Time Patrol

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Time Patrol Page 48

by Poul Anderson


  His voice dropped. "Of course, if they are not it will be a different future. Our twentieth century will never exist."

  "That's what we're trying to head off," Everard said harshly.

  A silence fell. Wind lulled, leaves rustled, sunlight skipped on the ruffled stream. The peacefulness made the landscape feel unreal.

  "But we've got to learn how this deviation started, before we can do anything about it," Everard went on. "Did you find where Veleda hails from?"

  "I am afraid not," Ulstrup confessed. "Poor communications, vast reaches of wilderness—and Edh does not talk about her past, nor does her associate Heidhin. He may feel a little more at ease with himself twenty-one years hence, when he mentions the Alvarings to you, whoever they are. Even then, I think, it would be dangerous to ask him for details. At present he and she are totally reticent.

  "However, I did hear that she appeared first among the Rugii on the Baltic littoral, five or six years ago as nearly as I can determine from the vague accounts. They say she came in a ship, as befits the prophetess of a sea deity. That and her accent suggest to me a Scandinavian origin. I'm sorry I cannot do better for you."

  "It'll serve," Everard replied. "You did okay, buddy. With patience and instruments, maybe occasional inquiries on the ground, we'll track down the place and moment of her landing."

  "And then—" Floris's words trailed away. She gazed past the river and the forest beyond, northeasterly toward an unseen shore.

  12

  A.D. 43.

  Right and left the strand reached, sand rising into dunes where stiff grass grew, until haze blurred sight. Kelp, shells, bones of fish and birds lay sparsely strewn on the darker stretch below the high-water line. A few gulls rode the wind. It whistled raw-cold. A taste of salt was on it, and smells from the deeps. Waves washed low onto the shore, hissed back down, came again a little higher up. Farther out they ran strong, hollowly booming, white-capped above steely gray, to a horizon that likewise lost itself in the sky. It pressed in on the world, did that sky, hueless as the sea. Tatters of cloud scudded murky beneath it. Rain walked in the west.

  Inland, sedge swayed around pools whose algal green was the only lightness. Forest gloomed in the distance. A brook seeped through the marsh to the beach. Doubtless the dwellers used it to move whatever boats they owned. Their hamlet lay a mile from the coast, some wattle-and-daub cabins hunched below turf roofs. Smoke blew out of louvers, otherwise nothing stirred.

  The ship brought abrupt vividness. She was a beauty, long and lean, clinker-built, stem- and sternposts curving high, mastless but swiftly driven by thirty oars. Though her red paint had weathered, the oak remained stout. To the chant of the helmsman, her crew brought her aground, leaped over the sides, and hauled her partway out.

  Everard approached. They waited for him in restrained wariness. Nearing, they had seen that he stood alone. He drew close and put the butt of his spearshaft on the sand. "Hail," he greeted.

  A grizzled, scarred fellow who must be the captain asked, "Are you from yon houses?" His dialect would have been hard to understand had Everard and Floris not received an imprint. (It was of a Danish tongue four centuries uptime, the closest available. Fortunately, early Nordic languages didn't change fast. However, the agents could not hope to pass for natives, either of the ship's home or of this region.)

  "No, I am a wayfarer. I was bound for there, wanting shelter tonight, but spied you and thought I would hear your tale first. It should be better than aught that any homefast hinds can tell. I hight Maring."

  Ordinarily the Patrolman would just have said, "Everard," which sounded like a name in some other patois. But he'd be using it uptime when he met Heidhin, whom he hoped to buttonhole this day. He couldn't afford recognition then—another shift in reality, with unguessable consequences. Floris had suggested this monicker, authentically southern German. She had also assisted him with a flowing blond wig and false beard, plus a Jimmy Durante nose that would keep attention off the rest of him. Given the fading of memory with years, that should serve.

  A grin creased and crinkled the mariner's face. "And I am Vagnio Thuthevar's son, from Hariu thorp in the land of the Alvarings. Whence come you?"

  "From afar." The Patrolman jerked a thumb at the settlement. "They're staying within their walls, hey? Afraid of you?"

  Vagnio shrugged. "We could be reavers, for aught they know. This is nobody's port of call. It's merely the landfall we made—"

  Everard already realized that. On timecycles aloft, he and Floris had observed the ship, once scanning revealed that she, among all they had checked, carried a woman. A jump into the future showed where she would halt; a jump back into the past deposited him close by. Floris stayed above the clouds. Explaining her presence away would have been too much trouble.

  "—where we'll camp the night," Vagnio went on, "and fill our water casks in the morning. But then we coast west to the Anglii, with goods for a great market they hold this time of year. If yon folk like, they can call on us, else we'll leave them be. Their kind has naught worth robbing."

  "Not even themselves, to sell for thralls?" The question was foul in Everard's mouth, but natural in this age.

  "No, they'd run off as soon as they saw us bound for them, and scatter what livestock they have. That's why they built where they did." Vagnio squinted. "You must be a landlubber not to ken that."

  "Yes, of the Marcomanni." The tribe was safely remote, about where western Czechoslovakia would lie. "You are, uh, from Scania?"

  "No. The Alvarings hold half of an island off the Geatish coast. Stay the night with us, Mating, and we'll swap yarns—What're you peering at?"

  Sailors had crowded around, eager to hear. They were mostly tall blonds, who blocked the Patrolman's view of their vessel. A couple of them had shifted, restless, and he got a clear look. A slender youth had just sprung out of the prow to the beach. He lifted his arms and helped the woman follow. Veleda.

  No mistaking her. I'd know that face, those eyes, at the bottom of her goddess's ocean. But how young she was today, a girl in her teens, withy-thin. The wind tossed loose brown tresses and flapped skirt around ankles. Across the ten or fifteen yards between, Everard thought he saw—what? A look that sought something beyond this place, lips that would suddenly quiver and maybe whisper, a grief, a lostness, a dream, he couldn't say.

  Certainly she showed none of the interest in him he had counted on. He wondered if she had so much as cast him a glance. The pale countenance turned away. She spoke briefly with her dark-haired companion. They walked off together, down the strand from the ship.

  "Ah, her," Vagnio deduced. Unease touched him. "An uncanny twain, those."

  "Who are they?" Everard asked. That too was a natural question, when women crossing the sea other than as captives were well-nigh unheard of. Eventually invaders from the Frisian and Jutish shores would bring their families along to Britain, but that wouldn't happen for centuries.

  Unless Scandinavian women occasionally took ship at this early date? His information didn't say. Those lands in those years were little studied. It hadn't seemed they would make much difference to the rest of the world until the Völkerwanderung. Surprise, surprise.

  "Edh Hlavagast's daughter and Heidhin Viduhada's son," Vagnio said. Everard noticed that he named her first. "They bought aboard, but not to trade alongside us. Indeed, she'd not seek the market at all, but wants we let her—them—off somewhere else, she has not yet said where."

  "Best we make ready for night, skipper," growled a man. A mutter of agreement went among others. Darkness was hours off, and it wasn't likely the rain would come this way. They'd rather not have talk about her, Everard realized. They've nothing against her, I'm sure, but she is, yes, uncanny. Vagnio was quick to assent.

  Everard offered to lend a hand with setting up. Bluffly polite, for a guest was sacred, the captain expressed doubt that a landlubber could expedite matters. Everard strolled off, the way Edh and Heidhin had gone.

  He sa
w them stop, well ahead of him. They appeared to argue. She made a gesture strangely imperious for such a slip of a lass. Heidhin wheeled about and started back with long stiff strides. Edh went onward.

  "This may be my chance," Everard subvocalized. "I'll see if I can get the boy into conversation."

  "Have a care," Floris replied. "I think he is upset."

  "Yeah. I've got to try, though, don't I?"

  It was the reason for making this rendezvous, instead of simply tracing the ship across the water, backward through time. They dared not charge blind into what might well be the source of the instability, the obscure and easily annulled event from which an entire future could spring. Here, they hoped, was an opportunity to learn something beforehand at minimal risk.

  Heidhin jarred to a halt, glowering, before the foreigner. He also was in his teens, perhaps a year or two older than Edh. In this milieu that made him an adult, but he was still gangly, not quite filled out, the sharp countenance darkened by no more than fuzz. He wore wadmal, odorous in the damp air, and salt-stained boots. A sword hung at his flank.

  "Hail," said Everard amiably. That was on the surface. Cold prickles went over his scalp.

  "Hail," grunted Heidhin. The surliness would have been considered appropriate to his years in twentieth-century America. Here it meant real trouble. "What would you?" He paused before adding roughly, "Follow not the woman. She wants to be alone."

  "Is that safe for her?" Everard asked: another natural question.

  "She'll not go too far, and will return ere nightfall. Besides—" Again Heidhin fell mute. He seemed to be wrestling with himself. Everard guessed that a youthful desire to be important and mysterious won out over discretion. Yet he heard an almost frightening sincerity: "Whoso offends her shall suffer worse than death. She is the chosen of a goddess."

  Did the wind really blow keener all at once? "You know her well, then?"

  "I . . . fare at her side."

  "Whither?"

  "Why would you know?" flared Heidhin. "Let me be!"

  "Easy, friend, easy," Everard said. It helped being large and mature. "I do but ask, I, an outlander. Gladly would I hear more about—Edh, did the shipmaster call her? And you Heidhin, I think."

  Curiosity awoke. The boy relaxed a bit. "What of you? We wondered as we drew nigh."

  "I am a wayfarer, Maring of the Marcomanni, a folk you may never have heard of. You'll get my tale this evening."

  "Where are you bound?"

  "Wherever my luck may lead me."

  Heidhin stood still a moment. The small surf mumbled. A gull mewed. "Could you be sent?" he breathed.

  Everard's pulse raced. He forced his tone to stay casual. "Who might have sent me, and why?"

  "See you," Heidhin blurted, "Edh is going whither Niaerdh bids her, by dreams or signs. She's now had a thought that this is where we should leave the ship and wend overland. I tried to tell her it's a niggard country, dwellings wide-scattered, maybe outlaws running free. But she—" He gulped. The goddess was supposed to protect her. Faith struggled with common sense and found a compromise. "If a second warrior fared along—"

  "Oh, wonderful!" crowed Floris's voice.

  "I don't know how well I can act like somebody that destiny has tapped," Everard warned her.

  "At least you can draw him out in conversation."

  "I'll try."

  To Heidhin: "This is news to me, you understand. But we can talk about it. I've naught else to do at once, have you? Come, let's walk to and fro while you tell me about yourself and Edh."

  The boy looked downward. He bit his lip, reddened, whitened, reddened again. "That's less easy than you think," he grated.

  "Yet I must know—eh?—ere I can plight faith." Everard clapped the stooped shoulder before him. "Take your time, but tell me the whole of it."

  "Edh—She should—She will decide—"

  "What is it about her that makes you, a man, wait on her word?" Show plenty of respect. "Is she a spaewife, she, a girl to behold? That would be a mighty thing."

  Heidhin looked up. He trembled. "Yes, that and more than that. The goddess came to her and, and now she is Niaerdh's, she shall bear Niaerdh's wrath across the world."

  "What? At whom is the goddess angry?"

  "The folk of Romaburh!"

  "Why, what harm have they done?" In these distant parts.

  "They—they—No, this is too holy to speak of. Wait till you meet her. She will make you as wise as she deems needful."

  "This is asking much of me," Everard protested reasonably, as a practical-minded hobo would. "You say naught of what has happened aforetime, naught of whither you would fare or why, though you'd have me ward with my life a maiden who'll rouse lust in any rover, greed in any slaver—"

  Heidhin screamed. His sword flashed from the sheath. "You dare!" The blade whirred down.

  Drilled-in reflex saved Everard. He brought his spear aslant fast enough to block. Iron slammed deep. The seasoned ash did not quite break. Heidhin whipped the blade high again. Everard swept his weapon quarterstaff style. Mustn't kill him, he's alive in the future, and anyway he's just a kid—Impact thudded. The blow to the head would have knocked Heidhin woozy, had the shaft not snapped. As was, he lurched.

  "Hold off, you murderous lout!" Everard roared. Alarm and rage buzzed in his skull. What the hell is going on? "D'you want men for your girl or not?"

  Yowling, Heidhin sprang at him. This sword slash was weak, easily sidestepped. Everard dropped the spear, got in close, grasped the tunic, took the moving body on his hip, and sent Heidhin asprawl six feet away.

  The youth crawled to his feet. He fumbled for the knife at his belt. Got to end this. Everard delivered a karate kick to the solar plexus. He kept it mild. Heidhin doubled over, collapsed, lay heaving for breath. Everard hunkered down to make sure there was no serious damage or choking on vomit or any such thing.

  "Wat drommel—What is this?" Floris cried in dismay.

  Everard straightened. "I dunno," he answered dully, "except that somehow, in my ignorance, I touched the wrong, inflamed nerve. He must've been overwrought, maybe after days or weeks of brooding. He's very young, remember. Something I said or did triggered a hysterical break. In this culture, you know, among males, that's apt to take the form of a killing frenzy."

  "I don't suppose . . . you can . . . mend the situation."

  "Nope. Especially as precarious as the whole business is." Everard looked down the beach. Edh was a dwindled bit of fluttering darkness, half lost in the sea mist, into which she drifted onward. Wrapped in her dreams, or nightmares, or whatever they were, she had not noticed the fight. "I'd better clear out. The sailors will accept that I'm bewildered—true enough, huh?—but unwilling to cut Heidhin's throat while he's helpless, or chance him cutting mine later, or bother negotiating a reconciliation. He's nothing to me, I'll say, and walk off."

  He picked up his spearhead, as Maring would, and started in the direction of the ship. They'll be disappointed, he thought wryly. Gossip from afar is a rare treasure. Well, I'm spared rehashing that elaborate story we concocted.

  "Then we may as well go straight to Öland," said Floris, equally toneless.

  "Hm?"

  "Edh's home. The captain identified it unmistakably. It is a long, narrow island off the Baltic coast of Sweden. The city of Kalmar will be built opposite it. I was there once on holiday." The voice became wistful. "It was, will be, quite charming. Old windmills everywhere, ancient barrows, snuggled villages, and at either tip a lighthouse overlooking a sea where sailboats bob along—But that is then."

  "Sounds like a place I'd visit to visit myself," Everard said. "Then." Maybe. Depends on what memories I bring back from it now, nineteen hundred years earlier. He trudged on up the beach.

  13

  Hlavagast Unvod's son was king of the Alvarings. His wife was Godhahild. They dwelt in Laikian, the biggest thorp their tribe had, more than a score of houses within a wall of dry-laid stone. Around it reached heath, where on
ly sheep could thrive. Neither, though, could foemen fall on it without being seen from afar. The walk was short to the eastern strand, nor much longer to the western, and there timber grew. Southward, also, one soon found good grazing and cropland, which went for some ways before it came to its own shore.

  Once the Alvarings held all the Eyn, until Geats crossed over from the mainland and, in the course of lifetimes, overran the richer northern half. At last the Alvarings fought them to a standstill. Many among the Geats said the south was not worth taking; many among the Alvarings said the fear of Niaerdh had gripped them. The Alvarings still paid her as much worship as they did the Anses, or more, whereas the Geats gave the goddess only a cow in springtime. Be that as it may, since then the two tribes had done more trading than warring.

  Both had men who rowed cargoes over the sea to swap, as far as the Rugii southward or the Anglii westward. The Geats of the Eyn also held a yearly market at Kaupavik haven, which drew traffickers from widely about. To this, Alvarings brought their woolen goods, salt fish, sealskins, blubber oil, feathers and down, amber when a storm had left a hoard of it on their coast. Now and then a young man of theirs joined the crew of an outland ship; if he lived, he would come home with tales of strange countries.

  Hlavagast and Godhahild lost three children early on. Then he vowed that if Niaerdh saved those who came after, when the first of them had shed all its milk teeth he would give her a man—not the two thralls, usually old and sick, that she got when she had blessed the fields, but a hale youth. A girl was born. He named her Edh, Oath, to keep the goddess reminded. The sons for whom he hoped followed her.

 

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