Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
be cautious. With the rune sticks, I’m certain to get the spells right—
most of the time. Without them, I have no guarantee and I don’t much
like relying on my memory alone.”
“You’re just looking for excuses not to rely more upon your
powers,” Leifr retorted. “Ready or not, you’re going to have to stand up
to the test now.”
“I’m ready!” Thurid snapped, with an icy glare as he stepped into
the shadow of the arch.
A dark figure waiting in the gloom suddenly lurched forward.
Thurid gasped and the knob of his staff flared with a brilliant burst of
alf-light. Leifr lowered his raised mace, and Gotiskolker winced in the
bright glare of the staff.
“It’s only me,” he grumbled. “I got locked out, so I waited for
you here.”
“We’ve been wondering what had happened to you,” Leifr said
the dogs crowded at his heels, urging him to hurry.
chidingly, as
“Where have you been all day? We could have used some help in
planning this escapade.”
“I was doing some planning of my own,” Gotiskolker replied,
and Thurid responded with a withering snort.
“Our plan,” Thurid said, “is to attack him when he comes out
tonight. Fridmarr and the dogs will keep him occupied, while I blast
him with fire magic.”
“That’s not the way to hunt bears,” Gotiskolker said. “You must
trap them inside their dens, where they can’t maneuver so well, and
pierce them with your lance.”
“We’re not hunting bears,” Thurid retorted, “or hadn’t you
heard?” He damped down the glow of his staff and motioned to Leifr.
“Let’s carry on, shall we?”
When they reached the well, Leifr sent the dogs down to draw
Ognun out. Thurid paced up and down uneasily, going over his rune
sticks. Gotiskolker squatted with his back against a stone and studied
the stars. Leifr listened impatiently, growing more uneasy the longer he
waited.
“They should have found him by now,” Leifr said at last. “We
should have heard a big uproar.”
“Maybe he found them first,” Gotiskolker suggested.
“He’s probably hungry.”
“Shh! There’s something!” Thurid warned.
A faint howl, questioning in tone, floated out of the well. Leifr
whistled and called, but got no response from the dogs. There was no
sound at all, except the drip of the ice melting around the top.
Leifr gripped his mace and stepped over the well curbing
onto the steps.
Grimly he said, “Come on, we’re going bear hunting.”
As Leifr started down the well, Gotiskolker followed at his heels
like a black shadow. Thurid quickly ignited his staff’s end with a puff of
alf-light and hastened to join them. Inside the well, the alf-light glowed
on the icy walls with a fiery blue phosphorescence. When they neared
the bottom, the pool of ice below radiated like a frosty eye, growing
larger with each descending spiral.
“No troll,” Leifr said, when they had a good view of the bottom
of the well. The stone steps ended at a small landing, where the pilgrims
had knelt to drink the water. Now there was nothing but ice, polished
smooth by Ognun’s filthy carcass and littered with bones, hair, and
rubbish.
“Maybe he got out earlier than usual,” Thurid said, shining his
light around and beginning to sound hopeful.
“Someone would have seen him,” Leifr answered. “People were
watching from the walls before the sun went down.”
Gotiskolker slipped past Leifr and began a circuit around the
wall, which was festooned with pillars of ice where the water had
dripped down for many years.
“No dogs,” Leifr continued, as Thurid’s beam traveled around the
well again. Feeling the breath of an air current on his face, he turned
toward it and saw Gotiskolker vanish into a fissure behind a thick
column of ice. Quickly he followed, trusting Thurid to notice where he
had gone.
Thurid was gazing elsewhere and did not notice that he was alone
for several moments. He stepped onto the ice warily, stamping on it to
sound its thickness. When he looked up, he perceived that he was by
himself. In a hoarse whisper he called, “Fridmarr! Where are you?”
A hand reached out of the fissure behind him and gripped his
arm, startling him. He staggered back with a whoop, and his alf-light
surged halfway to the top of the well in a bellowing roar of flame that
caused several columns of ice to collapse in a thunderous avalanche.
Thurid dived into the fissure, narrowly avoiding a falling slab of ice.
“Are you trying to burn the place down?” Leifr cried.
“You startled me,” Thurid protested. “My magic always
overdoes itself when I’m frightened. Fortunately, it happens so
seldom that it isn’t usually a problem.” As he talked, he peered
around him, poking his alf-light into the dark tunnel leading upward
from the bottom of the well. “Very clever of the Rhbus to have a secret
tunnel into the well. Those stairs winding around and around are fine
for pilgrims, but I’d hate to use them as a daily chore.”
“Hurry up with the light,” Gotiskolker whispered. “Ognun is
somewhere ahead of us.”
The tunnel angled upward, rising with short flights of steps, now
nearly obliterated by accumulating soil and rocks from the ceiling
above. In places, the fissure had been widened and enlarged and, in
other places, it widened naturally into cavernous rooms, where bats
hung in clusters from the lofty ceiling, twittering in protest at the
unwelcome intrusion of the light into their inky realm. Underfoot,
the earth was moist and soft, and Leifr discerned the three sets of
hound prints and the large, three-toed track of Ognun, slowly filling
with water.
The character of the underground chambers changed suddenly
as the three passed through a pair of large doors, torn from their hinges
long ago, rudely shattered by some powerful engine of destruction.
Beyond the doors were the remains of smooth stone floors, graceful
carved pillars, and stone galleries ascending upward, tier by tier.
Thurid gazed around in awe. “This was the assembly hall of the
Rhbus,” he whispered, with a tremor in his voice. “Imagine so many
Rhbus that they filled a place like this! And now there are only three
left.”
“And not as many Ljosalfar as there once were,” Gotiskolker
added. “If wizards like Sorkvir have their way, we shall become
extinct, too.”
Halfway across the assembly hall, Leifr halted and listened
intently for a moment to the distant baying of the hounds, echoing
through the underground chambers.
“They’ve cornered him,” Leifr said, striding forward. “Hurry up
with the light, Thurid. You’re crawling along like a snail.”
“A cornered troll is a nasty situation,” Thurid hastened to
explain, firing up his alf-light with a quick, muttered spell and
scuttling after Leifr and Gotiskolker. “Perhaps he’s leading us on this
merry chase deliberately. I don’t know what advantage we’ve got over
him down here in the dark where we can’t see and he feels perfectly at
home. Hasn’t it crossed your mind yet that he might have some dreadful
surprise in mind?”
Gotiskolker retorted, “He wouldn’t be a troll if he didn’t. He’s
got a number of bolt holes leading out of here to the outside; if we
corner him before he gets out, we’ll have a better chance of killing
him. We’ve got to keep close to him, or he’s likely to become the
hunter and we’ll become the prey.”
Thurid hastened his pace, glancing around nervously.
As they picked their way down a jumbled corridor, the distant
reflected light of the staff suddenly illuminated several sets of
glowing eyes that came bounding through the shadows toward them.
Heavy paws pounded over the rubble, and eager yelps echoed from
the damp walls as the troll-hounds burst into view. For a moment,
they caracoled around Leifr, leaping up to lick his face and nipping at
his heels to encourage him to hurry; then they raced away down the
corridor again.
“They’ve got him treed!” Thurid exclaimed. “Those worthless
mutts are forgiven all their crimes if they help kill Ognun!”
They found the dogs at a rockfall, barking up at the distant roof
and dodging the rocks that came hurtling down. Thurid threw
himself backward into the safety of the overhanging ceiling of the
corridor as a large rock whistled past his head and crashed into the
wall with an explosion of particles. The alf-light flaring upward
dimly illuminated a hulking dark shape, clawing its way up the rocky
dome of the vast vault above.
“He’s going to get away from us,” Gotiskolker snapped.
“There are more tunnels up above, and if he gets into them, he’ll be
stalking us.”
“Is there another way up?” Leifr demanded.
“If there is, I didn’t find it,” Gotiskolker replied. “It would take
days to map out this place completely. I was down here only a few
hours.“
“Thurid, knock him down with a spell,” Leifr commanded.
Thurid rattled among the runesticks. “This is the one,” he
muttered, taking out one of his new rune sticks. “I hope so, anyway.”
Raising his arms, he recited the words of the spell. At once a hundred
small barbs of flame leaped from the ends of his fingers and
ricocheted around the vault like a swarm of deadly, bright bees.
Thurid dived for cover, and one of the hissing darts pierced the tail of
his cloak with a puff of acrid smoke. Leifr and Gotiskolker and the
hounds all cowered in a heap as the last of the darts fizzled and died,
leaving the cavern in blackness.
“I didn’t write that one down properly,” Thurid said in a
bemused tone. “My fire bolt is badly frayed. Perhaps it was only a lack
of concentration—”
From above came the rumbling voice of Ognun, and another
thunderous crash as a rock came down, shattering on impact. “You’d
better go back while you can, you fools,” he called in a hollow roar.
“These halls are long and dark; when I’m here, they’re even more
dangerous. Worse things than rocks falling can happen to you.”
The dogs replied with a chorus of savage barking, until Leifr
hushed them. He crept out far enough to peer upward, with the aid of
Thurid’s alf-light. Reaching for the bow slung at his back, he strung it
and nocked an arrow.
“More light,” he said to Thurid in a whisper and slipped out
of his hiding place.
Thurid spluttered indignantly, “Fridmarr! Don’t be an idiot! Get
back under here before he brains you!”
“I said more light, you dolt!”
Thurid responded with a brilliant flare that outlined Ognun
clinging to the rocks and the dark mouth of a tunnel just above his
clawing fingers. Ognun’s shadow loomed huge and threatening as he
flung one arm over his eyes when the light swept over him.
“Die, you filthy bag of carrion!” roared Thurid, upping the
intensity of his light until the cavern roared with flame and heat, and
even he was forced to squint.
Leifr bent his bow until its sinew reinforcing creaked ominously,
then sent the arrow flying upward. It lodged in Ognun’s humped
shoulder, where no amount of twisting and clawing would allow him to
reach it. With a bellowing roar, he hurled more rocks down, his eyes
blazing with fury.
Leifr dived for refuge until the rocks stopped falling, then
signaled to Thurid to fire up the light again. Thurid grimaced and
shook his head furiously, but Leifr ignored him and pulled back his
bowstring for another shot.
This time the arrow lodged in Ognun’s leg, nearly causing him to
slip off his precarious perch on the rock face. Seizing the opportunity,
Leifr fired off two more arrows, one of which flew wide in his
haste, but the other stuck in Ognun’s back. Ognun began to slip,
clawing frantic score marks on the stone wall and roaring with rage.
Leifr placed two more arrows before Ognun finally arrived at
the bottom, still bellowing and lashing around with his deadly claws at
the arrows in his flesh. His glaring eyes searched the shadows for his
tormentors. When he saw them crouching behind a fallen slab, he
rushed at them in a frenzy of hatred. Somewhat impaired by his
wounds, he was not able to reach them before they raced away down