Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
an Alfar, and if these stones can bring you power.”
Gotiskolker lifted one sharp shoulder in a shrug. “As I
said before, carbuncles are sometimes bought, sold, or stolen. Mine
was sold a long time ago, but I won’t bore you with the story.
Fridmarr’s is the only one of interest to you.“ His tone was
almost venomous in its harsh self-loathing. ”Parting with my jewel
is partly to blame for the wreck I am now. Alfar do not live well
without their carbuncles—or wisely, I fear.“
At last Leifr heaved a reluctant sign and picked up the stone
again. “I’ll carry this stone for the sake of your venture, but I’ll never
be host to it. As soon as I’m finished with it, I’ll give it back to you. I
can still scarcely believe that all I have to do is carry it and everyone
will see me as Fridmarr.”
“There are curiouser marvels,” Gotiskolker said drily, watching
sharply as Leifr fashioned a hanger for the stone and strung it around
his neck inside his shirt.
Leifr returned his watchful stare with a belligerent scowl to hide
uneasiness and distaste for wearing the carbuncle. “Well then, do I look
like Fridmarr?” he demanded challengingly.
Gotiskolker looked away, reaching for his walking staff again.
“The resemblance is there,” he grunted unhelpfully. “And it will
increase the longer you wear his jewel—whether you like it or not.”
Leifr felt as if a cold wave of air had touched him, awakening
him to the utter strangeness of the Alfar realm. All the normal laws
of Scipling behavior and expectations had been suddenly revoked,
leaving him bereft of guidance.
Gruffly he said, “Well, I’m not going to like it, so let’s get it over
with. We’ll meet again soon, I trust?”
Gotiskolker shook his head. “You’ll be completely on your own,
except for the carbuncle. I’m not particularly welcome at Dallir, except
to haul away rubbish that no one wants or to bring tallow for candles.
I’ll watch out for you when I can, and you know where to find me, if
you care to. I’m your dear old friend, remember; but also remember that
it isn’t wise to be seen with your old conspirator, as far as Sorkvir is
concerned.”
“Sorkvir be blasted,” Leifr muttered in consternation. “You’ve
got to help me at least some of the time.”
“I hope it won’t be necessary,” Gotiskolker responded.
The sun was low in the west, casting long shadows behind
the rocks, barrows, and thickets. Gotiskolker hurried along with many
uneasy glances over his shoulder. Once he motioned to Leifr urgently,
and they crouched in a ditch while six riders in long black cloaks went
by with an officious jingling of harness and weapons. Leifr stared at
their battle banners, hung on long pikes ornamented with fluttering
trophies of hair and rattling bones. The devices on the banners were
skulls and bats, which matched the symbols on the warriors’
shields and helmets. When they had passed, Leifr looked to
Gotiskolker for an explanation.
“Dokkalfar,” Gotiskolker whispered grimly and hurried
onward, darting from shadow to shadow until they came into view of a
turf house and its many sprawling annexes and barns and stables.
As they advanced along a crumbling stone wall, Leifr could see
that Dallir was more nearly a ruin than it was a working homestead.
Portions, if not all, of each building had fallen into unclaimable ruin,
although use of the building continued with stolid determination to
endure until the structure finally collapsed entirely. A sullen red
light burned in one end of a sagging turf barn, and a few sick sheep
stood listlessly in a muddy pen.
As Leifr and Gotiskolker crouched beside the wall among the
nettles and thistles, a ragged figure carried a milk pail and a guttering
horn lamp toward the main hall. An annex door opened briefly, casting
a slim wedge of light into the gloom, then vanishing quickly.
Gotiskolker nudged Leifr sharply. “That’s the kitchen. Fridmarr
would never use the front doors. Go on, and good luck to you.”
“I’m sure I’ll need it. Who will be there that I should know by
sight?”
“Just Fridmundr, Snagi the house thrall, and Thurid—you’ll
know him by his thin hair and his arrogant clothing. His headgear is
typical of Djarfur district, but you’d know nothing of the dress
customs. Pretty vain and foppish, but some good wizards have come out
of Djarfur.”
Leifr shook his head, which was suddenly filled with images
of blue and yellow Djarfur hats, with red tassels and crowns shaped
like a horses’ nosebags. “Red tassels!” he exclaimed in amazement. “If
this is an example of how that precious carbuncle works—” He made as
if to tear the string off his neck.
Gotiskolker fastened his claw in Leifr’s arm. “It will tell you
other things. You’re not losing your nerve, are you? I hope the Rhbus
weren’t malicious enough to send me a coward.“
Leifr jerked his arm away. “If this doesn’t work, you old barrow
robber, I’m going to come after you and break your other arm and
maybe your neck.”
Gripping his sword hilt, he stalked toward the annex door, his
heart thudding. He nearly leaped out of his skin when a pair of small,
scruffy-looking dogs suddenly erupted from under a broken cart with a
vociferous uproar of barking. Sniffing suspiciously at his heels and
growling and whining worriedly, they scuttled away in craven terror
when Leifr stamped his boots at them. Unfortunately, they took a
defensive position on the stoop, growling, bristling, and showing their
teeth. Leifr hesitated, eyeing the porch window, where it was considered
more polite to knock, and watching the dogs, whose belligerence
increased with his hesitation.
Suddenly the door opened, and the dogs scrambled inside,
still growling, with their tails curled between their legs. A ragged
individual leaned out to peer into the darkness at Leifr, calling out in a
nervous, cracked voice, “Who’s there? Answer up quick, unless
you’re a draug or a Dokkalfar. Once the sun goes down, I don’t
open this door for anybody.”
Leifr came forward a few more steps, unable to think of any
appropriate words for a returning prodigal. The bright eyes of the
doorkeeper peered sharply at him around the edge of the door.
“Well, speak up, or I’m going to shut the door and let the
Dokkalfar and trolls have you.” He started to suit his words with the
appropriate action.
“Wait,” Leifr said, pulling off his hood in a gesture of peace.
“I’ve come a long way to get here. I heard that Fridmundr— my father
—is dying. I don’t know if I’m welcome or not, but I’ve come to see
him for the last time.”
The door was snatched open wider, and a tall, glowering
individual thrust the first speaker aside and surveyed Leifr from
head to foot with mounting suspicion and scorn evident in the harsh
glitter of his eyes. With his nose thrust forward like the prow of a ship
penetrating enemy waters, he swiftly peered around the farmyard to see
if Leifr had any cohorts lurking avariciously in the shadows, then
turned on the ragged fellow who had opened the door.
“Snagi, you old fool, how dare you open the door to a stranger
this way, with no regard for the safety of the house? How do we know
what sort of creature he is?” He turned toward Leifr abruptly, without
losing a stride in his rapid fire of questions and accusations. “How do
we know you’re not plotting to murder us all in the middle of the
night? How do we know you’re not one of them?”
Leifr’s heart condensed into a cold, hard knot and sweat trickled
down his spine. If this hard-eyed, suspicious character was Thurid,
Gotiskolker’s scheme would be detected immediately, and all due
retribution heaped upon him.
“Thurid! Won’t you listen a moment!” Snagi at last made
his presence known, after a series of unheard protests and exclamations
quivering with excitement. “Look at him, Thurid! Listen to his voice!”
“What nonsense is this!” Thurid flung open the door to let the
light fall upon Leifr. “Stop where you are,” he commanded, striding
out onto the porch, his eyes riveted on Leifr with a sudden acute
sharpening of his gaze.
Certain he had betrayed himself somehow, Leifr edged a step
backward. “I think I’ve made a mistake,” he muttered. “This must be
the wrong house. Sorry I’ve disturbed you.” He had almost turned away
when Thurid spoke.
“Fridmarr!”
Leifr froze, then swung around warily.
Thurid scowled blackly. “Don’t pretend you don’t know me. I
almost didn’t recognize you in that wretched attire. As long as you’re
here, you’d better come in, before Sorkvir gets wind of your return.”
Leifr’s eyes narrowed with dislike. He felt his hackles rising
dangerously. Men of this authoritarian, autocratic ilk had always
irritated him almost beyond endurance.
“Thank you for your kind invitation,” he said coldly. “I regret to
intrude myself where I’m not wanted, but I wish to see my father.”
“Intrude? It’s your hall now, since Bodmarr is dead. You know
I’m here only on Fridmundr’s sufferance.” He led the way into the
shadowy kitchen, fragrant with ancient wood and peat fires, whose
pungency had permeated every beam and turf for generations. “Let
me go ahead and prepare him for the shock of your
unexpected return.” Thurid arched his left eyebrow, as if to say
Fridmarr’s return was unwelcome as well as unexpected.
Resenting his officious tone, Leifr’s gaze traveled over Thurid’s
apparel, the long cloak and gown affected by scholars and men of
wisdom who often were paid to remain at the halls of wealthy men to
enhance the atmosphere. His clothing was of exceptional quality, if
somewhat threadbare and shabby, and his fine boots had been
assiduously mended and patched to extend their lifespan beyond the
normal years for a pair of boots.
“Still down on your luck, I see,” Leifr observed. “Your study of
magic hasn’t gotten you far, has it?”
Thurid darted him an evil glare. “Thanks to your late disgrace
and Bodmarr’s ill luck, I’ve lost a lot more credence in Solvorfirth. I
can’t even get children to tutor. Rhbu magic never prospers those who
practice it. Wait here while I see if Fridmundr is in any condition for
visitors. I shall summon you in a moment.”
“I’ll come with you,” Leifr said, not trusting Thurid out of his
sight. “I’m not a visitor here. I wish to. see my father at once.”
Thurid conceded with ill grace. “Come on, then,” he said,
stalking into a cold, dark corridor that led toward the back of the house.
“I can see there’s still no reasoning with you. By the way, did you ride a
horse, or are you afoot?” He glanced down at Leifr’s worn, dusty
footwear with a supercilious smile.
“I had to sell my horse long ago for ship’s passage. It was either
sell it or eat it.” He ignored Thurid’s visible shudder of disgust and
strode down the corridor at Thurid’s heels toward a dim doorway,
where a massive carved door stood ajar. In the dim light, Leifr saw
intertwining serpent designs that seemed to move in the dancing
firelight, writhing up and down the doorposts and across the panels of
the door. Leifr gazed at them, hesitating a moment, while Thurid
coughed with impatience, eyeing him with a knowing simper.
“You needn’t be so nervous,” he said. “Fridmundr is beyond all
anger and disappointment now. I believe he has quite forgiven you for
the blot upon the family’s name.“
Leifr spared him a cursory scowl and stepped into the room
beyond, mustering all his wits for the ordeal that awaited him; the
effort resulted in a very stiff and appropriately anxious demeanor.
A large, carved chair stood near the fire, and a tall, raddled figure
drooped listlessly between the two heavy dragons’ heads ornamenting
the foreposts. Completely white, his hair and beard covered his
shoulders and chest in a straggling mane, and he raised his head with
the fierce weariness of an aged lion at the sound of footsteps. His eyes,
white with cataracts, glowed like the eerie phosphorescence of foxfire
as they probed blindly at the two dim shapes that stood before him.