Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
pulling you out, but we couldn’t have allowed three valuable hounds
to perish so miserably.”
Thurid elevated his nose and turned his back in a smart about-
face and marched away to saddle his horse. For the rest of the morning,
he maintained a haughty silence. Once the mud and moss on his
clothing had dried, it turned to dust, which he shook out and brushed
away carefully, until he could once again present a dignified and
imposing appearance. Pointedly, he eyed his companions’
miserable attire.
Shortly after midday they sighted Luster ahead, in a green fold in
the skirt of the barren fell. The large turf hall boasted four gables and
various additions, and the stables and sheep folds rambled outward from
it in all directions, enclosing a well-trodden yard before the front door.
A dead tree in the center of the yard with a shield hanging on it
proclaimed that the house was a house of refuge, a safe haven for all
travelers of whatever persuasion, where anyone who left his weapons of
war hanging on the tree outside was welcome to come in.
“Luster!” Thurid announced. “This place is famous far and wide.
Alof, the woman who owns it, has kept the peace in this part of the
Pentacle for a good many years, as well as keeping a good table for her
guests. We should be well- fed tonight.”
As they rode slowly down the lane past the barns and
paddocks, Leifr noticed that it all seemed desolate of ordinary use, and
all that he could see of any livestock were heaps of bones hither and
yon.
“Sorkvir’s curse has been hard on this place,” he observed to
Gotiskolker.
Gotiskolker nodded abstractedly, peering around him warily.
“This place is dangerous,” he muttered. “Although there is only one
woman here, instead of four. Doubtless Thurid will be glad to hear
that.”
Thurid turned slowly to glare over his shoulder, clearing his
throat indignantly. “I don’t believe we’ll have anything to fear from our
hostess, Alof, on any account. She has long been known to this part of
Skarpsey as a generous, fearless, and solitary woman.”
“I wonder if she’s expecting us.” Leifr noted the freshly hung
carcass of a calf in the kitchen annex porch. “News travels fast in the
Pentacle, it seems.” “You ought to have learned what sort of
hospitality to expect by now.”
Gotiskolker grunted. “No one is going to welcome Fridmarr
Fridmundrsson with fresh meat.”
“How right you are,” Leifr replied gloomily. “Not even the dogs
will come out to welcome us.” He nodded toward the long barn,
where a row of dark snouts showed under the door edge, snarling
and growling menacingly. The troll-hounds’ fur stood on end, and
they would have attacked if Leifr had not called them back sharply.
The riders paused beside a window in the accepted fashion
and Thurid tapped at the shutter with the end of his staff. The house
seemed silent and watchful.
“What are we supposed to purify while we’re here?” Leifr
asked Thurid while they waited, speaking in a low voice so he would
not be heard by anyone inside.
“A spring,” Thurid answered, “called Lusterfoss, because there’s
a small waterfall below it. Hark, someone’s coming. They’re unbarring
the door.”
The door opened a short way and someone peered out cautiously.
“Are you travelers who come in peace?” a woman’s voice inquired,
somewhat suspiciously, and Leifr could feel himself being scrutinized.
“Yes, we’ve come with a just and peaceful intent,”
Thurid replied pompously. “We’ve heard that this is a house of refuge
and that we can expect food and shelter here.”
“You are day-farers, and I already have night-farers within. Do
you promise to abide one another’s presence and refrain from your
quarrels while you are under my roof?”
“Yes, we promise,” Thurid said, and Leifr and Gotiskolker
nodded their heads in agreement.
“Then you. may hang your weapons on my tree and come inside.
One of my men will come for your horses.”
As Leifr hung his sword and shield on the dead tree he studied
the Dokkalfar weaponry already hanging there—four broad axes, four
shields, and four swords with walrus tusks for handles.
“We’re outnumbered,” he observed to Thurid.
“They are outwizarded.” Thurid sniffed arrogantly and strode
toward the hall with his tattered cloak surging gallantly around the tops
of his pretentious old boots. Leifr and Gotiskolker slunk after him,
looking like two badly off thralls trailing at their master’s heels.
“Pardon the darkness,” their hostess said, after the door had
closed behind them. “My other guests prefer the dark, but they won’t
mind one small lamp.”
“Are you the famous Alof ?” Thurid inquired. For the first time,
Leifr got a good look at her. Short and rather stocky, she had little
to recommend her except a broad, good-natured face and a massive
coil of golden hair. In the Alfar realm, true age was impossible to guess.
Alof laughed, a husky, jovial laugh. “Have you been hearing
stories about me and my house of safety?” she asked. “I hope you’ll
find my hospitality deserving of your good opinion, but I must say that
times are not what they once were. One rule I must explain first so you
will understand. No one is to go outside after the sun has set. I’ve had
guests who slipped away after dark to fight a holmgang and I don’t like
to have then-blood upon the soil of Luster. This house is supposed to be
a haven from battle. Also, the trolls are too abundant around here to
make any nighttime strolling a pleasant experience.“ She smiled
broadly and beckoned them to follow her. ”Now come into my hall
and make yourselves comfortable.“
The Dokkalfar already in residence looked up suspiciously at the
new guests for a moment, then turned their backs to resume their
conversation, putting their faces close together and whispering
intensely. When the newcomers sat down at the far end of the table, the
four Dokkalfar shot them lowering glances and scuttled away to a far
corner.
Food and drink were brought. To Leifr’s famished eyes, the
modest meal looked like a feast. Even Alof’s rather coarse features
took on a lovely tint by the light of her hospitable fires.
“I feel as if I’m here on false pretenses,” Leifr muttered to
Gotiskolker, under the cover of a burst of laughter from Alof, whom
Thurid was amusing with witty anecdotes.
“You
are
here under false pretenses,” Gotiskolker replied in a
gruff mutter. “Now be quiet about it.”
Leifr ate in silence, watching Thurid putting on his best court
manners.
“Your two companions are so silent,” Alof said, smiling
toward Leifr and Gotiskolker, inviting them to speak.
“They’re rather rough fellows,” Thurid said hurriedly. “Doubtless
the splendor of your fine hall and good food has rendered them
speechless with admiration. Common creatures such as they are
sometimes are very quiet by nature.” His darting glance warned Leifr
to acquire a quiet nature or he might pay the penalties for it later. Leifr
might have shrugged it off if Thurid had not imprudently added, “I
wouldn’t be traveling with such low companions if it weren’t so
dangerous to travel alone these days. The looks of these two are
calculated to frighten off my enemies.”
“Low companions?” Leifr repeated. “Thurid, you’re going a bit
too far. Either you tell her who we are and why we’ve come, or I shall.
This is no time for your foolish games. Perhaps if the lady knew our
names, she wouldn’t be so generous with her hospitality.“
Thurid paled, darting a nervous glance toward the Dokkalfar and
then toward Alof. “Perhaps you have heard,” he began unwillingly,
“that Fridmarr Fridmundrsson has returned and swears to break the alog
and kill Sorkvir.”
Alof’s eyes widened. “Fridmarr Fridmundrsson! I thought I knew
that face.” She leaned forward to stare at Leifr with what he interpreted
as a predatory manner.
“Yes, I’m Fridmarr, the traitor, the despised, the follower of
Sorkvir, who caused his own brother’s death. You’re quite right to hate
me for what I’ve done to Luster, and I’ve got no business sitting down
at your table. If you wish, I’ll leave.” He stood up, ready to take evasive
action if Alof’s opinion of him matched that of the nisses.
“No! No! Please sit down.” Alof held out her hands welcomingly,
favoring him with her homely smile. “For a moment I was surprised,
yes, but then I realized that you have indeed come back to right the
terrible wrong you did to Luster. I forgive you entirely, and I only desire
to help you. Please believe me when I say I bear you no grudge.”
She spoke so earnestly that Leifr sat speechless. Belatedly he
said, “I am truly sorry for what happened before. I expected you to be
angry and to want revenge.”
Alof shook her head, still smiling. “Revenge has no place at
Luster. This is a house of refuge.” Her eyes seemed to bore into Leifr,
large and green, with dilated black pupils that glittered like obsidian.
Then she went on in a silky tone, “Do you really believe you can solve
the problem of Lusterfoss? It used to be such a pretty little spring, until
it started flowing with blood.”
Leifr stiffened, darting Thurid a questioning look, but Thurid
merely gazed back at him in blank astonishment. When Leifr glanced at
Gotiskolker, he encountered a blaze of silent fury that baffled him
further. The scavenger sat glaring at Alof with evident hatred.
“It flows blood,” Leifr repeated carefully, as if refreshing the
details in his mind. “Ah, yes. How often does it happen now?”
Alof shrugged her thick shoulders and gazed into the rafters
thoughtfully. “Sometimes daily. It almost always happens when there
are guests in the house, unfortunately. I’m afraid some of them don’t
carry away a very good opinion of my house when they leave.”
“You’re quite sure it’s blood?” Leifr asked.
She nodded emphatically and folded her arms. “Blood and bits of
flesh and bones,” she said matter-of-factly. “There’s no doubt about it in
my mind. The spring is a polluted, haunted place since Sorkvir made
his alog. You were there, you must know what he did to Lusterfoss.”
Her eyelids drooped knowingly as she nodded her head at him.
“Sorkvir never confides all there is to know,” Gotiskolker said
suddenly in his harsh voice. “But in Fridmarr’s case he made his fatal
mistake. He confided too much and he let Fridmarr escape from his
influence.”
Alof gazed at Leifr with narrowing eyes. Her pupils shrank to
mere slits, almost like a cat’s eyes. “I am very glad to hear it,” she
drawled. “I never thought Sorkvir capable of making mistakes.” She
shook herself abruptly, as if banishing unpleasant thoughts. “Enough
serious talk, for now.”
She smiled her empty hostess smile and excused herself,
taking a wide course around the three troll-hounds sprawled near the
smoldering hearth. They eyed her curiously, growling, with their
hackles bristling. Leifr reprimanded them sharply, and they
immediately cringed and fawned around his feet in apology.
“I’m sorry for their lack of house manners,” Leifr said in
embarrassment. “Perhaps they saw few ladies in Sorkvir’s hall and
think you are a new creature.”
Alof laughed, somewhat uneasily. “I thought I recognized troll-
hounds. What do you call the lovely creatures?” “Kraftig, Frimodig,
and Farlig.”
“What very good names. Powerful, Fearless, and Dangerous. If
they are like their names, woe betide any trolls they encounter. I’m
rather frightened of them myself.” She laughed nervously and edged
away into the kitchen, keeping her eyes on the hounds, who kept their
eyes upon her. Frimodig growled softly, stubbornly refusing to give up
his conviction that Alof was a possible enemy.
“You should leave them out here,” Thurid said angrily when they
were outside. “You don’t know what those wretched killers might
decide to do.”
“At least, he can watch them, if they’re inside,” Gotiskolker said.
“If they’re outside, they might kill all of her dogs and a few of her
servants for good measure. I’ve never seen such a scurvy lot in all my