Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
great heroes have finally died by stubbing their toes or drowning in their
own bathtubs.“
“She has a great amount of power,” Leifr said, feeling certain
he was going to be covered with bruises after his struggle with Finna.
“She’s not as soft and helpless as she likes to appear. She’s as
strong as the Midgard snake.” He looked back at the pool, which
already showed no trace of the deadly struggles that had gone on
there. He shivered, wanting nothing more than to leave Kerling-
tjorn many miles behind him.
The day promised to be mildly sunny, so he didn’t even bother to
change out of his wet clothing. Chafing impatiently while the others
saddled their horses, he searched the opposite bank until he spied a
tatter of white cloth fluttering from a clump of bulrushes.
“There it is!” he called and urged his horse into the water. As
the water rose to Jolfr’s belly and as high as his chest, Leifr’s doubts
of Eydis’ fidelity also rose, but the going underfoot seemed solid.
Presently the water became shallower, and Jolfr scrambled out on dry
earth and shook himself from nose to tail, like a dog.
“Say goodbye to your dear nisses,” Gotiskolker said to Thurid as
they rode away from the island in a westerly direction. “You were very
nearly a victim of your own magic. Maybe you should have left them
as we found them. Finna will captivate a great many more idiots
besides you.”
“Don’t talk to me of that creature,” Thurid huffed, his eyes
glaring with a fanatical gleam. “Did you ever see such rank ingratitude
as that? I wish I could have left her with a monstrous wart on her nose. I
brought back their precious lake for them, and all to what purpose? So
she can go on murdering innocent travelers? I’ve half a mind to go back
and do something about her.”
“Forget it,” Gotiskolker advised. “Part of the Rhbus’ great plan is
opposition. You’ve just had your little taste of opposition and you’ve
survived it, so you’d better shut your mouth and count yourself lucky.
Next time you may not get off so easily.”
Their travel was slow and arduous in spite of the markers.
Often they had to dismount and lead the horses, not trusting them
with the treacherous footing. Often the next white marker was nowhere
in evidence, and they had to explore for it cautiously, which frequently
got one of them into trouble with quicksand, mud, or very thin turf.
By late afternoon they were near the edge of the marsh; they
could see darker green trees and a few gnarled pines on the hillsides
ahead, but the worst part of the swamp lay before them. It looked
deceptively grassy and safe, but one misstep sucked the unwary traveler
into quicksand and black mud with such a powerful grip that Leifr was
certain for a while that they would have to leave Thurid’s horse behind
when it became mired. They also encountered the remains of nearly
a dozen Dokkalfar, although nothing was left after a day of sunshine
except clothing, armor, and weapons. Several of the troll-hounds also
had fallen prey to the swamp, along with four horses who had perished.
The travelers’ spirits were at low ebb when they received the first
evidence that they were not the only sojourners in the marsh. A dismal
moaning sounded suddenly not far away, as if a cow had been mired.
Nevertheless, Leifr unsheathed his sword before he approached any
closer. Parting a clump of cattails, he saw a man’s head and arms on the
surface level of the bog. The man brandished a stick at them, then
uttered a despairing, “Hallooo! Help, help!” like the cry of some vast
sea creature in distress.
Leifr could scarcely restrain a laugh. “It’s Raudbjorn,” he
whispered delightedly. “Sorkvir has left him to die. That ought to be a
good lesson to him to trust a wizard.”
Thurid coughed indignantly. “You seemed anxious enough to risk
your life rescuing a wizard. I’m astonished that you’d take the trouble,
considering how you feel about wizards.”
“You’re not Sorkvir,” Leifr reminded him, then stepped out into
the clear where Raudbjorn could see him. “Halloa, Raudbjorn! Are the
fish biting?”
Raudbjorn’s huge, round face cracked with a welcoming grin.
“Halloa, Fridmarr. Happy to see you. One day we meet on equal ground
for final battle. Only one of us walk away.”
“There won’t be any battle if you drown in that bog,” Leifr
answered. “Will Sorkvir come back to get you out?”
Raudbjorn managed to shrug. “Sorkvir knows, but not
Raudbjorn. Looks like mud getting deeper. Maybe too long till dark.”
He heaved a loud sigh and blinked disconsolately at a swarm of ravens
perching not far overhead. “Raudbjorn never had so many friends.”
Leifr went back to the horses, where Gotiskolker and Thurid
waited impatiently. He began assembling all the lengths of tether cords
into one long rope.
“Whatever do you think you’re doing?” Thurid demanded, his
eyes almost popping with indignation. “You’re not going to rescue
that assassin, are you? Fridmarr, fair play only extends to the nearer
edge of insanity, not all the way across and over the far end!”
Leifr ignored him, deeming his objections unworthy of rebuttal,
and proceeded to toss the rope out to Raudbjorn.
“I can’t bear the thought of never knowing which one of us is the
best,” he called out in reply to Raudbjorn’s stunned silence. “Once
you’re out, we’ll go our separate ways until we meet again under
better circumstances. Suffocating in a bog hole is no way for a warrior
to die.”
Leifr fastened the rope to his saddle and led Jolfr forward,
leaning into a makeshift collar. The ropes stretched tautly, vibrating
under the strain as Jolfr lunged against Raudbjorn’s weight and the
suction of the bog. Finally, with a loud, muddy exhalation, the
swamp released its hold, and Leifr hauled Raudbjorn ashore. The
thief-taker wiped the slop off his face, revealing a cheerful grin, and he
extended one massive paw for Leifr to shake.
“Raudbjorn is grateful,” he rumbled earnestly. “Fridmarr a noble
warrior. Raudbjorn always remember Fridmarr as the best.”
They left him to follow their tracks and the white markers,
although Thurid was far from happy about it.
“You’ve gone soft in the head, Fridmarr,” he growled. “You
never exhibited any symptoms of compassion all the time you were
growing up. This is a most unpropitious time for you to start exhibiting
such behavior.”
“Raudbjorn isn’t evil, like Sorkvir and the Dokkalfar,”
Leifr replied. “Besides, I feel a sort of kinship with him. We’re both
strangers here.” Thurid eyed him askance, and Gotiskolker darted him
a warning scowl, but Leifr had recognized his mistake the moment it
had left his lips. “Strangers to this miserable swamp, I mean,” he added.
Thurid sighed and shook his head in silent wonderment.
“Fridmarr, Fridmarr, if you were anybody else, I would worry about
you, but being Fridmarr, you’ll always be a stranger wherever you go.”
They were close to the edge of the swamp when Leifr called
another halt. Almost beside the safe path, one of the troll-hounds
was mired in black mud almost to its shoulders. The beast yelped at
them gladly and tried to wriggle free, using all its ability to appeal
for help by wagging its tail frantically and showing all its teeth in an
ingratiating canine grin.
Thurid groaned. “Don’t tell me you feel kinship with dogs,
too. That’s far too preposterous, Fridmarr. This is one of Sorkvir’s
hounds. Last night it was hunting you and would have torn you to bits if
it had found you.”
“Last night he was in bad company,” Gotiskolker said. ‘Today
he’s nothing but a hound. It all depends upon which cause he’s
following at the time, whether he’s only a dog or a demon.“ He pulled
out his pipe and made himself comfortable, watching Leifr inching on
his belly across the mud toward the hound.
All Leifr’s doubts about the hound’s disposition vanished when
he came within licking distance; the dog ecstatically slathered its red
tongue all over his face as he tied the rope around its chest and ordered
Thurid to pull. Still muttering curses, the wizard bent his back against
the rope.
Once the suction of the mud was broken, the hound bounded
freely out of the mire, the gladdest creature under the sun, and
placed both paws on Thurid’s chest to lick his face. The paws were
huge and muddy, but Thurid submitted rigidly to this form of
salutation.
“He’s harmless,” Leifr assured the wizard. As he crawled wearily
out of the mire, he promptly fell victim to the hound’s next outburst of
gratitude. When he managed to climb into his saddle, the hound
stationed himself at Jolfr’s heels and trotted along with the watchful
pride of a dog who has recently adopted a human being, an object to
be defended and prompted to provide shelter and food.
They had not gone far when the hound suddenly pricked up his
great, hairy ears and dashed ahead, whining worriedly.
“Ah, good, he’s leaving,” Thurid said. “For a while I feared he
would follow us.”
Leifr listened to the excited yelps ahead. “He’s found something.
Not Sorkvir’s bear fylgja, I hope.” He unsheathed his sword and nudged
Jolfr ahead cautiously.
The hound was capering up and down the safe track, his eyes
fixed upon something in the bog. It was another hound, with
nothing of him showing except his head. When he saw the
horsemen, he uttered a despairing howl of anguish.
Leifr dismounted, taking his rope with him, and Thurid added a
howl of anguish of his own, which Leifr ignored. When the second dog
was freed from the mire, he demonstrated his joy with delighted
wriggling and fawning around their feet, showing his teeth and lying on
his back, paddling the air with his feet, all for the privilege of trotting
behind Leifr’s horse at the opposite heel from the first hound.
When they found the third hound, Thurid was ominously silent,
even when the grateful animal almost knocked him down with its
delighted groveling. Each time Thurid took a step, the hound slithered
under his feet, gazing up at him rapturously with golden eyes, asking
only to be allowed to worship at the shrine of a generous master’s boots.
“Fridmarr,” Thurid rumbled menacingly. “I won’t tolerate these
puffing, slobbering, stinking brutes. Either you get rid of them, or I’ll
leave. What monsters they are, and imagine what a lot of fodder they’ll
eat. Maybe they’ll even forget their gratitude and turn on us one day.“
“They’re trained to hunt, aren’t they?” Leifr asked, wrestling
away from one of the beasts so he could mount his horse again.
“They’ll provide for themselves and us, too. They would also
discourage any trolls from attacking us, if we wander into troll
territory.”
“Most likely they’ll bring us nothing but troll meat for supper,”
Thurid grumbled in a much-softened tone. “Perhaps they might be
induced to bring down a deer, though.”
When they stopped for the night, the hounds stretched out beside
the fire, panting amiably, pausing to listen alertly to the night sounds.
Once they all sprang to their feet, growling deep in their chests, and
tore away without a sound, with all their back fur bristling up like
hedges. After a long interval, Leifr heard the distant yammering of trolls
and the savage baying of the hounds. When the hounds finally returned,
their jaws and chests were soaked with fresh blood.
In the morning, while Thurid was taking bearings with an
assortment of devices, the hounds brought down a brace of hares, which
Gotiskolker skinned and cooked. The dogs gnawed the bones without
any great hunger; their bellies still bulged with troll meat from their
night’s hunting.
“We’re slightly off track,” Thurid at last reported, tapping his
long finger on the map with disapprobation. “We must mend our course
slightly northward to find Luster. I expect we could be there by evening,
if we have no more delays.” He darted a significant glance toward Leifr,
and a resentful one toward the dogs. “We might have made it last night,
if not for certain unnecessary stops.”
Gotiskolker wiped his fingers on his tunic. “A pity it wasn’t you
stuck in the mire, Thurid. We wouldn’t have wasted our time