Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
hoped they were, although he knew almost nothing about them.
With Thurid and Gotiskolker gone, he needed desperately to believe
that somewhere he had some allies.
Sorkvir raised his hands slowly, his gaze intent, and Leifr felt
coldness gathering around him. The sword in his hands began to
glow with a faint, frosty gleam. In a moment he heard shrill, humming
notes and faint squeaks coming from the metal. The coldness of his
hand was a burning, searing pain. He knew he could not endure it an
instant longer. He dropped the sword, and the metal shattered like ice,
causing the nearest of the Dokkalfar to leap back in alarm.
“That was only a small trick,” Sorkvir said with thinly veiled
satisfaction. “Now you are without your friends, your sword is
smashed, and your dogs are in Alof’s safekeeping. Surely now you
must see you are helpless in my power.”
Leifr allowed his shoulders to sag and he lowered his head,
darting sidelong glances at the two Dokkalfar who had brought him
from his cell. The one with the sword hanging down his back turned
to nudge one of his cohorts. In that moment, Leifr pounced on the
Dokkalfar sword and yanked it from its sheath.
The hall erupted into pandemonium as he dealt two Dokkalfar
slashing blows and leaped over them to get his back against a wall. The
remaining Dokkalfar armed themselves and charged at him with
ferocious yells, yearning for revenge. Leifr parried their blows,
greatly assisted by a nearby pillar, which garnered several savage blows
from axes and maces that would have ended the battle instantly if they
had met their mark. On the outskirts of the melee, Sorkvir recovered the
staff from Raudbjorn and raised his arms for a powerful incantation.
Suddenly a brilliant explosion rocked the room, and the
Dokkalfar recoiled suspiciously, looking around for the source of the
spell. In close succession, six more reports and flashes filled the gloomy
hall with blinding light and clouds of smoke.
Sorkvir uttered a maddened, choking cry and flung the staff away
from him. “Hawthorn!” he gasped, staggering toward his chair and
collapsing after a few steps. “It’s not my staff. I’m poisoned by Rhbu
sorcery!”
The Dokkalfar stood as if frozen, staring at their leader as he
groped desperately for his satchel. From his position against the
wall, Leifr saw that most of Sorkvir’s hands had been blown away by
the magic in the hawthorn staff, and his clothing also hung in shreds, as
if he had been struck by lightning. His body seemed to be
disintegrating, piece by piece, sifting dust onto the floor, slumping by
degrees out of control, like a sack with the grain pouring out. The
Dokkalfar jumped back in alarm when Sorkvir jerked upright in a last
spasm, gasping and glaring, trying to speak.
Leifr seized the opportunity to dash nimbly for the door.
Raudbjorn rose up from a squat to stop him, but Leifr planted his
foot on Raudbjorn’s chest and sent him sprawling. In an instant, he
unbarred the door and dived into the darkness, bowling over a couple of
small trolls who had been lurking on the doorstep. Pausing to take a
couple of cursory swings at them with the Dokkalfar sword, he dodged
across the porch and leaped into the unknown darkness beyond.
Startled snorts and squeals greeted his precipitate arrival into the
midst of a group of horses, who immediately exploded in all
directions. Somehow he managed to throw his arms around the neck
of one and swing himself onto its back as it raced down the lane in a
wild gallop.
As Leifr reached the bottom of the lane, he stopped to look back
a moment. The Dokkalfar and Raudbjorn poured out of the house,
bathed in an eerie blue light. A windy whistling came from the interior
of the hall, which gathered into a mighty roar that sent the Dokkalfar
scurrying for cover. While Leifr watched, limbs were torn from the
dead tree and driven into the ground fifty feet away like giant
hayforks. Sorkvir’s wrathful spirit tore the doors off the barns and
ripped the gates from their hinges.
Not daring to stay any longer, Leifr clapped his heels to his horse
and galloped for the nearest dark ravine, hoping he wouldn’t ride right
into the teeth of a hundred hungry trolls.
The ravine had a small, swift stream rattling down its dark depths
and a narrow sheep path twisting along both sides of the water.
Once Leifr saw a group of trolls on the other side and froze, returning
their hostile green stares for a long chilly moment. They lifted their lips
in dreadful snarls and edged down to the verge of the water, but they
wouldn’t come across, although it was barely fetlock deep. Leifr moved
on cautiously, and the trolls followed for a short distance, growling and
making menacing gestures. Then the more businesslike trolls stopped
and thrashed several of the aggressive ones and led them away at a
shambling trot in another direction.
Leifr encountered several solitary trolls, who refused to cross the
water in spite of lengthy demonstrations of their ferocity and
general depravity. One troll gave him a considering stare, then turned
his back and hurried away as if he really couldn’t be bothered.
Wondering what all their important business could be, Leifr rode his
horse up to the rim of the ravine for a look across. He saw that he was
near the spring, which seemed to be the destination of the trolls he had
met. A fire burned at the base of each of the five standing stones,
casting a lurid glare on the black spirals burned on the surfaces. Several
dark figures moved around inside the circle of the bone fence, and a
dark, seething mass of trolls waited on the outside.
Near the edge of the dark water lay an inert form, which Leifr
knew must be Thurid. He thought about the small owl that had flown
in through the smoke hole last night, wondering if it were a ridiculous
coincidence, or if the owl had been Thurid’s fylgja. In any case, what
was he to do against such a mass of trolls?
As he watched, he noticed that the crowds of trolls outside the
bone fence kept a respectful distance between themselves and the fires.
When they pressed too close, the figures inside the fence brandished
burning sticks at them and they quickly backed away. The common
trolls, it appeared, were allowed only to watch while Alof and a few
chosen followers conducted their ritual.
Leifr dismounted and groped around in the thickets nearby until
he found some dead limbs with leaves and branches intact. With his
knife he sawed off the hem of his shirt and twisted it among the
branches, hoping the flax and nettle fibers would encourage the rest of
the torch to burn. He still had his tinderbox; in a few moments, his
makeshift torch had burst into flame. Quickly he got onto his horse and
kicked it into a gallop, straight for the spring.
The trolls saw him instantly. A hooded, fire-bearing figure
galloping toward them with threatening shouts was an awful
spectacle in their superstitious minds, and they scrambled to get out of
the way of this emissary of doom. Leifr urged his horse straight toward
the fence. The horse hazarded a leap, but it was going too fast,
crashing through the fence and plowing into the dark pool beyond.
Leifr jumped off, still carrying his torch, and took up a defensive
position over Thurid, sword in hand. Alof and four of her servants
picked themselves up from the ground and stared at him with
astonishment.
“Fridmarr!” Alof cried incredulously. “No one escapes from
Sorkvir!”
“Sorkvir is dead again,” Leifr answered, “but he’ll come back.
not be so lucky when you die.”
You might
She tossed her head and chuckled. “You are in a strange position
to threaten me. Hundreds of trolls surround you. At a word from me,
they will tear you to pieces.”
She nodded toward the gibbering masses of trolls scuttling
restlessly just beyond the whale bones, their green eyes glowing in the
firelight.
“How is it that you’re one of them?” Leifr asked. “You wear
our clothing and speak our language, and no one would suspect you—
until it was too late. What makes you different from those vile beasts
out there in the dark?”
Alof smiled coldly and twisted a strand of her hair.
“What makes you think there is any difference?” she asked.
Suddenly Leifr saw her concealing spell melt away, revealing the
features of a scarred old troll, baring its hideous yellow teeth at him,
and the voice became a guttural snarl.
“Some of us are half-trolls, captured young and taught to be
civilized by the Dokkalfar. Sorkvir put me here after the real Alof was
killed. In many ways, I am like any Dokkalfar—except for a healthy
appetite for fresh, raw meat.” She laughed her coarse laugh. “Fridmarr,
what a fool you’ve been. We shall relish drinking your blood, still
strong and hot from battle.”
Drawing her knife, she motioned to the half-trolls inside the
circle, and they all drew their weapons and started edging closer to
Leifr, baring their teeth in anticipation.
Leifr waved his Dokkalfar sword. “I’ll make rugs and boots
out of all of you,” he growled.
“We shall see what happens,” she said. “You don’t look much
like a prophet to me.”
Imperiously, Alof beckoned to her four assistants. They came
forward, brandishing their knives and clubs, wearing white gowns
embroidered with cryptic symbols and much blackened with dried
blood where they had wiped their hands. Leifr stood his ground
between them and Thurid.
Just as he raised his sword, a harsh screech rang out. With a noisy
flapping of wings, a small owl alighted on the top of one of the stones.
With a wary grumbling and spitting, the common trolls drew back, and
even Alof stared for a moment.
“Go on,” she said harshly. “It’s nothing but an owl. All they’re
interested in is mice. Are you mice, or are you warriors?”
The four servants took their eyes off the owl with difficulty
and resumed their warlike stances around Leifr.
“Some of you are going to die,” Leifr said. “Maybe all of
you. Are you certain it’s worth it?”
The four dull fellows glowered at Leifr a moment, then
made a tentative charge, careful to stay out of reach of Leifr’s sword.
“Cowards!” Alof spat. “I could do better!”
They circled warily, seeming more like trolls to Leifr every
moment in their slouching stances and scuttling attacks. One of them
carried a club made of a root with a heavy rock lashed to its end, with
the stubs of roots sharpened and hardened in the fire—a nasty, primitive
weapon, but drastically effective, once it connected. Several times it
whistled past his head, dangerously near.
Their skirmishes intensified with each attempt, and Leifr
managed to pick off one of the half-trolls with a stroke that sent him
rolling to Alof’s feet. Snatching his weapon from his dying hand, she
plunged into the front of the battle with enough ferocity to match the
remaining three trolls combined. The common trolls outside the fence
applauded their champion with . roars and bellows.
In spite of their uproar, Leifr heard the clear voices of baying
hounds coming from the direction of the fells. He whistled to them, and
they yelped an excited response.
The trolls ceased their cavorting to listen, and Alof backed away
to reconnoiter, her pale hair falling down around her thick shoulders.
“That wretched Vitleysa,” she spat. “He ought to have killed
those hounds. Wait until I see him again.”
“My dogs have killed him to spare you the trouble,” Leifr replied
grimly. “They’ll make short work of you, Alof.”
Furiously she threw away her club and seized the stone mace
from the hands of its owner. “Get yourself another weapon,” she
snarled. “If you knew how to use it right, he would have been dead long
ago. We haven’t much time left.”
Driven by Alof’s frenzy, the three half-trolls rushed at Leifr like
berserkers, unmindful of their own hazard. Two of them went down
under Leifr’s sword, and the third staggered away with a fatal injury, all