Cooking was a good idea. The witch had left sliced potatoes and a chunk of hare on her little counter, along with carrots and onions already in the pot. She’d even measured out her seasonings in a little bowl. It was going to be soup. Ajax finished the chopping, adding a few more potatoes to stretch the meal for two. A small fire was still burning inside the witch’s stove and Ajax quickly had it roaring again. He fried the meat and vegetables, added water, and brought it to a boil. Then he let the fire burn down and left the soup to simmer.
The work helped knock Ajax out of the daze he was in. This small, routine activity helped him feel grounded again, more like himself. He hadn’t wanted to lie down, though Hakon had been generous to suggest it. He’d just have replayed the death in his mind again and again if he had.
While the soup bubbled and the cottage filled with its smell, Ajax poked around. So much here reminded him of his father: the beautiful pottery, the delicate stained glass, the glazed tiles on the walls. Why the witch had made the hideous statues of men in pain he couldn’t guess, but sometimes Baba’s art didn’t make sense either.
The soup still needed a good hour when Hakon came back with a load of wood. Ajax babysat the soup while Hakon chopped the wood, but went outside to help him stack it. He didn’t offer to help carry the body and Hakon didn’t ask. Neither one of them wanted Ajax to throw up again.
When all was prepared, the two men stood silently next to the pyre. Hakon had been kind to him, uncharacteristically so. He was solicitous and appropriately somber. He’d healed him without needing to be asked, and tried to comfort him in his awkward way. It was rather touching, and that made it possible for Ajax to feel a little less horrified by the man he’d just seen commit a premeditated murder. He wanted a hug, badly, and a good cry too, but neither one of those was likely to happen. Instead he took a little affection, standing close to Hakon and leaning his head against one enormous arm.
“That was awful, Hakon,” he said quietly. “I’ve seen death before, but nothing like that. Never violent. Except for Alecto and her sons and you know that was very different.”
He had some things to get off his chest, but this wasn’t the time. After the body was disposed of, after they had food and hopefully his stomach stopped churning, then they could talk. For now, there was a task to see to.
“At home we bury the bodies on the beach at low tide, then the sea gods take them. Funerals are a big deal. When it’s an important man there’s feasting, racing, wrestling, music and poetry recitations. Sometimes it lasts days. What do you do here? Should we pray?”