Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
days.”
“What can you expect on a farm where the spring flows with
blood?” Thurid demanded, fastening an accusing glare upon Leifr. “If
you weren’t completely reformed, Fridmarr, I’d think you an evil villain
for bringing poverty and affliction on this poor woman. What a nasty
thing to do, causing harm to a house of refuge.”
Gotiskolker sighed hollowly. “I’d heard Thurid had an eye
for the ladies when he was in his prosperous days. He never learns his
lesson, does he?”
Thurid gripped his staff. “One day I hope to have the satisfaction
of doing something very unpleasant to you, you venomous bit of
raven bait. At my present level of powers, however, I don’t have
anything sufficiently dreadful at my command.”
Gotiskolker snorted. “Everything has already been done to me
that can be done, buffoon. Besides, if you keep going as you are, you
won’t have any powers.”
“Pooh! What do you know about powers?” Thurid sneered. “All
about losing them,” Gotiskolker answered.
For a moment their eyes locked in a hostile stare. Then Thurid
turned away with an indignant shiver. “What absolute rubbish,” he
growled. “Take me to the spring, Fridmarr, and I’ll see what influences
are prevalent.”
Leifr had no idea where the spring lay. Recalling a hummocky
area behind one of the barns, he started away in that direction, hoping
the spring lay somewhere above it. As they passed the barn, Leifr heard
something sniffing under the crack of a closed door. Looking down, he
saw several ugly snouts pressed into opening between the stone
threshold and the bottom of the door. Hurriedly he led the way around
the corner of the barn and over a stone wall, whistling impatiently to his
hounds, who lingered beside the door, enraging the dogs inside by
snapping and barking under the door.
In moody silence, Leifr hiked up the side of the fell, hoping
to sight the spring from his high vantage point. Thurid gazed down at
the farm below, a speculative gleam in his eyes and his thoughts clearly
occupied with something other than finding the spring. Humming softly
to himself, he strode along with a sprightly step, letting his cloak billow
majestically at his heels. Several times he ran his fingers through his
thin hair and tweaked at his wispy beard, as if regretting their mutual
sparsity.
Suddenly he stopped in mid-step, completely arrested. Slowly he
raised one hand to point, swinging around gradually like a weather vane
a few degrees to the west.
“There it is,” he said in a voice choked with awe. “I can feel it
from here. It is a great evil influence.” He started forward, his hand
still extended, his eyes wide and glassy.
Gotiskolker observed to Leifr, “He reminds me of a bird dog I
once had. It was a pointer, too.”
Thurid’s nostrils twitched indignantly, but he did not look around.
“Spare us your sarcasm. The influence I feel is no laughing matter.” He
took his dowsing pendulum from his pocket and commenced
dowsing, although the spring was clearly in sight. “Stay behind
me,” he ordered, as Leifr attempted to move around him during one
of his pauses to consult the pendulum. Leifr sighed impatiently, but he
remained behind Thurid.
The spring did not boast an inviting appearance. A fence of
whale bones had been set up around it to prevent livestock from fouling
it, and five tall monoliths stood protectively in a ring, with the dark
water pooling around their bases. Long, afternoon shadows reached out
like dark, grasping fingers and the air was thick with an unpleasant
stench. The turf around the hedge of whale bones was beaten to dust,
as if many different paths all converged at that spot. Uneasily Leifr
gazed around at the surrounding rocks and thickets, wondering if the
prickling sensation in his scalp was caused by watching eyes or by the
unseen influence Thurid felt coming from the spring.
As Thurid drew closer to the fence of bones, his pendulum
became almost unmanageable. It twirled viciously in tight circles, or
swung in wild arcs. Suddenly Thurid’s hand dived earthward. Using
both hands, he pulled up the pendulum like a stubborn weed with a
long root. The sinew string continued to lash around wildly until he
forcibly thrust it into his satchel.
“It’s no matter,” Thurid said, his ghastly pale face beaded with
sweat. “There’s nothing to worry about. We’ve dealt with Sorkvir’s evil
curses before. We can deal with this one just as easily. What are
wizards for, eh?” Then he added a horrified shout, perceiving Leifr
climbing through the bone fence. “Fridmarr! No! It’s not safe!”
Leifr looked around him carefully, seeing nothing to alarm
him except Sorkvir’s black spirals emblazoned on the standing stones.
The earth underfoot seemed smelly and stained, and the smaller rocks
ringing the pool were smeared with something that Leifr didn’t like the
looks of—something suspiciously similar to blood. He moved closer to
investigate, ignoring Thurid’s cries of protest and dismay.
Thurid finally bent down and crawled through the fence, too
curious himself to stay outside while Leifr appeared so interested in his
discoveries.
“This place is like a enamel pit,” Leifr whispered, as
Gotiskolker slipped silently through the fence, his eyes blazing with a
peculiar intensity.
Thurid covered his mouth and nose with a handkerchief,
peering into the dark spring water intently. “It
is
a channel pit,” he
answered in a strangled voice. “There must be dozens of skulls in
that water—and bones and bits of rags. Murders— Alof said that
it was dangerous to go out after dark. Someone— or something
—preys upon her guests.”
Filled with dark forebodings, Leifr looked into the murky
water. A pale shape rose toward the surface slowly, detached from the
jumble of bones on the bottom. It was a hand, reaching out toward
him as if to shake hands. With a gasp, he drew back from such
uncouth familiarity, and the hand floated to the overflow at the low end
of the pool and disappeared in the green slime of the slough below the
spring.
“There are houses,” he said to no one in particular, “where
the hosts welcome travelers inside and then murder them for their
possessions. This could be one of those places.”
“Nonsense,” Thurid said. “Luster has been a house of safe haven
for many, many years. All my life I’ve heard of Alof and her golden
hair. I’ve never heard of any murders until lately, since Sorkvir’s curse.
A great evil has overtaken Luster, and it is because of this polluted
spring. We shall purge it of these fell murderers and make Luster a safe
refuge once more, instead of a place of horrors.“
“The murderers are trolls, I’d say.” Gotiskolker rose from a close
scrutiny of the soft earth. “Dozens of them, and some are quite large.”
“Trolls! Then it will be as simple as this—” Thurid snapped his
fingers confidently and reached out to pat one of the stones. “Tomorrow
I shall have these stones once more—” He had no time to finish; the
moment he touched the stone, a heavy jolt ran through his body,
spinning him half-around and throwing him to the ground. His open,
unblinking eyes stared sightlessly skyward.
Leifr and Gotiskolker rushed to him and knelt down, listening for
a heartbeat and trying to feel any breath coming out of his pinched and
pale nostrils. They could detect no sign of life after several minutes, and
his flesh was beginning to feel cool.
“He’s dead!” Leifr gasped. “What happened? I thought wizards
never died!” “He shouldn’t have touched that stone,” Gotiskolker
until he’d cured it of Sorkvir’s influence. He
replied gloomily. “Not
should have known, the buffoon.”
They knelt beside him silently. Leifr touched the silver torque
with a flutter of panic in his stomach. It seemed a notch tighter already.
“We can’t alter the Pentacle without a wizard,” he began, but
Gotiskolker raised one hand warningly, his gaze fixed upon something
outside the bone fence.
“He’s gone to his fylgja form,” Gotiskolker whispered, as a small
owl landed on a rib, staring at them and composing its feathers in a
familiar, exasperated manner.
“How will he get back?” Leifr demanded, looking from Thurid to
the owl. “How long will it take?”
Gotiskolker shook his head. “With the escape spell, no one ever
knows for certain if he will get back. We’ll have to keep him safe until
he returns, if he knows how to reverse the escape spell.” He stood up
and looked back toward Luster. “Let her believe we think he’s dead. If
she believes it, that’s all to the good.“
He refused to explain himself. Under his direction, Leifr
hauled Thurid’s body out of the circle by the heels, then hoisted him
onto his shoulders and carried him down the hill to the house.
Gotiskolker trailed behind abjectly with such a weary, despondent
manner that Leifr began to be gnawed by fears that he was going to be
left to fend for himself in the Alfar realm much sooner than he had ever
imagined in his wildest nightmares.
By the time he reached the courtyard, the sun was below the
horizon and his strength was almost exhausted. Alof came hurriedly
to meet him, and he told her what had happened.
“How very unlucky! How dreadful!” she gasped. “Bring him into
the hall by the fire and we’ll see if any life lingers yet.”
“He’s dead,” Gotiskolker said glumly, but Leifr followed Alof’s
directions and placed Thurid’s body on the platform nearest the fire.
Alof brought several lamps nearer to cast their light on Thurid,
but she could not detect any signs of life, either.
“We won’t give up,” she said with a gloomy sigh. “We’ll sit up
with him and watch through the night. We might see the life return to
him. Wizards are strange, though. I hope we don’t have any trouble.”
She shuddered significantly. “Although he was your friend in life, I
doubt if you’d care for him as a draug.”
“Not at all,” Gotiskolker replied darkly.
As soon as it was sufficiently dark, the four Dokkalfar sent for
their horses and rode away in a state of muffled excitement. Leifr
watched them through a crack in the door as they charged at the tree
and reclaimed their weapons. Brandishing their axes and bristling
maces, they galloped past the hall, cloaks flying like banners and all
their barbarous trophies fluttering from saddles, bridles, helmets, and
weapons. From their insignia, he knew them to be from the Order of the
Owl and therefore high in status and power with Sorkvir.
Grimly Leifr eyed his sword hanging on the tree, wishing it were
at his side where it belonged. Unless he misjudged the intent of the four
Dokkalfar, he expected that word of his presence at Luster would soon
reach Sorkvir.
Gotiskolker also seemed to be brooding upon that dire possibility
as he sat beside Thurid’s inert form. “We can’t wait forever,” he said at
last. “Even if this is a house of refuge.” He spoke the last words with
bitter emphasis, glancing sidelong at Alof.
“Even Sorkvir won’t dare harm you here,” she said earnestly. “It
would be bad luck to break such a long tradition. He won’t risk it. You
mustn’t think of leaving until you know whether Thurid will live or
die.”
“The tradition of safety was broken long ago,” Gotiskolker said
harshly. “It would make no difference to Sorkvir anyway. We have no
choice, however. We wouldn’t leave our friend behind in a place like
this.”
“You don’t care for my hospitality?” Alof inquired with a
brittle smile, eyeing Gotiskolker closely.
“Not much,” Gotiskolker replied coolly. “I don’t know whether
I’ll be murdered in my bed or up there by the spring.”
Leifr scowled at him, secretly sharing the same fears. ‘Thurid’s
misfortune isn’t her fault,“ he said. ”She’s as opposed to Sorkvir as we
are. He’s been no friend to her. We can’t afford to make any more
enemies, Gotiskolker.“
“Enemies are cheaply acquired,” Gotiskolker growled. “Friends,
on the other hand, are very expensive. Ever notice how your friends
disappear when your money and luck are gone?”
Leifr decided to ignore him, but Alof gazed at him with particular
dislike. They agreed to take turns watching though the night, but
more watching than Leifr, who awakened in the