03 June 2026
“Fuck
my life,”
Jonah wheezed, his voice drowned and forgotten in the subarctic gusts cascading
over the tightrope-thin ridge that, according to locals, was the easiest path
to the mountain’s summit. Looking down at the serrated, viciously eroded slope of the
ravine they’d just scaled – still peppered with the dirty gray corpses of the last spring snows – he couldn’t imagine a more difficult route.
“Crazy ass Icelanders,” he said to himself, adjusting the hood of the
too-thin parka he’d bought four days earlier in Reykjavík.
Ragnar
trotted a couple dozen meters ahead. Every minute or so, as the trail had gotten
steeper, he’d stopped to make sure his client was keeping pace, to flash that
same stupid gap-toothed grin at Jonah, his white-blond ponytail flailing like
the tail of an annoyingly eager puppy that’s worn out its welcome but still wants attention. How the seemingly
late-middle-aged man wasn’t brutally hungover after the previous night’s idiocy
was as much of a mystery to Jonah as the reason for their climb.
Now, as they
approached what looked like the toughest incline they’d encountered so far,
Ragnar swiveled, shouted something that sounded like summit (Jonah
hoped), and scrambled spider-like the rest of the way up, quickly disappearing
over the top of a massive, tabletop-shaped outcropping.
Ten minutes later, after
a far less nimble ascent, choking on the fumes of Brennivín, synthetic bourbon,
and god knew what else leaking from his pores, Jonah saw that they were, in
fact, at the top of Spákonufell. A volcanically flattened, moss-covered
plateau, where, a semi-lucid Ragnar had explained during their debauched
marathon at the café, a sorceress called Þordis used to hike every day 1,000
years earlier. Apparently, she’d also buried a treasure somewhere on the
mountain, one that could only be discovered by a non-baptized woman. The only
thing Jonah could think about, as the burning sensation slowly dissipated from
his legs, was how impressive Þordis’s calves must have been.
Ragnar
was perched on a nearby boulder, typing something on his phone. He looked up,
the perma-grin already stretched across his too-smooth cheeks.
“You
look tired, Mr. Overhill,” he said, vaguely incredulous. “I hope this wasn’t
too much for you to handle. Perhaps we should go through another round of
diagnostics before Thursday?”
“It’s
fine,” Jonah said, reaching into his backpack for a water bottle.
Ragnar
motioned at the thick layer of pillowy vegetation suffocating most of the
nearby rocks. “Normally we would tell people not to sit or lie down on the
moss,” he said, “because once disturbed it won’t grow back for maybe 70 years.
But if you need to take a, what is it, a breather, please be my guest. It’s
really quite comfy. And by the time we plan on bringing you back, it’ll be –”
He
was cut off by his own obnoxious ringtone – “Live Like You Were Dying” by Tim
McGraw. Was that meant to be some kind of ironic joke between Ragnar and his
coworkers at the lab? Did people in Iceland actually listen to Tim McGraw?
Ragnar looked at the
screen, shook his head. “Sorry, I need to take this.”
Jonah grunted and shuffled
past him, leaving a trail of semi-permanent footsteps in the moss. Looming
toward the western edge of the tabletop was a large and clearly unnatural stone
formation that had built to look like an altar, where a shoddily made treasure
chest had been placed, clearly a nod to the sorceress whose odd influence was
still so deeply felt in the town below. A sequence of images from the café suddenly
flashed in Jonah’s mind: the woman who ran the prophetess museum, her
unnerving, coal-black glare, the paper she’d slipped him. Taking a deep breath,
he shook off the sudden chill that had begun to creep up his sweat-drenched
spine.
The farther he
walked, the more the view opened. He could see the upper slopes of the mountain
and several neighboring peaks, the impenetrable basalt and rugged gravel
cascading down to gentler hills rippling in the sunlight, bursting with purple
lupine, alpine bistort, and reindeer lichen. And farther down, the hyper-green
jigsaw of fields where horses grazed lazily and sheep with red and green
markings on their backs nursed pairs of greedy newborns. Then the red and beige
corrugated roofs of Skagaströnd’s tiny suburban sprawl, the smoky blue Arctic
Ocean leading to nowhere.
Maybe that was why
Ragnar had suggested they take the hike. To give Jonah one last glimpse at what
he would be giving up. To feel the heat in his muscles, the wind against his
flesh, the intoxicating briny aroma of the sea, while there was still time for
him to change his mind.
He
couldn’t deny that it was beautiful, outrageously so. But as he squinted for a
more detailed assessment of the town – the ghostly harbor and shuttered fish
processing plant, the community center that had been rebuilt as a refuge for
those smart (or lucky) enough to get visas before the quarantines in Brooklyn
and Miami, the upside-down American flag flying outside it – he had never been
more certain of anything in his life.
In a
little less than 24 hours, his body would die. His brain would be extracted and
embalmed, kept in hyperbaric slumber in the sterile basement of the BioPol
laboratory until… He didn’t really know. He hadn’t paid much attention to most
of the emails Ragnar had been sending him for months, the dozens of forms he’d
signed, the endless biometrics.
But whether he awoke
from the cocoon into some wildly distant, unanticipated new reality or didn’t
wake up at all, it didn’t matter. Anything – or nothing – would be an
undeniable improvement over the last three years.
“Mr. Overhill,”
Ragnar said, suddenly inches away.
Jonah flinched,
tripped on something and fell forward, his head careening toward the altar. Ragnar
grabbed his shoulders from behind at the last moment, held on tightly until
Jonah was sturdy.
“Where the hell did
you come from?” Jonah stammered. “How did I not hear –”
“Mr. Overhill,”
Ragnar repeated, ignoring the question, “are you still sure you want to do
this?”
Jonah took a breath,
instinctively slipped his hand into his jacket pocket and lightly fingered his
phone, tracing the outline of the two faces that always appeared on his home
screen.
“OK,” he finally
managed to get out, scarcely more than a whisper, but audible in the first
windless silence since he’d come to Iceland.
He meant it.