withucar lived. Hands lashed behind his back, he knew Lockridge and defied him.
A dying fire had been fuelled until it lit the wet dark as wildly as the Tenil Orugaray were dancing. Lockridge saw the misery that faced him and spoke with much gentleness:
“You will not be hurt further. Tomorrow you may go. This is our place, not yours. But a man from us will depart with you, to talk of peace. The land is broad; we know of ranges unpeopled for your use. At midwinter, the tribal chiefs will hold council here, when we will seek ways to meet our common needs. Withucar, I hope you will be among them.”
The Yutho dropped to his knees. “Lord,” he said, “I know not what strangeness has touched you this night. But for your ruth, we are still sworn comrades, you and I. If you will have me.”
Lockridge raised him. “Take off his bonds. He is our friend.”
Looking across his people, he, Lynx, knew his work not ended. Westhaven was strongly founded. In the next twenty or thirty years—however much time was granted him—he must build the same kind of league in Denmark.
If only Storm—
A man dashed to him and fell on his face. “We did not know! We did not know! We heard the noise too late!”
Night closed on Lockridge like a fist. He cried for torch-bearers and ran the whole way to the Long House.
By the unmerciful light of the globes, she lay. Her beauty was gone; one is not strangled to death without blackening skin, tongue swollen between teeth, eyes half bulged from the skull. Yet something lingered, in sheening hair and carven face, in body that had fought to the last and in bound hands which once touched him.
Brann’s corpse was across her.
I forgot him, Lockridge thought. I couldn’t stand to remember. So he came through the veil, with death on his heels, and saw her, his torturer, helpless.
Storm, oh, my Storm!
The Sea People grew hushed when their lord wept.
He had them bring wood. He himself laid her to rest, with her lieutenant and her great enemy at her feet, and put the torch to the Long House. High and loud sprang the flames, to make another day out of darkness. We will build a sanctuary here, he thought, to the worship of Her Who one day will be called Mary.
But for him there was only one place to go. He returned alone to the ship.
Auri’s arms enfolded him. Toward sunrise he found peace.
God, or fate, or whatever you wanted to name it, be thanked for work.
The Bronze Age, the new age was coming. What he had seen in his own unborn yesterdays gave him to believe it would be a time rich, peaceful, and happy: perhaps more happy than aught men would know until that distant future he had glimpsed. For the relics that afterward remained did not show burning, slaughter, or enslavement. Rather, the golden Sun Chariot of Trundholm and the lur horns, whose curves recalled Her serpents, spoke for the Northern races become one. Then widely would they fare; the streets of Knossos would know Danish feet and men depart from England for Araby. Some might even touch America, where the Indians were to tell of a wise kindly god and of a goddess named Flower Feather. But most would return. For where else was life so good as in the first land the world ever saw which was both strong and free?
In the end it would go down, before the cruel age of iron. Yet a thousand fortunate years were no small achievement; and the spirit they brought to birth would endure. Through every century to come, the forgotten truth that men had once known generations of gladness must abide and subtly work. Those who built the ultimate tomorrow might well come back to the realm that Lynx founded, and learn.
“Auri,” Lockridge whispered, “be with me. Help me.”
“Always,” she said.