© 1997 Michael C. Rudasill 




Stories are told about the great Sea Kings
Who braved bitter strife in the years of our elders;
The sons of the Mighty, not once drawing back,
Their blood-whetted swords stirring war's Phyrric pitch.

Dreaded in battle, the Sea Kings of old
Poured molten death upon ashen-faced strangers
And built to the heavens goodfires of conquest
That sent crimson sparks dancing upward in triumph!

Spent weapons, once wielded by valorous princes,
fed fires that feasted on spear shaft and helmet.
Brasen shields, throbbing hot, swooned in weak, fevered fealty
To gush flaming streams down their pyres of joy.
Burning steel sifted through ruby fingers of flame
To find rest in the earth with shieldbearer and thane.

The greatest of Healf-Scylfs, the chief of their kind,
King Vigmarr grew strong in the land of the Sea Kings.
He hunted the hills of the harsh mountain coastlands
And waxed great in wisdom, in honor and strength.

Hope melted like wax before Vigmarr's dread hosts
As if breathed on by fire, and the strength
Of his victims poured out with their lives
Into the waterways, mingled with burnings.
Detritus of kingdoms, bones, ashes, and blood,
Slid to the sea with the dust of their dreams.

Holding by hand the young and the helpless
Vigmarr sheltered the weak and encouraged the strong;
Leading his hosts to the homelands of strangers,
He conquered strong kings to make sport with their crowns.

Many a good night was spent in the mead hall
Recounting his battles in light's golden glow.
Lulled by the warmth, safe from the howling
As snow-billows roared on the ocean of night,
The mighty men rested within the fair haven:
Moored to the food-board, full-stocking their mead-holds,
They took weighty ballast, shared in his abundance.
A generous man and a good king was he!

No valiant earl wanted for armor or gems
When Ingeld's son, Vigmarr, shared treasure and mead.


- Chapter 1 -

Pitch and Battle 

        The arrow hissed past his ear like an angry snake, a slender sliver of death that flashed through his field of vision before exploding against a cliff, far ahead. The impact struck bright sparks from the stone, a brief, burning blossom that flared for an instant and was gone, lost in the dense forest shadows.
        A wisp of smoke drifted from the site of impact, slowly uncurling in the pale spray of sunbeams that sifted through the tall forest canopy. The smoke lingered in the air, at rest in the pale incense of springtime.
        The rider raced his pony with tumultuous abandon, oblivious to the glories of nature. Standing in the stirrups, crouching low, he focused intently on the trail ahead.
        The beauty of the day contrasted sharply with the deadly business at hand. Awash in clear morning light, the forest exuded the delicate scent of musty earth watered by clouds of clean white snow, the evergreen tang of amber resin, smoky flint, and a translucent shimmer of vapor at rest in a column of light.
        The frantic hoofbeats grew louder, pressing hard against the silence. The thin thread of smoke - offspring of iron and stone - stretched luxuriously in the rippling rays of dusty luminance.
        The horseman ripped through the smoke in heedless disarray, hurtling past the sheer rock wall in a fine frenzy of urgency. He drove his horse recklessly, at the limit of his ability in a desperate dash at breakneck speed along the steep slope.
        Ancient trees towered high above the rider and his magnificent mountain pony. A dense carpet of needles cushioned the perilous, rock-strewn terrain over which they breathlessly surged, an explosion of haste in the midst of the still and solemn forest cathedral.
        The young horseman heard the distant blast of his father's war horn ringing through the valley, answered by the muffled, throaty cries of the bandits. The noises echoed through the haze, mingling with the scent of the dew, the thud of hooves and the harsh hiss of his ragged breathing. Hearing the horn, he remembered the ambush.
        "Run!" his father had cried, and like an obedient son, he had obeyed. He had whipped his pony's flank and sprung away in a dead run, seized by a surge of terror that had surprised and overwhelmed him - even though, from a child, he had dreamed of heroic splendor. His brave plans had disappeared when the moment of truth had come.
        The horseman veered to the right, rushing dizzily down the steep mountain slope, testing the limits of the gifted pony's sure footing and leaving a heavy cloud of dust in his wake. A cruel black arrow hissed past his ear and bit deeply into an ancient tree that he hurtled past without a pause. He heard the cries growing closer now, heard the throaty shouts as his pursuers called to one another in a harsh, unmelodic dialect.
        Their horses must be fresh, he thought, and an unbidden idea suddenly flashed through his mind. It was wild, it was desperate, but he had little to lose.
        Far below him, a great blast from his father's war horn soared above the rocks and trees, filling the distant reaches of the vast, open valley. King Vigmarr was leading the party south, hoping to lure them away from his son.
        If you had been there that day, on a mountainside high above the trees, you would have seen the young rider as he darted across a clearing on his slender chestnut mount. If you had tarried beneath the rim of the valley, meditating in the hush of the solemn, ancient woods, your meditations would have been abruptly shattered by the sudden crash and clamor as he fled past, a bright, fleeting vision of pre-medieval Norse nobility, his blond braids whipping behind him, brass helm low, face peering intently ahead around his horse's neck as he thundered past and was gone.
        His name was Gunnar-val, and today was his seventeenth birthday.



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"Jewel of the Mind," a work of Christian historical fiction, recounts the saga of young Norse prince and his struggle for redemption.