Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
This Leifr somebody I don’t know.”
“Maybe we’ll become friends, when you get to know me as
Leifr, instead of Fridmarr.”
“Maybe. Leifr fights like Fridmarr, brave as Fridmarr, looks like
Fridmarr. But Raudbjorn always miss Fridmarr, somehow.”
“Me, too,” Leifr replied with a sigh. “I wanted to ask you about
the grindstone, Raudbjorn. I have two days to find it and return it to
Hjaldr, or my life will be cut short as if I were a common horse thief.
Do you remember where Sorkvir hid the grindstone?”
Raudbjorn heaved a regretful sigh. “In rocks. Rocks all
Raudbjorn remember. Raudbjorn search tomorrow and maybe find
grindstone for Leifr. Maybe find Sorkvir and Dokkalfar too.” His
teeth gleamed in the moonlight, and he strummed the edge of his
halberd with his thumb to test its sharpness.
During the night, Ljosa prepared Fridmarr’s body for burial, as
well as she was able with such limited resources. The news of his true
identity and his death swept through the encampment almost
immediately. At dawn, the ragged assembly gathered before the open
barrow to pay their last respects and hear Thurid give his funeral
recitation. Then Leifr and three of the stoutest of the former prisoners
carried the remains on a pallet to an open barrow for burial, with the
others streaming behind, singing skalds. Ljosa stood beside Leifr as the
barrow opening was filled with stones. When it was done, she turned
away with a sigh.
“I saw you limping as you carried him,” she said. “Your knee
must be very painful.”
“No, not at all,” Leifr lied manfully.
She walked beside him in silence, darting him a covert glance
now and then. At last she said, “Fridmarr is dead. You don’t have to
maintain the pretense of being infatuated with me.”
“It never was a pretense. If I really were Fridmarr—-if Fridmarr
had come back as himself—would you have forgiven him then, instead
of waiting until he was dying?”
Ljosa let her blowing hair screen her face as she bent her head. In
a broken voice she replied, “I don’t think I have ever been humble in
my life, until now. Nothing Sorkvir could do to me broke my pride. I
vowed I would never forgive Fridmarr because of Bodmarr’s death. I
didn’t know if my hard heart could forgive him. But to think of him
living just a few miles away, all those years, and never saying
anything!” She wiped her eyes on a tatter of her cloak and walked a bit
faster. Then she turned abruptly and asked, “Did he do this all for me?
You knew him better than anyone else, so you should know what
his reasons were.”
Leifr considered carefully and slowly shook his head. “No, he did
it because he knew that something had to be done and he was the only
one with the knowledge to get it done. Gotis— Fridmarr was tormented
by his past and he knew that nothing could take the pain away
altogether.”
Ljosa bowed her head, nodding in assent. “I’m glad he was doing
it for the sake of lightness and not just to prove himself to me. He
must have suffered greatly under the burden of his guilt. I don’t think I
will ever forget this pain— no more than you can forget your knee.”
“Many people walk with a limp,” Leifr said. “It’s better than not
walking at all.”
Ljosa darted him a small smile through the curtain of her hair.
“That must be Scipling wisdom. Yours must be an enduring and
determined race of people.” Leifr shrugged, never having thought
harsh as Skarpsey is.”
about it before. “We have to be, as
The thralls gathered near the open barrow where Fridmarr had
died, and Thurid divided them into groups for searching Grittur-
grof, reserving the western section for himself, Raudbjorn, and Leifr,
since that was where he expected to encounter the Dokkalfar. As they
saddled their horses, Ljosa also saddled a horse and rode forward to
join them with such a set, composed expression that even Thurid dared
not contradict her. He stuffed a handful of rune wands back into his
satchel and disentangled a dowsing pendulum.
“Silence, please,” he commanded, extending the pendulum at
arm’s length. “Think of nothing but the grindstone, so your mental
powers will assist me.”
Raudbjorn obediently squeezed shut his eyes, but after a few
moments he gave it up with a groan. “Nothing but food in Raudbjorn’s
mind,” he grumbled.
Thurid glared at him as a fresh source of aggravation and
thrust the pendulum in his pocket. “I shall try later when there is less
interference. Raudbjorn, doesn’t anything at all look familiar to you?”
Raudbjorn slowly shook his head. “Grittur-grof all the same
everywhere. Nothing but rocks and barrows.”
“Rocks and barrows,” Thurid muttered witheringly, darting a
covert glance at Leifr, perhaps the thousandth one since he had learned
that Leifr was not Fridmarr. With a huffy snort, he urged his horse along
faster.
Leifr prodded Jolfr into a trot, overtaking Thurid so he could ride
beside him and look at him as he asked, “Why do you keep on staring at
me like that? Don’t you think I can be trusted?”
Thurid’s eyes slid over him uneasily. “It’s just that I’ve never
seen a Scipling before and I feel as if I’ve been betrayed somehow by
having one deceive me for so long. I don’t know how I could have
mistaken you for Fridmarr. You’re nothing alike. I had a strange
nagging feeling all along that something was wrong, but I was too
stupid to see what was right before my nose. I suppose it was a clever
hoax. You must feel awfully proud.”
“I can’t say that I do,” Leifr replied. “I’m sorry if my being a
Scipling upsets you, but I’d like to remind you that we’ve spent a long
time together, and I, at least, have grown to trust you. Am I not the
same person I was when I first came to Dallir?”
“No, you’re not,” Thurid answered decisively. “You were
Fridmarr then, and now you’re a strange Scipling. It will take me a
while to get used to the idea. I’d always though there was something
rather evil about Sciplings; I’m trying to decide what it is.“ He rode a
few moments in moody silence, then burst out with, ”You might have
confided in me! Didn’t you think I was worth trusting?“
“Not at first, no,” Leifr replied.
Thurid sniffed indignantly, “You weren’t fair to me at all.” He
paused and dismounted to make another attempt to dowse with the
pendulum, darting a murderous glare at Raudbjorn. “Ride to the
other side of that barrow, Raudbjorn. I don’t want any more of your
mutton and duck than I’m already forced to endure.”
Thurid struck his pose, concentrating magnificently, but he had
scarcely got into it when Raudbjorn rode back from the other side of the
barrow.
“Something strange, something strange!” he babbled.
Thurid put the pendulum back in his pocket with jerky, irritated
movements, muttering, “What’s the use of trying to think with this
brute in our midst? Sorkvir was wise in palming him off on us, I’m
beginning to think.”
Raudbjorn pointed upward. “Look! Clouds!”
“Clouds!” Thurid seethed, but he glanced upward nevertheless.
Black masses of clouds with a greenish tinge boiled up at the
horizon, spreading over the rocky face of Grittur-grof like
advancing night. Thurid leaped off his horse and dug frantically into
his bundle of rune sticks, selecting one with shaking hands and reading
it over several times in great haste. Extending his staff, he spoke the
words of the spell in a loud voice. A jet of white cloud hissed from
his staff into the sky, but the black clouds rolled over it with a crackling
of thunder and lightning. Several more times, in quick succession,
Thurid tried to halt the advance of the storm, until the black clouds were
almost overhead, blotting out the sun and half the sky.
“Blast!” Thurid muttered, rummaging through the rune wands in
a frenzy of impatience. “That’s one I must have copied wrong! I can’t
get enough power into it! I hope there’s another way to stop those
clouds, or we’ll have a battle such as no Scipling has ever seen and
lived to tell about.”
A deadly cold wind lashed at the horses’ manes and tore at
everyone’s cloaks. Thurid tried another spell, which happened to be the
sputtering firebolt that had failed so drastically inside the tunnels of
Bjartur.
“Look!” Raudbjorn gripped Thurid’s arm in the middle of
another spell, turning him around to look to the west. “Sorkvir!”
Sorkvir and a long line of Dokkalfar rode slowly toward
them, spanning much of Grittur-grof. The thralls sprang from their
hiding places like flushed rabbits, retreating from the grim apparition of
the masked Dokkalfar and the menacing clouds.
Determined not to retreat so ignominiously, Leifr rode to the top
of a barrow and waited, armed with a heavy pickaxe from Dokholur, a
weapon he had learned to respect and use with good effect against
prowling trolls.
Sorkvir and his men halted within shouting distance, and Sorkvir
rode ahead alone until Leifr advised him, “Come no closer. What you
have to say can be heard from there.”
Sorkvir unmasked himself, after a glance upward to note the
progress of the clouds. When he revealed his face to Leifr, he was
grinning with maniacal glee.
“Fridmarr is dead,” he hissed malevolently. “I heard it from one
of my spies. “You are nothing but a lowly Scipling.”
He laughed a harsh and bitter laugh that the wind carried
away across the barrows. “Now you’ll know the meaning of my wrath,
Scipling. With Fridmarr gone, I have nothing to fear by destroying you.
The Pentacle is still mine. Fridmarr might have saved himself the
trouble of coming back and suffering as he did, I am indestructible, and
your Rhbu wizard is a contemptible, inept amateur.” He shook his head
in disgust as another of Thurid’s failed spells fizzled overhead,
showering the barrows with a spray of harmless sparks.
Leifr glanced at Thurid, who did not bother to conceal his
desperation; rune sticks lay scattered around his feet. His hair
streamed in the icy wind, and his eyes had a mad, furious glaze. Leifr
signaled silently to Raudbjorn to take Ljosa and depart. Raudbjorn
nodded, and Leifr turned back to Sorkvir, who was still preening
himself with monstrous self-satisfaction.
“Our dispute rests in the hands of fate,” Leifr said. “You don’t
know that a Scipling won’t be your bane. I was not brought here to
fail.”
“Nor have I raised this empire of mine to fail,” Sorkvir
retaliated. “Half of my assurance lies in a good defense. You won’t
have the chance to kill me, Scipling. Your bones will rot here in
Grittur-grof with the remains of the Rhbus and the Ljosalfar.” He
raised one arm aloft and the clouds responded with an earth-shaking
explosion of thunder. Needles of greenish lightning struck the tops
of the barrows nearby, blasting fragments of rock in all directions,
which lent great impetus to the fleeing thralls.
Sorkvir masked himself and drew his sword. With a
defiant roar of challenge, he spurred his horse down the side of the
barrow, with the Dokkalfar thundering close behind, clashing weapons
and shields.
Leifr fought to control his frightened horse, winding his pickaxe
around his head and letting it fly just as Sorkvir’s horse came plunging
up the barrow. The pick struck Sorkvir in the chest, knocking him
backward off his horse and sending his sword flying end over end into
the rocks.
Thurid suddenly struck upon a workable spell with a wild yell
of exultation. A wall of flame sprang up, towering before the
charging Dokkalfar. Their horses veered and stumbled, shooting
several riders off over their necks.
Sorkvir was rising to his feet slowly, shaking both fists in the air
and saying the words of some spell directed toward the roiling black
clouds.
The clouds glowed with an eerie, lurid light, churning into the
shapes of horses and riders galloping through the flying turmoil of
clouds with a mighty thundering roar.
“Storm giants! Take cover!” Thurid shouted, scuttling into the