Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
Gotiskolker suddenly stopped his horse. “What’s that?” he
called. “Stand still and listen!”
“Trolls,” Thurid said, after hearing a guttural grunt from a distant
fell. “No. Something else.” Gotiskolker threw off his hood to hear
better.
A yelping howl sounded from the direction of the cliffs, followed
by another.
“Troll-hounds!” Gotiskolker cried.
“Hunting trolls, maybe?” Thurid asked, without much hope. He
listened to the eager baying scarcely a mile away, shaking his head in
answer to his own question. “No, and where there are troll-hounds,
there are usually Dokkalfar. What a miserable place for a battle.”
Leifr turned Jolfr off the marked track, his eyes upon an island
that looked steady enough to offer them some slight protection. Jolfr
stretched out his neck, picking each step with caution. The others
followed silently, while the chorus of the hounds gathered in volume.
Suddenly Jolfr’s front quarters sank almost to his shoulders
in soft mud. Leifr jumped off so the horse could struggle free, and
the other two horses began backing and turning to go back the way
they had come.
“This is no good,” Gotiskolker said. “We’ll have to stay with the
track. It’s more solid than this. We’ll have to go deeper into the mires
and hope for solid ground.”
They passed the point where they had turned around before.
Dimly, Leifr could see the white marking stone ahead. Wondering how
many others were completely obscured by moss or tules, he sent Jolfr
plunging ahead, hoping he was taking a straight line.
The baying of the hounds grew louder. Twice Jolfr plunged off
the safe track up to his neck in slime. Looking back through the
twilight, Leifr could see the dark, moving line of the troll-hounds
streaking through the reeds, intent upon their prey.
“What a rotten place to die,” Gotiskolker observed.
“Who’s dying?” Thurid snapped. “I’ll stay behind and blast the
creatures while you two go ahead. They’re not much different from
trolls.”
“It’s time to make a stand,” Leifr said grimly. “I’m not leaving
anyone behind. Is that understood?”
“Perhaps there will be something left of us for the Dokkalfar,
when the hounds are done with their work,” Gotiskolker added wryly.
“Sorkvir wouldn’t want to miss his opportunity either. By all means,
let’s stop, put up a good show, and hope that none of us live to be
captured. I, for one, do not intend to go back to Gliru-hals.”
They dismounted, and Thurid took the foremost position on
the path, gripping his staff and mumbling the words of a spell. Leifr
drew his sword and stood behind him, while Gotiskolker armed himself
with Bodmarr’s ruined sword and stood waiting and listening with
stoic calm.
To the left, Leifr heard something splashing quietly toward
them. “What’s that?” he demanded sharply. “Are they slipping up on
us?”
Thurid responded with a brilliant flare of alf-light, and several
large figures lurking in the marsh beside the path crept warily into the
shadows of the reeds.
“Who’s there?” Leifr demanded. “If you’re going to fight, come
out here and make yourselves known. Brave men don’t skulk in the
dark to do their murdering.”
The skulkers conferred a moment, then crept out of their hiding
places, approaching the path and stopping just before they reached it.
“We’re not interested in any murdering,” a hoarse voice said.
“We want to help you escape. If you’ll follow us, we’ll take you to a
safer place, where the hounds can’t surround you so easily.”
“Who are you?” Leifr demanded, trying to see them better in
the flaring glow, but the dark figures turned their faces away from the
light. All he could tell for certain was that there were four of them.
“Never mind who we are. Just let us help you. Enough evil has
been done in this cursed place. Come off the path and follow us.
We’ll lead you to a safer place.”
“No, indeed,” Thurid declared. “I know who you are. You’re
nisses, and what you delight in most is leading lost travelers astray so
they drown.”
“Be silent, Thurid,” Gotiskolker snapped. “Perhaps they will help
us, if you don’t make me angry.”
“It’s your decision,” the niss said, sloshing away a few steps in
the marshy water. “We could help you or we could leave you here for
the hounds and the foul creatures hunting with them. Our chances for
thwarting Sorkvir’s plans are not many, but at least we offered to help.”
The baying of the hounds burst upon them with ferocious
clamor as the beasts sighted their prey. Leifr grabbed Jolfr’s reins and
started forward into the water.
“Help us then,” he said. “We all know there’s nothing to lose.
Come on, Thurid, this may be our chance.”
“This will be our doom,” Thurid said, following Gotiskolker
reluctantly into the water. “I know nisses. They’ll lead us to some
deep spot or some particularly sticky mire and they’ll drown us.”
“Be quiet or you’ll get drowned for sure, and it might not be a
niss that does it,” Gotiskolker retorted. “I’d like to find out what
pleasure they get from it.” “You probably shall, from a very close point
of view,” Thurid answered.
Leifr tried to keep his full attention on the four dark shapes that
floated just ahead of him, scarcely breaking the surface of the water
with a ripple. The ground underfoot seemed firm enough, although he
occasionally stepped into a soft spot and floundered around noisily,
trying to regain his footing. Each time, he wondered if Thurid’s gloomy
prognostication was correct.
The baying of the hounds took on a frustrated note, and the beasts
seemed to be running up and down the track searching for the scent.
Presently the Dokkalfar caught up to the hounds and stood arguing.
“They’ve gone off the track,” a voice called in disgust.
“We’ll never get them before the bog does.”
“Let the nisses have them.”
“Sorkvir won’t be pleased if we don’t find them. We’ll have to
go into the bog after them.”
Leifr saw the four nisses gather, whispering, and he glimpsed
long hair streaming over their ragged shoulders, speckled with
duckweed and bits of peat. Filled with sudden misgivings, he stopped
sloshing along, wondering where the nearest patch of solid earth
might be. The nisses looked back briefly, then floated on. One
called back, “Either follow us, or stay where you are forever.”
He followed, listening to the shouts of the Dokkalfar all around
them. The huntsmen shouted at the hounds and exchanged signals with
harsh blasts on horns. Over it all, the hounds filled the night with
frustrated howling.
Finally, incredibly, Leifr’s feet touched solid rock, and he hauled
himself out of the marsh onto an island of stones, trees, and solid turf.
Jolfr almost knocked him down in his rush to get out of the water, and
Thurid lurched face forward when he trod upon his sodden cloak, but he
didn’t seem to mind. Putting his arm around a smooth rock, he patted it
affectionately, then looked more closely at its surface. Hoisting himself
to his feet, he went to investigate the dim, rounded shapes of other
stones.
Gotiskolker sat down on a rock to wring himself out. Leifr
discarded his wet cloak, keeping his eyes upon the nisses. They crept
out of the water and sat down on some nearby rocks, pulling bits of
refuse out of their long hair and squeezing the water from their ragged
skirts. In the Scipling realm, Leifr had heard that nisses were
beautiful ladies who lured travelers into lakes and streams, where
they invariably tried to drown them. These nisses, however, were
shapeless old women, stout and darkened by years of floating around
in the peaty water of the marsh. Their arms were long and spidery, their
straggling hair matted from years of disinterest.
Spying him almost immediately, one of the nisses said, “Well
now, here’s our laddie. Not much to look at are we, my dear?”
“Come and sit down with us,” invited another, whose hair was
mostly white. “Let’s get better acquainted. We don’t have guests every
evening.”
“Especially of the young and handsome variety,” added another
niss with a great, sly cackle.
“Finna,” the eldest reproved, shaking her head. “She’s rather
playful, I’m afraid, in spite of everything. I am Eydis, and these are my
sisters, Goa, Velaug, and—” She sighed impatiently. “—Finna. In her
day, I’m afraid she was something of a minx.”
“Enchantress, you old harridan,” Finna interrupted. “I was the
most beautiful of us all. It was me they all came to see.”
“Hush, witling. You have little to boast about,” Eydis snapped.
“Especially now. It serves you right, considering what you used to do to
those young and handsome travelers who were foolish enough to be
swayed by your charms.”
“Why is it,” Velaug asked, turning to Leifr, “that young men
always teach for the thing that’s going to hurt them?”
Leifr shrugged. “I don’t know—perhaps the forbidden and
dangerous has a certain attraction.”
Finna cackled again. “Forbidden and dangerous—that’s exactly
what I used to be. The rest of you were good girls, and where did it
get you?“
“Finna, be quiet,” Eydis commanded. “You are the sort to give
all nisses a fearfully bad reputation. A necessary evil, and nothing
more, do you hear? Your evil days have been supplanted with a greater
evil for us all, so stop your preening and cackling about it, you old
goose.”
“Something good may come of all this after all,” Goa said gently.
“I haven’t given up hope yet.”
“Something good?” Finna snorted. “Three good nisses and one
bad one, and the travelers always chose the bad one. So what is good?
Something you hope for and worship—and never get?”
“Finna!” Eydis rose to her feet, rather stiffly. “I don’t know how
we’ve tolerated you all these years. If we hadn’t been under a
compulsion to endure your presence, we would have gotten Hjaldr to
give you away to a husband who would beat you.”
“But she is our sister,” Velaug said. “We will take care of our
own, even if our own is just a bit mad.”
“Mad! Not I!” Finna declared furiously. “You’ve always been
jealous, all of you!”
“Let’s not quarrel in front of guests,” Goa reproved. “Besides, we
all know Finna was only doing what the Rhbus needed done. Just a
predator, you realize, to reduce the numbers of the weak ones trying to
make it through the Pentacle. Everyone isn’t supposed to make it, of
course.”
“Of course,” Leifr echoed faintly, casting an apprehensive glance
at Finna, who cackled as if she were reminiscing about the most
treasured part of her past.
“It’s the weak ones who are the most interesting,” she said,
turning her long eyes speculatively in Leifr’s direction. “I wonder if our
friend here is strong and single-minded or if he could be tempted away
from his objective.”
“Finna, hold your tongue,” Eydis commanded. “Speaking of
objectives, however, reminds me that it has been quite some time since
anyone has attempted the Pentacle. Since the removal of the Dvergar
grindstone, the power of the Pentacle is not what it used to be.”
Leifr tried to ignore Finna. “Since you mentioned the
grindstone,“ he said, ”I hope you’ll pardon my curiosity, but I’d like
to know if you can tell me anything about it.“
Eydis folded her hands in her lap. “There’s not much to tell. It
was stolen from the dwarfs’ hall inside the mountain by a young acolyte
of Sorkvir. Where he took it no one knows, but since its theft, the
Pentacle has lost much of its power. Sorkvir desecrated this place.” She
pointed with her chin to the surrounding stones and stumps. Leifr
looked around him more closely, and felt his gooseflesh rising as he
recognized Sorkvir’s spiral mark on the stones behind him. Eydis
continued, “He made an insulting pole with a goat’s head on it, and he
left its hooves and horns with it to drive our powers astray.”
Thurid came around the side of a large, upright stone in time to
hear her. “Insulting pole, and much more,” he said indignantly. “He’s
left his mark on every stone. That’s what caused the lake to turn into a
swamp and the nisses into old hags. What we need to do is change the