Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
Borgar’s frown deepened. “Fridmarr was regarded as a hero here.
He deceived Sorkvir utterly and had gotten into Sorkvir’s trust,
although it was Elbegast’s cause he was always loyal to. He told my
father Ofrodur that he was a spy for Elbegast and that one day he
would return to undo the evil that Sorkvir put the people of Bjartur into.
My father believed absolutely that Fridmarr would return one day,
and he raised me to believe it too. Everyone here believes it, more or
less, depending upon how discouraged we feel at the time.“
Leifr felt as if all the breath had been squeezed out of him, so
great was his shock. Suddenly Leifr felt himself so thoroughly in the
grip of Fridmarr’s fate that he wanted nothing more than to escape from
the situations which Fridmarr had created so many years ago and which
reached out now to enmesh him in the unforgiving bonds of cause and
effect.
Leaping to his feet, he took a few steps, only to realize the
futility of trying to escape. The towering walls of Bjartur were all
around him, solid and dark behind their screens of morning mists. There
was no escape, and there was no one who could help him. Only
Gotiskolker knew that Leifr was not Fridmarr, and Gotiskolker was
driven by his own inner demons toward his own inscrutable
devisings.
Knowing he was trapped, Leifr turned back to Borgar, who
was watching him suspiciously.
“And the people of Bjartur still believe that he is almost a
hero, even though he helped ruin the Pentacle?”
“A hero, yes,” Borgar replied.
“But look at the terrible evil that he caused you,” Leifr protested.
“Fridmarr was a traitor to his own kind. He told Sorkvir how to destroy
the well. A lot of your people lost their lives.”
“We are at war, and during wars, people die,” Borgar answered.
“If Fridmarr chose to appear as a traitor, it was for reasons that will be
explained sometime in the future. Fridmarr gave his word of honor to
my father and asked Ofrodur to trust him that one day Sorkvir would be
destroyed forever. He promised the people of Bjartur that he would
return as their deliverer.”
Leifr gazed around at the ruined fortress, which was coming to
life with the rise of the sun. Sheep, cattle, and ponies foraged among the
fallen stones, under the watchful eyes of young herdsmen, and three
men with bows and lances were starting out for a day’s hunting. The
smoke and busy noises of a striving settlement rose from the depths of
the shadowy old ruin.
For such a diligent and stubborn group of survivors, Leifr
reflected, they had certainly been taken in by one of Fridmarr’s most
blatant ploys. For a moment, Leifr considered the possibility that
Fridmarr had intended to come back, but he doubted Fridmarr’s word.
He had seen very little in Fridmarr’s nature to offer him any
encouragement.
“How did such a young man as you become chieftain?”
Leifr asked suddenly. “I saw plenty of older, grayer heads than yours
around your table last night.”
Borgar’s tension relaxed somewhat. “By the same means
that you have earned your status. By fighting—and fighting well. With
so few good men and only stone for weapons against the Dokkalfar
steel, I must plan our defenses carefully. Less than half of us here are
fighting men of full stature and warrior age. Plenty of times, the
women, children, and elders have had to put on the appearance of
warriors to frighten away marauding Dokkalfar.”
“Why do you stay here? There are plenty of better places, either
north or south.”
“Bjartur must not die. This has been our land since the time of the
Rhbus. People will come back when the alog is lifted and Ognun is
dead.”
“But only if the illustrious Fridmarr returns.”
“He is coming. Someone broke Sorkvir’s influence over
Kerling-tjorn and Luster. Perhaps it was Fridmarr. Perhaps you have
seen him.”
Leifr turned away from Borgar’s too-intent scrutiny. “I think fate
is another word for Fridmarr. Haven’t we wasted enough time arguing
over someone who might not exist?”
“He exists,” Borgar said, rising to his feet and starting away.
“You shall see. Come along if you truly want to pay Ognun a visit in
the daytime.”
The path leading into the north court was littered with bones and
skulls of animals and a few bones that looked to be human. Leifr gazed
in uneasy wonder at the corner of the gatepost where Ognun obviously
liked to rub his back when it itched. What concerned Leifr the most was
the fact that the greasy mark was head and shoulders above him, as high
as a man’s head on horseback. Leifr measured with the stone mace how
high he would have to swing to land a blow in a vital area.
“He’s bigger than he looked by moonlight,” Leifr observed
ruefully. “I can’t reach his skull unless he falls down, or I climb a wall.”
“He’ll swat you with that big club he carries as if you were a
fly,” Borgar answered.
Warily they approached the curb of the well. Four of the five
stones still stood, and the area around them had been paved with
flagstones at one time, although by now the stones and the moss had
compromised with a checkerboard effect. A well-beaten path
disappeared at the edge of the well, and the steps descending into the
darkness were blackened with Ognun’s grimy footsteps. A skull thrust
onto a sharpened stake stood as a warning in a crevice of the
curbing, and bones and molting skins were scattered within convenient
tossing distance around the mouth of the well. A few broken weapons
were among the litter. The worst part of it was the nauseating stench
hanging over the court.
Leifr approached the well, ignoring Borgar’s sharp warnings:
“Don’t go near the edge, where he might see you. He hates it when
anybody trespasses on his private domain.”
“He’ll have to get used to it,” Leifr answered, his voice echoing
inside the well. “His private domain never was his to call his own,
so we may trespass here with more right than he has.”
A cold breeze exuded from the well as Leifr peered down into it
from the top steps. It was deeper than he had imagined, spiraling down
into the earth until he could see nothing but blackness. The stone walls
oozed with clammy sweat, which encrusted them with frost and ice. Far
below, he heard something stirring restlessly, moving, then falling silent
to listen. Behind Leifr’s legs, the troll- hounds licked their lips and
rumbled with growls.
Closing his eyes a moment against the dank breath of the well,
Leifr allowed the carbuncle to tell him what it could, by way of warning
or advice. He felt a strong anticipatory thrill at the prospect of exploring
unimagined mysteries. Distinctly he glimpsed a vast galleried chamber
veiled in musty dimness—a hollow, echoing place filled with the
countless whispers of the long- departed Rhbus.
Startled and uneasy, Leifr stepped back from the well, conscious
of Borgar’s keen scrutiny.
“Let’s see if Ognun’s at home,” he said abruptly. “The dogs
would like to meet their opponent without a door between them to spoil
all their fun. Ready, Kraftig?”
At the signal from Leifr, they eagerly scampered down the
winding stairs and vanished into the gloom.
“You’ve just wasted the lives of your dogs,” Borgar said grimly.
“They may be death on ordinary trolls, but Ognun is not ordinary. He
eats dogs.” “He won’t eat these dogs,” Leifr answered.
In a few minutes, there came a ferocious outburst of barking and
snarling from far below.
“Ognun is at home, I’d say,” Leifr observed, and whistled to the
dogs. “Now they’ve had their look at him.”
Borgar regarded the dogs narrowly when they emerged from
the well, panting with satisfaction and wagging their plumy tails.
Kraftig pawed Leifr’s shoulders, looking straight into his eyes as if he
wanted to speak but found Leifr a rather dense subject for
communication. Leifr thumped them all affectionately and let them go
exploring.
“Let’s be going,” Borgar suggested uneasily. “I expect we’ve
stirred up enough trouble for one day. Ognun will tell us about it
tonight. I’d better double the guard.”
“Put everyone up on the walls if you wish,” Leifr said. “They’ll
have a good view of Ognun’s last battle.”
When they returned to the main gate of the inner keep, they
found Thurid holding court with the elders of the settlement. Seeing
Leifr, he excused himself and came to meet him. “There you are,” he
said accusingly. “When I awakened this morning, you and Gotiskolker
were nowhere to be found. What have you been doing off on your own,
without me to protect you?”
“I went to the well,” Leifr replied. “The dogs went down for a
look at Ognun’s living quarters. I heard him moving around down there.
The well is deeper than I had thought it would be, and Ognun is bigger
than a mounted rider.”
“That’s to be expected. What are your plans?”
“I have some ideas, but I thought it was your job to come up with
the plans. I don’t do anything except the fighting and dying.“
“Don’t be facetious. I’m in no mood for levity. This
throwback troll is nothing to joke about, Fridmarr. He’s far more
dangerous and cunning than a hundred regular trolls combined. You’d
better have some good ideas for killing him.”
“Have you talked to Gotiskolker yet?” Leifr asked.
“That scumbag?” Thurid snorted profoundly. “I should say not. I
haven’t fallen so low as to ask him for advice yet. What makes you
think he might know anything about killing giant trolls in wells?”
“Well, it’s possible—”
“The trouble with you, Fridmarr, is that you have no respect for
your elders and their years of wisdom.”
Leifr glanced around uneasily to see if anyone were near enough
to overhear. “You’d better stop using my name when you talk, Thurid. I
don’t want them to know who I am. They think that I’m some sort of
hero, but I’m not, so I don’t want to be treated like one.”
Thurid’s eyes bulged wrathfully. “Perverse, that’s what you are.
The return of their hero is exactly what these people need to stir them
up against this giant. If enough men attacked him, they might kill him.”
“And how many do you suppose Ognun would kill before he
died? I don’t want to do it that way, and I don’t want to pose as a
hero. When they find out the truth about my past, they’re liable to be
furious that I managed to trick them for so long. Gullible people
usually get very angry.”
During the day, the word spread that the strangers intended to
challenge Ognun. By nightfall, most of the settlement had taken up
positions on the walls overlooking the north court. A bonfire burned
on the highest rampart in the ruins of a fallen tower, and smaller fires
dotted the walls where people watched and hoped. When the sun had
vanished, Borgar opened the gate to let Thurid and Leifr out, evincing
much reluctance to see them go alone; but Leifr firmly resisted all
offers of help. The person he most wanted to see was Gotiskolker,
but the scavenger had stayed out of sight the entire day.
The troll-hounds ran ahead, racing straight toward the north
court. Ognun had not yet emerged, the watchers on the walls reported,
but more mist than usual seemed to be coming from the well, in
billowing white clouds.
Leifr glanced frequently at Thurid, wondering at his resolute
silence and the grim set of his jaw. It was unlike Thurid to be quiet so
long.
“Why do you keep staring at me?” Thurid snapped at last,
hesitating at the arched gateway into the north court. “Are you afraid
I’m not competent for the task at hand? I spent most of the day making
new rune sticks from memory and finding a new satchel. Are you
beginning to doubt my ability?”
“You seem to doubt more,” Leifr replied. “I don’t think you need
those rune sticks.”
“Indeed! And what makes you a qualified judge, if I may be so
bold as to inquire?”
Leifr paused, knowing he had spoken from Fridmarr’s knowledge
coming to him from the carbuncle. He rubbed his chest, feeling the
slight bump of the little stone against his breastbone. “You are far too
willing to walk with a crutch, when you could be flying without it,”
he said.
Thurid sniffed disdainfully. “Crutch, my eye! I’m only trying to