The salt-laced wind shredded the night, rattling shutters and dragging the bitter tang of seaweed through the village; waves thundered like a living thing against the cliffs, and the aurora bled green light across the snow. Somewhere a bell stilled—an uneasy hush—as if Strandir itself was holding its breath for a doom no one dared to name.
The wind screamed through the jagged cliffs of Strandir, a lonely stretch of Iceland’s northwest coast where land and sea met with a violence only nature could command. The waters churned, dark as ink, crashing into the rocks below like an unrelenting beast; the sky shimmered in strange green and violet bands. Legends walked here. They whispered through cracks in old cottages, clung to the howls of the wind, and echoed in the restless waves. Some spoke of creatures lurking beneath the fjords, but the most terrible tale of all was that of Katla EirÃksdóttir—Katla of the cliffs—the Witch of Strandir.
Her name lingered on the villagers’ tongues, spoken only in hushed voices beside the warmth of a dying fire. Some called her a demon, others a goddess, but all agreed she was something beyond their understanding. This is her story.
A Daughter of the Storm
Strandir was no place for the weak. Its people were carved from the same stone as the cliffs—hard, weathered, unyielding. Life followed the rationed rhythm of hunger and survival: long winters, short summers, and seas that could provide or destroy on a whim. Katla was born into that world on a night when the gale shook the cottage timbers and the birch smoke curled thin and blue from the chimney. Her first cries were swallowed by the storm.
Her mother, Signy, was the healer of DrangavÃk, a woman whose knowledge of herbs and runes made her both needed and feared. Signy read bones and songs, tended fevered brows, and spoke with ravens that watched like black sentinels on the rooftop beams. People came to her in sickness and left with relief, but gratitude in Strandir was short-lived.
When Katla was ten, the village learned how cruel the heart can be. A young man died in his sleep, and fear quickly turned to accusation. The villagers, stoked by superstition, dragged Signy from her house before there was time to think. They bound her with iron, and in a frenzy of righteous terror they led her to the cliffs.
Katla hid in the rocks, numb with horror, and watched the sea take the only parent she had. Before she vanished into the black water, Signy’s voice carried up across the wind: “The sea will remember me.â€
From that night, Katla lived on the edges. The stares followed her like snow on a hut roof; laughter curdled when she passed. Still she learned—of herbs, of old songs, of the runes tucked into driftwood that her mother had taught her to read.
The ravens kept to her shoulder. The land leaned toward her in small, uncanny ways. When a fisherman’s leg turned gangrenous, Katla’s poultices saved him.
When a child burned with fever, it was Katla’s hands that cooled the brow. They spat at her shadow and yet came when a neighbor needed saving.
The Witch’s Return
Years stretched and hardened Katla’s face, and the girl the villagers had scorned became a woman they feared to name aloud. She lived in the same cottage once warmed by Signy’s hearth, surrounded by books blackened at the edges and rune-inscribed driftwood. The sea hummed in her ears. The wind brought voices. She learned to read the bones of birds and to listen for the currents beneath tides.
One winter night the storm came like an old wound reopening. When morning softened the world and snow fell like slow breath, the shore was strewn with wreckage. Among frozen corpses and splintered planks, one man clung to life. Katla found him half-buried in the snow, blood dark on the white, a deep gash across his chest. He was breathing, faint as a whisper.
She should have left him. The sea had given and the sea had taken; perhaps it was not her place to interfere. She did not leave.
The Stranger
When he woke three days later, wrapped in blankets and warmed by a damp fire, he asked where he was. He said his name was Magnus. He said he was a trader bound for Norway, that the storm had taken his crew. His eyes were a cool grey; his voice, husk-rough with cold. He watched Katla with an attention that unsettled her—neither revulsion nor fear, but a measuring curiosity that flirted at gratitude.
In the slow weeks of his recovery they traded stories like coins. Magnus spoke of distant fjords and low taverns; Katla spoke of tides and ailments and the odd rituals that kept a child alive through a fevered night. He did not cross himself at her words, nor did he mock the runes she drew into the ash. There was something tidy in his silence, something withheld.
Yet she began to trust him. He did not flinch when she tended his wounds. He tasted the bitter teas she brewed and complimented the warmth of her hands.


















