Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
“I’m not a thrall,” Leifr snapped. “I’m the son of a well-off
landholder in Landslag. No one is going to hold me thrall.” He
struggled to rise to one elbow by slow and calculated degrees,
inventorying his injuries and deciding with relief that no bones were
broken and nothing seemed too badly beaten to mend eventually.
Raudbjorn slowly shook his head. “Sorkvir sells enemies to
Dokholur as thralls. Dying too good for some people.”
Leifr sank back with a stifled groan. Sorkvir was perfectly
within his rights to sell a vanquished enemy into slavery. Death had a
certain nobility for the defeated, but nobody cared to remember the
degradation of being sold into thralldom. Such a fate made a man more
dead than a funeral pyre or a barrow mound, and escape did little to
improve the lot of the reluctant thrall.
“I’m not staying here.” Leifr felt the torque‘ around his throat.
“How long have I been out of my head?”
“Three days.” Raudbjorn looked at Leifr critically. “Escape, hah!
No thralls escape from Dokholur.”
“I’m not a thrall. I’m a warrior, with the freedom of the earth and
my fate in my own two hands, and I’m going to escape. You can tell
that to your master Sorkvir.”
Raudbjorn grunted dubiously and scowled. “Raudbjorn no thrall
either.”
“You are, as long as you grovel around Sorkvir’s feet and lick
his boots,” Leifr retorted, ignoring Raudbjorn’s dangerous expression.
“What about Thurid and Gotiskolker? Were they captured too?”
“No. Just Fridmarr. How you kill that great, ugly Ognun?
Raudbjorn tried to fight him and had to run like big chicken. What
weapon you kill him with?” He made the inquiry in a strictly
professional tone not untinged by admiration.
Leifr replied shortly, “Arrows and a whetstone.”
Raudbjorn’s brow puckered. “Whetstone. Rhbu magic. Bad
sign for Sorkvir.”
“Sorkvir is going to be killed, Raudbjorn. If I were you, I’d get
out now, before you get caught in the middle. All these Dokkalfar are
going to be driven underground. You’re a day-farer. You don’t belong
with them.“
“Raudbjorn likes fire and food and Sorkvir’s gold. Night-faring
not so bad. Better than thief-taking.”
Leifr snorted in disgust. “You’re willing to lose your good name
and your pride for nothing more than gold and a full belly?”
Raudbjorn winced. “Used to be proud, but poor. Now Raudbjorn
not so proud.”
“Well, give it up, then.”
“Too hard to give up good life, Fridmarr. Sorkvir a hard master,
but hungry belly worst master of all.” Resuming his expression of
benign vacuity, he posted himself against the wall to watch Leifr, with
his halberd held across his chest.
On the next day Leifr was awakened by the shuffling of the
wretched thralls on their way to their labors. They did not raise their
dull eyes to Raudbjorn, but they glanced at Leifr knowingly, offering
him no encouragement with their rueful expressions. When they were
gone, a group of Dokkalfar came striding down the tunnel into the
thralls’ quarters, stopping in a menacing circle around Leifr, who rose
to his feet, tottering like an old dog rising to his last battle, beaten
but not defeated.
Sorkvir shoved his way through the ring to confront Leifr,
suppressing his - gloating into a pleased smirk.
“Still alive, I see,” Sorkvir said, thrusting a torch almost into
Leifr’s face, but failing to make him flinch. “Perhaps old Skrof didn’t
make such a bad bargain after all. A thrall such as you should be good
for years in the tunnels of Dokholur.”
A gaunt and unwashed face crept out of the shadows
behind Sorkvir, nodding nervously. “Yes, I dare say he’ll last a long
time, my lord, although it is rather close to winter and nobody really
wants another thrall to feed this time of year. I’ll be lucky if half of
them don’t freeze or starve before next spring.” He looked at Leifr with
great gloom. “He still doesn’t look too good. Do you really think he’s
ready to go to work?”
Leifr answered grimly, “You needn’t worry yourself about my
welfare. You should look out for yourselves, considering what has
happened at the other places where I have stopped for a while.”
Skrof blanched and slunk back into the shadows.
Raudbjorn nodded approvingly. “Right, right. Ognun not feeling
too good now.”
Sorkvir whirled spitefully on Raudbjorn, giving him a shove with
the end of his staff. “Silence, you bullock. It’s not your privilege to
speak anything that comes into that bird-sized brain of yours, so hold
your speech. You might inadvertently convince me I don’t need your
presence, if you’re not more cautious.”
Raudbjorn retreated, scowling and muttering, and the Dokkalfar
seemed to enjoy his discomfiture and humiliation, winking at one
another and stifling nasty chuckles.
“And you,” he continued, turning back to Leifr, “are in no
condition to boast. You have interfered in matters more important than
you are. That’s what earned your friend Gotiskolker his reward. I don’t
know what gave you the audacity to interfere with the Pentacle. You
could not have done it without the knowledge I entrusted you with. No
ordinary fire wizard could have broken my influence.”
“But Rhbu magic might,” Leifr answered. “As long as Thurid
remains free, you’re in danger, Sorkvir.”
“In danger!” Sorkvir’s cloak surged as he raised his staff in a
threatening gesture. “You are the one in danger, my insolent friend.” He
nodded to the Dokkalfar, and they all drew their swords, gleaming in
the firelight and etched with blood-blackened runes.
Skrof edged forward and ventured to tug at Sorkvir’s sleeve,
protesting, “You can’t kill him unless you give my two marks back.
You’ve lost your rights to murder him. Begging your pardon for
speaking up, of course,” he added hastily, retreating into the shadows
when Sorkvir bent an angry eye upon him.
Leifr said, “Perhaps it would be well worth two marks for
you to kill me now, Sorkvir. This may be your best opportunity.”
Sorkvir’s hard eyes glittered as he stared at Leifr. “I dare not,
just yet,” he said with hatred in his tone. “You know far too much of
my own knowledge. You would return as a vengeful fylgjadraug,
made more powerful by your journey into Hel and back. I shall
keep you here, working like a mindless animal, until there’s little left
of your mind or body, like Gotiskolker.”
“It didn’t work with Gotiskolker,” Leifr replied. “He’s the one
who brought me back. I see little evidence that he’s under your power.“
Sorkvir’s eyes flickered with rage. “It was Gotiskolker, was it? I’ll
settle with him later. His time is near at hand, when he’ll
have to
want to seek me out for the eitur.”
“Not any longer, Sorkvir. He’s going to die free.”
“You should know that none of my enemies die free, Fridmarr.
Perhaps you have forgotten Kaldi and Barmur, or you might never have
ventured to dare my wrath. Or have you forgotten that I have Ljosa
Hroaldsdottir here as a prisoner? I have brought her to Dokholur to
convince you to return Bodmarr’s sword to me. She was much more
comfortable at Hjaldrsholl, I am ashamed to confess. Here she is forced
to work for her keep, the same as any other prisoner.”
Leifr restrained his fury, speaking with cold deliberation. “For
that alone, I shall be glad to kill you. She is a chieftain’s daughter
and not accustomed to such treatment. If she had any brothers left to
protect her, you wouldn’t dare to treat her this way.”
“She has no one left to defend her—except you. Unless you
return that sword, Hroaldsdottir is likely to die this winter when the
trolls get hungry and start stalking the tunnels, preying upon the weak
and unwary. She shall go free as soon as you summon that madman
Thurid and put Bodmarr’s sword into my hands. I’ll see to it that she is
taken to her relations in Fjarastrond.”
“How can I believe anything you say?” Leifr retorted. “You
wouldn’t let her go. Maybe she’s not even here now. For all I know, she
might be dead.” The thought was like iron struck to his soul.
“She is here and alive.” Sorkvir nodded toward one of the
Dokkalfar. “Go and fetch her from the cauldron area. Be quick about
it.”
The Dokkalfar favored Leifr with a malevolent grin, and Leifr
recognized him by the dried ear trophies hanging from his sword sheath
as the same Dokkalfar who had brought Leifr out of Alof’s musty
storeroom as Sorkvir’s prisoner. He had also garnered a chin-to-temple
slash from Leifr’s sword, now partially healed into a fulsome puckered
scar. Seeing Leifr’s present battered condition seemed to afford
him a great amount of satisfaction.
“That’s Greifli,” Sorkvir observed. “He holds a particular
grudge against you. It was all we could do to restrain him from leaving
a similar beauty mark upon your face. He thinks you’ve quite spoiled
his looks.”
Leifr was about to retort, when the mountain suddenly began to
tremble slightly around them. Hollow, groaning, grinding sounds
echoed through the network of tunnels.
Sorkvir cocked his head to listen intently, and the Dokkalfar
guards exchanged uneasy glances while the tremors continued.“
“Skrymir the mountain giant crush us all one day, digging in his
body like worms,” Raudbjorn said.
“Not before we find his heart or whatever keeps him alive,”
Sorkvir replied, speaking to Leifr. “I’ve heard that his heart is a
single large ruby, big enough that one man can’t reach all the way
around it. One day we’ll find it, and Skrymir will be dead, as
mountains are intended to be. He has weakened a great deal since you
saw Dokholur last, Fridmarr. I suspect you never thought that you
would one day be one of the wretches carving out Skrymir’s vitals.”
Leifr scarcely noticed the jibe. His thoughts were too busy with
the idea of a mountain that lived. Another rumbling groan ran through
the mountain, as if some huge creature were in pain.
Greifli came back, pushing Ljosa along before him, a slight, very
ragged figure with a regal composure about her that filled Leifr’s
heart with fierce pride. Greifli shoved her into the circle of
torchlight, and Sorkvir reached out one withered hand to draw back
the hood that hid her face. She flinched away, tossing back her hood to
gaze around the ring of her captors. Her glance settled on Leifr with
rock-steady calm. Leifr could not speak, only gaze with furious resolve
to rescue her from the loathly condition he had brought her to in his
clumsy and unwilling parody of Fridmarr.
“You see, she is here,” Sorkvir said. “Enjoy looking at her; she
won’t keep her looks long in this place. Unless, of course, you do the
noble thing and set her free by giving me Bodmarr’s sword. What is
your answer, Fridmarr?”
“Let her go, Sorkvir,” Leifr said in a deadly tone.
“Then will you give me the sword? At least then you could
spend the last of your days thinking of her freedom, which you bought
for her.”
Ljosa turned her angry stare upon Leifr. “Don’t do it for my sake,
Fridmarr. I refuse to be used as a pawn in Sorkvir’s vile games. I can
suffer and endure as well as you can. If you help Sorkvir get Bodmarr’s
sword, even if I do go free, your name will be an anathema to me
forever, Fridmarr.”
“Quiet, spitfire!” Sorkvir rasped. “Greifli, take her out of here. I
might have known she’d have a streak of self-immolation in her.”
Greifli seized her arm roughly and started to lead her away. She
called back, “Remember, Fridmarr! Anathema!”
Raudbjorn grinned and nodded approvingly. “Brave girl. Spirit
like tiger. Anathema something poisonous?”
“Silence, fool!” Sorkvir spat, shifting his brittle stare to Leifr.
“Well? What is your answer?”
Leifr shook his head slowly. “As long as I live, you’ll never get
the Sword by any means of mine.”
“Are you mad? That girl can’t survive here. She’ll have a
lingering and wasting death before her—supposing that a troll doesn’t
kill her and carry her off.” Sorkvir smiled his thin and sinister smile. “I
had thought that you cared for her, somewhat.”
Leifr’s response was a cold and menacing stare. “Have you