All the inhabitants of Villmark agreed: this was the warmest and sunniest spring any of them could recall. I had missed out on almost the entire month of April, having spent it far in the north where the weather hadn"t been quite so mild.
But I had been in Villmark for weeks now. It was the middle of May, but it felt much closer to Midsummer than that. The sun was only halfway up the sky as I stood outside the council hall, but it was almost too warm on my shoulders. A few puffy clouds skittered across the sky, steering well clear of the sun"s path.
The public gardens behind me were filling the air with the smell of growing things. Fallen apple tree blossoms from the orchard covered the cobblestoned road like snow, and the smell as the breeze or some passing feet stirred them up was more apple than flower.
I had a sudden craving for apple butter. Apple butter smeared on my grandmother"s waffles.
I hadn"t had those waffles in months. I missed being in the same house with her, but she had insisted that Villmark needed me close by. And that she needed to remain in the lonely cabin overlooking the shores of Lake Superior. A nearly two-hour walk separated us. I didn"t make that journey as often as I should, I knew.
But she was making it today. Because I had asked her to be there with me when I talked to the council.
I fussed with my new dress yet again. The last time I had been called to stand before the council, I had opted for the traditional garb of Villmarker women: a sheathe-like dress with an over-sized apron and soft leather shoes, all in sedate shades of blue and white.
But my grandmother had insisted the time had come for me to dress the part I played as the village volva. This meant a far fancier dress of alternating sections of red and green with white sleeves so long they touched the ground when I had my hands at my sides. A golden brooch carved like a cat with tiny emerald eyes was pinned to my breast. It had belonged to my grandmother"s grandmother, although it gleamed so brightly it wasn"t showing a bit of its actual age.
My bronze wand was tucked into a loop in my belt, which also had a golden buckle fashioned to look like a cat.
At least the soft leather shoes were the same. But all together, I felt very out of place standing in the street between the council hall doors and the public gardens. Most of the Villmarkers around me were wearing lightweight leggings and short-sleeved shirts of a simple, almost T-shirt-like design. A few of them were even wearing clothes from the modern world: actual T-shirts with logos on them and faded jeans with sneakers.
Ironic, really, that I would feel like I was the anachronistic one, that I was the one completely out of sync. I was from that modern world, after all. I had grown up there. I hadn"t even known Villmark existed until less than a year before.
And yet here I was, standing among the actual descendants of a tribe of Vikings who had fled Old Norway for the shores of Lake Superior far longer ago than even when Leif Erikson had reached Vinland.
But that was thanks to my ancestress, Torfa, who had used powerful magic to save her people. I, as her descendant, was meant to have my own measure of her power.
I wasn"t always sure I did.
But the outfit did help.
did "Greetings, Ingrid!" my grandmother called as she turned the corner from the main north-south road through Villmark and strolled towards me.
She was looking better than I"d seen her in ages, bright color to her now rounder cheeks, a surer gait to her walk. I would swear her long, silver braid was thicker and more lustrous than before.
Maybe it was just the kindness of the sunlight.
Or maybe it was just the side effects of dressing up.
Because she, too, was dressed in bright colors, in her case deep purple and a shade of blue to rival the skies above us. No wand was thrust through her golden belt, but she had added ribbons and long strips of soft fur to her staff.
I blinked. It had never occurred to me that her walking stick was for anything besides walking. But now that I saw it in her hands while she was dressed like a volva of old, I knew full well that it was a magical tool. No wonder she carried it everywhere.
I wondered when I would get one. But I had a wand already that I barely understood the use of.
One thing at a time.
"Ingrid?" my grandmother said, and I realized I had never answered her greeting. "Are you really that worried?"
"About meeting the council? No," I said.
"You still feel that darkness?" my grandmother said to me. Her tone was like a doctor checking a patient for symptoms.
"Yes. All the time," I said with a shudder. The sun might be blazing down hot and bright on the village around us, but my heart felt a cold darkness lingering just out of sight, but waiting to descend on all of us.
"No dreams?"
"No," I said, trying not to sound impatient. We"d had this conversation before. My answers never changed. "And I haven"t seen any runes calling to me through my art, although I"ve been sketching every day. But I know something is looming over all of us. I know I"m not imagining it."
knowMy grandmother nodded gravely, but before she could answer, the double doors of the council hall swung open. No one stood there in the doorway, but my grandmother gave me a single reassuring smile, then led the way up the few stone steps and into the shadowy hall interior.
I had been inside before, but the sudden transition from bright sunlight to perpetual darkness was always jarring. As soon as we were inside, the doors were closed behind us. I could hear someone"s leather shoes shuffling over the flagstones, but my sun-dazzled eyes couldn"t make out even a shadow of a figure.
My grandmother tugged at my elbow, and I followed her down the center of the room towards the raised dais on the far side. Three simple stools—each just three crossed wooden supports tucked into the pockets at the corners of a triangular piece of worn leather—were evenly distributed across that dais, all empty now. Behind the stools were the pillars that told the story of Villmark, dark, rich wood that was densely carved with figures arriving in a ship, harvesting food, meeting the local Ojibwe.
I had not yet gotten a good look at those pillars, although I very much wanted to. But the older pillars, the ones Torfa had brought over with her people from Old Norway, I knew well.
They were in my house just a short walk away.
A single bronze brazier stood in the center of the room, the smell of burning pine sharp in the air as we passed it. The smoke curled up, disappearing beyond the rafters carved with likenesses of snakes and wolves twisting among more abstract knot-work patterns. That wood was old, the pillars almost devoid of their former carvings after being touched by so many hands over the years.
But the thatching that formed the roof was new, just replaced this spring. It still had a green smell to it that mixed with that burning pine smell to tickle my nose.
My grandmother stopped where the flagstones at the base of the dais had been worn down into shallow bowls by the knees of generations of previous supplicants. She shook her head at my offer of help, easing herself down on her knees with only the aid of her staff. Then she settled there, feet tucked beneath her, staff still standing tall. A breeze I didn"t quite feel was stirring the ribbons ever so slightly.
I knelt down beside her, smoothing my dress over my thighs then folding my hands on my lap, prepared for however long the council would keep us waiting.
But the curtain behind the dais rustled almost at once, and the three council members came out together. First was Valki, father of the five young men everyone called the Thors. My time away from Villmark, the one that had caused me to miss all the fine spring weather, had been a rescue mission. A successful one; his sons were back among us now. And Valki, who had started to look his age when they were all missing, was recovering nicely now that they were back. Better eating and exercise had bulked up his hard muscle again, and time in the sun rather than sitting by the ancestral fire in its cave under Villmark had brought the color back to his face.
But the black hair he wore tightly pulled back was shot through with more strands of silver than before. That probably wouldn"t improve with time.
Behind Valki came Brigida. Her hair had been all silver as long as I"d known her, and she wore it today in her usual elaborate crown braid. I had no idea how long it would be if she wore it down, but that braid wrapped around her head at least three times. She took her customary seat at the middle stool, crossed her legs and folded her beringed hands over her knee.
She didn"t quite smile down at me, but her eyes were more friendly than they had been the last time I had knelt before her. Valki wasn"t the only one who was looking at me differently now that I had come home with the missing Thors.
I didn"t need the outfit to feel it. Everyone in Villmark just saw me as the volva now, my grandmother"s successor, despite my unconventionally modern upbringing.
I just had to make sure I earned that respect. I couldn"t let these people down. And with my paltry skills with magic, that was an all too likely occurrence.
But the third man to emerge from the gap in the curtains was my best hope at mastering those skills. Haraldr was my mentor in all things my grandmother couldn"t teach me about magic. She had the practical skills, no doubt about it. But Haraldr had studied more texts than most people even ever read in a lifetime. He knew more about runes and the old ways than anyone else in Villmark.
Although lately I had gotten the sense that others lurked in the hidden places outside the village, where pockets of other worlds had gotten tangled together. Others who might have more knowledge. But I doubted they could be trusted as teachers, if they were even open to such things.
Haraldr was leaning on his staff even more heavily than my grandmother had on hers. But he, too, waved away any offer of help, preferring to rely on that staff as he slowly eased down onto the stool. The sparse white hairs that hovered halo-like around his sun-damaged old scalp were stirring in the same unfelt breeze that danced through the ribbons on my grandmother"s staff.
"We are here at your request, Nora Torfudottir," Brigida said when Haraldr had given her a nod that he was settled. "Is this in regards to the fate of your mead hall?"
"No, I"m afraid not," my grandmother said. "I am doing much better than previously, but I still need more time before I will be ready to take up that responsibility once more."
"Time, and permission from us, both," Brigida said, raising an eyebrow significantly.
"Of course," my grandmother said with a smile.
As if they both didn"t know full well that when my grandmother was ready, that hall would be open for business, whatever the council had to say about it.