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“I suppose,” Sam replied. “But I’m no expert on the Northern Lights.”

“This can’t be the Aurora phenomenon, people,” Heri said impatiently, frustrated with their ineptitude at telling basic scientific principles apart. “Those colors in the sky are caused by solar wind in the magnetosphere,” he started to explain, sounding a bit patronizing. Gunnar’s eyes were stuck on the beauty of the anomaly, while Sam and Jo seemed indifferent to the origin of the phenomenon. It drove him crazy that they weren’t concerned with the reason for the appearance of the lights, merely that it was awesome.

“There’s no way this occurrence is caused by the same properties of the Aurora Borealis,” he said again as they gathered around the floating colors that appeared to intertwine at various points.

“It looks like a paint spill in a glass of water!” Johild observed. The lights illuminated her beauty even more. “Only, there’s no ether in which it can blend. Heri, it has to have some sort of magnetic properties,” she proposed.

“Jo, the Northern Lights happen at very high altitudes, for one. They don’t bob around just off of the ground. And even if they could, they wouldn’t just occur within a small area. The atmosphere is consistent throughout the local region on the mound of Grímsfjall,” Heri answered.

“Sam?” Gunnar asked. “Why are you so quiet?”

“I’m trying to assimilate both Heri and Johild’s theories into my layman’s logic to figure out how this is formed, but my conclusions come to nothing,” Sam admitted. “You guys will have to let me send this to my friend David Purdue in Edinburgh. He’s a genius scientist and I’m sure he’d be able to tell us how it is formed, at least.”

“I knew your sworn to silence promise was bullshit,” Jo grunted.

“It is not. Look, I have no cameras here. What I’m suggesting is getting him over here to see for himself. That way the secret is safe. What do you say?” Sam suggested.

They did not look happy with his offer. “Don’t you want to know once and for all what is happening here?” Sam persisted.

“I don’t want to know,” Gunnar mumbled from the other side of the rainbow shred. “I want this to remain a mystery.”

But he was the only one who felt this way. Both the cousins would appreciate some sort of explanation to soothe their curiosity. Sam could see that Gunnar was feeling emotional about having shared his find, so he changed the subject somewhat to draw the old man’s attention toward the interesting side of the investigation instead.

“Can we maybe move those rocks away, then?” Sam asked. “Maybe I can just take a water sample if the shaft is still filled with mountain water. That should explain why people who drink it or bathe in it find that their bodies do not age as they should.”

Gunnar lifted his chin, looking decidedly more positive about Sam’s latest proposition.

“That sounds like a plan, yes,” he agreed, and Heri also nodded.

“I have a water bottle in the car,” Jo said, and she turned with a skip to make her way down the slope to retrieve a container for their examination. Her long, fair hair looked like a ghostly apparition as Sam watched her disappear into the night.

“Want me to come with you?” Heri called.

They heard her faint voice answer, telling them to get the rocks moved so that they could save some time. They obliged right away under the anxious and excited eye of the old man who had not dipped in the pool since he was a much younger man.

“Watch your feet, Gunnar,” Sam said as he and Heri pushed the flat rock aside.

“Geez, are we moving Stonehenge here?” Heri growled as the two of them pushed with all their might, barely inching the stone at all. “This isn’t a boulder by any reach. Why the hell is it so heavy? Christ! My rectum is about to prolapse.”

Sam burst out laughing and ceased his efforts for a second. “Wait, wait,” he chuckled, trying to catch his breath before trying again.

“Uncle Gunnar, how did you and Uncle Jon move this goddamned rock?” Heri moaned as he pushed. His uncle looked a bit confused, having forgotten such small details since that night, but he soon remembered more and more.

“We had our fishing tackle with us, because we were on our way to Hvalba when we ran into the Nazis. That was all we had then that you two don’t have now. We also struggled with the stones over that small area, but when I put my pack down on it, Jon could shift it easily,” he recounted. With a shrug he gestured that there was no special way he knew of to move the rock. “Maybe you boys just don’t have enough marrow in your bones,” Gunnar chuckled.

“What was in your fishing bag?” Sam asked him.

“Uh, line, bait, and some iron hooks in my old trunk. We were going to get new nets and rods for different catches once we’d managed to get a trawler at the bay from Ragnar. Other than that, there was nothing worth mentioning.”

Sam looked at Heri. “I don’t know about you, but it feels like this stone is held by a force other than gravity holding it down. Can you feel that too?”

Heri nodded his head. “What was the trunk made of, Uncle?”

“Copper and tin, mostly. Welded it together ourselves,” Gunnar answered.

Sam continued while catching his breath. “As mentioned before, I’m not big on science, but could the copper and the iron in your bag maybe have disrupted an energy field here?”

“Ah! Long shot, but it’s the only substantiating explanation,” Heri reluctantly agreed. “So there is only one way to find out if it’s a possibility. What copper or tin do we have with us?”

Sam shrugged. “None.”

Gunnar said nothing. He simply walked over to another, smaller rock and picked it up with a hefty groan. Struggling to get a good grip, he finally lifted the rock high enough to make a good impact before hurling it onto the larger slab of stone. With a crack and a spark, the two ancient stones met, their meeting clap echoing through the vast flatness of the region.

“Fucking hell!” Sam marveled as the large stone shattered from the impact and a faint glow of green light permeated through the crevices of its destruction. Heri stared wide-eyed at his uncle, amazed by the simple solution he hadn’t thought of. Gunnar grinned at his nephew, his barrel chest heaving from the exertion. Mockingly he wheezed, “Physics.”

Heri had to concede that his uncle had won that bout fair and square. Sam and Gunnar made quick work of clearing the majority of the stone fragments away to better investigate what was beneath.

“Um, a little help here?” Sam groaned to Heri, who stood sentinel next to him, looking around from side to side.

“Where is Jo?” he asked.

The question sent chills through Gunnar and he jumped up to see if she was nearby, but it had become so dark that the vehicle was obscured by darkness. Sam felt his stomach knot up.

“Johild!” he shouted. “Jo! Where are you?”

“Hey, what are you shouting for?” she said as she came walking from the blackness outside the reach of their flashlights. Relieved, the three men enveloped her to see what container she had brought.

“It’s not much,” she sighed. “Just 250 ml, but it should be sufficient, right?”

“Aye, that will do,” Sam replied, smiling. “Thank you.”

Johild was positively spellbound by the beautiful colors floating from the exposed hole. “How did you get the rock away?” she asked, but Heri just cleared his throat. Then she noticed the broken stones surrounding the hole. “It’s hard to see if there’s water in there behind all this blinding light, but I’ll admit, I’m too scared to stick my hand into it.”