Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
household, explaining that of the original settlement only three families
now remained, and everyone drank in tribute to family members who
had perished or disappeared since the advent of Sorkvir’s alog. Leifr
trembled lest they ask him to introduce himself. Fortunately,
Borgar seemed to be politely waiting for him to mention his name
without being asked, so Leifr gladly allowed the matter to slip
beneath his notice as the evening wore on. Eventually only Borgar,
a few of Borgar’s people, and his guests were left to themselves
beside the fire, where the troll- hounds stretched out with weary sighs.
“Now must be the time to speak of Ognun,” Leifr said to
Borgar, who nodded slowly. Without his winged helmet, he seemed
about the same age as Leifr, although Leifr knew that, among Alfar,
appearances could be deceiving. He was spare and lean, and the
firelight played up the bony contours of his angular features.
“Yes, now is the time for Ognun. Sorkvir put him in the Rhbus’
well to guard it, in a courtyard on the north side of the fortress. He is a
night-farer, so we are able to travel in and out with our livestock or go
fishing by day, while he sleeps. At night, he tries to break through our
fortifications, unless he knows of any trolls nearby. He often comes
home with a brace of them slung over his shoulder, as if they were
rabbits.”
“What sort of creature is he, a giant?” Thurid removed his pipe
from his mouth and dropped it unnoticed into his satchel as he eagerly
dove into his rune wands to find the instructions for a giant-fighting
spell.
“No, he is what our elders called a troll,” Borgar replied. “You
seldom see his kind anymore.”
“A troll, eh?” Thurid slapped shut his satchel and felt around
for his pipe with mounting irritation. “Trolls are my specialty. Has
anyone seen my pipe around here? It was in my hand a moment ago.
Trolls, as I was saying, don’t give me the slightest qualm. I’d be glad
to destroy this Ognun for you. I wonder that you haven’t done it
yourselves, if there’s only a solitary troll giving you trouble. Drat that
pipe, I hope I haven’t lost it.”
“Men have tried to destroy Ognun before,” Borgar replied.
“They ended up as Ognun’s next meal. He’s not an ordinary troll. He
has powers. He lives in an old well which is always frozen and fearfully
cold.”
“Sorkvir’s work,” Gotiskolker spoke up with flat certainty.
“That well used to be a stop for Pentacle travelers.”
Borgar and his three lieutenants exchanged a glance, alert and
cautious. “Not many people speak of the Pentacle anymore,” Borgar
said. “Sorkvir has made it a thing of dread. No traveler dares to drink at
that well now. In the old days, drinking its water gave a man clearer
sight and stronger powers; and for certain ones, there was even more.
When a person of extraordinary powers came to the well, five salmon
would appear in its water. By catching one and eating it, the chosen one
became capable of hearing the voices of the Rhbus—all the Rhbus, not
just the ones still in existence now. At one time the Rhbus were a large
race of people, like Ljosalfar, only far more gifted in powers. Although
they are extinct except for the last three, a person with the gift can hear
their voices, thousands of them. This fortress was built by the Rhbus,
long before Elbegast, and they put the salmon in the well to insure the
preservation of their wisdom.“
Thurid’s eyes glittered in the red firelight. ‘Then one who eats the
sacred salmon has the prospect of one day becoming one of the Rhbus,
if he is gifted enough.“
“It is possible—although the selection of a Rhbu is a very rare
event indeed. The Rhbus were so far ahead of even the best
Ljosalfar wizard that only hundreds of years of training and practice
will prepare a candidate.” Borgar prodded another piece of wood into
the fire. “But with the Rhbus’ well frozen solid by a spell of Sorkvir’s,
no one will ever again partake of that knowledge. When the present
Rhbus are gone, all their powers and intelligence will be lost.”
Thurid gazed into the fire, absorbed in thoughts so engrossing
that he did not notice the smoke oozing from his satchel.
“The knowledge of the Rhbus must not be lost,” he declared, his
nostrils quivering with fine emotion. “We’re going to kill that troll
and purify the well of Sorkvir’s influence. Nothing must threaten the
perpetuity of the revered Rhbus.”
At that solemn moment, he noticed the smoke and hastily jerked
open his satchel with a fierce oath that rattled the moldering weapons
on the walls. Plunging his arm in to the elbow, he fished out his pipe
and a feather-covered headdress which was smoldering and smoking.
Quickly he extinguished the fire and peered into his satchel, sniffing
suspiciously for signs of further trouble. Satisfied, he shut it up again
with a brisk snap and continued, “As I was going to say, we’ve dealt
with trolls before. I daresay you know about Kerling-tjorn and Luster
by now.” He leaned back confidently in his chair and relit his pipe by
blowing into the bowl gently.
Borgar and his men seemed to have forgotten the ale in their
cups, so intense was their scrutiny of Thurid, Leifr, and the enigmatic,
shadowy figure of Gotiskolker sitting with his head turned, watching
the fire.
“We get very little news,” Borgar said. “My cousin Lesandi
here makes a few journeys each year with a pack train, to fetch needful
supplies and to fill his ears with news, but he’s between trips now.”
“Then you haven’t heard that Kerling-tjorn and Luster have been
delivered from Sorkvir’s power,” Thurid said with great relish. “The
lake is restored and the safe haven at Luster is no longer a place of
terror and death.”
“This is news indeed!” Borgar leaped to his feet. “Lesandi, go
spread the word. This means there’s hope for Bjartur. Do you know who
is responsible for breaking Sorkvir’s power over two points of the
Pentacle?”
Thurid beamed, and Leifr cringed inwardly, uncertain of
Fridmarr’s reception in a place that had suffered such harm because of
his duplicity. As Thurid opened his mouth to proclaim the news, his
satchel suddenly exploded with a murderous report and swatches of
soot sailed through the air in all directions. With an agonized howl,
Thurid pawed through the blackened remains for any survivors, and
came up with a scant handful of intact rune wands.
“I’m ruined,” he said in a voice of despair.
Borgar and his companions withdrew to share the news with the
rest of the household, darting a few questioning glances over their
shoulders at Thurid and Leifr.
“Can’t you remember any of those spells?” Leifr asked.
Thurid heaved a wretched sigh. “I don’t know. If you make one
mistake, you get something completely different from what you
intended. It even gets dangerous.”
Gotiskolker coughed and fanned at the smoke. “You’ve still
got your staff magic. Alf-light does an excellent job of killing trolls.”
“But what about Sorkvir’s power over that well?” Thurid
plucked at his sparse beard with his sooty fingers. “1 don’t know what
I’m going to do. I wish this had happened before I’d told them we were
going to kill their troll.”
“You can do it, can’t you?” Leifr asked uneasily, testing the
tightness of the neck torque with one finger.
“Yes, yes, of course,” Thurid snapped. “When the day comes that
I can’t blast a solitary troll into smithereens, you can put old Thurid
out to pasture with the rest of the winter stewing meat. I don’t care this
much for Ognun, or whatever they call him.“ He snapped his
fingers contemptuously. ”But those rune wands and all that old
magical paraphernalia was priceless and irreplaceable.“
“You’ll have to come up with the same powers on your own,
then,” Gotiskolker said. “If you’re any kind of wizard at all.”
Thurid glared, but the dogs interrupted him by suddenly
scrambling to their feet, with their fur standing on end from ears to tail.
With loud, shuddering growls, they slowly stalked toward the far end
door, which stood barred and battened. Suddenly Kraftig lunged,
shoving his nose under the door and then baying at the top of his lungs
in his eagerness to get at whatever lurked on the far side. The other
dogs took up the same defiant note and pawed at the door, standing on
their hind legs to sniff intently between all the boards.
Thurid hurried to the locked door with his staff in hand. “It
must be the troll,” he whispered. “Open the peep hole. I want a look
at the troll who has devastated an entire settlement singlehandedly
and keeps thirty-four survivors living in terror. I don’t believe that the
troll has been made yet that can do all that by himself.”
For a long moment he gazed out the small window which Leifr
had unbarred. Then he hurled himself over backward as an enormous,
hairy hand shot through the window, narrowly missing Thurid with a
set of sharp, black claws as the owner of the huge paw groped around
for something to snag, growling fearsomely.
The only reason that Thurid wasn’t hooked like a mackerel on a
gaff was the fact that the creature’s forearm was too thick to reach
through the narrow window any further. The dogs instantly seized the
hand with their teeth and shook it furiously, resulting in a deafening,
furious bellow from the other side of the door and a series of
thunderous blows on the planks. Behind Leifr, Borgar and Lesandi led a
rush of men into the hall, all armed with their stone weapons.
Leifr called off the dogs, fearing that the door could not endure
much more abuse. Then Ognun put as much of his face against the
opening as he could and peered malevolently into the hall with one
gleaming green eye. Leifr stared back, hefting the stone mace
belligerently, with the dogs snarling around his knees to complete the
picture of grim defiance.
Ognun’s eye opened wider, perhaps in astonishment, and he
peered in with his other eye to make sure the first eye was not deceived.
Then he jerked back in alarm as Leifr gave the command and the
dogs hurled themselves at the window. Ognun swiped at them with
his murderously sharp black claws, rumbling like thunder, until Leifr
called the dogs back again, fearing the destruction of the door.
Again Ognun peered into the hall, breathing heavily in hoarse,
panting breaths. In a deep, grumbling voice, he called, “Borgar, I’m
going to eat those dogs the way a cat eats rats. Who is this
stranger with a cockleburr for a weapon? I don’t like the smell of
him, nor that smoky one in the long cloak. You’re plotting treachery,
Borgar. I’ll suck the marrow from your bones and pick my teeth with
your ribs if you brought them here to kill me.”
“We brought ourselves,” Leifr replied. “Your quarrel is with us,
not Borgar.” Ognun sniffed through the window, with a huge, wrinkled
nose seamed with scars and misshapen from many battles. “What is
your name, stranger?” he rumbled.
Leifr drew a deep breath. “My name is my own business, and I
don’t care to reveal it to any troll who demands it.”
Thurid flourished his staff, scattering sparks as he strode forward,
almost within Ognun’s reach. He had to stoop slightly to peer into the
window, where Ognun’s eye and part of his warty nose showed
through. “You can’t be a troll,” he declared scornfully. “Trolls don’t
get that large. Trolls are nasty little vermin with the appetites of sea
gulls and the intelligence of weasels. Whatever you are, you aren’t a
troll.”
“Not a troll? Did you ever see teeth like this in anyone else’s
mouth but a troll’s?” Ognun gnawed at the edge of the peep hole,
showing an enormous set of yellowed fangs. “What about these claws?
Don’t these look like troll claws to you?” Curving black claws
reached inside, biting deep into the wood and pulling off slivers.
“I suppose I’m forced to concede that you are indeed a
troll,” Thurid admitted grudgingly. “Take your claws out of that
window, won’t you? I find it discomfiting to talk with a seemingly
rational being with claws like those. Are you a greater gray troll, or a