Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
As he spoke, a bright splinter of flame cleft the darkness like a lightning
bolt far above, exploding with a report that jarred some small rocks
loose.
“Hurry up, back down!” growled a chorus of irate voices, perhaps
six in all. “You go back up,” Leifr answered. “There’s nothing below
moving.”
but water. Start
“Who’s down there?” demanded one of the Dokkalfar.
“Raudbjorn,” came the rumbling response. “Back up.”
“Raudbjorn!” muttered the Dokkalfar. Then one called, “We’re
not backing up for you. If you don’t like it, you can jump. I hope that
fire wizard burns you like bacon.”
The Dokkalfar laughed nastily, and the ladder creaked as they
descended another step. Their faces caught the red glow of their torch—
lowering, sinister faces. With an unpleasant shock, Leifr recognized
Greifli, who had cut his leg. At the same moment, Greifli recognized
Leifr.
“It’s Fridmarr,” he said in disbelief.
“Kill him, then,” someone growled. “We’ve had too much
trouble from him already. Day-farers should all be killed.”
“Do it and hurry up,” another voice said. “I think that fire wizard
might be coming down after us.”
Raudbjorn fastened the chin strap of his helmet and pulled his
shield up over his shoulders to the top of his head. Gripping one of the
hand-holds in his teeth, he started climbing upward, expressing his
feelings with an inarticulate roar of wrathful challenge, He held onto the
ladder with one hand and took swipes with his sword with the other,
driving back the Dokkalfar above. They hailed him with blows and
rocks to no avail; he advanced inexorably, hacking at their feet when he
got near enough. The Dokkalfar soon abandoned the ladder for the
jumble of timbers crosshatching the shaft and fired arrows at Raudbjorn
when they got the opportunity. Most of their arrows went wide of their
mark in the darkness, but a few whizzed by dangerously near, and
one hit Raudbjorn’s shield. Motioning Leifr to stay under cover behind
a timber, Raudbjorn sheathed his sword and unslung his deadly halberd.
Still protected behind his shield, he stepped off the ladder onto a beam,
inching his way across with his halberd to balance him. The Dokkalfar
climbed farther downward on the scaffolding to escape from him. One,
who stood his ground a little too long, was swept from his perch by the
halberd and sent plummeting down with an echoing shriek.
Suddenly the entire structure shifted with an ominous groan as
Raudbjorn reached the middle, and everyone froze, not breathing, until
the creaking and shuddering stopped.
“Raudbjorn,” Leifr called. “Come back from there before it
collapses and takes you with it.”
“Need to get rid of five Dokkalfar first,” Raudbjorn replied.
“Lighten the load. Dokkalfar trapped now, no place else to go.”
Raudbjorn stalked the remaining Dokkalfar and picked them off
the timbers one by one until only Greifli remained, holding the torch
and waiting at the lowest part of the scaffolding. As Raudbjorn reached
the lowest timber and stepped onto it cautiously, the scaffolding creaked
again. Raudbjorn waited until the structure had steadied and crept
after Greifli with catlike grace along a beam, with nothing on either
side to hold onto.
A look of cunning overspread Greifli’s face. He jumped on the
timber under his feet, causing the scaffold to sway alarmingly.
Leifr was almost straight above Greifli; if he leaned out a bit he
could drop a rock right on him. Groping around for a loose one, he
heard the cracking of wood.
The scaffold folded in on itself, tearing away from the walls of
the shaft, a section at a time. Raudbjorn clung to a timber, looking up
with astonishment.
Still holding his torch, Greifli sprang desperately from timber to
timber even as they sagged, making a last flying leap toward the
ladder. Then ‘the whole structure of timbers gave way at last, sinking
into the black void and taking Greifli and Raudbjorn with it. The red
light of the torch winked out, leaving Leifr alone and trembling with
shock on the ladder.
“Raudbjorn!” he shouted, when the uproar of falling timbers had
ceased. There was no answer. “Raudbjorn! Answer me!” he roared in
despair.
“I hear you,” a voice said, not far above, and a burst of
blinding alf-light filled the shaft with twisting black shadows and
harsh glares. “Come on, Fridmarr, there’s nothing you can do to
help him now.”
Leifr gazed down the tangled maze of the shaft, which had been
considerably cleared out by the collapse of the scaffolding.
“I’ve got to be sure,” Leifr answered, staring down. “He saved
me once. It’s the least I can do for him.”
“Fridmarr! Stop! What a mutton-headed—Fridmarr! You’re not
going down there again!” Thurid clambered down after him, his eyes
glaring with rage.
Leifr stopped to rest a moment, allowing Thurid to overtake
him. “Shine your light down there, Thurid. We may be able to see
him.”
Thurid obliged with a blaze of light, but the bottom of the shaft
was a dark tangle of groaning, shifting timbers and black water. “I hope
you’re pleased,” Thurid growled. “Thanks to you, the Dokkalfar are all
going to escape. If you’d climbed up as you were supposed to, I would
be up there now, blasting Dokkalfar. I don’t see him, Fridmarr. Let’s
go back up. Look how fast that water is rising.”
Leifr resumed his descent. The water was rising at a visible rate,
gurgling around the timbers. “How did you get so much water to come
up, Thurid?” he asked. “I thought it would take days to fill all these
tunnels.”
“Ordinarily it would, but I was afraid it wouldn’t fill up fast
enough to suit me, so I used a water spell from one of my rune sticks.”
Thurid sighed and followed Leifr downward. “Do be careful,
Fridmarr!” he warned sharply as the whole jumble creaked dangerously,
grinding against the walls and splintering some of the timbers. Part of
the ladder pulled away from the wall as the treacherous mass shifted
upward with the rising water.
Leifr climbed onto the tangle of wood, occasioning even more
violent groaning and shifting. “I see him!” he called, identifying a
dark, sodden lump trapped not far below among the timbers.
Raudbjorn raised one hand in a feeble wave and exerted
another mighty shove against the timber that was trapping him. Already
the water was past his waist. Raudbjorn looked up at Leifr and smiled
his gentle smile.
“Knew you’d come, Fridmarr. This time Raudbjorn won’t get
out.”
“Don’t be a fool,” Leifr said, motioning Thurid to hurry. “I’ve
got Thurid with me. He’ll get you out with one of his spells. Isn’t
that so, Thurid?” The look he turned upon Thurid left no doubt about
his determination.
Thurid stepped onto the tangle with great trepidation,
yelping when it creaked threateningly. “All right, Fridmarr, we’ll try
it, but we’ve got to hurry. Before long there won’t be any sense in
pulling him out.”
He positioned himself over the timber that held Raudbjorn and
hastily read over a few rune wands. Then he polished his staff
nervously and held it aloft and began to chant strange words. The
timber groaned and trembled, and Raudbjorn’s eyes widened as it rose
inch by reluctant inch off his chest. The water was nearly to his chin
by the time Raudbjorn wriggled out from under the beam and
clambered upward, still clutching his prized halberd.
Thurid stopped chanting, and the timber fell back with a crash.
Heaving a huge sigh of relief, Thurid helped Leifr hoist Raudbjorn out
of the tangle of wood, shoving him toward the dangling ladder. Thurid
brought up the rear, with his alf-light glowing very pale. Brusquely he
brushed off Raudbjorn’s thanks, urging him to climb faster and stop
talking so much. A large part of his irritation was due to the water
streaming off Raudbjorn’s clothing and dripping into his face.
When the last ladder was behind them, they stumbled gratefully
into a short tunnel that was barely more than an airshaft. Raudbjorn had
to bend nearly double as they crept toward the small patch of light at the
end.
Suddenly a deep and ominous rumble shook the rough ground
beneath their feet with the most powerful tremor yet. Leifr lost his
footing, and Raudbjorn fell to his hands and knees, blocking the tunnel
effectively. Thurid battered at him in a frenzy, gasping, “Get up, you
great ox! Skrymir’s going to do it this time! The whole mountain might
fall in! We’ve got to get out!”
A thundering crash behind them filled the tunnel with dust as
tons of rock plummeted down the shaft. When the dust had settled
somewhat, Leifr raised his head from the protecting cradle of his arms
and looked around at a peculiar red light which suffused everything. A
dome of stone had fallen down the shaft, leaving a high, vaulted ceiling
above. The light seemed to come from the top of the vault. Leifr
glanced at Thurid, who gaped at it just as uncomprehendingly and
made only a faint croak of protest when Leifr stood up and picked his
way back toward the domed chamber.
Looking up, he gasped and shaded his eyes from the dazzlement
streaming down into the dusty pit. An enormous red stone hung like a
brilliant plug in a natural shaft that looked straight up at the sun. A
thousand facets caused the light to sparkle and dance on the walls. Up
near the ruby, runes had been carved into the stones.
“Skrymir’s heart,” Thurid whispered in awe, with his face turned
rapturously upward. “There was a chamber beneath it. This is what the
Rhbu candidates sought for. They came to Skrymir’s heart to learn.”
“That’s why Sorkvir wanted it? It’s full of power?” Leifr
questioned, unable to remove his gaze from the wondrous vision
twinkling above him.
Thurid nodded. “He was terribly close. The floor of the chamber
must have been only a few feet thick. There are voices here, too. This
disturbance has awakened them.”
“Old dead Rhbus talk to Thurid?” Raudbjorn queried.
“Maybe Thurid a Rhbu someday.”
Thurid shook his head quickly. “It’s not for anyone else to
say. When the Pentacle is cleared, others will come who have a greater
gift than I do.”
“The Pentacle won’t be complete until the grindstone is
returned,” Leifr said. “We have three days left. After that, if we’re not
successful—you’ll have to find another swordsman, Thurid.”
Thurid turned away from his rapt contemplation of the stone.
“Three days is three days. Plenty of time,” he snapped fiercely.
“Let’s go. Gotiskolker and Ljosa will think we’re all dead.”
When they crept from the small, rough opening at the end of the
tunnel, they found the remains of several petrified Dokkalfar. Thurid
nodded to the west where the sun had not been long below the horizon.
“They were a bit too hasty. Sorkvir was patient enough to wait for
the sun to set. If he’d waited for Skrymir’s last tremor, he would
have seen what he has been digging for all these years. Perhaps if he
had, he wouldn’t be so willing to forsake Dokholur.“ His keen eyes
discerned a group of horsemen riding southward, far below. ”I believe
his next and final stand will be wherever the grindstone is hidden.“
“Grittur-grof,” Raudbjorn said.
Thurid turned on him incredulously. “Grittur-grof? The
center of the Pentacle? What makes you think it’s there?”
“Raudbjorn carried it there, after Sorkvir heard Fridmarr came
back. Sorkvir hid it from Fridmarr. Lot of fuss over one old grindstone.”
Raudbjorn shook his head in wonderment at the vagaries of wizards.
“It’s a Rhbu grindstone, you dolt,” Thurid told him testily.
“The only one that will sharpen a Rhbu sword, which is the only
weapon that can destroy Sorkvir forever. That’s Sorkvir’s great
weakness—Rhbu magic is his bane.”
The mountain shuddered again, dislodging several black skarps
and boulders that crashed thunderously into the valley below,
scattering the thralls, Dokkalfar, and horses that lingered there. All
the portals were blocked by rockfalls, and water oozed out from
beneath, cascading down the steep, scarred slopes. Fissures opened as
the earth slipped downward in landslides. Where the tunnels collapsed
underground, deep craters pockmarked the mountainside. The glaciers