Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
any other business to conduct?” he asked sarcastically. “I thought I was
supposed to work in the mine, not stand around listening to a lot of
useless chatter.”
Sorkvir folded his arms across his chest and moved a few paces
to the side. “Many’s the time, Fridmarr, in the old, pleasant days
when you were my acolyte, that I wondered if you would be worth all
the trouble of teaching and retraining you in the ways of the Dokkalfar.
You were in so many ways a bright and eager pupil, but somehow I
always suspected you lacked the true, single-minded devotion that a
student of mine would require. Indeed, when I killed your brother,
Bodmarr, I learned where your true loyalties dwelt—with the Ljosalfar
and their dying cause. I wonder how many years you will have to
reflect upon your wisdom in choosing that cause instead of mine. Five
years? Ten? Thirty?”
Leifr shook his head doggedly, weary but determined to sustain
his passion for survival. “I think of it as five or ten or thirty years to
escape,” he replied.
“I thought you would say that.” Sorkvir beckoned again to
Greifli, who again unsheathed his sword with a ringing hiss and a
broad, evil smirk. “Are you certain you’ve reconciled yourself and
Hroaldsdottir to such a despairing fate? Think of those five or ten or
thirty years filled with the agony of the eitur slowly devouring your
vitals from the inside out. Not a pleasant prospect, is it, Fridmarr? A
dose of the eitur would do you good now, after the beating you’ve
taken. Come now, I’m offering you a painless way out of your
situation.”
He produced the small blue vial from the tail of his sleeve and
uncorked it. The tantalizing fumes drifted lazily through the musty
smell of the room.
Leifr shook his head doggedly. “Take yourself and your poison
out of here.” In vain he groped for a stray thread of memory from
the carbuncle, but its voices were all distant and faint now. Searching,
he caught a faint clue. “I took the eitur once to prove my loyalty to you
—or so you would think. It was a small price, if I had succeeded in
destroying you then. I deceived you, Sorkvir. Do with me what you
will, but carry that thought with you.”
Sorkvir’s face darkened with fury. “I’m not likely to forget your
treachery. However, the sting of it will be greatly soothed by picturing
you here, slowly dying from the eitur.” He nodded toward Greifli and
stepped back. “But first there’s a small matter of unfinished business
I want attended to before you depart for your labors.”
Greifli stared at Leifr with a tight little smile, his eyes large and
black like a cat’s, about to pounce on its quarry. His sword gleamed
sharp and deadly in the torchlight.
Skrof whimpered in protest, “Have you decided to kill him after
all, Sorkvir? You’ll owe me two marks!”
With a quick thrust of his blade, Greifli slashed the tendons
behind Leifr’s knee. Leifr doubled over, clutching the wound with both
hands to stop the bleeding, and pitched to the ground, his meager
strength suddenly exhausted by this new insult to his weakened
condition.
Pandemonium erupted as Raudbjorn’s furious bellow echoed
through the underground vault. Swinging his halberd, Raudbjorn came
after Greifli with a roar of red-eyed fury and challenge.
Sorkvir raised one hand, and an ice bolt shattered with a loud
explosion on the wall behind Raudbjorn. Halting his weapon’s
downward swoop, Raudbjorn froze a moment, with his eyes widening
as he contemplated the black mark on the wall, realizing how near it had
come to him.
“This is your last warning, you ignorant ox,” Sorkvir said.
“The next time, the bolt may not miss its target. This is what comes of
trying to make use of a day-faring killer. I fear you will come up
lacking, Raudbjorn.”
Raudbjorn’s face furrowed in thought and the halberd wavered
uncertainly. He let its butt drop to the floor with a clank and leaned
upon its handle to calm his furious breathing.
“Not a fair way to fight,” he grumbled in an abashed tone,
retreating toward the shadows, watching the Dokkalfar warily. Greifli
made a feint at him, and all the Dokkalfar chuckled unpleasantly when
Raudbjorn whirled around to defend himself.
Sorkvir beckoned silently and started to leave, his cloak swirling
around his heels. Skrof risked seizing the moment to dart a quick scowl
over the rock that sheltered him. “That was a treacherous thing to do,
Sorkvir,” he quavered indignantly. “I could make a grievance of it at the
next Althing, if I was of a mind to. You lamed my thrall, and after I
paid you good money, too, when nobody could tell if he would live or
die.”
Sorkvir turned and tossed a small pouch to Skrof, who
opened it up feverishly and gasped at the contents.
“Now I have bought him from you,” Sorkvir said, “and at a far
better price. I want you to take care of him for me and keep him alive
and as healthy as you can in a place like this, but not so healthy he’ll
think of trying to escape. If such an accident should occur and Fridmarr
comes up missing, your head will be the first to fall. You do understand
me, don’t you, Skrof?”
As he talked, Sorkvir caught a shred of Skrof’s raiment. The
thrall-driver sidled back and forth, nodding and shaking his head in an
ecstasy of self- abnegation. Sorkvir wound up the shred of cloth,
drawing Skrof unwillingly nearer, like a gasping, glassy-eyed,
unwholesome species of fish.
With a last, intimidating glower, Sorkvir thrust Skrof from him
and stalked away, calling to his warriors to follow. He bestowed a
last triumphant sneer upon Leifr; then he and his men were swallowed
up by the cavern amid the tramping of boots and the rattling of
weapons.
Skrof smote his brow and stooped to look at Leifr’s
wound with an exasperated, proprietary air. Leifr at once knocked him
sprawling.
“Mind your own business, you maggot,” he snarled. “Now get
me a bandage for my leg.”
Skrof picked himself up, shaking his head in disbelief. Backing
away from Leifr cautiously, he went out into the corridor and
underwent an astonishing transformation from abject worm to towering
tyrant, all in the space of a few moments, shouting in a mighty voice for
a cart and a horse and someone to bandage a wound. When the objects
of his desires were slow in presenting themselves, he flew into a terrible
fury, taking care to stay out of Leifr’s sight. When he came back, his
shoulders sagged and his belligerence left him.
“I’m glad I sold you to Sorkvir,” he muttered. “I’m not looking
for trouble, but trouble always seems to find me. I knew poor old Skrof
would catch it in the neck when Sorkvir arrived.”
When his leg was bandaged, Leifr climbed into a cart behind a
bony wreck of a horse and Skrof glumly drove him down the tunnel on
the most miserable journey of his life. He tried to remember the turns,
but he lost track when the torches became too few to see much. They
passed groups of wretched thralls, chipping at the rock and tossing the
pieces into carts and sledges. The journey ended in a large, dank room
where another troop of prisoners was sleeping the sleep of exhaustion
and deprivation. One of the guards pointed to an empty pallet by the
wall, where Leifr lay down gratefully, without wondering much what
had become of the former occupant. He did not suppose it would lift his
spirits any if he knew.
They put him to work with a heavy pickaxe, since he was taller
and stouter than most Ljosalfar or Dokkalfar. The only light he had to
work by was a small whale-oil lamp wedged in a crack, and the food
portion was inadequate, as he soon discovered. Perhaps worst of all was
the constant threat of rockfalls and cave-ins, when the mountain shook
under their feet and all they could do was crouch helplessly and wait for
the tremor to cease, hoping their tunnel would not collapse.
“Skrymir feels the pain,” they would say when the mountain
trembled. But there was no choice except to work or starve, as Leifr
soon discovered.
After six days of watching for his opportunity, he managed to slip
out of the prisoners’ quarters after a long day’s work and threaded his
way almost to the main portal. Each dragging step of his injured leg
was an agony. If he had possessed two good legs, he might have
eluded his captors and escaped, but they recognized him and hauled
him back to Skrof. To discourage any further departures from duty,
and to save his own throat, Skrof fastened a shackle around Leifr’s
leg and chained him to a large stake pounded into the ground.
For several days Leifr enlivened his existence by refusing to
work and menacing Skrof whenever he came near, so Skrof left him
alone in the dark in the prisoners’ quarters to do nothing until his
pride subsided. The involuntary abstinence from eating did as much
as the boredom to convince him that working was better than
doing nothing, so he promised that he would behave himself and
received his pickaxe and resumed his mindless battering at the rock
walls. At present he could do nothing but wait for another opportunity,
all the while giving the appearance that he had reconciled himself to his
fate.
As near as he could guess, there were twelve days left before
Hjaldr’s alog took effect. Every clank and rattle of the chain
reminded him of his captivity, and he berated himself for not trying
harder to escape before. In a fury, he attacked the chain with his pick,
hoping to break free, but the metal defied all his efforts. Skrof caught
him at it and he lost the privilege of eating his share of stale black
bread and rancid dried fish that night. The other prisoners offered
their silent sympathy by slipping him bits of their own meager fare,
which fired his resolve to deliver them all safely from Dokholur.
Although talking was strictly forbidden, everyone seized any
opportunity for a few moments of whispering; by this means, Leifr
learned that Dokholur was the final stop in the lives of hundreds of
thralls and wanderers who had fallen upon bad times. Even a cripple
such as Leifr could swing a pick or shovel ore into the carts. Every
year, dozens of thralls died from cave-ins, falling down deep shafts,
or getting lost in the maze of tunnels. Lungs gave out in the cold, damp
air, and occasionally the miners encountered deadly vapors. If nothing
else menaced the lives of the prisoners, trolls could always be counted
upon to seize victims in the dark tunnels, particularly in winter.
A prisoner might last a day at Dokholur or many years, but
eventually Dokholur and its hazards won. When a thrall died at his
work, his companions silently loaded the body onto a full ore cart
and it was burned with the next batch of molten ore at the nearest
furnace, so the thrall’s final contribution to the mines of Dokholur was
the remains of his own poor husk. From the least, scruffy orphan
child that dragged food and water to the prisoners, to the sickest old
beggar, everyone was expected to give his all to the mine. Leifr
encountered old thralls, outlaws, wanderers, and many others who
had fallen into disfavor with either fate or Sorkvir.
With ten days left, Leifr saw Ljosa for the first time since his
arrival. Rising water had made further work impossible in their
tunnel, so Leifr’s troop was being taken to another place until the
water was dammed up. As the captives shuffled wretchedly past the
furnace area, he saw her in the red light, throwing fuel onto the fire.
Sensing his eyes upon her, she straightened and looked around,
spying him towering over his bent, skinny companions. A brilliant light
of recognition suddenly illuminated her weary features, and Leifr could
see that she was calling something to him, but it was lost in the roaring
of the furnaces.
Leifr started toward her, ignoring Skrof’s frantic attempts to drive
him back by prancing around him menacingly and brandishing a staff.
Keeping his eyes upon Ljosa, Leifr seized the staff and broke it over
one knee, tossing it away in contempt. Skrof scuttled away in alarm.