Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
would have blunted it. I hope you can keep it a secret from Sorkvir.”
Shuddering suddenly, he damped his brilliant light to a soft red glow
and his expression became brooding. “Fridmarr, Fridmarr,” he sighed
wearily. “Your past is no less troubled than your future will be.
Sometimes I fear you. Sometimes I fear for you.”
Leifr shivered also, feeling that Thurid had spoken prophecy.
Raudbjorn watched Dallir patiently, seeming oblivious to rain,
cold, fog, the odd snow flurry, and the malicious peltings of rocks by
the trolls at night. His aspect brightened whenever Leifr appeared on
some mundane occasion; but on the whole, his job was a boring one. He
prowled about, enlivening his existence only once a day when a closely
masked Dokkalfar brought him his food and drink from Gliru-hals.
On the surface, Dallir was the dullest of all the
downtrodden Ljosalfar settlements. A keener mind, however, might
have wondered at the increased need for tallow at Dallir and the
sudden spate of housecleaning, which entailed taking something nearly
every day to the scavenger’s hut in the barrows. Snagi and Thurid, or
one of the servants, did the traveling back and forth, while Leifr
remained where Raudbjorn could keep his eyes on him. Gotiskolker
received an almost-daily account of Fridmundr’s declining condition.
Stubbornly, the old Alfar’s fetch labored to release its hold
upon life and upon the life of Fridmundr. Leifr was not able to see it
every night, somewhat to his relief, since he still felt uneasy in the
presence of the mysteries of Ljosalfar magic. Thurid reported to him
what he saw, whether the ailing ram managed to rise to one knee or
whether he was down on both again. Fridmundr kept to his bed now, his
luminous eyes fixed upon the rafters in rapture. His entire body glowed
with alf-light, as if the threadbare curtain were thinner with each
passing day.
Leifr saw Ljosa twice, herding her sheep past Dallir to water
at the beck. With Raudbjorn watching, Leifr had no intention of
speaking to Ljosa, thereby casting suspicion upon her. Ljosa glanced
toward Dallir and let her sheep take their time drinking their fill, then
she went on her way. Later, Leifr heard that she had taken her sheep
north to Stormurbjarg, where Hroald’s farthest shieling was.
Remembering her lingering near Dallir, Leifr wondered if she had
wanted to speak to him. At least she was out of Sorkvir’s way now, he
told himself gloomily.
As a creature of habit, Thurid continued his evening practice of
telling Fridmundr all the happenings on the farm for the day, although
now he had to sit by the bedside for his recitation. Leifr sat beside
Fridmundr also, out of respect for a noble Alfar. In his youth,
Fridmundr had been a redoubtable warrior, unbroken in spirit until the
death of Bodmarr and the treachery of Fridmarr. After his fondest hopes
had been shattered and Sorkvir seemed entrenched in Gliru-hals,
Fridmundr turned the running of the farm over to Thurid and retreated
into himself in search of the voices of his ancestors. He had found them,
and slowly his body wasted away, until at last the nearness of the end
was signaled by the alf-light and the burning revelations of the
meanings of all things.
“All Ljosalfar don’t die this way,” Leifr observed, hoping to
pump Thurid for more information.
“No,” Thurid replied rather proudly. “Only philosophers, sages,
wizards, and others who are clever enough to die safely in bed, rather
than in a fight.”
Leifr murmured, “A straw death is held in contempt by the
Sciplings. Death in battle is the most honorable death to be bought with
one’s life.”
Thurid snorted. “I’m not at all surprised to hear it. Those
Sciplings won’t last as a species, with that kind of ideas.”
Leifr would have liked to argue that point further, but the
dusk was deepening to night; at the boundary of nightfall, Fridmundr’s
fetch was most apt to be seen. Unwillingly, yet helplessly fascinated,
Leifr watched the shadows beside the door. Thurid arose to blow out the
lamp, and Leifr heard him gasp. Leifr turned around slowly, his hair
prickling as a cold wave swept over him.
The fetch lay beside Fridmundr’s bed, between Thurid and the
lamp. It raised its heavy head to look at them with glazed eyes in mute
appeal, gasping for each breath, its lips drawn away from its teeth. With
a sigh, it laid its head down on the floor and wearily stretched out its
legs—too weary to struggle any longer. Still struggling to breathe, the
fetch faded and vanished.
Gingerly reaching over where it had lain, and taking care not to
step there, Thurid picked up the lamp and carried it out of the room,
with Leifr close at his heels.
“The fetch is down,” Thurid said when they had reached the
kitchen where Snagi was polishing boots with bear grease. “Somebody
must tell Gotiskolker.” “Tonight?” Snagi quavered. “The Dokkalfar are
hounds. If they found my trail, I’d be torn to
out hunting with their troll-
ribbons.”
Leifr went to the door and listened. The savage howling of the
hounds drifted down the fells, a sound that would turn the bravest
heart cold and send most trolls scuttling underground as far as they
could get.
“I’ll go,” Leifr said, reaching for his cloak. “Snagi wouldn’t have
a chance with that shaky knee of his. The hounds are hunting in the
high fells, so I’ve little to worry about.”
“Except Raudbjorn,” Thurid added.
“Even Raudbjorn has enough sense to take shelter
somewhere when the hounds are hunting,” Leifr replied. “He should ,
know that better than we do.”
“I forbid you to go,” Thurid declared. “It’s too dangerous. If
the hounds don’t find you, the trolls might. Snagi wouldn’t be that
much of a loss. We’ll send him.”
“We’ll send me,” Leifr said grimly, unsheathing his sword a short
way. “This will discourage the troll-hounds.”
Ignoring Thurid’s spluttering and threatening, Leifr let himself
out into the windy night, creeping along the walls and hurrying from
thicket to thicket, in case Raudbjorn was lurking nearby. By the time he
was halfway up the side of the fell, he had detected nobody following,
although the baying of the hounds was considerably closer.
Keeping near the running water, Leifr took a rather circuitous
path to get to Gotiskolker’s barrow field. Twice he was followed by
trolls along the opposite side of the water, which they were prohibited
by earth powers from crossing. Aside from snarling and throwing a few
stones, they did not bother him, uneasy as they were about the hounds
hunting.
When he neared the barrow field where Gotiskolker’s hut stood,
Leifr advanced cautiously until he had reached the large pile of bones
and skulls near the door. A faint flicker of light gleamed through the
cracks in the makeshift door, but the fire had died beneath the huge,
blackened kettle and its foul-smelling brew. Hearing no sounds of
human occupation, Leifr crept toward the door and found it unlocked.
Inside, he found Gotiskolker sprawled across the table, still
wearing his traveling cloak, with his stick propped against him.
It seemed unlike Gotiskolker not to awaken at the slightest noise.
Leifr announced himself with a loud “
Hem
!” but the scavenger slept on,
his face drawn up in a weary, anxious scowl.
Leifr gave his shoulder a shake, and the motion dislodged a small
vial from Gotiskolker’s hand. A single red drop oozed from the empty
vial onto the table. Leifr touched his finger to it and smelled it. Eitur—
Sorkvir’s addictive poison! Hastily, he wiped it off his finger and
looked hopelessly at Gotiskolker, who was lolling in his chair like a
limp doll. His breathing rattled stertorously, and his meager muscles
were completely relaxed.
“Gotiskolker! You wretched rat!” Leifr propped him upright and
shook his wasted form none too gently. “What have you done? We’ve
got to talk tonight! Fridmundr’s fetch is down on its side, dying. Can
you talk? Wake up, you fool!”
Gotiskolker’s eyes opened reluctantly, looking flatly at Leifr with
scant recognition.
“Who is it?” he muttered thickly. “Go away and leave me
alone. Haven’t I furnished you all sport enough?”
“It’s Leifr, you sot—the Scipling you brought here to be
Fridmarr. Now pay attention. The time has come to get the sword from
Sorkvir. Tell me what to do, Gotiskolker.”
Gotiskolker’s head sagged. “Sorry. Can’t tell you anything. We’ll
talk later. Too sleepy now. The pain—I had to have the eitur. Didn’t
know the fetch was sinking so fast.”
“Gotiskolker! You fool! If you’d endured it for one more day—
don’t you know that stuff is killing you?”
Gotiskolker tried to nod. “No more eitur. This is the last time.
Time to let go and die.”
“There’ll be no talk of dying until you get me safely back to my
own realm, my friend. Why did you have to make everything so
difficult? How long is this going to last? I’d better take you to Dallir,
in case you wake up and decide to make yourself useful.“
Leifr bent to free Gotiskolker and the stick, then lifted the limp
form to his shoulders and closed the door behind him. Fortunately his
burden was not as heavy as a well-fleshed man, but, by the time Leifr
reached Dallir, he was staggering with weariness and too exhausted to
care if Raudbjorn saw him or not.
Snagi opened the door in response to Leifr’s imperious kick,
scuttling out of the way as Leifr reeled across the kitchen and deposited
Gotiskolker on the old sleeping platform.
“What’s this? You’ve brought contagion into our midst!” Thurid
sputtered indignantly. “Fridmarr! Do you know what sort of bugs
he must have from those troll hides?”
“I don’t care,” Leifr panted, collapsing in a chair and accepting
the horn of ale Snagi put into his hands. “The fool has taken eitur.
Maybe it will wear off tomorrow. If it doesn’t, we’ll have to plan the
theft without him.”
Thurid’s brow puckered in consternation. “Without him? This
scruffy rat knows a great deal about Sorkvir and Gliru-hals. We can’t
do it without him.
We’ll have to wait until he wakes up.” He rubbed his hands
nervously and avoided looking at Leifr.
“The time is now,” Leifr replied. “Fridmundr’s fetch is dying.
If we wait until Fridmundr is dead, Sorkvir is going to strike the first
blow the moment the truce is off. From what I’ve seen of his
Dokkalfar, I don’t think we could survive. Thurid, you must have
a plan in mind. We’ll put it into action tomorrow, whether or not
Gotiskolker is awake. We must have that sword in our possession when
Fridmundr breathes his last. You’ve done amazing things already. There
must be a spell on one of those rune sticks that will help you.”
Thurid paced across the room several times, plucking at his
sparse beard. “I suppose this is what it means to be a wizard. One
must do the most difficult things alone.”
“I’ll be with you,” Leifr said. “I can put my old clothes back on
and slink around like a scavenger and no one at Gliru-hals will look
twice at me. You could do the same, Thurid.”
Thurid paid scant heed. He opened his satchel and selected a rune
stick. By the firelight, he studied it carefully, his lips moving silently
as he read.
“This one is the spell 1 shall use tomorrow night,” he finally
announced with an air of finality. “Now I must go to my cave and ready
myself by seeking the intervention of the dextrous Rhbus. I fear the
clarity of my mind isn’t what it used to be, before certain disturbances
entered into my carefully ordered life.” With a swirl of his cloak, he
turned and went out the door, letting in a gust of cold wind as he
departed.
Leifr slept fitfully. Snagi insisted upon staying awake to
sit beside Fridmundr. “I’ll sleep later,” he assured Leifr. “Between
chores, or during chores, or instead of chores. You know how lazy this
old thrall is. I’m the last of your father’s thralls.” He spoke in a tone of
mild surprise, as if he had only just thought of it.
“You’re a thrall no longer,” Leifr said. “My father would want