Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
you to be a freeman now, and so do I.”
Snagi flapped one hand in disdain. “Oh, the master tried to set me
free many times, but I wouldn’t go. This is my place and my father’s
before me and my grandfather’s before him, and on back I don’t know
how long. I’ll stay at Dallir for as long as I live.”
In the morning, Fridmundr was still breathing at slow, shallow
intervals, and the alf-light had faded to a soft glow. His eyes were
open, but he made no sign of seeing anyone who came into the room.
Snagi sat beside him, dozing lightly from time to time. Around midday
he sent word to the outside servants to start collecting the wood for
Fridmundr’s funeral pyre. Word was also taken to Fridmundr’s old
friends, Einarr the Elder and Young Einarr, Latvi, Birki, and the other
old Alfar who had known Fridmundr.
Gotiskolker slept on, as limp and unconscious as he had
been the night before. Thurid glared at him resentfully, still hopeful,
until at last the sun was low in the west, and the time had come to
depart.
Leifr wore his old clothes, feeling quite at home in them. He
looked disreputable enough that Raudbjorn scarcely glanced at him
slinking out of the gate like some wandering beggar. Leifr headed down
the ravine toward Gliru-hals.
He met Thurid behind the horse stable as they had agreed.
Gliru-hals was stirring around them, with the scavengers
creeping out of their hovels to beg, the troll-hounds setting up an eager
yammer from their kennels in anticipation of another night’s hunt, and
the Dokkalfar slipping furtively from shadow to shadow, their voices
raised in quick, heated argument.
Thurid and Leifr climbed onto the roof and lay in the shadow,
waiting until it was fully dark. Of his plan, Thurid would say nothing,
keeping it rather smugly secret.
“You shall see,” was all he would say. “Stay here and watch.
You’ll have a splendid view.”
“If anything should go wrong, just shout for me,” Leifr said
uneasily. “I can hear you in the hall from here. Are you sure I shouldn’t
get closer?”
Thurid glanced over his shoulder. “That way lies our escape
route. Stay close to it and hope that the moon gives us plenty of light.”
With misgivings, Leifr watched him climb down off the roof and
disappear into the shadows, which were increasingly populated with
skulking Dokkalfar and scavengers. As the smells of cooking food
drifted from the main hall, followed by the sounds of the Dokkalfar
feasting, the beggars crowded around the doors, waiting for the
leavings. Leifr watched them closely, suspecting that Thurid had
insinuated himself into their midst and was plotting a secretive entry
into the hall by one of the doors.
The Dokkalfar finished their meal and threw out the scraps to the
scavengers, then laughed coarsely to see them fighting over their
meager fare. Ten Dokkalfar saddled their horses and rode away
purposefully, while the others sat round gaming, sharpening weapons,
or whispering in tight knots of four or five, eyeing other knots of
conspirators with suspicion and loathing. Six Dokkalfar saddled their
horses and went hunting with the troll-hounds. Leifr saw nothing of
Sorkvir. Only the highest ranking Dokkalfar did not gamble,
quarrel, conspire, or hunt; they stood upon the porch, talking
seldom, their grim presence alone enough to quell the most avaricious
of scavengers and discomfit the most determined of the conspirators.
Leifr still saw no sign of Thurid and was beginning to hope that
Thurid had gotten inside the hall somehow. Then one of the nondescript
watchdogs sounded the alarm, leaping off the porch with several others
following, all barking furiously, and the lot of them tore away up the
lane past the stables. The Dokkalfar glanced up suspiciously from their
grooming, polishing, and sharpening.
A lone rider paced slowly down the lane, guiding his horse
fastidiously away from the squelching mud holes. At a single word, he
silenced the barking mongrels and sent them cringing away to hide in a
barn. The Dokkalfar forgot their work and stared blatantly as the
strange Dokkalfar rode into the yard at a dignified pace, scarcely
glancing right or left. His black cloak, turned back to display its red
lining, sparkled with embroidery and bright bits of metal and glass, and
his ceremonial headdress incorporated the wings of an owl. He wore a
scarlet mask trimmed with owl feathers and stitched with an owl motif.
The ceremonial shield he carried bore the owl symbol and more feathers
and talons. His horse ornaments glittered with gold nails and owl
motifs, leaving no doubt that the stranger was a Dokkalfar of
importance.
The stranger halted his horse to gaze around at the Dokkalfar in
silent contempt a moment. Then he barked in a harsh voice, “When
you’ve got your fill of staring, scraelings, you can send word to Sorkvir
that I wish to see him. I’ve come all the way from Djofullholl to see
about this alog of his.”
Laden with scorn, his tone lashed at the other Dokkalfar, startling
them into action. Three hurried away at once toward the hall with the
message, two edged forward cautiously and offered to attend to the
stranger’s horse, and one held his stirrup for him to dismount. The
others cast knowing glances at one another and whispered covertly until
the stranger rounded upon them suddenly.
Shaking his beaded whip in one hand, he snarled, “You slime
are the worst of the Dokkalfar worst. Djofull knows about your
defection, and he’s not pleased. He is your warlord, and none other.
The Dokkur Lavardur has spoken to him.”
“The Dokkur Lavardur!” someone whispered. “He knows!
Sorkvir is doomed!”
The stranger raked the assemblage with another disdainful
glower. “Little do you suspect the harm you have done in Solvorfirth,
and I don’t refer to your infantile wrecking of farms and killings of
innocent Ljosalfar. Your plunderings have awakened the wrath of a
great wizard, whose powers have been sleeping since the last of the
Rhbus. Now he is stalking you with all the might of the Rhbus and
the wrath of the Fire Wizards’ Guild. His name is Thurid, and he has
marked you for destruction.“
With a billow of his red-lined cloak, the stranger strode away
and mounted the steps to the porch.
With a weak feeling in his knees, Leifr slipped off the roof
and found a hiding place nearer the hall by the kitchen door. A group
of scavengers waiting there for a few last tidbits eyed him
unwelcomingly, but he sat down in their midst anyway, his eyes upon
the door. He knew with a deadly certainty that Thurid was going to need
him. Thurid’s natural vanity had carried him too far already.
As he pondered his means of getting into the hall, a disturbance
commenced in the yard behind him. Looking around cautiously, he
beheld Raudbjorn picking his way through a blockade of jeering
Dokkalfar, his gaze fixed upon the main hall, as if the Dokkalfar were
nothing but a shoal of malicious puppies chewing at his bootlaces.
When he reached the doors, however, two of the Dokkalfar put their
backs to it and presented their swords defiantly.
“You can’t go in there, you blundering ox,” one said derisively.
“Sorkvir has an important visitor.”
“Raudbjorn has important news,” the thief-taker rumbled with
a lowering scowl. “Move Dokkalfar carcass, or Raudbjorn spill your
guts.”
“Get out of here,” the guard retorted. “If you bother Sorkvir now,
he’ll spill your guts. What is this great news you have to tell him,
anyway? I could take it to him later, perhaps.”
Raudbjorn’s eye gleamed cunningly, and he shook his head. “My
news, not yours.”
Turning his back, he returned to the yard to wait, squatting down
on his hams and leaning against the side of a barn to rest himself. The
Dokkalfar took amusement in throwing small bits of sticks, dung, or
pebbles at him, grinning wolfishly behind their hands when he opened
his eyes to glare around at his tormenters. From his position by the back
steps, Leifr could see Raudbjorn’s ire rising. The roach of hair atop his
head bristled like the back of a mean-tempered old boar. One long lock
of his hair dangled down in an ornamental topknot, with a few favorite
teeth or bones fastened to it, and one of the Dokkalfar had the
misfortune to reach over and give it a tweak.
With a roar, Raudbjorn was on his feet, with one huge hand
gripping the Dokkalfar around the throat, lifting him off his feet
completely. Instead of breaking his neck, Raudbjorn gave him a toss
over the wall into the rear yard, where the scavengers scuttled to get out
of the way. When another Dokkalfar rushed at Raudbjorn, he threw him
over the wall to land upon his friend. Raudbjorn glared over the wall
and growled, “Learn to fight, Dokkalfar. Sneaking little rats. Trolls in
black cloaks.”
Raudbjorn uttered a loud snort of disgust and was turning away
when his eye lighted upon Leifr crouching next to the steps, trying not
to attract any attention. “Fridmarr!” Raudbjorn started to climb over
the wall, his eyes gleaming.
“Fool Raudbjorn a little while with old clothes. Raudbjorn not
so dumb. No beggar went in Dallir, so how a beggar come out?
Something evil in your mind, Fridmarr. Better come away from Gliru-
hals.”
Leifr leaped onto the porch, shoved open the kitchen door,
and slipped inside, pressing the door shut with his back. Some
house thralls and women were cleaning up after the meal and they
turned and looked at him suspiciously.
“I’m a new house thrall,” Leifr improvised. “They sent me
around here to make myself useful.”
The housekeeper put her fists on her hips and eyed Leifr from
head to foot. “You look better than some I’ve seen,” she said
reluctantly. “We don’t need you in the kitchen. You can go stand watch
by the hall. Sorkvir doesn’t trust these Dokkalfar not to kill him. You
keep them away from him and follow my orders and you’ll be a good
thrall. Otherwise, you’ll be out there with them.” She jerked her
grizzled head toward the scavengers and went back to her goose-
plucking.
Leifr did not wait around for. more of her acrid speech; he dived
into the nearest doorway and found himself in a long, dark corridor. No
sooner had he disappeared than he heard a heavy knock at the
back door and the slow bumbling buzz of Raudbjorn’s voice being
overridden by the shrill clatter of the housekeeper’s irate tongue; then
the door slammed shut with a decisive bang.
Leifr grinned in the darkness, hoping Raudbjorn’s rout by a
shrewish housekeeper had been witnessed by the Dokkalfar, particularly
by the ones the thief-taker had thrown over the wall. Creeping down the
long passageway, Leifr passed doorways into stables and dark, damp
places that smelled of rats. Presently, he reached a closed door with
light showing beneath it. He was fumbling discreetly for the latch when
a couple of Dokkalfar strode importantly into the corridor, almost
colliding with him in their haste.
“What are you doing here, thrall?” one demanded. “You’re not
allowed in Sorkvir’s private rooms!”
Leifr backed out of the way, chilled by the atmosphere that
surrounded them. The nails studding their armor glowed with a dim
phosphorescence, and their eyes shone with a feral, red gleam.
Remembering belatedly to cower, Leifr got out of their path, keeping
his head covered.
“They wanted the doors open because it’s too hot,” he muttered.
The Dokkalfar flung open the doors and stalked into the
room beyond, leaving Leifr a perfect view. It was a small hall, used by
a chieftain and his elect companions to provide a refuge from the
restlessness of a larger room crowded with warriors. He saw Sorkvir
seated upon the dais with Thurid in his outlandish disguise. A cup of ale
sat on the table near Thurid, untouched, and Thurid still wore his mask.
The two Dokkalfar bowed respectfully to him and seated themselves
below, looking grim and stiff.
The atmosphere in the hall was also grim and stiff. Thurid turned