This is part 2 of a tale published in 3 parts and is not meant to be a stand-alone story.
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Guthredd Sleeve-heart's tale (or the Circle of Hearts): Part 2
Now we must tell of the childhood of Guthredd.
Jofrid took the role of Mother to Guthredd and taught her the secret meaning in things that Guthredd might have a father in all of nature.
So Guthredd grew strong and healthy on the middle islet of the Sound and grew to love the enchantress Jofrid who nursed her in a cavern, and grew to love the linnets singing and the warble of the thrush as though they were her father's voice.
Of the deal betwixt Fox and Thorarna, Jofrid spoke not a word, telling Guthredd only that Guthredd's life had already been sung.
The child Guthredd smiled at this and likened the drawing of spirits by enchanted song to a song of her life.
Jofrid did not tell Guthredd that she had not drawn the singing spirit, but the spirit had been drawn to Guthredd's birth.
Guthredd knew no other person than Jofrid throughout her childhood and loved her much. She heard of the passing of the farmer called Sigfrid and Jofrid took her to the burial.
And she heard of the old whore who kept her farm with saucy coinage to the King's fee-taker.
Her days were spent amongst the wild things of the heath or learning of housekeeping and playing. As she grew older, Jofrid passed on the ways of song to draw the spirits and many other secrets of enchantment.
And always would Guthredd ask to hear again the tale of the broken iron sword that was kept wrapped in calf-skin within the cavern and Jofrid would tell her that the sword was called 'fail-sword' because love had failed once and so a man had taken his life with the sword. But also that 'fail-sword' would be re-forged and Guthredd would take vengeance for that very need for 'fail sword'.
Guthredd's heart would sing at hearing the story and she would spend hours amongst the bracken and the peat, brandishing some small stick and imagining her destiny.
Guthredd was not lonely for she had no other child to compare and Guthredd was not lonely for she had all the wild creatures as her friends.
And it is said Guthredd was also not lonely for the comfort of the tattooed face upon her arm that betimes would talk to her, and that the tattooed face upon her arm writhed and slipped about her flesh when it whispered to Guthredd and that the tattoo tutored Guthredd in great swordplay.
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Nothing is reported for the full turning of nineteen seasons until one day the young woman Guthredd, grown strong and beautiful as an elk, walked along the shore and espied a forty-oar boat coming across the Sound.
When Guthredd saw the boat have to in the haven of the middle islet of the sound, it is said that the tattooed face whispered to Guthredd of her real kin and of the pact with Fox.
Guthredd followed the fee-taker Fox and his armed men up the winding cliff path, and making from tree, to bush, to wall, did creep unseen to Antler's farm.
Thorarna gave the men good welcome, offering milk and bowls of curds and apologising for having no wine to offer.
"It is not wine we come for." Fox said.
His courtly apparel, brightly coloured and gilded with gold, and the bright helms of the soldiers seemed asquint and off kilter amidst the dearth and squalor of the farmstead. The home-field lay abandoned to weeds and both land and chattels were bared waste so that the King's men could nowise find fee.
"It seems, whore, that thou art as your land and chattel; barren and cheap. There is no saucy coinage left in our pact. You must pay the King's fee."
Thorarna knelt before Fox, her aged knees striking hard on the mud floor, and kissed the brocaded hem of Fox's tunic. She begged that Fox might uphold the pact and when she saw that Fox would not be persuaded, said;
'My clothes are poor and it does not worry me if I do not wear them out'
Quaffing curds and milk at the farmstead table, Fox kicked Thorarna away and bid the men take fee of what they could find. Then finishing his meal, Fox wiped his wormy lip upon his sleeve and ran Thorarna through with a spear.
From Thorarna's limp arm, Fox helped himself to the gold upper arm ring that Sigfrid had gifted to Thorarna on her wedding day.
Guthredd's peepers espied the death of Thorarna through a hole of Steiner's crafty making and she fled across the heath to her home in the cavern.
She found the cavern aglow from the pool of brackish water and a shrewish voice singing out:
"Guthredd harkens to her heart
And well she hears; and it is hers."
Nowhere could Guthredd find Jofrid but of the blade 'fail-sword' did she find whole again but damascening. Now was Guthredd for taking vengeance, but the tattooed face slipped across the flesh of her arm and gave rede:
"The fox is in the hole and will not be leaving before he can take fee of each farmstead. Wait until night and make a burning of the farmstead that your deed be of great renown, for many are the King's men you would have to overcome ere you run through the wily fox."
Guthredd saw that the rede was good and prepared kindling for the burning of the King's men in Antler's farm and also sat a carving.
And in the cloak of darkness, Guthredd and Jofrid made use of the path along the cliffs to carry their bundles of kindling over the heath to Antler's farmstead.
The farmstead was quiet and all inside asleep as the two women laid the kindling where it would take to beams and doorframes the quickest.
At the back door Jofrid sang that the spirits might make a barring of the threshold so that none may pass over and into the home-field, but of the front door Guthredd would not have this for she wanted 'fail-sword' to screech in Fox's wound.
The fires were lit and took quickly to the old wood of the farmstead, burning bright and bold and red so that people on the mainland wandered at the happenings on the middle islet of the sound that night.
And now the King's men were roused by the crackling of wood and the burning heat, and some made for the back door and stood frozen saying;
"There is a barring of the threshold that none may pass over" and made turn for the front door.
Now at the front door had Guthredd placed a shame pole and the shame carving upon the pole told of all Fox's secret doings upon the middle islet of the Sound that the king's men night know why they die.
Inside the farmstead fire took well to the wood, collapsing beams so that the Kings men made for the front door and, reading their last boon upon the shame pole, met their death wound from Guthredd, taken as she was, with the berserk.
Last, because most a-feared, did Fox come to the door with his wormy lip suppliant in it's grovelling for a pardon and seeing again the tattooed face upon the bare arm of the woman, he was again assayed with the creeping willies.
Fox knelt and kissed the hem of Guthredd's tunic, but with slight of hand removed his patch from his evil eye so that Guthredd was accursed ere she could cover Fox's hideous eye with a calf-skin bag.