Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
got his head through it, but certainly there was no room for his
shoulders. By turning sideways Leifr managed to squeeze through and
found himself standing in the shadow of a massive arched gateway.
Beyond was the north court, with its walls jeweled with small fires. It
was the place where Gotiskolker had joined them at dusk, seeming to
come from nowhere.
A small group of men stood around the mouth of the well with
burning torches, which lit up the billowing clouds of mist and
spume rising from the well. Muffled creaking and groaning sounds
came from the well, punctuated by shattering crashes as the ice released
its grip on the walls and fell to the bottom. From the watchers on the
walls came no sound, except from an old woman who began a wailing
lament, sung to commemorate fallen warriors.
Thurid lit his staff with a burst of white light to announce
their arrival without startling anyone into thinking it was Ognun
creeping up behind them.
“Halloa, Borgar,” he called. “Why the lament? Has someone
died, or are you grieving for Ognun?”
A gasp rippled around the walls of the court as Thurid led a short
triumphant procession to the well, stopping beside one of the standing
stones.
Borgar, Lesandi, and the other warriors gathered around them
with a torrent of excited questions, unable to grasp the news that Ognun
was dead until Leifr held the necklace of bones and teeth over his head
so everyone watching could see it. Then the shouts and cheers began,
and the entire settlement converged on the hall for the telling and
retelling of the tale until the sun rose that morning. The furor died
down somewhat by necessity, since there were animals to care for
and food to be hunted or fished for and prepared. Leifr found a quiet
corner in the old hall and went to sleep, sharing his eider with the three
exhausted troll- hounds.
When he awakened, there were more questions and more
retelling of the battle with Ognun. Gotiskolker’s popularity among the
youths and children was magnified tenfold when he passed out a
handful of the smaller pebbles from Ognun’s petrified carcass. Thurid
basked quietly in the glory, smoking his pipe and looking on with a
benevolent, superior air.
When Borgar found an opportunity, he approached Leifr alone
and said in a low voice, “You are Fridmarr, aren’t you? Isn’t it time
you confessed it?”
In the midst of the heady wine of acclaim and admiration, Leifr
wavered a moment, caught between knowing he was not Fridmarr
and the unworthy feeling that he was donating the most heroic deed of
his life to a ghost named Fridmarr if he allowed them to honor him
under Fridmarr’s name.
Regretfully he shook his head. “One day I’ll send you a
message,” he said. “Then you can tell everyone the truth about me.
Until then, I will remain nameless.”
Borgar shook his head, mystified. “I don’t understand it,” he said.
Then a conspiratorial gleam came into his eye. “Perhaps it has
something to do with Elbegast, eh? A spy for our king must maintain his
secrecy, I suppose?”
“I suppose,” Leifr replied with an uneasy smile, amazed
that he had explained himself so well.
After another day at Bjartur, Leifr grew impatient to set out for
the next point of the Pentacle—Dokholur, the fifth and final station. As
they wound down the fell, they passed several trains of ponies, all
loaded with household possessions and farming gear, with smaller
children rocking on the tops of the bundles while the larger ones ran
behind with exultant shouts. Compared to the barren, rocky fortress,
the valley was a green and spacious paradise.
“There are still Dokkalfar around,” Leifr cautioned Borgar, who
was accompanying them as far as the last house.
“We’re not afraid of the Dokkalfar,” Borgar replied. With a
significant side wise glance at Leifr he added, “The Dokkalfar won’t be
bothering us much longer, when you finish the task you have begun.
When the alog is broken, they’ll take to their heels, or risk their lives on
the sharp new steel of the Ljosalfar.”
Later, when they were well away from Bjartur, Thurid began to
grumble. “I don’t know why you wanted to be so secretive, Fridmarr,
especially when they were almost certain they knew who you were
anyway. You don’t need to be ashamed of what happened so long ago.”
“I don’t, eh? Well, you’re mistaken,” Leifr retorted, with a
resentful scowl in Gotiskolker’s direction. “As the Fridmarr
who committed such crimes, I don’t feel like being praised now for
mending something I shouldn’t have ever broken in the past.”
“Were you spying for Elbegast, Fridmarr?” Thurid demanded. “Is
that why you’re so devious and evasive now?”
“Maybe,” Leifr replied warily.
Thurid snorted in disgust and rode his horse closer to Leifr’s
stirrup. “I practically raised you, Fridmarr, and somehow you’ve always
remained a complete stranger, hiding behind your secrets and facades
and keeping everyone away with your insults and suspicion. Even now,
after I’ve saved your life and you’ve saved mine, you still refuse to tell
me if you’ve got connections with Elbegast or not.”
Leifr darted Gotiskolker a haunted look, feeling himself totally
beyond his depth. “Thurid, you wouldn’t want to know the truth, and
wouldn’t accept it if I told you,” he said in exasperation, ignoring
Gotiskolker’s covert choking motions and frantic grimaces.
“I dare you to try me,” Thurid challenged.
“All right. To begin with, I’m not a spy for Elbegast, and I’d
never even heard of Elbegast until this spring.”
“I don’t believe you,” Thurid said immediately, sputtering
incredulously. “This is a perfect example of another of your insults,
Fridmarr. What kind of fool do you take me for? No, don’t answer!
Just forget 1 ever spoke to you, and I’ll try to forget I saved you from
Ognun by throwing the whetstone over his head. What I won’t forget
is that you’re Fridmarr, through and through, and you’ll never change.”
He spurred his horse into a canter and left Leifr and
Gotiskolker behind, avoiding each other’s eyes.
“I’ve had just about all of Fridmarr I can stand,” Leifr muttered.
“I’m getting more like him every day. When and how are we going to
end this masquerade, Gotiskolker?”
Gotiskolker rode along in silence for a few moments, his hood
drooping over his face. “We’d better do it before my time is up, or
you’ll be stuck here forever as Fridmarr, like it or not.”
“I can tell you right now that I won’t like it,” Leifr snapped.
“You’d better not die before you get me back to my own realm. How
much time is left?”
Gotiskolker pulled out his notched stick and counted.
“Thirty-two,” he said. “Plenty of time. How’s the torque, by the
way? Does it seem any tighter yet?”
Leifr slipped his finger under the ring. “I feel as if it’s strangling
me every moment.”
“Perhaps you’ll die before I do.”
“Then you’d better watch out for a vicious and vengeful draug,
because I’ll not rest until I’ve wrung your neck with my own hands,”
Leifr snarled. “I’ll make you regret you ever brought me here.”
Leifr dropped behind, sunk in an angry silence made more
painful by thoughts of Ljosa waiting to be released from Hjaldr.
Bleakly, he stared at Gotiskolker’s bony carcass, sagging wearily in his
saddle, and wondered if he would be able by himself to convince
Ljosa that he was not Fridmarr. But as Fridmarr, at least he would be
entitled to inherit Dallir, in case he managed to survive the next thirty-
two days and the coming battles.
Thurid waited impatiently near the summit of the next ridge,
motioning for them to hurry. He tied his horse to a dead thicket and
crept up to the skyline to peer warily around a stone pylon someone had
erected there long before.
Leifr tied his horse and started up the hill. Gotiskolker
dismounted and sat down to rest on a mossy rock, waving Leifr away
when he turned and started to come back down to see what was wrong
with him.
“Go on,” he rasped. “I’ll wait for you here.”
Leifr climbed up the rocky ridge to Thurid’s position and
gazed down into the next valley, disbelieving his eyes until he began to
comprehend the method behind the destruction below.
The valley lay desolate and barren, heaped with mounds of rock
and dirt like the massive skeletons of extinct monsters. One large fell
seemed to have been blasted with some poisonous blight, clawed from
top to bottom with gouges and craters and fans of sliding scree. Roads
traversed the once-green face of the mountain, leading from one gaping
cavern to the next. Around the portals, the rocks were blackened with
soot, and wisps of smoke still issued from the openings in lazy black
puffs. In the silence of the fells, the muffled clangor of the working of
the mines sounded an ominous note.
Leifr knew by instinct that the feeling of dread and gloom
hovering over the place signaled a location associated with evil—and
Sorkvir. He knew without asking that they had arrived at Dokholur.
“This used to be a holy hill,” Thurid said finally, his voice
choking slightly. “In the winter, no snow would stay on its summit. No
blood was ever shed here, and no night-farer dared to attack anyone
sheltering here. This mountain, according to old legend, is actually a
giant who lay down and went to sleep so long that the dirt covered him
up and trees started to grow on him. Perhaps that was just a way of
explaining the frequent earthquakes near Dokholur. I do know that the
mountain is a site of special powers, and Sorkvir knows it too. This
must be his most ambitious destruction project yet—the complete
leveling of Dokholur, and the gutting of its valuable minerals. There
used to be a river that surfaced here, but you see that Sorkvir has done
something to change its course. Underground water seems to be the
secret for much of the Pentacle’s powers.”
He dangled a dowsing pendulum as he talked, shaking his head
and scowling over its behavior before stowing it in his satchel once
more, adding as an afterthought, “Enough disturbance of this kind can
destroy an important site forever. We’ll have to find the aquifer first and
consider the damage to the mountain second.”
Leifr stared at him in horror. “No one could fix this wreckage,”
he said. “The Dokkalfar have spent years digging up the mountain and
hauling it down to the valley. The mountain is destroyed, and the valley
is full of rocks. Dokholur does not exist anymore.”
“So it would appear,” Thurid replied wearily. “But the least we
can do is stop any further destruction. Perhaps all the magic and power
is not diverted.”
“How many Dokkalfar do you suppose it takes to dig away that
much of a mountain?” Leifr asked suspiciously.
“Quite a lot, I imagine,” Thurid answered with an evasive shrug.
“Let’s get a bit closer, to see what we’re up against.” He pointed with
his staff to the ruins of a house at the foot of the slope. “We’ll get down
to there, where there’s some cover. Where’s Gotiskolker?”
“He’s staying with the horses,” Leifr replied, with an uneasy
glance over his shoulder down the hillside. “He wasn’t looking too
good.”
“I daresay he’d like another swallow of eitur,” Thurid said.
“We ought to keep an eye on him, in case he decides to go in
search of Sorkvir and his poison.”
“Don’t be any more of a fool than you can help,” Leifr retorted.
“He’d rather die than go on with that poison.”
Thurid smiled darkly. “You might be surprised how a man’s
mind changes when he comes eye to eye with dying. I hope you’re not
wrong about your unsavory friend.”
By the time they had crept down the hillside to the ruined house,
slithering from one scanty cover to the next, the sun was touching the
horizon. Nothing occupied the house except a family of owls, who
seemed undiscomfited by the growing heap of scree that had come
down the mountain to build up against the side of the house.
As the sky darkened, the excavation came to life. Pony trains,
loaded with sacks of earth and rock, wound their way down the
mountain to dump their cargo in the valley, with rivalrous shouts from