Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
at the summit of the mountain cracked and heaved, sending blocks of
ice the size of hay barns rumbling down the ravines, casting up sheets
of misty spray and ice particles.
Thurid led the descent from the mountain, muttering magic to
himself the entire time, until they arrived safely on the far side of the
fell to the south. By then, Leifr’s strength was exhausted and his
damaged leg dragged almost lifelessly as he hauled himself grimly
along with the aid of a rough crutch torn from a thicket. At the bottom
of the fell was a ruined farmhouse, where watch fires burned in a ring
around it. Leifr halted suspiciously, but Thurid assured him, “It’s
nothing to worry about—just some of your old friends from the mines
watching for us. We’ve got an army ready-made, armed with pickaxes,
mauls, and shovels, and a strong desire to remain free of Sorkvir. There
are about four times as many thralls as there were Dokkalfar. Even
Sorkvir would think twice about attacking them.”
The first watchman spied them and sounded the alarm, which
went from post to post down the mountain. In short order, a horse and
sledge came rumbling up the fell with a welcoming jingle of bells and
harness. None of it seemed real to Leifr until the sledge had delivered
him to the ruins of the house, where Ljosa and Gotiskolker had taken
possession of the last remaining piece of standing roof, which had been
part of a barn.
Gotiskolker was too weak to rise from his pallet and could only
welcome Leifr with his dark, pain-laden eyes and a slight quirk of a
smile. To Leifr, he looked already cadaverous, with his skin drawn
thinly over his battered facial bones, showing every scar.
Seeing Leifr’s stunned expression, Ljosa came forward quickly
and led Leifr aside to explain tersely, “He’s dying, Fridmarr. It took the
last of his strength to rescue me. He said that he has something
important to tell me, but I fear he won’t live to tell it.”
Leifr drew a deep breath and sank down on a sheep fleece to stare
across the fire at Gotiskolker. “I believe I know what he wants to tell
you.” He was certain it was the secret of Leifr’s identity; or perhaps
Gotiskolker wanted Ljosa to help Leifr return to the Scipling realm.
“He can’t die and leave me here,” Leifr said wearily. “We’ve
come so far together.”
Thurid held his hands over Gotiskolker a moment, as if testing
the heat of dying coals; then he sat down with an exhausted grunt next
to Ljosa’s fire. “Don’t look so bleak, Fridmarr,” he said, meaning to be
been killing him for years. He’s been living on
kind. “The eitur has
borrowed time. His life could not have been very pleasant for him.”
“He’s not finished yet,” Leifr said doggedly. “There are things
he has to do first.”
“Is there anything to eat around here?” Thurid asked, and
Raudbjorn grunted a second to that motion, his eyes brightening at the
prospect.
“Nothing but black bread and dried fish,” Ljosa replied.
Leifr shuddered. “I’ll never eat black bread and dried fish again
for the rest of my life.” He lay down, bone-tired and gloomy, unable
to think of anything but being marooned in the Alfar realm and unable
to convince anyone that he was not Fridmarr Fridmundrsson. He felt the
torque around his neck as the idea occurred to him that he might have
only three days to worry about it. But if he were successful in finding
the grindstone at Grittur-grof, he would have to spend the rest of his
life as Fridmarr, an uneasy occupation with frequent unpleasant
surprises as more of Fridmarr’s past came to light.
Eventually he went to sleep. In the morning when he awakened,
he looked first to see if Gotiskolker was still breathing. By daylight,
Gotiskolker looked far worse than by firelight, but he was still holding
on to the thread of life. He opened his eyes a moment to look at
Leifr, then closed them slowly, drifting away again.
Leifr prodded the frosty heap that was Raudbjorn, who
awakened with a snort and blinked around at the ruins, as if he had no
idea how he had gotten there.
“Raudbjorn, go find us a sledge and three horses. See if you can
find us some riding horses.”
Raudbjorn’s face puckered with doubt. “Old mine ponies no
good to ride,” he grumbled. “Dokkalfar took best horses. Maybe have
to walk.”
“While you’re doing that, Raudbjorn, spread the word that we’re
all going to Grittur-grof.”
Glad for the opportunity to strike a few blows at their former
slavemasters, the outcasts of Dokholur rallied themselves into an
efficient traveling company, ready to follow Leifr south to Grittur-
grof. Gently Leifr placed Gotiskolker in the sledge, noting that there
was almost no substance left to his body.
“He might have lived longer if he’d never come on this
expedition,” he observed bitterly to Ljosa, who was to ride in the
sledge with Gotiskolker.
She smiled at Leifr sadly. “Yes, but look at all the strength it took
for him to go so far, when he knew he was dying. He must feel proud;
and so should we, to have known such a brave and tormented soul.”
To cushion the rough ride, she held him in her arms, swaying as
the horses started forward. The spectacle of the chieftain’s daughter
comforting a dying beggar sent a thrill through the motley army of
perhaps a hundred tattered, homeless men, instilling their resilient souls
with the strength to shoulder their packs of salvaged provisions and
march grimly toward Grittur-grof and the expected confrontation with
their bitterest enemy.
Leifr found himself miraculously reunited with his old black
horse Jolfr, who had been deemed unworthy of Dokkalfar possession
and set to work in the mine, much as Leifr had. Raudbjorn brought
Jolfr to him in the company of several former prisoners Leifr
recognized, ones who had shared their food with him when they had
not enough for themselves. Leifr made them captains. Under their
leadership, the army moved southward.
Near sundown they came into view of Grittur-grof. Ancient
barrow mounds covered with stones rose from the barren earth, long
barrows where kings might have been buried, and round barrows for the
lesser dead. No bushes or thickets grew among the graves, and the grass
and moss clung to sheltered pockets between the stones, where the
piercing wind could not penetrate. Leifr viewed the vast, desolate area
with grim dismay, wondering how a grindstone could be found among
so many thousands of ordinary stones.
Raudbjorn deployed his watchmen, and a dozen small fires soon
sprang up in a circle around the main encampment. Leifr found a
sheltered area for Gotiskolker and Ljosa within the doorway of a
large barrow. As the sky darkened, the Dokkalfar appeared on the
tops of the barrows, their helmets and weapons glimmering redly by the
light of their torches and their battle-standards flapping in the cold wind
with a rattling of bones and metal symbols. Presently Sorkvir appeared,
riding the length of a long barrow, with several of his captains following
at a respectful distance. Greifli would no longer be among Sorkvir’s evil
train, Leifr thought with grim satisfaction, and neither would
Raudbjorn, who had taken a prominent position atop a small barrow to
yell derision at the Dokkalfar.
Sorkvir halted and conferred with his captains for a few
moments, then rode his horse down the side of the barrow
toward the former prisoners’ encampment. The former thralls took
up their weapons and presented a bristling defense. Stopping at a safe
distance, Sorkvir sent in word that he wished to speak to their
leader, and the message was carried quickly to Leifr. He rode his horse
out to meet Sorkvir, in spite of Thurid’s advice not to, and persuaded
Raudbjorn to stay at the edge of the watch fires only after a lengthy
argument.
Leifr stopped at a cautious distance, not trusting the glowering
wizard to maintain the truce.
“Fridmarr, we ought to be able to reach some agreement,”
Sorkvir began, his eyes burning with the fever of a hunted animal. “I
believe we can both continue to exist, once we come to a truce.”
“There will be no truce,” Leifr replied.
“I could give you Gliru-hals,” Sorkvir said after a long, taut
pause.
“Gliru-hals is not yours to give,” Leifr said. “It belongs to Ljosa
Hroaldsdottir, now that Hroald is dead by your hand. Driving out the
trespassers is only one of our goals. Not one Dokkalfar will remain in
Solvorfirth.”
Sorkvir snorted. “You wouldn’t be so arrogant if not for that
Rhbu wizard.”
“Perhaps not, but Rhbu magic will be your doom.”
“Be sensible, Fridmarr. I could make you rich and powerful. I see
now that I was foolish to think I could subdue your spirit by
imprisonment and deprivation, when it was your intelligence I should
have appealed to. We are not so different, you and I.”
“Only as different as night and day, Sorkvir,” Leifr said. “Only
one can exist at a time. It does you no good to try to sway me. I won’t
change my mind. I will sharpen that Rhbu sword and destroy you with
it.”
“You are only doing this to assuage your own conscience about
your brother Bodmarr. You think it will remove your guilt for his death,
but treachery to your own brother is a crime the Ljosalfar will never
forgive. They may tolerate you, but their backs will always be turned to
you. You will always feel a secret self-loathing because you were
unable to come to Bodmarr’s aid when you could have saved him.
What a weak fool you were in those days! You were out of your
mind with eitur while I was killing Bodmarr. You killed him almost as
much as I did. One day the eitur you took then will kill you,
Fridmarr. Sometimes it takes many years, but one day you’ll begin to
feel it burning away in your vitals, in your very brain. All that can
prevent it is more eitur. Aren’t you afraid, Fridmarr? It’s an
unpleasant way to die. I have the means to save you from such a
miserable and protracted death.”
Sorkvir held out a small flask to Leifr. “Go ahead and take it,
Fridmarr. As long as you have a supply of eitur you’ll never have to
worry about the pain of being without it.”
Leifr’s thoughts were upon Gotiskolker. With a sudden flare of
hope he realized that saving Gotiskolker’s life now could ensure him a
way back to his own realm later. But his hope died a sickly death when
he pictured himself forcing the poison on his friend in order to desert
him to the evil consequences of such a deed. He gazed at Sorkvir,
feeling the powerful influence of the wizard’s skills trying to draw him
under the spell of Sorkvir’s words.
“It’s useless to try to save yourself,” Leifr said after a long, silent
struggle. “You know that fate is on my side; otherwise, the Pentacle
would not be almost cleared.”
“The damage is quite easy to remedy,” Sorkvir said, making a
visible effort to control his temper. “Fridmarr, I have tried in vain to
appeal to your common sense and I have tried to frighten you about the
eitur. I had thought that you might listen to reason, instead of being so
obdurate. You have not changed from the stubborn fool you were
before.”
“As you said, we are not so different.”
“Is that your final word, Fridmarr?”
“Yes, unless you wish to tell me where the grindstone is hidden.”
Sorkvir chuckled drily. “And tempt fate? Your challenge is
tempting, Fridmarr, but I’m no longer young and foolish, as you are.
What if Bodmarr’s magic Rhbu sword doesn’t work in your hand?
What if he was the chosen hero, and you are nothing but a
presumptuous usurper? If that should be the case, and you are unable to
kill me, have you contemplated what your immediate future might be?”
Leifr turned his horse sharply, backing away from Sorkvir. The
wizard broke into a wild laugh that echoed off the rocky barrows. “Give
it up now, Fridmarr, while neither of us knows what the truth actually is.
This question will keep the peace between us.”
“I think I stand to lose more by not knowing,” Leifr replied,
feeling the torque’s cool metal around his neck. “I know from