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Disease, I thought. I wondered why I hadn't gotten the disease yet, having followed the huns for days so recklessly, without realizing what a danger it meant. Odin had decided to protect me, like he had protected me from both ice and fire, he now protected me against the muddy earth, from which diseases spring. I rode for three days more, before the landscape changed again. I was getting close to the great river that divides Gallia Cisalpina, and the ground had changed from forest and hills to vast open lands, something that looked strange and unusual for a man who had grown up in the dense forests of the north. The entire landscape was like an infinite sand bank of the type that lies next to the rivers also to the north, but to the north they were seldom wider than an axe blade. For hours, I rode through this desert, through this land where only meagre, twisted plants could grow, covered in layers of grey dust. My only company was my horse, and I suspected the horse had once been ridden by one of the huns, because it sometimes had an empty look in it's eyes, sometimes fire sparkling through them, with slow, proud movements of the neck, but aggressive, quick steps with the feet. Even though I couldn't call out the demons of this creature completely like the tatars could, I was able to make it run faster than any other horse I had ever ridden. Suddenly, I had a feeling of being followed. As the sun set before the third night in this unforgiving, dry desert, I decided not to light a fire to sleep by. Instead, I tied the horse to a dry, thorny bush and then sneaked away from the place as quietly as I could, grabbing my axe tightly, and watching the place where the horse lied, and where any follower would expect me to be, from a safe distance. At first I didn't see anything, but then a skinny figure, that reminded me of a skeleton, appeared next to the horse. It sneaked away as quickly as it had appeared. I slept little that night, and when I woke up in my hiding spot, it was already day. There were no traces of any followers, and I quickly took the horse and continued my pursuit of the huns.
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