Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
rage. “How like Fridmarr to create such a mess. He never
thought much about consequences— especially the consequences
of his own stupidity.”
Leifr shrugged. “It’s all right, Thurid. Nothing lasts long in
this life anyway. The only part that I really regret is Ljosa. But I
suppose I was a fool for ever thinking she might care about
anyone else, after Fridmarr.”
Thurid stood up to stalk around impatiently. “Sciplings
must be dense creatures to protect themselves from the truth
when it is smacking them in their faces,” he exclaimed. “Among
Alfar, there is no greater gesture than to expend one’s last powers
for another. You didn’t see her doing that for Fridmarr. She lived
for him, because he made her miserable. You, Scipling, freed her
by becoming her cause, her purpose for existence. You took
away all her pain and regret and the poison of long-embittered
pride. If she didn’t love you with a far better love than she loved
Fridmarr, then I have no idea what love must be.” He dabbed at
his smoke-reddened eyes with the tattered tail of his sleeve. “I
loved her too, you know—as well as Bodmarr and Fridmarr.
They were my pupils. I helped raise them from children. Now
they are all gone, and I have nothing left of my past.“
In gloomy silence, they sat watching the sun descend
closer to the horizon, seemingly moving faster the closer it got.
The dogs, lying around their feet, suddenly lifted their heads,
breaking the reverie with a chorus of growls and suspicious
woofs as a lone traveler appeared on the rugged path to
Hjaldrsholl. Leifr and Thurid eyed him a trifle resentfully as he
plodded toward them.
“Is this Hjaldrsholl?” he called out when he was near
enough. Little of him was to be seen beneath a long black cloak
and closely drawn hood.
“Hjaldrsholl it is, although Hjaldr is dead,” Thurid replied.
“I suppose it will be called Hegnasholl now. The hospitality is
somewhat rough, but you’re welcome, as long as you’re a day-
farer.”
“That I am, one of the things I know for certain.” The
traveler stopped beside them and leaned on his long staff. “No
doubt you know all about Sorkvir’s death,” he said, in the
manner of one who doesn’t and would like to hear more. “I’ve
just heard the news myself and I came as fast as I could to see if
it was really true.”
“It’s true enough,” Leifr replied guardedly. “You’ll hear
all about it down below, if you want to walk down the mountain.
I’d walk with you, but I’m waiting here and can’t leave just yet.”
“Waiting, eh? Then I don’t mind waiting with you. I’ve
taken a liking to your company.” The stranger sat down on a
rock and removed a pipe and pouch from an inner pocket. He
stuffed the pipe and blew gently into the bowl to ignite the
leaves, and Thurid’s eyes widened in recognition of a fellow
wizard. The stranger nodded and silently puffed at his pipe for a
few minutes.
“I’ve traveled far to get here,” he said in a satisfied tone,
casting one long, appraising stare at Leifr, blowing the fragrant
smoke in his direction. “It’s a momentous day when lost land is
regained by the Ljosalfar. I hope there’s room here for me and a
few traveling companions.”
Thurid nodded a trifle curtly. “Plenty of room down below
in the new hall. Hjaldrsholl is not a festive place, I fear. There are
too many unhappy memories up here. Down in the new hall,
they’ve got plenty to celebrate about.“
The stranger peered toward the outer gates of Hjaldrsholl.
“I think this suits us better up here. New halls are not as
homelike as fine old ones, even with their age and sorrows. It’s
not fine hospitality we’re looking for.”
He stood up and signaled with his hand, and some riders
and a sledge came out of a thicket on the side of the fell. A trio of
white horses pulled the sledge, tossing their heads with a jingling
of small bells. The last rays of the sun glinted on gold-inlaid
harness, and the helmets of the riders also gleamed with golden
light and the occasional flash of red jewels. As the horses
approached, Leifr could see the fine, fur-trimmed cloaks of the
riders, stitched with gold and silver thread. The horses ranged in
color from black to pale silver dapple and white, and all were
arrayed as splendidly as their riders.
Thurid hoisted one eyebrow and straightened his bent
shoulders into a more dignified posture.
“I see you are traveling with someone of
considerable importance,” he observed with grudging respect.
“Yes, indeed I am,” the stranger agreed, raising one
hand in salute as the sledge rumbled past, bearing its glittering
driver and a lone passenger.
Leifr stood up to see better as the sledge passed, and what
he saw convinced him that he was having a hallucination. The
lone rider in the sledge looked like the ragged little smith who
had sharpened his sword, and he sat cradling the grindstone in his
arms to steady it. He spared Leifr one sharp glance from beneath
his peaked hood and a glimpse of a crusty smile before the
sledge bounded through the outer gates and vanished into the
tunnel.
Leifr leaped to his feet, startling Thurid, who turned
pale and cried out furiously, “It’s not sundown yet! The alog
can’t start already!”
“No! Hush, you dolt! It’s him! The troll—or Rhbu.
He sharpened my sword!” Leifr started after the sledge. “He’s
brought the grindstone back to Hjaldrsholl!”
He shoved his way through the horses and riders gathered
in the courtyard until he got to the sledge, where he found a pair
of Alfar hoisting the grindstone to their shoulders and bearing it
into the hall, amid the cheers and battle cries of the jubilant
Dvergar. Of the ragged little smith there was no sign.
The torque remained as tight as ever around his throat.
Disgusted at himself for his foolish hope that the smith could
break Hjaldr’s alog, he hurried back to Thurid, meeting him
halfway as he strode along arm in arm with the stranger.
“Gone,” Leifr said tersely. “He must have slipped away in
the confusion.” “I saw nobody in that sledge except the driver,”
Thurid said testily.
“And the troll’s grindstone,” the stranger added. “Or so
it is called by the Dvergar. It may not be a troll at all who turns
it.”
“I saw no one.” Thurid made a slight effort to extract
himself from the stranger’s companionship, politely saying,
“Through there you’ll find Hegna. He’ll make all of you quite
comfortable. Right now I fear I must go and attend to
something. Leifr, come along. There’s not much time left.”
“No, no, you must both come with me,” the stranger said
warmly. “1 know who you are. I wish to hear the story from your
own lips, since poor Fridmarr is not here to tell me himself. I
wish he had lived to see this day. He devoted his life to the
destruction of Sorkvir. Now, after many wrong turns, he has
finally accomplished his objective.”
The stranger strode into the hall, with Thurid and
Leifr following in his wake. At once, a hush fell over the
Ljosalfar and Dvergar, and they looked up expectantly while the
stranger seated himself in Hjaldr’s chair.
“Who is this arrogant trespasser?” Thurid muttered
between his teeth to Hegna.
“He knew Fridmarr,” Leifr said. “We can expect the worst
— or, at best, the totally unexpected.” He shook his head in silent
wonder and covertly tested the tightness of the torque for any
signs of its imminent shrinkage.
The stranger must have heard; he turned to Leifr with an
amused gleam in his eye as he removed his hood and unfastened
the brooches of his cloak.
“Yes, expect the unexpected,” he said. “I have things to
say that no one will expect to hear. To begin with, I wish to
thank Thurid for sending for me. It was a message which I
have waited long to receive.“
Thurid’s jaw gaped as all eyes turned toward him. He
spluttered, “I don’t recall sending for anyone, if you’ll forgive
me for saying so. I think I’d know if I had.”
“You did send, Thurid, and I have come, just as I promised
young Fridmarr.” The stranger’s beard was wiry and golden,
and his long fair hair was bound at his forehead with a plain
band, allowing the rest to fall to his shoulders. His eyes were
the color of amber, sparkling with amusement and vitality.
Leifr knew a natural leader when he saw one. If not for the
torque, he would gladly have followed this man wherever he
commanded, in perfect faith.
“Who are you?” Leifr asked, forgetting the etiquette that
forbade such impertinent questions. “You know us, but we’ve
never seen you, and you knew our comrade Fridmarr. A friend of
his who sought for the destruction of Sorkvir is a friend of ours,
so tell us what your name is.”
The dwarfs nudged each other and leaned forward to
listen. The stranger placed his staff across his knees and did
not appear annoyed by Leifr’s blunt manners.
“The night-farers have a variety of names for me,
which I don’t care to claim, since they are invariably
derogatory. I have been known as Schmelpfinning, and the Lord
of Snowfell, but most will agree in calling me Elbegast or the
Ganger or the Wandering King.”
Thurid gasped and clutched Leifr’s arm, shoving him
forward. “The torque!” he cried. “Remove Hjaldr’s torque!
There’s very little time left! He cleared the Pentacle of Sorkvir’s
evil, and the grindstone has been returned, but Hjaldr’s alog will
not be stopped. Elbegast, Lord of Ljosalfar, use your powers to
save Leifr, and I’ll be your servant for the rest of my life. Or you
can take my powers and do with them what you will— such as
they are.”
Elbegast rose to his feet and regarded Leifr gravely for a
moment. “Where is the grindstone? Is it restored to its usual
place?”
“Aye, it’s in the forge,” Hegna replied uneasily. “King of
the Ljosalfar you may be, but it’s a dangerous thing for anyone
to go alog-breaking. I wish you wouldn’t be doing it here.“
“Here and now is the best place and the only time,”
Elbegast said, raising his hands with a shimmering glow, as if
seen through a curtain of flame. “The grindstone is in its place.
The Pentacle is purified of evil. What more remains to prevent
the earth powers from flowing again? What influence
interferes? What is missing to complete the circle of power?”
White light glowed around his form, and the Dvergar
squinted and shaded their eyes from the unwonted glare. In the
brittle silence, as Elbegast stood entranced, with his arms
outstretched, a faint but familiar sound threaded its way into
the shadowy hall. Leifr recognized it instantly as the grating
whine of a grindstone being turned somewhere down the echoing
tunnel of Hjaldrsholl. He pushed past Thurid, who was staring at
Elbegast, half-entranced with reverence. Jolted from his reverie
by Leifr’s abrupt departure from the hall, Thurid seized his staff
and rushed after him, seething with outrage.
“Fridmarr! Dradgast it, Leifr,”
he spluttered. ”Your
Sciplings’ manners are abysmal, do you realize that?“
Leifr found the forge, following the red glow of the fires
as well as the whine of the grindstone. As he passed under the
wide arch of the doorway, with the three hounds at his heels, he
saw the ragged old smith bent over the grindstone in a circle of
light, sharpening a tool with loving concentration. The sparks
danced on the bright blade of the knife, showering over the
smith’s wrinkled hands and bouncing playfully over his sleeves
and the patched knees of his trousers.
“Are you glad to be home again?” Leifr inquired softly,
during a pause in the grinding, and the smith answered with a
slight nod.
“I know who you are now,” Leifr went on. “You’re one of
the Rhbus, the last of the living ones. My fate has been in your
hands from the beginning. Now I am ready for your final
decision. Are you finished with me, or is there yet more that I
will be able to do for your cause?”
The Rhbu put down the knife and took up a large pair of