Authors: David Eddings
âHow can you tell?'
âWhatever's making all the noise is doing it on purpose. A deer wouldn't crash around like that, and the bears have all denned up for the winter. The Troll wants us to know he's there.'
âWhat do we do?'
âLet's build up the fire a bit â let him know that we're awake. We've got a touchy situation here, so let's not move too fast.' He pushed his blankets aside and rose to his feet as Tynian piled more limbs on the fire.
âShould we invite him in to get warm?' Tynian asked.
âHe isn't cold.'
âIt's freezing, Ulath.'
That's why he's got fur. Trolls build fires for light, not heat. Why don't you go ahead and get started with breakfast? He's not going to do anything until full daylight.'
âIt's not my turn.'
âI have to keep watch.'
âI can keep watch as well as you can.'
âYou wouldn't know what to look for, Tynian.' Ulath's tone was reasonable. It usually was when he was talking his way out of doing the cooking.
The light grew gradually stronger. It was a process that is always strange. A man can be looking directly at a dark patch in the surrounding forest and suddenly realize that he can see trees and rocks and bushes where there had been only darkness before.
Tynian brought Ulath a plate of steaming ham and a chunk of leathery-crusted bread. âLeave the ham on the spit,' Ulath told him.
Tynian grunted, picked up his own plate, and joined his friend at the front edge of the rocky shelf. They sat and kept watch on the birch forest that ran down the steep slope beneath them as they ate. âThere he is,' Ulath said gravely, âright beside that big rock.'
âOh, yes,' Tynian replied. âI see him now. He blends right in, doesn't he?'
âThat's what being a Troll is all about, Tynian. He's a part of the forest.'
âSephrenia says that we're distantly related to them.'
âShe's probably right. There aren't really all that many differences between us and the Trolls. They're bigger, and they have a different diet is about all.'
âHow long is this likely to take?'
âI have no idea. As far as I know, this has never happened before.'
âWhat'll he do next?'
âAs soon as he's sure we know he's there, he'll probably try to communicate in some way.'
âDoes he know that you speak Trollish?'
âHe might. The Troll-Gods are acquainted with me, and they know that I run in the same pack with Sparhawk.'
âThat's an odd way to put it.'
âI'm trying to think like a Troll. If I can get it right, I might be able to anticipate what he's going to do next.'
Then the Troll shouted up the hill to them.
âWhat did he say?' Tynian asked nervously.
âHe wants to know what he's supposed to do. He's very confused.'
âHe's
confused? What about
me?'
âHe's been told to meet us and take us to the Troll-Gods. He doesn't have any idea of our customs or the proper courtesies. We'll have to guide him through this. Put your sword back in its sheath. Let's not make things any worse than they already are.' Ulath stood up, being careful not to move too fast. He raised his voice and called to the creature below in Trollish. âCome to this child of Khwaj which we have made. We will take eat together and talk of what we must do.'
âWhat did you tell him?'
âI invited him to join us for breakfast.'
âYou did
what?
You want a Troll that's no more than a few feet from you to start eating?'
âIt's a precaution. It would be discourteous of him to kill us after he's taken food from us.'
âDiscourteous? That's a
Troll
out there, Ulath.'
âJust because he's a Troll doesn't mean that he has bad manners. Oh, I almost forgot. When he comes into camp, he'll want to sniff us. It's polite to sniff him as well. He won't smell very nice, but do it anyway. Trolls do that so that they'll recognize each other if they ever meet again.'
âI think you're losing your mind.'
âJust follow my lead, and let me do the talking.'
âWhat else
can
I do, you clot? I don't speak Trollish, remember?'
âYou
don't?
What an amazing thing. I thought every educated man spoke Trollish.'
The Troll approached cautiously, moving smoothly up through the birch forest. He used his arms a great deal as he moved, grasping trees to pull himself along, moving with his whole body. He was about eight and a half feet tall and had glossy brown fur. His face was simian to a degree, though he did not have the protruding muzzle of most apes, and there was a glimmer of intelligence in his deep-sunk eyes. He came up onto the bench where the camp lay and then squatted, resting his forearms on his knees and keeping his paws in plain sight. âI have no club,' he half-growled.
Ulath made some show of setting his axe aside and held out his empty hands. âI have no club,' he repeated the customary greeting. âUndo your sword-belt, Tynian,' he muttered. âLay it aside.'
Tynian started to object, but decided against it.
âThe child of Khwaj you have made is good,' the Troll said, pointing at their fire. âKhwaj will be pleased.'
âIt is good to please the Gods,' Ulath replied.
The Troll suddenly banged his fist on the ground. âThis is not how it should be!' he declared in an unhappy voice.
âNo,' Ulath agreed, dropping down into a squat much like the Troll's, âit is not. The Gods have their reasons for it, though. They have said we must not kill each other. They have also said we must not eat each other.'
âI have heard them say it. Could we have misunderstood them?'
âI think we have not.'
âCould it be that their minds are sick?'
âIt is possible. We must still do as they tell us, though.'
âWhat are you two talking about?' Tynian asked nervously.
âWe're discussing philosophy,' Ulath shrugged.
Tynian stared at him.
âIt's fairly complex. It has to do with whether or not we're morally obliged to obey the Gods if they've gone crazy. I'm saying that we are. Of course my position's a little tainted by self-interest in this particular situation.'
âCan it not speak?' the Troll asked, pointing at Tynian. âAre those bird-noises the only sounds it can make?'
âThe bird-noises pass for speech among those of our kind. Will you take some of our eat with us?'
The Troll looked appraisingly at their horses. âThose?' he asked.
âNo.' Ulath shook his head. âThose are the beasts which carry us.'
âAre your legs sick? Is that why you are so short?'
âNo. The beasts can run faster than we can. They carry us when we want to go fast.'
âWhat kind of eat do you take?'
âPig.'
âPig is good. Deer is better.'
âYes.'
âWhere is the pig? Is it dead? If it is still alive, I will kill it.'
âIt is dead.'
The Troll looked around. âI do not see it.'
âWe have only brought part of it.' Ulath pointed at the large ham spitted over the fire.
âDo you share your eat with the child of Khwaj?'
Ulath decided not to explain the concept of cooking at that particular moment. âYes,' he said. âIt is our custom.'
âDoes it please Khwaj that you share your eat with his child?'
âIt is our thought that it does.' Ulath drew his dagger, lifted the spit from off the fire and sawed off a chunk of ham weighing perhaps three pounds.
âAre your teeth sick?' The Troll even sounded sympathetic. âI had a sick tooth once. It caused me much hurt.'
âOur kind does not have sharp teeth,' Ulath told him. âWill you take some of our eat?'
âI will.' The Troll rose to his feet and came to the fire, towering over them.
âThe eat has been near the child of Khwaj,' Ulath warned. âIt is hot. It may cause hurt to your mouth.'
âI am called Bhlokw,' the Troll introduced himself.
âI am called Ulath.'
âU-lat? That is a strange thing to be called.' Bhlokw pointed at Tynian. âWhat is it called?'
âTynian,' Ulath replied.
âTin-in. That is stranger than U-lat.'
âThe bird-noises of our speech make what we are called sound strange.'
The Troll leaned forward and snuffled at the top of Ulath's head. Ulath suppressed a strong urge to shriek and run for the nearest tree. He politely sniffed at Bhlokw's fur. The Troll actually didn't smell too bad. Then the monster and Tynian exchanged sniffs. âNow I know you,' Bhlokw said.
âIt is good that you do.' Ulath held out the chunk of steaming ham.
Bhlokw took it from him and stuffed it into his mouth. Then he quickly spat it back out into his hand. âHot,' he explained a little sheepishly.
âWe blow on it to make it cool so that we can eat it without causing hurt to our mouths,' Ulath instructed.
Bhlokw blew noisily on the piece of ham for a while. Then he crammed it back into his mouth. He chewed reflectively for a moment. Then he swallowed. âIt is different,' he said, diplomatically. Then he sighed. âI do not like this, U-lat,' he confided unhappily. âThis is not how things should be.'
âNo,' Ulath agreed, âit is not.'
âWe should be killing each other. I have killed and eaten you man-things since you first came to the Troll-range.
That
is how things should be. It is my thought that the Gods are sick in their minds to make us do this,' He sighed a hurricane sort of sigh. âYour thought is right, though. We must do as they tell us to do. Someday their minds will get well. Then they will let us kill and eat each other again,' He stood up abruptly. âThey want to see you. I will take you to them.'
âWe will go with you.'
They followed Bhlokw up into the mountains all that day and half of the next, and he led them finally to a snow-covered clearing where a fire burned in a large pit. The Troll-Gods were waiting for them there.
âAphrael came to us,' the enormity that was Ghworg told them.
âShe said that she would do this,' Ulath replied. âShe said that when things happened that we should know about, she would come to us and tell us.'
âShe put her mouth on our faces.' Ghworg seemed puzzled.
âShe does this. It gives her pleasure.'
âIt was not painful,' Ghworg conceded a bit dubiously, touching the cheek where Aphrael had kissed him.
âWhat did he say?' Tynian asked quietly.
âAphrael came here and talked with them,' Ulath replied. âShe even kissed them a few times. You know Aphrael.'
âShe actually
kissed
the Troll-Gods?' Tynian's face grew pale.
âWhat did it say?' Ghworg demanded.
âIt wanted me to say what you had said.'
âThis is not good, Ulath-from-Thalesia. It should not talk to you in words we do not understand. What is its name?'
âIt is called Tynian-from-Deira.'
âI will make it so that Tynian-from-Deira knows our speech.'
âBrace yourself,' Ulath warned his friend.
âWhat? What's happening, Ulath?'
âGhworg's going to teach you Trollish.'
âNow, wait a minute â' Then Tynian suddenly clapped his hands to the sides of his head, cried out and fell writhing into the snow. The paroxysm passed quickly, but Tynian was pale and shaking as he sat up, and his eyes were wild.
âYou are Tynian-from-Deira?' Ghworg demanded in Trollish.
âY-yes.' Tynian's voice trembled as he replied.
âDo you understand my words?'
âThey are clear to me.'
âIt is good. Do not speak the other kind of talk when you are near us. When you do, you make it so that we do not trust you.'
âI will remember that.'
âIt is good that you will. Aphrael came to us. She told us that the one called Berit has been told not to go to the place Beresa. He has been told to go to the place Sopal instead. She said that you would understand what this means.' He paused, frowning. âDo you?' he asked.
âDo we?' Tynian asked Ulath, speaking in Trollish.
âI am not sure.' Ulath rose, went to his horse, and took a map out of his saddle-bag. Then he returned to the fire. This is a picture of the ground,' he explained to the enormous presences. âWe make these pictures so that we will know where we are going.'
Schlee looked briefly at the map. âThe ground does not look like that,' he told them. He squatted and thrust his huge fingers down through the snow into the dirt.
âThis
is how the ground looks.'
Ulath jumped back as the earth under his feet shuddered slightly. Then he stared down. It was not so much a map as it was a miniaturized version of the continent
itself. âThis is a
very
good picture of the ground,' he marveled.
Schlee shrugged. âI put my hand into the ground and felt its shape.
This
is how it looks.'
âWhere is Beresa?' Tynian asked Ulath, staring in wonderment at hair-thin little trees bristling like a two-day growth of beard on the sides of tiny mountains.
Ulath checked his map and walked several yards south to a shimmering surface covered with minuscule waves. His feet even sank slightly into Schlee's recreation of the southern Tamul sea. âIt is right here,' he replied in Trollish, bending and putting his finger on a spot on the coastline.
âThat is where the ones who took Anakha's mate away told him to go,' Tynian explained to the Troll-Gods.
âWe do not understand,' Khwaj said bluntly.
âAnakha is fond of his mate.'
âThat is how it should be.'
âHe grows angry when his mate is in danger. The ones who took his mate away know this. They said that they will not give her back to him unless he gives them the Flower-Gem.'