Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
“Nothing is what it seems, especially legends,” Gotiskolker
replied.
“Legend or not, I’m going to find out why the lady Alof is still
here, letting trolls into the house. If I don’t come back by the time you
count to five hundred, you’d better get out of the house and leave
Thurid to fend for himself.” Leifr took a lamp in one hand and his
sword in the other and slowly moved down the long, dark corridor.
The sounds of mauling and snarling suddenly ceased; then the
voices of the hounds blared outside in the midst of fresh fighting. The
uproar diminished gradually as the hounds pursued their quarry into the
fells. When Leifr reached the kitchen, he found the door shut and
locked from inside. After staring at it distrustfully for a moment, he
went on to explore the dingy, foul-smelling kitchen and the warren of
rooms and passages beyond. More than once, he had the feeling that
something was flitting ahead of him, just barely beyond the reach of
his feeble lamp.
“Who’s there?” he demanded, certain he had seen a movement.
For a long time he listened, holding his breath, feeling the hairs lifting
on his arms under the unseen influence of someone hiding nearby,
perhaps in the same room with him. He took a step and heard the soft
rustle of cloth in the darkness ahead. Striding forward swiftly, he
glimpsed a dark figure darting around behind him and a flash of pale
hair.
“Alof, is that you?” he called sharply.
His answer was a low, vulgar chuckle and the thunderous
slamming of a door. A bar fell into place on the far side with a crash.
“Alof! I know you’re out there! What are you doing?” Leifr
threw his shoulder against the door in a mighty effort and was rewarded
with only a small creak of protest. “Alof! Open this door!”
“I’m the mistress of this house,” she answered, “and I’ve decided
you’ll be safer if you’re locked up.”
“On whose orders, Alof? Sorkvir’s? I thought this house was
supposed to be a safe haven for both sides. You’re violating the spirit of
Luster with such treachery.”
“All that is different now,” she answered. “Luster belongs to
Sorkvir and he has given it over to the trolls. Whoever stops at this
house is fair game.”
“I hope this is your idea of a joke,” Leifr said in a threatening
tone. “You’ve had your fun now trying to frighten me with your tricks.
Open this door and let me out, and I’ll forgive you for your unfortunate
sense of humor.”
She laughed; for a moment, Leifr thought it didn’t sound much
like Alof. “You won’t think it’s a joke much longer,” she said in a
grating voice. “Sorkvir doesn’t have a sense of humor. Pain is all that
amuses him—as you will soon find out.”
“Then you planned to lure the dogs away,” Leifr said, “and you
led me down here into a trap. This isn’t a house of refuge, at all; it’s a
house of trickery and murder, and you’re in the middle of it.” He gave
the door a heavy kick to vent his fury, raising a cloud of musty dust.
“I must confess to a certain taste for blood,” Alof replied, with
a smack of her lips. “Unfortunately, we shall have to content ourselves
with a cold wizard. Sorkvir forbade us to lay one tooth on you; the other
two are fair game, but what poor pickings! Not enough blood in either
of them to slake my thirst. I wish it were you we were taking up to the
spring tomorrow night.”
Leifr listened with mounting horror. “Who are you? What
are you?” he demanded.
She laughed her coarse laugh. “Don’t worry, you’re safe enough
from us in there—as long as you’re locked up. I don’t advise you to
come out until dawn, my dear guest. I believe I warned you about that
before.”
With a chuckle, she moved away down the corridor, but Leifr
could tell she did not go far. Listening through a crack in the door, he
heard the patter of several pairs of feet and some hoarse, growling
voices. Once an ugly nose poked under his door, sniffing curiously
until he trod on it with his foot, occasioning a furious snarling on the far
side.
Leifr dismally scouted the narrow room. From its general musty
atmosphere, flavored with quantities of mouse droppings, he guessed
that it had been a granary at one time. An infrequent breath of fresh air
led him to a small, high grate near the roof. Subsequent investigation
showed him that the opening was too small to crawl through, and the
wall was mortared stone, so he could not hope to dig through it. As
long as his lamp lasted, he prowled up and down the room, looking for
any weakness in his prison. When the wick at last failed, he searched
with his hands. He battered at the door until he was exhausted, but it
was a thick, strong door, tightly bound with iron and swollen tight and
solid by the dampness of the atmosphere.
Toward dawn, when a bit of light showed in the small grate, the
trolls tramping up and down in the corridor ceased their restless
prowling and weird chuckling, and the house seemed quiet. Leifr called
out to Gotiskolker until he was hoarse, and his head ached from
straining to hear an answer. Not a sound came in reply, although he
could hear the hounds whining somewhere, unable to get at him. Too
exhausted and despondent to think of any more ways to pass the time,
Leifr curled up in his cloak and went to sleep. Not surprisingly, his
dreams were all unpleasant possibilities of what lay in store
for him and his companions.
When he awakened, the slant of the sun told him it was
afternoon, and his stomach told him he was hungry. Encouraged by the
slender beam of sunlight and a few hours’ rest, he investigated his cell
another time. When he was finished, he understood his former
discouragement. There was no way out, except the way he had come
in—through the door. Furiously, he attacked it again, certain that
something must give if he kept battering at it; but at last he was forced
to concede that his flesh and bones would give out before the door ever
suffered much damage.
Gloomily he watched the light fade from his small window,
thinking of Alof and her troll companions gathering at the spring to do
their evil work, murdering and feasting upon their helpless victims.
If Alof opened his door again, he would show her no more mercy
than she planned to show Gotiskolker and Thurid. Gripping his sword,
he waited for the sound of footsteps.
At last he heard a door open far down the corridor, but the
footsteps were heavy and measured and jarred a large amount of
metal hanging upon the persons approaching. When the bolt shot back
and the door grumbled open, he found himself confronting a pair of
burly Dokkalfar, cradling broadaxes on their arms. The expression in
their small, glittering eyes assured Leifr that he was looking at a pair of
Sorkvir’s favorite killers.
One of them grunted. “Come with us. You may walk, or we’ll
carry what remains of you after trying to change your mind.”
“I’m sure your methods are very persuasive,” Leifr answered,
sheathing his sword. “I’ll walk.”
One of the Dokkalfar led the way, treating Leifr to a view of the
long sword he wore in a sheath hanging down his back. The handle was
a walrus tusk, much carved with intricate, looping designs, the
interstices deeply dyed with blood. The sheath was ornamented with
battle trophies, such as long locks of hair or beard, gold-filled teeth,
amulets, and quite a few shriveled-up objects that Leifr identified as
ears. The rings through the lobes made the job of suspending them from
the scabbard much easier.
In the main hall, Sorkvir had taken possession of the best seat on
the dais. Raudbjorn stood on one side with his arms folded across his
chest, scowling fearsomely, and an armed Dokkalfar stood on the other
side. The rest turned and stared at Leifr coldly, their hands uneasy upon
their weapons.
“I hope you have passed the time pleasantly,” Sorkvir greeted
Leifr. “My servant tells me you had the best accommodations the
house has to offer.”
Leifr glanced around and spied Alof trying to stay out of
sight behind a pillar. “My accommodations gave me no cause for
complaint, but I’d like to know what has become of Thurid and
Gotiskolker. The quarters she had in mind for them were not nearly so
commodious.”
“Well, Alof,” Sorkvir asked, “have you taken care of Thurid and
Gotiskolker as I commanded?”
“Yes, my lord,” she replied nervously and seemed about to add
something more, but she shut her mouth instead and smiled rather
vacuously.
“Your friends are taken care of,” Sorkvir continued to Leifr.
“Now what is your answer? Do you wish to capitulate or do you wish
to resist further?”
“I see no alternative,” Leifr replied. “I will never surrender.
It would be better to die.”
Raudbjorn rumbled disapprovingly and shook his head.
“Death in a house of refuge,” he growled. “Great, sad evil.
Raudbjorn refuse.”
Sorkvir curled his lip in scorn. “You’re a superstitious fool,
Raudbjorn. Nothing is going to happen to us. A great number of killings
have taken place here, and you can see the earth hasn’t swallowed the
house yet.”
Leifr kept his hand on his sword. “So one more murder will make
no difference—is that what you’re saying, Sorkvir? Why don’t you
get it started then? Send your best men against me. Let’s see how
many of them it takes to kill me.”
“Don’t be so hasty, Fridmarr. Why are you so willing to die?”
Sorkvir bared his teeth in a thin, crafty smile. “Has Thurid taught
you the secrets of death? You think you will be more powerful than I
am, once you come back from the dead. He has taught you powers, has
he not?”
“I won’t answer that,” Leifr replied. “You have made up your
own mind, so why should you question me and expect to hear what
you want to hear? I may be defeated, but I refuse to surrender without
defending my position as long as I am able to lift a sword. I’m ready; do
your worst. You’ll never break my spirit.”
Raudbjorn’s sullen features suddenly beamed with an admiring
grin. “Good speech, Fridmarr,” he boomed. “A good warrior’s speech.”
“Since you liked it so much,” Sorkvir responded, tapping his
fingers on the arm of his chair, “you will get to see
long, yellow
what reward it earns him. Where is my staff, Raudbjorn?”
Raudbjorn shook his head. “Hanging on tree, not in house of
safety. Raudbjorn no fool.”
Sorkvir transferred his baleful gaze from Leifr to Raudbjorn. “I
didn’t order you to leave my weapons on the tree. Now go and
fetch them, and we shall allow Fridmarr all the resistance he needs
before he surrenders his sword and his desire to fight. The mines of
Dokholur will be your next stop, Fridmarr, as long as you have strength
enough to wield a pick or spade.”
Raudbjorn heaved a lugubrious sigh and shook his head with
genuine regret. “Someplace else, Sorkvir. Not here. No honor for
Sorkvir in killing Fridmarr in house of refuge. Sorkvir’s name would
stink.”
“Then Raudbjorn’s head will roll, if you think you’d prefer
it,” Sorkvir replied acidly.
Raudbjorn clasped his huge arms and glowered around him at the
Dokkalfar. “Let them try,” he rumbled. “Raudbjorn make mouse meat
out of them. With bare hands.”
The Dokkalfar themselves seemed inclined to agree, evincing no
great eagerness to attack Raudbjorn. They stood uneasily with their
weapons in hand, viewing Raudbjorn, Leifr, Sorkvir, and even each
other with the utmost distrust. Their fear and mutual hatred was
Sorkvir’s method of controlling them.
Realizing he had reached a stalemate, Sorkvir angrily
motioned Raudbjorn aside. “Go fetch my staff now, if you wish to live.
Let me show you how your job is supposed to be done, thief-taker. I
had thought I could use a day-faring thief-taker, but I find he is worse
than the least talented Dokkalfar.” He stood up and faced Leifr, who
immediately drew his sword and held it ready in both hands. “So you
think to confound me with your cold Scipling steel. There are far
colder forces, Fridmarr.”
“Then use them,” Leifr said. “The Rhbus are on my side.” He