Friday 31 December 2021

DANCING TO THE SINGING OF THE WIND

 


 He was drowning. 

        Trapped beneath the ice he hammered desperately with bleeding fists at the frozen sheet above his head, while above the ice the grotesque face of the Mistletoe Man looked down upon him, revelling in his plight with demonic glee 

       He could hold his breath no longer and exhaled, waiting in terror for the lake to enter his lungs, but even as he took breath the ice above him shattered, his head broke the lake’s surface, and he found himself, sweat soaked, trembling, but relieved, lying on his bunk in the cabin. But the sight of Deakin’s sheet-enshrouded body on the other bunk immediately jolted him back to frightening reality.

       The stench from the corpse was unbearable, and had seemingly fused with the palpable presence of the evil that had taken Deakin’s life; the evil that he himself had glimpsed on Christmas Eve, watching him from high in a lakeside oak. At first he had thought it a trick of the light, shadows flickering in the winter gloom, but a second glance revealed the devilish face leering down as if from within the mistletoe itself. It was gone in a moment, but had filled him with incomprehensible fear.

     Back at the cabin, he had found Deakin, demented, and raving deliriously about the Mistletoe Man. Deakin had lain in delirium all Christmas Day and three days more and, as a bitter gale raged around the cabin, had died in torment, in vain begging the Mistletoe Man to spare his immortal soul. He knew then that he was in danger and must leave the cabin, but to venture into the gale would have been suicidal.
           

       But now, on New Year’s Eve, the gale had eased, so gathering his rifle and his few belongings, he lit the oil lamp and, as he left the cabin, turned and hurled it at Deakin’s body, engulfing it in flames.

    Cresting the long rise beyond the cabin, he stopped, and watched as flames and smoke belched from its roof; flames and smoke in which he fancied he saw the Mistletoe Man, writhing in fury, a swirling mass of orange, red and black.

            Frightened, he hurried through the forest, far from the lake and the burning cabin and in to strange and unknown country. He knew that he must find shelter and warmth before nightfall and pressed on purposefully through the morning and long in to the afternoon. And through all the day he saw not a living thing, nor heard a bird, but all the time the wind pursued him, rustling and sighing through the trees, as if encouraging him on his way.

            Daylight was fading when he emerged from the forest, to find himself once more beside an ice-bound lake. Before him was a cabin, smoke curling from its chimney in to the darkening sky, while outside, muffled against the cold, a woman worked, splitting logs upon a block with a long-handled axe. She saw him and put down the axe, waiting his approach.

            She was a fine-looking woman, tall and strong, and with a dark beauty that blended, somehow, with the forest. She did not seem surprised by his arrival and her strange green eyes, the colour of spring-fresh leaves, seemed to be looking deep inside him.

        “I have been expecting you. Welcome to my home.”

          He was confused. “You knew I was coming? How can that be? I didn‘t know of you, nor of this place.”

       She smiled. “There is nothing that happens in the forest of which I do not know. There are many messengers among the trees; no news that the wind does not share, or that the lake does not carry in its hidden currents. Word of your mortal peril reached me yesterday, and I asked the wind to guide you safely here.”  

   He knew then that the woman was not of his world, but was something mystical, a sprite perhaps, a goddess even. And he realised, with feelings of both apprehension and euphoria, that he was powerless in her presence.

           Taking his arm, she guided him into her cabin where a log fire was burning in the stone fireplace. After the bitter cold of his journey the room was warm and welcoming and two comfortable chairs were set beside a low oak table, which was laden with bread, cheeses, preserves and a jug of wine.

       “Sit now, and eat,” she said. “The fare is wholesome, and the wine refreshing.  You will be tired and hungry from your journey, and bewildered that I know so much about you.”

      “I am bewildered,” he admitted. “So much is happening that I do not understand. Who are you,  that you know so much about my troubles?”

        She took the chair beside him, poured wine in to earthen mugs and bade him drink.

         “My name is Hulder,” she said, “and the forest is my home. The forest dwellers are my family, my friends and my protection, and provide for all my needs.  Nothing happens in the forest of which I am not aware, nothing that I cannot control.

      “Who are these forest dwellers?” he asked. “I saw no evidence of human habitation on my way here. Do you live here alone?”

      “I have no human friends,” she said, “although sometimes someone strays from the outside, as you have done, and keeps me company for a while. But I am not lonely. The animals and birds are my companions, the trees my watchful neighbours, the wind and water my messengers. But tell me now of your journey here. I know only of your danger, but little of what led to it.

         So he told her of how he had glimpsed the Mistletoe Man in the forest and how the Mistletoe Man had stolen Deakin’s soul; of the brooding evil that had pervaded the cabin and his fears for his own safety that had caused him to flee.

        “I know of the Mistletoe Man,” said Hulder. “He is an evil wraith who steals the souls of all who trespass in his forest world. He is capricious and unpredictable and will be angry that you have escaped him and found sanctuary with me. But now,” she said “we must celebrate your deliverance.  Tonight the old year dies, and the creatures of the forest will celebrate the coming of the new. You must eat now and rest a while and then we will go together to join the forest festival.”

      Later, wrapped warm against the night, he and Hulder left the cabin. She took his arm and pressed tight against him, as they walked beside the lake and he marvelled that someone so unworldly could feel so warm, so human, excite so much desire within him, and dared to wonder what delights the night might hold. 

     As they walked along the shore a full moon filled the sky, reflecting brilliantly upon the ice-cloaked lake. The forest had come alive with mysterious shapes and shadows, but with Hulder at his side he felt no fear. The wind had now joined their progress, whispering gently before gathering force towards a wild crescendo, singing in celebration, while unseen pan-pipes played exotic melodies. 

      The excitement of the wind’s song intoxicated him. Roughly, he took Hulder in his arms and, carried along by the irresistible urgency of the music, he spun her around in exultation, laughing at the joy and passion in her face.

      He had lost control now, dancing frenziedly, conscious that the forest shadows had joined the dance and were circling them, around and above, in ever-changing patterns of light and shade. Laughing, Hulder broke from his arms and danced away, beckoning him to follow, but as he did so the shadows closed around him, blocking her from his sight. The wind still sang, encouraging him onwards; but Hulder had gone, and the shadows, too, now melted away and he realised, too late, that his pursuit of her had taken him, alone, far on to the ice-covered lake.

   Panic-stricken, he turned towards the shore, but as he did so the ice beneath him cracked and parted and he plunged in to the lake and was swept beneath the ice. Briefly, he struggled in disbelieving rage as his helpless soul was torn, screaming, from his body, while above him, Hulder and the Mistletoe Man whirled in unison, dancing to the singing of the wind.











 









 

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