Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
torture you.”
Raudbjorn’s reason departed. With a terrible bellow, he
drew his sword, raised it aloft with both hands, and thrust it through
Sorkvir to the very hilt. Planting his foot on his enemy’s chest, he
yanked the sword out and lashed off Sorkvir’s head. Then he began to
chop the rest of Sorkvir to pieces.
The Dokkalfar forgot Leifr and Thurid and rushed at Raudbjorn.
They fastened themselves to his arms and legs like ants trying to
debilitate an angry bear.
“Now you’ve done it, you great fool!” the eldest of the Owl
counselors shouted. “He’s going to change form!”
The Dokkalfar surged backward, away from Raudbjorn,
and beat a disorderly retreat. Raudbjorn was too intent upon his
mayhem to notice as Leifr and Thurid came out of the shadows and
slipped toward the doorway.
Suddenly Raudbjorn staggered back in astonishment from
his work, coughing and snorting. Instead of fresh blood, Sorkvir’s
body oozed dust and corruption. As if that weren’t astonishment
enough, a ghostly image was rising and swelling until it was as large as
Raudbjorn. It was a massive, shaggy bear, with silvered fur, humped
shoulders, and an enormous, broad head with small eyes that glowed
redly. The bear’s teeth parted in a low, menacing growl.
Raudbjorn sheathed his sword, gripped his halberd, and backed
away as the bear’s form solidified. The wooden dais creaked as it
padded forward slowly.
At the same moment, Leifr and Thurid plunged for the doorway,
with Raudbjorn bringing up the rear. The bear charged after them,
clouting aside a heavy table and hurling two benches after them.
Raudbjorn took the brunt of the assault, which enabled Leifr and Thurid
to get outside first, tumbling almost into the arms of a crowd of yelling
Dokkalfar. Seizing Bodmarr’s sword from Thurid and brandishing it,
Leifr opened a path for their escape. Thurid shoved him around the
corner of the horse barn, directing him along the edge of a small
creek and over a low green hill. He stopped at a crude ring of rocks.
Leifr watched with growing concern as Thurid dashed around the circle
as if he were demented, touching all the stones and muttering excitedly.
“Now we’re ready,” Thurid said in a voice that shook slightly.
“Hang onto my arm. We’re going for a sledge ride—I hope.”
“You must be joking,” Leifr replied indignantly. “I don’t see any
sledge.” He started to walk away, disgusted, but Thurid grabbed his arm
and pointed back at Gliru-hals.
“We haven’t a lot of time,” he said.
The Dokkalfar had freed the troll-hounds. In a dark wave, the
beasts poured over the walls and rocks after their quarry, howling and
barking with fearsome eagerness.
“Thurid, this isn’t going to work, whatever it is,” Leifr tried to
protest as Thurid started to run down the hillside, towing Leifr after
him, with longer and longer strides until Leifr was certain they would
end up at the bottom in a tangle of arms and legs and possibly broken
bones.
“Nonsense! It will work!” Thurid panted fiercely, giving an
extraordinary leap into the air. Leifr’s legs went out from under him,
churning frantically in mid-air.
Incredibly, they hurtled over a stretch of rocks and thistles at
the bottom of the hill, bounced once on some hummocks in a green,
boggy area beyond, and landed on their feet, running. Thurid gave
another amazing bound.
“Isn’t this wonderful?” he shouted. “We’re almost flying! Pick
your feet up, Leifr!”
They sailed over a spring pool, gathering speed, although they
were running uphill. When they reached the top, Leifr barely had time
to note an excavation of some sort and an upright stone, white nearly to
the ground, where it was blackened as if by a fire and glowing in a
red-hot ring just above ground level. Its hot breath fanned Leifr’s face
as they plummeted past.
With an exuberant yell, Thurid propelled himself into midair
off the top of the hill, keeping a tight grip on Leifr’s wrist. Leifr closed
his eyes. The air whistled in his ears as they descended; then they were
climbing again to another rocky hilltop, where Leifr glimpsed a
complete ring of standing stones, all glowing red-hot at their bases.
Thurid scarcely touched the ground, except to get a running start
when their speed slowed at the summit of a hill. “I think we’ve
gone far enough,” he shouted to Leifr. “We’re in the fells above Dallir.
They’ll never know what became of their mysterious visitor from
Djofullholl.”
He began dragging his feet, braking with his heels, but the
force that had them in its grip did not relinquish its riders easily. Thurid
muttered at it and swore and cajoled, but it carried them up yet another
hill and started down the other side, where he somehow managed to
break its hold about halfway down. They rolled the rest of the way, and
arrived at the bottom with Thurid coasting along like a toboggan,
still clutching his staff in one hand. He stood up recent
experience.
Leifr felt his bruises. He stood up, feeling shaken and slightly
sick and turned to look behind him at the hill, notched long ago by
unknown hands to mark the path. “I don’t know what just happened,
Thurid,” he croaked hoarsely.
Thurid preened himself like a large, disreputable crow. “We
flew,” he smirked, “or very nearly so. This is a ley line. The ancient
straight way of travel. The only safe way to get through the trolls,
Dokkalfar, and giants. Elbegast and his armies will follow these lines
one day in the last great battle with the Underground. A great force is
conducted through these stones and mounds and notched hills. There
are standing stones that men could not have possibly moved without the
aid of powerful magic. Whole mountains have been moved away, piled
up into mounds and rings and earthworks. It is all terribly ancient,
and none of the modern wizards pay much attention to early magic. Too
primitive, they say, and difficult to control. But now I can control
the powers of the ancient Rhbus.”
Leifr shook his head. “This didn’t happen,” he muttered,
looking at Bodmarr’s sword in his hands.
Thurid removed a dowsing pendulum from his satchel with a
flourish and began dowsing, with his eyes screwed earnestly shut and
one hand extended as a pointer. “Ah,” he breathed. “The Dokkalfar
influence is all to the west of us. West is a favorable direction for me.
We shall go north to Dallir.”
“Is Sorkvir dead?” Leifr asked.
Thurid snorted. “Dead a dozen times over; and each time, he
gathers strength from Hel. Raudbjorn merely freed a more evil force
temporarily. He’ll put his body back together. He can do far more evil
with the help of the Dokkalfar than he ever could as a poltergeist.” He
tittered.
Leifr saw nothing to laugh at. He held up the pitted, wretched
blade of Bodmarr’s sword. “What do we do with this now? I can’t
believe it was worth all the trouble.”
“The grindstone, my lad, the grindstone.” Thurid’s eyes gleamed.
“When we find that, we can sharpen the sword. And with the sword,
Sorkvir can be killed beyond his power to return.”
Leifr shivered from the cool night breeze fanning his dew-soaked
clothing, and the distant yowls of trolls disturbed by the troll-hounds
did nothing to add to his peace of mind. Thinking of Sorkvir changing
forms right before his eyes turned his shivering into a shudder. The
Alfar realm was more eerie than he had known.
Glancing at Thurid as they strode toward Dallir, he suddenly
inquired, “What happened to your Dokkalfar finery?”
Thurid waved one hand carelessly. “It went when I dispersed the
glamour spell, of course. The horse I left behind will create an
amusing uproar. It was that old, bony creature of Latvi’s with the
walleye.” He chuckled appreciatively, trailing a plume of smoke from
his staff.
“It won’t take Sorkvir long to realize it was you,” Leifr said. “He
must know sooner or later that there was no new house thrall.”
Thurid stopped his gloating and said. “I can see you’re
determined to worry. Well, we may have to hide out in the fells for a
few days—depending upon how much time your father has left. I’d
venture to guess that the truce won’t be worth much after this. We
can’t leave Fridmundr to die alone, however.”
“What will happen to Dallir when we are gone?”
Thurid knit his brows in a scowl. “I don’t like to think about it. I
only hope that Sorkvir will be routed before it falls into a hollow
ruin. You won’t have much time for farming, now that we’ve taken that
sword.”
It was near dawn when they walked into the yard at Dallir. A
lone goose sifted the muddy area near the still house, and all the bars to
the folds and paddocks were down. The earth had been churned by
many iron-shod hooves into a muddy bog hole in the yard before the
house.
“The Dokkalfar were here last night!” Thurid said grimly,
striding toward the house. “You see how Sorkvir keeps truces!”
They cut across the wall into the yard. The barns with their doors
standing open struck Leifr as ominous; when he looked more
attentively, he saw the spiral marks burned into the wood in fresh,
vicious, charred scars.
“We’ve been marked for doom,” he said.
Thurid stared rigidly, turning slowly toward the house. The doors
there, too, had all been marked, but none had been broken down. Yet
Dallir was finished. The barns with their doors standing agape lent an
atmosphere of desolation that seemed to have been undisturbed for half
a century. The only sign of life was a faint wisp of smoke coming out
the smoke hole in the roof of the kitchen annex.
They crossed the dooryard boldly and slipped along the wall
to the kitchen door. The heaps of grassy debris and crumbled walls,
grown so familiar to Leifr, now seemed alien and desolate. Glancing
toward the long barn suspiciously, Leifr thought he heard a faint,
mocking whimper.
The kitchen door was locked from within, so Thurid tapped
urgently with his staff. Pressing his lips to a crack he called, “Snagi,
you old fool, it’s Thurid and Fridmarr. Come and let us in!”
Inside, heavy objects grated over the floor, then the door
opened a small crack, and Snagi’s pale, suspicious eye scrutinized
them for a long moment. “Hurry up and let us in,” Thurid ordered.
Gliru-hals looking for us.”
“We’ve got every Dokkalfar in
The door grumbled open barely enough for them to squeeze
through; then Snagi hurled his bony form against it to close it as
quickly as he could. Slightly breathless, he shoved a heavy chest against
the door and sat down on it weakly. “Thank goodness, someone is
here,” he panted. “My wits are nearly gone daft. We’ve had Dokkalfar
half the night, besides worrying about you—then there’s the master.”
Leifr, not stopping to talk, strode toward Fridmundr’s private
quarters, with
Snagi pattering in his wake, making anxious chirps of distress.
“That wretched Gotiskolker is still here,” he wheezed. “I tried
to send him off, but he’s not afraid of me. He said that someone has to
sit beside poor old Fridmundr until the last and that he’s the one to do
it.”
Leifr raised his hand for silence, halting in the doorway.
Fridmundr lay on his bed, dressed in his finest clothes, with boots on
and his weapons lying beside him. At his feet lay many of his favorite
possessions; his cloak lay ready, and he wore a fine battle helmet, as if
he were about to embark upon a journey. Gotiskolker did not look up
from his work, piling offerings of new clothing and fine weavings
beside Fridmundr so he would not enter the next world impoverished.
Fridmundr’s transparent eyelids fluttered slightly. The wondrous
light was almost gone from him now, flickering like the last of a dying
candle. His expression was peaceful, almost pleasant, as if he found all
the funeral preparations satisfactory and anticipated only the prospect of
getting on with his journey.
“A pity we’ve no ship to burn with him,” Gotiskolker said to no
one in particular. “I think the four of us can carry the bier out to the