Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
a place with such an atmosphere of untimely death, the travelers rode
on in silence.
“No one is left here,” Leifr said, after passing two more
battered houses. “The entire settlement is gone.”
Thurid rubbed his nose with the knob of his staff. “It must have
happened since you passed through here with Sorkvir. I was here
shortly before the alog. I shared some of my ideas with a bunch of
thralls sharing the same barn I slept in. We passed around a big stone
flagon, and the more times it went around, the better I sounded. It was
Ofrodur Blue-Nose’s barn, I recall, but which place is his, I couldn’t
say, after all this time. Fridmarr, do you know which one is old
Ofrodur’s place?”
Leifr shifted uncomfortably in his saddle and stole a glance at
Gotiskolker, who was hunched away in his cloak and scowling as if he
had no desire to be disturbed.
Annoyed by his unhelpful attitude, Leifr retorted, “We haven’t
got to it yet. This place looks all strange to me too, with no people or
livestock. I don’t like the feeling I get here. Did you notice how those
doors were pulled off their hinges by something? I don’t think trolls
could have done that sort of job. They wouldn’t smash the furniture,
either, until it was nothing but kindling wood. When we stop for the
night, I want to be in someplace safe.” He gazed up at the hill fort
crowning the summit of the mountain. Its ramparts had crumbled here
and there, pouring fans of scree down the hillside. A pair of round
towers peered with blank slits of eyes over the battlements, watching
the low ground in silent suspicion.
“Up there?” Gotiskolker questioned, nodding to the fortress.
“Yes, up there,” Leifr repeated, his curiosity suddenly piqued
as a flock of ravens surged into the air over the hill fort, cawing
raucously in alarm. “If there’s any life left in Bjartur, we’ll find it
there.”
The roadway up to the hill fort carved a zigzag path across the
face of the hill. Years of storms had eroded deep gullies across it, and
rockslides blocked it completely at two points, but something had made
a path either over the top or around the edge of the rockfall.
At the third rockslide, they halted to decide between a tortuous
climb over the rocks or a wretched goat trail overhanging a
breathtaking drop to the crags below. Leifr opted for the path over the
top, since it was shorter and the afternoon was almost spent. At the top
of the rockslide, they passed below the crumbling ramparts of the
fortress, where the ravens still cackled among the rocky crenellations.
With an echoing clatter, a rock suddenly bounced across their
path and careened into space beyond. Cautiously Leifr started
forward again, watching the walls above. Glimpsing a flash of
movement, he halted Jolfr quickly and backed him into the protection
of a jutting rock as another stone came bouncing down the high wall.
This time a considerable amount of rocks and gravel started moving,
threatening to bury the trail across the rockslide.
“Someone is up there,” Thurid said excitedly. “If he throws one
more rock, I’m going to blast him.”
“And bring down half the mountain?” Gotiskolker snorted,
his hood and beard whitened with dust. “I didn’t come this far to get
buried alive.”
“You’re not more than half-alive anyway,” Thurid retorted. “I
don’t know what your objections would be.”
When the rocks finally stopped falling, Thurid poked his head out
cautiously and looked up toward the top of the wall. “I see him, the
miserable rotter,” he growled. “Halloa! You up there! Who are you? Are
you trying to kill us? Stop dropping those rocks, or you’ll regret it.”
The answer was another rock, larger than the others, which
bounced across the path and vaulted into a thicket far down the slope. A
voice called out from above, “Stay away! You’ll be sorry if you come
up here. Bjartur is haunted.”
“Haunted! Well, that’s hardly surprising,” Thurid mused, his
hand straying into his satchel to shuffle through the rune sticks.
“I wonder if this fellow thinks he’s a draug.”
“Maybe he
is
a draug,” Leifr suggested. “Certainly a draug would
know if a place were haunted or not.” He was beginning to regret his
ill-conceived fascination with the ruined fortress, but he hated to think
that they had come a mile over a rough path only to turn back within a
stone’s throw of the top. He stepped out of his shelter and peered up the
face of the hill.
“You there!” he called in a threatening tone. “If one more pebble
falls down on us, this wizard is going to make you suffer for it. You’re a
day-farer and so are we, you fool, so stop trying to brain us with rocks.”
The scornful reply from above was unmistakable—half a
dozen rocks in quick succession clattered down the cliff, generating a
rumbling rockslide which fortunately angled behind the travelers,
instead of pouring over the top of them like a waterfall.
When the rocks stopped and the dust cleared somewhat,
Gotiskolker shook his cloak free of a load of dirt and sand and came
forward to Leifr’s position.
“I think we’ll have to negotiate,” he said, nodding toward the
edge of the rockslide.
Four men armed with fearsome stone axes stood blocking the
way. Rusty armor of several unusual designs was strapped onto their
limbs and torsos by makeshift methods and their helmets were clearly
ancient, eagle-winged, and much embellished with superfluous
devices and embossing. The axes were made of obsidian, mounted
on wooden handles with rawhide and honed to transparent sharpness.
Thurid stepped forward immediately, warning Leifr and
Gotiskolker to keep silent with a terse grimace and a scowl.
“What has become of my old friend Ofrodur Blue-Nose?” He
struck an indignant pose, rapping his staff on the ground with a shower
of sparks. “I’ve come all this way, and all the houses are in a shambles.
Are you the plundering vagabonds who have ravaged Bjartur?”
“Ofrodur Blue-Nose, did you say?” The strangers lowered their
axes cautiously, and their leader stepped forward, a rather thin
individual with a brown beard that reached to his waist.
“I’m Borgar Ofrodursson. My father is dead. Did you know
him?”
“Know him? I shared his hospitality, his food, his shelter, his
company—and you say he’s dead. It grieves me to hear it.” Thurid
rubbed his chin meditatively. “Borgar, you say? I remember you as a
small lad.”
“I don’t remember any wizards at Ofrodursknoll,” Borgar replied
warily. “What are you doing here now? It’s dangerous to wander around
Bjartur after dusk.” His three companions nodded grimly and muttered
in agreement.
“We were looking for some people,” Thurid said.
“They’re gone,” Borgar replied. “Moved away, sailed away, or
carried away, it’s all the same. Gone, except for a few of us, who stayed
to fight.”
Leifr stepped forward. “Who are you fighting? Sorkvir?”
Borgar shook his head. “Sorkvir wastes little time on us, and we
keep out of his way. We fight and we wait. Now tell us something
about yourself. You look like a warrior and you carry a stone weapon,
instead of Alfar steel, and I see you aren’t afraid to bare your head to
the sun, so you must be a day-farer. Were you also a friend to my
father?”
“I fear not,” Leifr answered, and Thurid darted him a
warning frown. “I came here once, before your misfortune. I am a
warrior, but thanks to Sorkvir’s alog, I have no steel weapons to fight
with. I have come here with these companions to offer restitution for an
old wrong.”
Borgar and his men exchanged glances, suddenly uneasy.
“We can’t stay here to talk,” Borgar said. “Let’s get within doors
before the day wanes. We have matters of consequence to discuss, and
this is no place for it. Follow me. Let my men bring your horses.” He
signaled to the man on the fortress wall, then led the way up the narrow
path. “I hope you’ll forgive us for our caution. It’s hard to know whom
to trust, so we trust no one.”
“If you’re trusting us, however,“ Gotiskolker said. ”Isn’t that
setting a dangerous precedent?“
Borgar turned to look at Gotiskolker curiously. “Who said we
were trusting you? Until we are satisfied you’ll do us no harm, you’ll be
our prisoners.”
Thurid halted with a deep and regretful sigh. “I don’t wish to be
disagreeable, Borgar, since I have such fond memories of your father,
but we haven’t the time to be prisoners. We’re on a journey of utmost
importance, and you stand to benefit a great deal from what we do—if
we are allowed to do it, that is.“
Borgar inclined his head in an understanding nod. “In a very
short time the sun will be beneath the horizon and we will all be
prisoners of these walls until dawn. If you are roaming around out here,
sometime before sunrise you’ll wish most desperately that you were a
prisoner in anyone’s dungeon anywhere in the Realm. The thing that
walks the outer fortress by night keeps a far harsher prison than we
do.”
“But when dawn comes, will we be free to leave, if we wish?”
Leifr asked suspiciously.
“Certainly, if you wish,” Borgar replied. “But for the hours
between dusk and dawn, you must be safe behind bars and bolts and
thick doors with the rest of us.”
Leifr motioned impatiently to Thurid and strode ahead beside
Borgar. “Wizards are useful when it comes to fighting supernatural
forces and powerful enemies. What is it that walks these ruins?”
Borgar darted him a quick glance. “It’s Ognun,” he said quietly.
“I’ll tell you about him when we are safe inside. No one likes to talk
about Ognun when the sun is about to go down, and there’s quite a ways
to safety yet.”
They reached the main entrance to the hill fort, where the gates
lay shattered, with grass and moss growing in velvety tuffets in the
cracks. The massive pillars that had held the gate were also skewed
and shattered, held together by clumps of grass and trailing vines.
Leifr nodded toward the fallen gates. “Did your enemy Ognun
do this?” he asked.
Borgar shook his head. “This was long before Ognun, when the
fortress fell for the last time to the Dokkalfar and their wizards.”
Inside the wall lay a ditch and another wall, also crumbling and
overgrown with the grasses of decades of neglect. An arched gateway
led into a courtyard, overshadowed by the walls and the two round
towers. By this time, several other strangers had joined the
procession. All their weapons were stone, and their clothing was
mainly roughly tanned troll skins, with a worsted wool shirt or cloak
seen only rarely.
Entry into the towers was gained through a small door barely
large enough to accommodate a horse with a pack on its back. Once
everyone was inside, a quick tally was taken of the occupants. When
everyone seemed to be accounted for, most of the men clumped away to
the small courtyard beyond the towers, where dogs barked, horses
nickered, and children’s voices mingled in a pleasing, home-like
babble of sounds. Borgar plucked up a sconce light from where it stood
beside the doorway and led his guests across the courtyard to an ancient
firehall with a thatched roof, hung with rotting shields. Inside, it was
like many a Scipling firehall—much blackened by smoke and age,
sparse as to decorations and carvings, with a great hearth at either
end and benches and tables in between. Along the sides were
platforms for sleeping for guests, travelers, or a dozen or so extra
fighting men.
Servants were carrying in the supper, threading their way
patiently through small children and dogs to serve the meal. Borgar
pointed to the places nearest the end of the table for honored guests,
then sat down in the chieftain’s chair. The hubbub of voices was
hushed, and all eyes turned to Borgar and his guests.
“We have visitors tonight, and I bid you all to make them
welcome among us,” Borgar said gravely. “They were here before we
took refuge in the old fortress.”
Leifr sensed a sudden heightening of interest throughout the
household of thirty-four, from the oldest grandfather to the two solemn
babies seated on their mothers’ laps. Borgar went on to name all the