Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
absolutely quiet and meditating upon the inner reserves of power that
conjoin us with the influence of the Rhbus.”
Thurid passed his hands over the stones and began in a loud
voice, “I am turning the stones against Sorkvir of Gliru-hals. May all
the land-vaettir rise up against Sorkvir and his house and bring him
misfortune. May his powers fail, may his springs turn to poison, and
may the earth be blighted to his touch. I am turning the stones against
Sorkvir of Gliru-hals. May all the land-vaettir—” He droned the words
over and over, while the standing stones grumbled in their sockets
and the air crackled with energy.
Leifr eyed the stones uneasily, noting that the bases glowed dull
red, and the nearby grass was slowly turning black, forming wide rings
around each stone.
“It looks as if it’s going to work,” Gotiskolker whispered in
amazement.
The sky still gleamed with the harsh, green light, deepening to
cobalt at the zenith. The marsh disappeared into shadows and silence,
broken only by the infrequent yelp of the troll-hounds and the distant
mutter of Dokkalfar voices. Inside the stone ring, the objects at ground
level were bathed in red light from the steady glow of the stones,
interspersed with sparks that leaped from Thurid’s fingers. Low and
hoarse, his voice chanted on with deadly intensity, hypnotic in its
monotony.
“There they are,” Gotiskolker whispered, pointing with his
shoulder toward the edge of the marsh.
The eyes of the hounds gleamed with the light from the circle.
For a while, they milled around indecisively, then they spread out along
the far edge of the marsh.
“I am turning the stones against Sorkvir of Gliru-hals,” Thurid
whispered, his voice almost gone, his sharp features lurid in the red
light. Then the sound of his words was lost in the sudden, hissing
roar of an ice bolt arcing up from the marsh and shattering overhead
with a thunderous explosion.
“It’s done,” Thurid croaked, collapsing on the altar among the
staring stones.
“This place is no longer Sorkvir’s domain.”
More ice bolts exploded overhead, showering them with harmless
raindrops. Thurid leaned on his staff, still weakened by his effort, but
his expression was one of great satisfaction.
Then Sorkvir in his human form, with Raudbjorn skulking along
in his wake, rode his horse from the mists of the swamp to the edge of
the water, his staff trailing greenish vapor. He stood and stared across at
Thurid, Leifr, and Gotiskolker.
“Thurid, you’ve crossed me again,” he rumbled in a tone of
menace. “My patience wears thin. Give me Fridmarr, and I shall let you
escape from Solvorfirth.”
Thurid’s nostrils flared as he stepped forward. “Never, I say.
Your offer is an insult to my honor. You won’t dismiss me so easily
when we obtain the grindstone.”
“The grindstone! You’ll never find it, you fools!” Sorkvir
laughed, raising his staff. An ice bolt thundered across the marsh,
shattering in mid-air against Thurid’s counterspell.
Raudbjorn started forward, swinging his halberd and mouthing
threats, but Sorkvir called him back.
“I’d like to see him come across,” Leifr said.
“I’ll make a whale blubber lamp out of him, if he does,” Thurid
said with a dire chuckle. “They don’t suspect what power I have here at
my fingertips.”
Steadying himself by leaning against the altar, he pointed his staff
in the direction of Sorkvir and Raudbjorn and uttered a spell. At once
the marsh was bathed in blinding white light. The Dokkalfar threw
up their hands to protect their faces, but the brilliance melted their
hands before their eyes. With despairing shrieks, they crumpled,
reduced to nothing but black puddles.
The beam raked over Raudbjorn with no effect except to blind
him temporarily, sending him staggering away into the swamp
with plaintive bellows for help. The remaining Dokkalfar wasted no
time with foolish heroics; they took to their individual heels and left
Raudbjorn to his fate. The troll- hounds slunk away, wincing at the
painful glare. There was no trace of Sorkvir. In a few moments all
that remained of Sorkvir’s advancing army were dark spots on the
ground and heaps of empty clothing and armor.
Throughout the rest of the night, the marsh rustled with uneasy
footsteps and whispering voices, interspersed at irregular intervals by
shouting. Unable to sleep, Leifr wrapped his - cloak around him and sat
down near the altar stone. Gotiskolker rested against a stone just inside
the ring of standing stones, while Thurid spent most of the night pacing
restlessly from the altar to each of the upright stones. The standing
stones still radiated heat from their bases, which felt good to Leifr
during the cool, misty night.
“Where is Sorkvir?” Thurid at last exclaimed in exasperation,
when the pale glow in the east could no longer be denied. “I’ve got the
power now to destroy him. Why doesn’t he attack?”
Gotiskolker grunted, “He probably went home and slept
peacefully, knowing he has nothing to fear from you. It’s Fridmarr
who will destroy him with the powers of the Dvergar woven into that
sword. If you could kill him with vanity, I dare say he might have
something to worry about, since I have seen few engines of
destruction half as large as your pride, Thurid.“
“The voice of envy,” Thurid sniffed, averting his gaze after a
scathing survey of Gotiskolker’s ragged attire. “One day I’ll be a
member of the Fire Wizards’ Guild, and a lot of people will be glad to
know me then. Including you.”
“I doubt it.” Gotiskolker carved another notch out of his
calendar stick and shoved it into his pouch without counting the
remaining notches.
While they argued, Leifr listened with only half an ear, trying to
identify an unfamiliar sound that chattered softly in the chill air,
seeming to come from all around him. As the light increased steadily to
dim morning, he got up and began to investigate.
It was the sound of running water, Leifr realized, that had
tantalized him for so long during the night. Incredulous, he followed the
sound around the rocky edge of the island and discovered a spring
cascading down the stones into the marsh water below. Farther
beyond, he found another spring pouring clear, bright water into a
sludgy pool, and the four nisses were there, bathing in the showering
water or sitting on the rocks to dry their hair in the sun.
At first Leifr was certain they were four different nisses,
much younger nisses with long, shining hair of gold and copper. Their
voices were young and mirthful as they bathed in the waterfall and
frolicked in the pool. By degrees, it dawned upon him that Thurid’s
stone-turning had rejuvenated the springs that had once fed the lake,
and the nisses also had been rejuvenated, as Thurid had promised. With
the springs flowing again, the rank marshlands would soon be covered
by clear water. At last, something had worked out the way they had
planned.
Seeing him, the nisses swam across the pool, their bright hair
mingling with the moss and duckweed like rays of sunlight. Seldom had
Leifr seen women so fair and radiant; their beauty was the untrammeled
beauty of wild things, unassisted by studied arts and unembellished
by fine jewels or sumptuous that seemed to repel the water like fish
scales or duck feathers.
“Thurid’s magic has rescued us,” Eydis greeted him,
recognizable only by her solemn air of leadership as the eldest of the
sisters. “The springs are flowing again and soon our beautiful lake will
cover this swamp. Our days of misery and bondage are over. We owe
our gratitude to you and Thurid. I wish our means of repayment were as
great as our debt to you, but we have little to offer, except safe passage
out of the swamp—”
“And ourselves,” Finna added with her chilling chuckle, tossing
her damp, coppery tresses. Of all the nisses, she possessed the greatest
beauty, with dark, flaring brows arching over slanting green eyes, wide
cheekbones, and full lips that pouted with a soft, secret smile.
She continued, “Choose one of us, Fridmarr. Nisses make good
wives, once you take them away from their water and keep them from
it. The only trouble is their feet, which will persist in looking more
like big fins, but that’s easy enough to hide.”
“Finna! Be silent!” Eydis commanded, seconded by the other
sisters with devastating frowns.
Leifr felt the enchantment of Finna’s green eyes and knew how
easy it would be to forget all caution and to allow himself to be
trapped. With difficulty, he reminded himself of the other adventurers
who had forsaken all care and abandoned themselves to Finna’s wiles,
only to die for it.
“Is it true?” he asked Eydis, tearing his gaze away from Finna’s.
“Can a niss be happy away from her lake, once she is taken away by
someone?”
“She may be taken away, yes, and made into a wife who will
serve you diligently, but happy—” Eydis paused, and the nisses looked
wistful a moment, except for Finna, who smiled connivingly.
“I’d be happy,” she said sweetly. “I’d be glad to leave with
you, Fridmarr. You’d never regret it for a moment.”
Velaug gave her a small shove while she was simpering her
prettiest. “She kills them quickly, so it’s true they don’t experience
much regret. Don’t take her, Fridmarr; you know what she is. I’m not
the prettiest, but at least I’m sensible. I know I’d make a very practical
and thrifty housewife.”
Finna’s simper turned to an enraged scowl. “Sensible!
Practical! Thrifty! Who cares for all that? A man wants something to
look at, not a face like a toad’s!”
“Finna! That’s enough from you,” Eydis interrupted, giving
Finna’s hair a good hard yank. “A man doesn’t want a temper,
either—even if you were willing to leave the lake and forsake all your
evil ways, which I doubt. You are far too lazy, besides.”
Finna retired in defeat, swimming away with murderous scowls
over her shoulder at her sisters.
“You’ll have to pardon her,” Goa said. “She can’t help being as
she is. We are used to forgiving her, since everyone must accept a
certain amount of danger in this life. Perhaps Finna is not happy with
her fate, either.”
“Well spoken, Goa,” Eydis said. Turning to Leifr she added,
“You couldn’t go far wrong to choose Goa. You’d never hear a harsh
word from her lips.”
Goa paled under such praise. She murmured, “I’ll accept
whatever lot life deals me. One must expect changes.”
Leifr took a deep breath, aware that he must tread with utmost
care or he might offend the nisses into retaliatory anger. With a
regretful sigh, he began, “I wish that I had the freedom to choose
among you, but another’s life hangs upon my ability to restore the
Pentacle to its former power. I wear this torque as a constant reminder
of her in her imprisonment. May I die a miserable death by choking if I
allow her to remain without her freedom.“
Eydis and the others nodded their heads in approval, their
expressions thoughtful and cautious.
“I’m glad to see you have some honor,” Eydis said. “Is your heart
quite taken up by her, then?”
“Quite,” Leifr replied, with a rather gloomy sigh.
“Ah! You seem sad,” Velaug said. “Doesn’t she return your
affection?”
“I fear not,” Leifr answered. “Not yet, but I haven’t given up
hope entirely.”
“Well, if she doesn’t come to her senses, you must come back
tjorn and choose one of us for your wife,” Eydis said.
to Kerling-
“We owe you a great debt. What is the name of this haughty
creature you are devoted to, perhaps unworthily?”
“Ljosa Hroaldsdottir. You may have heard of her.”
“Yes, I believe she’s reputed to be something of a
beauty,” Eydis said. “Although I’ve never seen her, I’m sure her
looks can’t compare even to poor, practical Velaug, with that crooked
place in her nose. We nisses have claimed almost all of the beauty
among women, and there’s precious little left over for the rest of them.”
Leifr sighed uncomfortably. “I never knew about nisses when