Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
Raudbjorn that the grindstone is here. Maybe he will remember
exactly where it lies.”
Keeping a watchful eye upon his enemy, Leifr turned and rode
back to the encampment. Obviously working himself into a rage,
Sorkvir lashed his horse into a gallop and raced away into the barrows,
with his captain following warily.
Thurid strode after Leifr, once Sorkvir was safely out of sight.
When he caught up with Leifr, his face was drawn and gray with
anxiety.
“Fridmarr,” he whispered, darting a resentful glower at
Raudbjorn, standing rigidly nearby, guarding them. “What about the
eitur? How could you have swallowed that stuff? Even a fool such as
you were should have known—”
“Thurid,” Leifr interrupted, “do I look like I’m dying of poison?
I’ve never tasted eitur in my life.” He started to go around Thurid,
but Thurid again blocked his path, using his staff as a bar.
“Fridmarr, if you’ve used eitur—” Thurid seemed to have trouble
slowing down his rush of words into coherent words and sentences. “If
eitur has been in your bloodstream only once, then the magic of the
Rhbus isn’t going to work for you. The corruption begins immediately,
although it may progress very slowly for many years. Even if we
sharpen the sword with the proper grindstone and you thrust it
through Sorkvir a hundred times, it isn’t going to destroy him and
prevent him from taking Hel’s journey back to life again. What I mean
to say is, if we’re doomed to fail, it would be better not to try until we
find someone who is free of Sorkvir’s fatal taint.”
“Thurid, I told you—”
“Yes, but I think you’re lying in an attempt to keep me from
worrying.”
“It’s not working then, if that’s what I’m doing,” Leif retorted. “If
I’d taken eitur, I’d tell you. I don’t want to face Sorkvir in battle
and fail. If you’re through bothering me, will you let me by now?”
“I’m not through,” Thurid protested as Leifr pushed him aside.
“You’ve already got your bad leg to slow you down. Sorkvir might
kill you before you kill him, even if the sword magic will work for
you.”
Gnawed by his own grave doubts, Leifr retorted furiously, “I
didn’t come here willingly; if I’d known what it would be like, I
would have done anything to prevent it. I am not Fridmarr, and this
shouldn’t be my quarrel. I was virtually kidnapped and forced to
interfere with that Pentacle. Gotiskolker is the one who brought me
here, and he’s not going to be able to get me back. Gotiskolker is—”
Leifr had a grip on Thurid’s collar piece, shaking him for emphasis
at each point.
Then a pure revelation pierced his anger to the core, dissolving it
into amazement and awe. Releasing Thurid from his grip, he turned
slowly to the barrow, where Raudbjorn stood watching interestedly.
“Gotiskolker is Fridmarr,” Leifr whispered.
Thurid’s glazed eyes did not blink as he stared at Leifr for a long
moment. Then he said, “Brain fever. It must have been from that
beating in Dokholur.” He clasped his hands around his staff and rested
his forehead against them as if this new affliction were too much for
one wizard to bear.
The knowledge of Fridmarr’s final secret and the dark
torment of Gotiskolker, finally resolved, left Leifr almost weak with
relief. Leaving Thurid to his distraught muttering and groaning, Leifr
went inside and knelt beside the still figure on the pallet. Ljosa
already knelt on the other side, holding one wasted hand between
hers. Tears spilled on the withered hand as she smoothed it and kissed
it.
“You know,” Leifr whispered, and she nodded, raising eyes
to him that regarded him as if he had suddenly become a stranger to
her.
“Who are you?” she asked.
“Leifr Thorljotsson—a Scipling. He brought me here to do the
things that he couldn’t.”
Ljosa bowed her head. “All these years among us, and no one
suspected. What wretched little comfort anyone gave him— except
Fridmundr, from the generosity of his own kind heart. If he had known
—” Blinded by scalding tears, she gently kissed the thin, scarred hand.
The long-lost Fridmarr opened his fragile eyelids a crack and
whispered, “Hush, it doesn’t matter now. My father did know who I
was. He also knew I was too proud to accept more than almost
worthless offerings. All I took from him was the reverse glamour spell
that got me into Gliru-hals. Then he carried me to the hut in the
barrows and treated my wounds, instead of leaving me on the dung
heap to die, as he ought. I almost didn’t forgive him for that. Not until
he was nearly gone did I speak to him again. You see what a fool I’ve
been. Don’t grieve for this miserable carcass. I’m glad to let go of all
this old pain.”
Leifr glanced up as a shadow passed before the fire and met the
astounded gaze of Thurid, gaping at him with a complete lack of
comprehension. Slowly the wizard sank to his knees beside Fridmarr to
listen to the long-kept secret.
Leifr burned with mounting shame, struck by a sudden awful
realization. “Then Fridmundr knew from the first moment that I was
not his son. What a fool he must have thought me. And I was a
bigger fool for thinking that even this would deceive Fridmarr’s own
father.” Leifr removed the carbuncle from his neck and placed it in
Fridmarr’s wasted hand.
Fridmarr shook his head weakly and smiled. “No. He knew the
carbuncle, of course. He knew that I was finally making the effort to
restore the honor to our family name, after wasting so much time. He
saw you as Fridmarr reborn in all his former strength and power and
courage—reborn from the ruin of eitur, abuse, and wretched
suffering caused by his son’s terrible pride.” Fridmarr’s eyes glowed
faintly for a moment. “I saw you that way myself and felt horribly
jealous, so 1 wasn’t kind to you, Leifr. But I tried to swallow some of
my pride in order to destroy Sorkvir.”
“Even to the extent of destroying and denying your entire identity
as an Alfar?” Thurid demanded brokenly, his hand closing gently over
the carbuncle and Fridmarr’s feeble hand clutching it. “We could have
helped you without all this misery. To think of you, outcast among your
own family, sacrificing your jewel for the sake of revenge, and
poisoning yourself with Sorkvir’s eitur—” He shook his head, unable to
continue.
“Thurid. My old teacher and friend.” Fridmarr tried to raise his
head to see, but the effort was too much for him. “You should know
how it is with me. I never took the easy way around, did I? Some of us
need to suffer and make our own mistakes. Now it’s time to pay the
price. I’m sorry for the misery and pain I’ve caused all of you—but it
was a good deception while it lasted, was it not?”
Thurid lifted his pinched and pale features to look at Leifr,
bafflement and suspicion in his eyes.
“Yes, it was an excellent deception,” he said musingly. “Even I
was fooled, and I prided myself at one time upon my perspicacity. And
you were there in the barrows all this time, scavenging useless bits
from the settlements. Fridmarr, you might have told your secret to me,
and I would have helped you.”
Fridmarr shook his head, his unfocused gaze traveling blindly in
Thurid’s direction. “My truest and oldest of friends, I could not abide
anyone’s pity. Sorkvir might have guessed who I really was, had you
come flocking around. I knew Sorkvir would punish anyone who was
too kind to me, whether or not he knew who I was, so I kept you all
away.”
Ljosa raised her tear-stained face. “I would not have been afraid
of Sorkvir, Fridmarr. I wouldn’t have pitied or scorned you when you
needed my help. It would have taken away this bitter feeling in my
heart that I’ve cherished all these years, if you had allowed me to
forgive you.”
“I’m too stubborn,” Fridmarr answered with a tortured scowl.
“I’m not the fine spirit that you are, precious one. I was too ashamed of
my weakness and my mistakes. So when I found Leifr, I used him to
hide behind. Leifr, will you ever forgive me for all this I’ve put you
through?”
“Of course I will,” Leifr said gruffly. “I never meant half those
wicked things I said about Fridmarr, before I knew he was you. It must
have been hard watching me make such a fool of myself and not giving
yourself away by saying too much.”
“You did well, my friend. Far better than I had expected. My only
regret is that I won’t be here to see your final victory. I know you must
succeed, Leifr.” He sighed and closed his eyes. “Thurid, you’ll see to
it that Leifr gets back to his own realm, won’t you?”
Thurid looked disturbed and twisted a strand of his thin beard.
“I’ve never done anything like that before. I’ll be glad to experiment,
though. Perhaps the rune sticks contain such a spell.”
“Forget the rune sticks. You don’t need them, Thurid. You’re
going to be one of the finest wizards in the realm one day.” Fridmarr’s
voice was faint and tired. “It’s time to make an end to all this talk. Leifr,
take the carbuncle. Where I’m going, there will be no use for it. I think
the day will come when you might want it. You could stay in this
realm. The Ljosalfar need good fighters.”
Leifr took the carbuncle reluctantly; it was a dying friend’s last
wish, and he knew he must honor it. “I’m grateful, Fridmarr—but I’ll
have to go it as a Scipling from now on. One day maybe I’ll change my
mind, though.“
“The choice is yours, my friend.” Fridmarr’s voice faded to a
mere whisper. “The time has come to say goodbye, my dear ones. May
the Rhbus guide you, until we meet again.”
As they gazed, his withered skin began to glow softly, blurring
and shifting in changing patterns, until it was Fridmarr as he had been
long ago, before his afflictions laid him low. His likeliness to Leifr was
distinct, but the light shining from within illuminated his countenance
until ordinary flesh seemed dull dross by comparison.
“The last gift of the Rhbus,” he whispered. “Remember me as I
once was—not as Gotiskolker.”
The glorious light began to fade, although the youthful likeness
remained. Ljosa clutched his hand, whispering, “So little time! Why
couldn’t we have had just one day? I had him back, and now he’s gone
again!”
Thurid leaned forward. “Fridmarr, if ever I do achieve honors and
fame and power in this realm, it will be partly yours. Farewell, my dear
boy!” His voice choked, and he hid his face in his hands.
“Good-bye, old friend. Good-bye, Leifr, battle companion and
true friend. Good-bye, Ljosa—my love.” He sighed and relaxed his
tremulous grip on the thread of life, smiling peacefully as his spirit
slipped away.
“Fridmarr! I always loved you!” Ljosa cried out in anguish.
“I know you did, my love,” Fridmarr’s voice whispered, as if
from a great distance. His last breath rattled in his throat, and his eyes
opened with a brief flicker of glad astonishment before fading into a
lightless, vacant stare.
For a long moment no one stirred. Then from outside came
Kraftig’s mournful howl, echoed by Frimodig and Farlig, rising in an
unearthly chorus that tightened the band of grief around Leifr’s heart
until he feared it would burst. Rising quickly, he left the barrow and
limped away into the darkness blindly, guided by the voices of the
hounds. They stood atop a barrow, pointing their long noses skyward,
shivering in a crouched pose, with their fringed tails drooping.
When the dogs were done with their howling, they slunk down
from the barrow to Leifr, pressing close to his legs and growling
fearfully at every small sound, still shivering. Raudbjorn loomed
suddenly around a large black cairn, setting off a ferocious salvo of
barking and snarling, which Leifr quelled sharply to conceal his own
startlement.
“Raudbjorn, I meant to find you earlier,” Leifr began, glad for
some distraction from his grief and despair at Fridmarr’s death.
“Fridmarr?” Raudbjorn’s voice quavered questioningly.
“No. My name is Leifr. The real Fridmarr is dead.”
Raudbjorn shook his head slowly. “Real Fridmarr always be you.