clenching my mind on the words of the dragon, then, helpless as
always, I went down. The wind howled, piling up snow in drifts and
blinding the night with ice-white dust. I walked bent over against the
cold, protecting my eyes with my arms. Trees, posts, cowsheds loomed
into my vision, then vanished, swallowed in white. When I came near
Hart, I could smell the guards of the hall all around me, but I
couldn't see them--nor, of course, could they see me. I went straight
to the wall, plunging through drifts to my knees, and pressed up
against it for its warmth. It trembled and shook from the noise
inside. I bent down to the crack I'd used before and watched.
She was brighter than the hearthfire, talking again with her family
and friends, observing the antics of the bear. It was the king, old
Hrothgar, who carried the meadbowl from table to table tonight. He
walked, dignified, from group to group, smiling and filling the
drinking cups, and you'd have sworn from his look that never until
tonight had the old man been absolutely happy. He would glance at his
queen from time to time as he moved among his people and hers, the
Danes and Helmings, and with each glance his smile would grow warmer
for a moment, and a thoughtful look would come over his eyes. Then it
would pass--some gesture or word from a guest or one of his Scylding
thanes--and he would be hearty, merry: not false, exactly, but less
than what he was at the moment of the glance. As for the queen, she
seemed not to know he was there. She sat beside her brother, her hand
on his arm, the other hand on the arm of a shriveled old woman,
precious relative. The bear sat with his feet stuck out, playing with
his penis and surveying the hall with a crotchety look, as if dimly
aware that there was something about him that humans could not
approve. The Helming guests all talked at once, eagerly, constantly,
as if squeezing all their past into an evening. I couldn't hear what
they said. The hall was a roar--voices, the clink of cups, the shuffle
of feet. Sometimes Wealtheow would tip back her head, letting her
copper-red hair fall free, and laugh; sometimes she listened, head
cocked, now smiling, now soberly pursing her lips, only offering a
nod. Hrothgar went back to his high, carved chair, relinquishing the
bowl to the noblest of his thanes, and sat like an old man listening
inside his mind to the voices of his childhood. Once, for a long
moment, the queen looked at him while listening to her brother, her
eyes as thoughtful as Hrothgar's. Then she laughed and talked again,
and the king conversed with the man on his left; it was as if their
minds had not met. Later that night they passed a harp--not the old
Shaper's instrument, no one touched that--and the queen's brother
sang. He was no artist, with either his fingers or his throat, but all
the hall was silent, listening. He sang, childlike except for the
winter in his gray eyes, of a hero who'd killed a girl's old father
out of love of the girl, and how the girl after that had both loved
and hated the hero and finally had killed him. Wealtheow smiled, full
of sorrow, as she listened. The bear irritably watched the dogs. Then
others sang. Old Hrothgar watched and listened, brooding on dangers.
(The queen's brother had straw-yellow hair and eyes as gray as slate.
Sometimes when he stole a glance at Hrothgar, his face was a knife.)
Toward morning, they all went to bed. Half buried in snow, the deadly
cold coming up through my feet, I kept watch. The queen put her hand