Part 24 (2/2)

He left the smithy angrily and called to Grani, his proud horse. He mounted and rode on like the sweep of the wind.

Later he came to his mother's bower and stood before Hiordis. ”A greater sword must I have,” said he, ”than one that is made of metal dug out of the earth. The time has come, mother, when thou must put into my hands the broken pieces of Gram, the sword of Sigmund and the Volsungs.”

Hiordis measured him with the glance of her eyes, and she saw that her son was a mighty youth and one fit to use the sword of Sigmund and the Volsungs. She bade him go with her to the King's Hall. Out of the great stone chest that was in her chamber she took the beast's skin and the broken blade that was wrapped in it. She gave the pieces into the hands of her son. ”Behold the halves of Gram,” she said, ”of Gram, the mighty sword that in the far-off days Odin left in the Branstock, in the tree of the house of Volsung. I would see Gram new-shapen in thy hands, my son.”

Then she embraced him as she had never embraced him before, and standing there with her ruddy hair about her she told him of the glory of Gram and of the deeds of his fathers in whose hands the sword had shone.

Then Sigurd went to the smithy, and he wakened Regin out of his sleep, and he made him look on the s.h.i.+ning halves of Sigmund's sword. He commanded him to make out of these halves a sword for his hand.

Regin worked for days in his smithy and Sigurd never left his side. At last the blade was forged, and when Sigurd held it in his hand fire ran along the edge of it.

Again he laid the s.h.i.+eld that had the image of the Dragon upon it on the anvil of the smithy. Again, with his hands on its iron hilt, he raised the sword for a full stroke. He struck, and the sword cut through the s.h.i.+eld and sheared through the anvil, cutting away its iron horn. Then did Sigurd know that he had in his hands the Volsungs' sword. He went without and called to Grani, and like the sweep of the wind rode down to the River's bank. Shreds of wool were floating down the water. Sigurd struck at them with his sword, and the fine wool was divided against the water's edge. Hardness and fineness, Gram could cut through both.

That night Gram, the Volsungs' sword, was under his head when he slept, but still his dreams were filled with images that he had not regarded in the day time; the s.h.i.+ne of a h.o.a.rd that he coveted not, and the gleam of the scales of a Dragon that was too loathly for him to battle with.

[Ill.u.s.tration]

THE DRAGON'S BLOOD

Sigurd went to war: with the men that King Alv gave him he marched into the country that was ruled over by the slayer of his father. The war that he waged was short and the battles that he won were not perilous.

Old was King Lygni now, and feeble was his grasp upon his people. Sigurd slew him and took away his treasure and added his lands to the lands of King Alv.

But Sigurd was not content with the victory he had gained. He had dreamt of stark battles and of renown that would be hardily won. What was the war he had waged to the wars that Sigmund his father, and Volsung his father's father, had waged in their days? Not content was Sigurd. He led his men back by the hills from the crests of which he could look upon the Dragon's haunts. And having come as far as those hills he bade his men return to King Alv's hall with the spoils he had won.

They went, and Sigurd stayed upon the hills and looked across Gnita Heath to where Fafnir the Dragon had his lair. All blasted and wasted was the Heath with the fiery breath of the Dragon. And he saw the cave where Fafnir abode, and he saw the track that his comings and goings made. For every day the Dragon left his cave in the cliffs, crossing the Heath to come to the River at which he drank.

For the length of a day Sigurd watched from the hills the haunt of the Dragon. In the evening he saw him lengthening himself out of the cave, and coming on his track across the Heath, in seeming like a s.h.i.+p that travels swiftly because of its many oars.

Then to Regin in his smithy he came. To that cunning man Sigurd said:

”Tell me all thou dost know of Fafnir the Dragon.”

Regin began to talk, but his speech was old and strange and filled with runes. When he had spoken it all Sigurd said, ”All thou hast told me thou wilt have to say over again in a speech that is known to men of our day.”

Then said Regin: ”Of a h.o.a.rd I spoke. The Dwarf Andvari guarded it from the first days of the world. But one of the aesir forced Andvari to give the h.o.a.rd to him, ma.s.ses of gold and heaps of jewels, and the aesir gave it to Hreidmar, who was my father.

”For the slaying of his son Otter the aesir gave the h.o.a.rd to Hreidmar, the greatest h.o.a.rd that had ever been seen in the world. But not long was it left to Hreidmar to gloat over. For a son slew a father that he might possess that h.o.a.rd. Fafnir, that son was Fafnir, my brother.

”Then Fafnir, that no one might disturb his possession of the h.o.a.rd, turned himself into a Dragon, a Dragon so fearful that none dare come nigh him. And I, Regin, was stricken with covetousness of the h.o.a.rd. I did not change myself into another being, but, by the magic my father knew, I made my life longer than the generations of men, hoping that I would see Fafnir slain and then have the mighty h.o.a.rd under my hands.

”Now, son of the Volsungs, thou dost know all that has to do with Fafnir the Dragon, and the great h.o.a.rd that he guards.”

”Little do I care about the h.o.a.rd he guards,” Sigurd said. ”I care only that he has made the King's good lands into a waste and that he is an evil thing to men. I would have the renown of slaying Fafnir the Dragon.”

”With Gram, the sword thou hast, thou couldst slay Fafnir,” Regin cried, his body shaken with his pa.s.sion for the h.o.a.rd. ”Thou couldst slay him with the sword thou hast. Harken now and I will tell thee how thou mightst give him the deathly stroke through the coils of his mail.

Harken, for I have thought of it all.

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