CHAPTER TWO

The Fifth Winter

Saga stomped through the snow towards the harbour. She found the little longboat that her afi had made her on her last birthday, and climbed inside. Silvery fish slipped in and out of the ripples like fallen stars. A ring of mountains cradled the fjord, their steep walls of rock coated with snow. Here and there, an eagle cried out in the distance and the air was thick with salt. Saga propped her chin up on her arms as she watched the lantern-lit morning boats glide out of the harbour and into deeper, colder water, where the secret doorway through the magical shield lay. When they returned, the fisherfolk’s eyelashes would be frozen and their nets heaving with fish. Behind her, the wooden buildings of the village were cosy with firelight, but Saga’s mood was as gloomy as the black skies. Suddenly, her end of the little boat leaped up into the air. She held on to the wooden bench and laughed. ‘Bjørn!’

Her bear, now sitting on the other side of the boat, tilted his head to one side and cocked an ear, listening. ‘You nearly made me fall in!’ Saga continued before spotting her best friend, Dag, and waving at him. They’d become best friends the day that Dag had pulled a thorn out of Bjørn’s paw, and they’d had many adventures since, skating, sledding and exploring as far as they could under the shield.

He came over at once, wearing a giant hat that hid his black hair and kept falling down to his pink nose. ‘Saga, what are you doing down here?’

‘I fought with Afi,’ Saga told him glumly.

Bjørn whined. He could sense Saga’s moods and hated it when she was sad or upset.

Dag scrunched up his nose in sympathy. ‘Was it about the runes again?’

Saga nodded.

‘Don’t worry, you’ll make up. You always do.’ Dag gave her a reassuring smile. ‘Everyone’s skating up at the lake, do you want to go?’

Saga picked up her skates and vaulted over the side of the boat. Her leather boots had been waterproofed with fish oil so that she could splash through the shallow water without getting her feet wet. She picked up a torch that had been left, dug into the stones on the shoreline, still flaming bright. ‘Let’s go!’

Guided by the fiery torchlight, the two children rode Bjørn over the tundra, his paws crunching through glittering snow, until they reached a small lake on the outskirts of their village. Deep in the heart of a hundred fir trees, the lake was milky-white, its thick ice glistening. There, they strapped their bone skates to the soles of their boots and stepped on to the lake.

Bjørn sniffed distastefully at the ice, curling up at the side of the lake to keep a watchful eye on Saga and Dag as they found their skating feet.

Half the village seemed to be out on the lake, with a group of younger children playing nearby. One of them slipped and fell head over heels on the ice, making the others laugh. Saga leaped up, ready to rush over to help, until she saw the expression on the boy’s face. He wasn’t hurt, but a telltale blush was creeping up his cheeks. He shouted, ‘You won’t be laughing when I enter the contest, will you?’

The children dissolved into giggles again, and one girl stepped forward, rolling her eyes. ‘You, enter the contest? Now that I would like to see!’

The boy stood up and regained his balance on the ice. ‘Well, then you’ll love seeing me win and get all the magic in the land!’ He stuck out his tongue and the girl gave him a playful nudge.

Saga snorted. Dag gave her a curious look as the pair strayed out further from the torchlight, where the ice was as dark as the night sky.

‘What?’ Saga asked.

‘Do you know what year it is?’ Dag’s grey eyes shone brighter than moonlight. ‘It’s the Fifth Winter.’

‘Already?’ Saga frowned. Their village was one of many scattered around the north of Norvegr, but if you voyaged further still, across a perilous sea to the frozen islands in the Far North, you would find the sorcerers. According to legend, the sorcerers were so powerful that they crackled with magic, and their special magically forged tools were the only ones that could prise ice crystals out of the stone that was found deep down on their islands.

Pure, raw magic came from the Northern Lights, giving everyone who lived under its light magical abilities, but a long time ago a sorcerer had discovered that if you distilled the Northern Lights into an ice crystal, it would amplify the magic of whoever held the crystal, until ordinary people were nearly as powerful as a sorcerer. But when the sorcerers held one, they didn’t only wield incredible magic – they were like gods.

The sorcerers were meant to rule over the North, but Saga didn’t know anyone who had ever met a sorcerer. Each village had its own Jarl to keep things running smoothly and if there was a bigger problem the sorcerers sent down a couple of ice crystals. But the power of the crystals didn’t last long. Saga had only seen one ice crystal before – it was embedded in the hilt of her afi’s axe and it had run out of magic long ago, drained in battle. If you wanted more, you would have to enter the Fifth Winter.

The Fifth Winter was a contest the sorcerers held every five winters and the only way you were allowed inside their castle. The first fifty contestants to enter the doors were allowed to compete and the winner received a horn filled with ice crystals.

When Saga had asked Afi why the sorcerers hosted the Fifth Winter, he had told her that they were lazy rulers, and their contest was the one thing they did to keep everybody happy. After all, if you were promised the chance to win enough magic to make your wildest dreams come true, it would stop you moaning in a hurry. Saga had been sceptical of this, but Afi had just chortled and reminded her that most people liked magic.

‘Do you think they’ll enter?’ Saga grinned, gesturing at the children who were setting each other challenges on the other side of the lake, pretending that they were competing in the Fifth Winter.

‘You have to eat the most snow to win!’ one of the children shrieked, chasing the others with handfuls of snow.

Saga laughed as the smallest child managed to give their older sibling a face full of snow.

‘Saga, did you hear me?’

Saga shifted her attention back to her friend. ‘What?’

‘The Fifth Contest.’ Dag shifted on his skates, reluctantly meeting her eyes. ‘I think I might enter.’

Saga stared at him. Not too far away, Bjørn lifted his head, sensing her mood change.

‘You know I’m rubbish at rune-work,’ Dag continued. ‘I’ve got barely any magic running through my veins; winning that horn might be the only chance I get to wield some. Think what you could do with magic like that!’

Saga’s gaze rose to where her parents’ shield shimmered above them. ‘That much magic is too dangerous for one person,’ she said fiercely. Bjørn stood up and slowly began padding around the ice. If he could pounce on her bad thoughts, he would, but there were some things from which not even Bjørn could protect her. It always helped when he was close, though.

Dag fell silent.

Guilt bubbled in Saga’s stomach. ‘Are you really going to enter?’ she asked in a smaller voice.

‘Not this year,’ Dag said, and Saga blew out a sigh of relief. ‘But one year, I will.’ He spun on the ice to face Saga. ‘Not all magic is bad,’ he said carefully. ‘Your parents used their magic to save your life. To save our whole village.’

‘But if my mother was that powerful …’ Saga swallowed. If her mother’s magic was strong enough to kill, what if Saga had inherited the same magic?

Like Bjørn, Dag always seemed to know what Saga was thinking. ‘You don’t know if it was her magic or if she used an ice crystal,’ he reminded her.

Saga nodded, not trusting herself to speak. Her parents had met four Fifth Winters ago, when they’d both competed in the contest. Neither of them had won, but her mother had made it to the final challenge where she’d impressed a sorcerer enough to give her one ice crystal. A big lump wedged itself in Saga’s throat and she felt as if she was back there, hiding under the table, as that flash of silver light poured out from her parents – the last thing she could remember from that night. She shook her head as if she could shake the memory away.

‘You need to remember the good things as well as the bad,’ Dag said.

But Saga suddenly didn’t want to talk about it any more. ‘Race you to the other side!’ She pushed off with one skate and flew over the ice so fast she thought she might launch into the sky and soar over clouds and birds until her fingertips grazed against the stars and she’d left her sadness behind.

It was much, much later when Saga tiptoed back into her longhouse.

Her stomach growled louder than a bear, reminding her that dinner had been hours ago.

‘You’re late.’ Her afi sat before the fire, carving a small piece of wood. He didn’t look up. Again and again, his chisel flowed over the wood, summoning the true shape of the carving to the surface.

‘I’m sorry,’ Saga burst out, throwing her arms round him.

He patted her shoulder. ‘Now, now, what’s all this?’ he grunted. Saga sniffed back tears. Her afi pulled away and looked seriously at her before reaching out and rubbing his thumb under her eye. ‘Reckon we both could have handled this morning better,’ he told her. ‘It looks like you got more than my blue eyes – my temper’s in there too. Did I ever tell you the story of how I got my axe?’

Saga had heard the story several times before, but stories were like the stars; each time you encountered them, you learned them a little better until they became familiar old friends. She was settling in to listen, happy that all had been forgotten and they were back to normal, when her stomach snarled.

‘There’s food on the – ah,’ her afi said, and Saga twisted round just in time to see the platter of roasted meat vanishing into Bjørn’s mouth. ‘I think that was your punishment for keeping him from his dinner.’ Afi laughed, creaking to his knees and spearing a couple of slices of thick rye bread over the fire. When they were toasted, he handed them to Saga, dripping with golden butter. ‘Now, I was a young man when I got the notion to visit the elves’ smithy. It was said that they lived deep in the caves, several days’ travel south from here, where they worked red-gold into weapons that gleamed like stolen dragon scales.’

Saga devoured her toast, licking butter from her fingers as she listened. Bjørn curled up behind her as Saga settled in for the night. These were her favourite times – when she didn’t have to think about magic, the sorcerers, her supposed destiny or anything other than being cosy. She rested back against her bear, lying down on the handwoven rugs that warmed up their swept marl floor. The thick wall hangings gently fluttered as the fire made their little longhouse warm as toast, lulling Saga into a deep, dreamless sleep.