Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
eyebrows.
“We are the Dvergar of the Grindstone,” he said with a weighty
intonation. “We have captured four trespassers—a woman, a wizard, a
scavenger, and what looks to be a warrior of some kind. This is highly
suspicious. Especially when we find you trying to creep around our
rear guard. There can be no reasonable excuse for your presence here.“
“We came here for peaceful purposes,” Leifr said. “Our common
enemy has made it impossible for us to stay in Solvorfirth, so we’re on
our way north to escape him.”
“Sorkvir is after you, then.” The white-bearded leader did
not relax his guard. “Having a common enemy does not make us
friends. The Dvergar are choosy about the strangers they meet
blundering around in the fells. In the past, we trusted when we should
have attacked.”
As he talked, another dwarf searched through the saddle
bags and possessions of the prisoners. With a grave sense of
foreboding, Leifr saw him pull out the sword, cautiously unwrapping it
and examining it for a long time before bringing it forward. Thurid
silenced his indignant huffing and threatening.
“If you’ll allow us to explain—” he began.
“No explanation is needed,” the white-bearded dwarf interrupted.
“We know who you are now. This is the Bjartur sword, taken from a
barrow in the ancient fortress of the Rhbus and brought to Solvorfirth to
cause unimaginable troubles. Fridmarr, you should have left this sword
buried, and we would not have been cursed with this alog. The first
time I saw it, I knew you’d only succeed in turning Sorkvir against us.
Now we’ve all paid for your foolishness. Bodmarr is dead, Sorkvir has
the grindstone, and this sword is ruined.”
“Perhaps,” Thurid said acidly, “the fault lies in you for not
sharpening it the first time he brought it to you, Hjaldr. Your
cautiousness led him to the desperate theft of the troll’s grindstone.”
Hjaldr snorted, “He was an ally of Sorkvir. Why should I
sharpen a sword for my enemy, especially on a stone with such power
as that grindstone had?”
“You knew he wanted to kill Sorkvir,” Thurid replied. “It
shouldn’t have mattered, as long as we were rid of Sorkvir. Fridmarr
was the lesser enemy, by far.”
“It matters little, now,” Hjaldr said. “AH our hopes are blasted.
Half my men were killed yesterday by Sorkvir’s Dokkalfar. All that is
left to me is the desire for revenge for Bodmarr and all the Ljosalfar and
Dvergar who once hoped that Fridmarr would be the bane of Sorkvir.
Many is the time I’ve wished for this very opportunity to slay the man
who was responsible for raising such hope and such despair.“
He reached for the short sword hanging at his belt, and the
two dwarfs holding Leifr from either side wrestled him to his knees
after a sharp struggle.
Hjaldr raised his sword with both hands. “With your head gracing
a pike before our doors, we’ll grieve a bit less for our companions
who have so recently died.”
“Wait!” Thurid gasped. “The least you can do is listen to our side
of this issue! How do you know you’re not making a fatal mistake,
Hjaldr?”
Hjaldr hesitated and cast one eye over his men to observe their
opinion. Most of the Dvergar were in favor of taking Leifr’s head off
then and there, but a few insisted upon hearing out the guilty ones
before killing them.
“Very well, Fridmarr, you’ve won a short reprieve,” Hjaldr
rumbled unwillingly, lowering his sword. “Go ahead and speak your
piece, and then we shall decide if you’re lying or not. Your head may
yet decorate our doors.”
Leifr got to his feet, glowering at his two captors, respecting the
amazing strength in their long, burly arms.
“I came back to Solvorfirth to right the wrongs I’ve committed,”
he began grimly, aware that he was bargaining for his life. “If we can
get through the Pentacle, the Rhbus will grant us the object of our
desires, which is to sharpen that sword and kill Sorkvir with it.”
The dwarfs shook their heads and hooted in derision.
“The Rhbus are all dead,” Hjaldr said. “They can’t help
you, and the Pentacle is all perverted. Sorkvir did his work of
destruction well, and you were the one who showed him how to do it.”
“I never suspected what the result would be,” Leifr protested.
“Sorkvir never confided in me about his intention of making an alog
that would protect him from that sword. I gave it to Bodmarr, didn’t I?
Doesn’t that show that I was against Sorkvir? If I had given it to him
and warned him that it possessed Rhbu magic and would destroy him
utterly, then you could say I was Sorkvir’s friend. But I gave it to
Bodmarr and I came to you to ask you to sharpen it on the troll’s
grindstone— and you refused.“
“Then you stole the grindstone, and went on with Sorkvir to
destroy the rest of the Pentacle,” Hjaldr replied. “We can never forget
that. Either you possess a strange sense of humor or a strong wish to
die, if you dare to return here and try to make fools of us a second
time.”
Leifr winced away from their sneers and glowers and found
himself looking at Ljosa, who stood erect, watching him with dark
anguish deepening the shadows of her eyes.
“I have no evil plot this time,” Leifr said, feeling the sweat
sliding down his spine. “I came back to right the wrongs I have
committed. I didn’t have to return, and a more sensible man might not
have done so, but I never was known for good judgment. I want to
break Sorkvir’s alog over Solvorfirth. I’m going to sharpen this sword
and kill him, if it takes me the rest of my life.”
“Which may not be long,” Hjaldr added grimly. “How do we
know all this is true? You were always an accomplished liar before. I
doubt if you have learned to be truthful in such a short time.” The
dwarfs muttered their agreement.
“It’s true.” Ljosa’s voice floated above the bass grumble of the
dwarfs. “I am Ljosa Hroaldsdottir, once Bodmarr’s betrothed. I will
speak for the truthfulness of what Fridmarr says. I believe him when he
says he has sworn enmity with Sorkvir. I believe him when he says he
has changed and mat he will make himself a better man. Already he is
not the same Fridmarr we knew.”
Her testimony threw the dwarfs into another debate.
“No matter what he does, he can’t bring Bodmarr back,”
someone said, “nor all our friends and kinsmen who died last night.”
“Revenge is the same as cutting off your foot to match the one
you’ve lost,” another Dvergar grunted.
“But he was a traitor once. We can’t forgive that.”
“If he gets rid of Sorkvir and the alog, I’ll forgive him. Let
his brother’s death be on his conscience.”
“I don’t care about his conscience, as long as the grindstone
is brought back.”
“We’ll never see it again. He was Sorkvir’s once, and no one
ever escapes from Sorkvir. He’s tainted meat, if ever I smelled it.“
Hjaldr raised one hand to silence the mounting uproar before
the dwarfs started going for each other’s throats.
“Be still,” he commanded. “His past misdeeds don’t matter much
now. The question is, where is the grindstone now? If what you say
about it being a Rhbu sword taken from a Rhbu grave in Bjartur is true,
until it is sharpened upon a proper Rhbu grindstone, the sword won’t
work in the hand of Elbegast himself. This is what I told you when you
brought it to me before, Fridmarr. How do you know what will happen
when that metal touches that stone?”
The dwarfs looked grimly at Leifr, and some shook their heads
and spat upon the ground, as if his fate were sealed. Leifr glanced at
Thurid, hoping for a cue, but Thurid only stared at him, hanging upon
his words with great fascination. The powers of the carbuncle were of
no assistance.
Ljosa took a step forward. “Fridmarr won’t speak for himself,
but I’m not afraid to speak for him. He knows that the sword and the
grindstone are both Rhbu because he has seen the Rhbu who turns your
grindstone—not that you Dvergar can truthfully call it yours, since it
belonged to your halls long before you named them Hjaldrsholl. Your
unbelief does not alter the fact that the magic of the Rhbus lives on.
There are still three Rhbus battling the Dokkur Lavardur and they enlist
the aid of ordinary Ljosalfar when they find worthy individuals. The
Pentacle is one of their tests, as you should know from ample
experience, having seen its magic work many times for its travelers.”
Hjaldr scowled. “I’ve also seen plenty of travelers who didn’t
find what they sought when they started the Pentacle. Plenty of them
have died, for one reason or another. If any Rhbus were left to tell
us how it should work, perhaps it would be a less dangerous journey.
As it is today, only a madman would attempt to use its magic. When did
you see the troll who turns the stone—or Rhbu, if that’s what you care
to believe?”
Leifr glanced at Ljosa, wondering desperately what she must
know about Bodmarr and Fridmarr’s secret plans.
“This is not something I care to discuss,” he growled, glowering
around the circle of suspicious Dvergar faces.
“He saw the Rhbu,” Ljosa insisted. “I know it from his
brother Bodmarr.
Call it a troll or whatever you will, but we know it was one of the
Rhbus.” “Who’s to say the troll or Rhbu was pleased to have the
grindstone stolen?”
Hjaldr rejoined with a triumphant hoisting of one bristling
brow. “I can’t be beaten in that way, my lady. The grindstone is lost
now, difficult if not impossible to retrieve. And we have captured
Fridmarr Fridmundrsson, the one who is responsible for most of the
disasters that have befallen Solvorfirth.”
Gotiskolker spoke for the first time. “If you were wise, Hjaldr,
you’d provision us and send us on our way again with your blessings.
The stone will sharpen the sword wherever it lies, but the Pentacle will
not shake off the alog until the grindstone is returned to this fortress
and placed in its rightful spot in the old forge.”
Hjaldr pursed up his lips in a wry expression. “Perhaps we
can come to a more suitable arrangement than my whacking your head
off and placing it on a pike before Hjaldrsholl. Let’s see if we can settle
upon a satisfactory alternative over some food and drink. Our
hospitality isn’t what it once was, now that the best of what rough
circumstances we’ve got.”
The Dvergar nodded and grumbled in agreement, not without
displays of reluctance on the part of the more truculent ones.
“Are we still prisoners, or will our weapons be returned to us and
Thurid allowed the use of his hands?” Leifr pointedly ignored their
bluff overtures of peace, until Hjaldr issued a sharp command to one of
his followers, and Thurid was quickly released.
Hjaldr’s rough circumstances were a spacious cave in the cliffs
not far above. They rode in the wide opening, and the heavy metal-
studded doors were closed behind them with a sound like echoing
thunder. The visitors rode down a long corridor, dimly lit by whale oil
lamps on long spikes thrust into the earth at infrequent intervals.
To Leifr Hjaldr said, “These halls used to belong to the trolls.
When the Dokkalfar came, we had to clean them out. The trolls are
gone, but some of the stink remains. It takes a long time to get rid of
such vermin. I hate to think what the Dokkalfar are doing to our
beautiful new hall. A thousand years went into the stone carving
alone. I can remember when the pillars were nothing but rough
columns.”
Leifr said nothing, stealing a covert glance at his companion.
Hjaldr was as tough and gnarled as any individual Leifr had seen, as
well he should be after a thousand years of battling trolls and Dokkalfar.
“This looks like fine work for trolls,” he observed, nodding to
some carvings on the walls where the moonlight filtered in through a
distant hole far above. “The trolls at Dallir were depraved creatures.”
Thurid snorted. “So they all are. Dvergar made these halls long
ago, before the Alfar split into Ljosa and Dokk.”
Hjaldr grunted. “It was our halls the Dokkalfar took over when
they decided to go underground. It’s always the Dvergar you Alfar