Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
a thief, and a murderer. He is a wrongful usurper of Gliru-hals and the
killer of many innocent Ljosalfar. I have challenged him, and he has
set his allies against me and has run away in the craven manner of a
coward.”
“These are strong accusations,” Digur replied. “You can’t make
accusations like this without expecting to make an accounting for
them. Your speech has offended Sorkvir’s honor. He must defend
himself against your charges, and you must either fight him or
withdraw your accusations and suffer the loss of your own reputation
for it.”
“Fighting him is what I want to do,” Leifr replied. “Are you
going to try to stop me? Are you afraid for Sorkvir to meet me with
this sword?”
He raised the sword so they could all see it glowing in the pale
darkness. Endless Death—the name suited it perfectly, and Leifr smiled
with grim pleasure.
Digur unsheathed his axe. “I have my orders not to let
you go to Hjaldrsholl,” he said.
The Dokkalfar beside him rode forward and leaned over to
speak to Digur, but Leifr could hear plainly what was said. “Orders to
die, you mean. I say let him challenge Sorkvir to the holmgang. What
do we want with a leader who is afraid to defend his name against
accusations of this kind? All the Dokkalfar in Skarpsey will know that
Sorkvir was afraid to fight and that we helped him in his cowardice.”
“You’re speaking treason,” Digur snarled. “I should bury this axe
in your brain rather than listen!”
“Listen you will, because you know in your heart it’s the truth.”
“We can kill one Scipling, no matter what weapon he has in his
hand. There are twenty of us against one of him.”
“Do you want to be the first to taste the Endless Death? I don’t.
Who of your friends will you send to die?”
“It will be an honorable death,” Digur answered after a short
pause.
“We’ve had enough honorable deaths for Sorkvir’s cause. I say
let the Scipling go. Sorkvir is doomed. Let’s not go to our own
senseless doom by backing a loser with our lives.”
“How many of the others think as you think?” Digur turned in his
saddle to look up and down the line beside him. The Dokkalfar returned
his look uneasily, gripping their weapons.
“All,” the other Dokkalfar said firmly.
“So the lot of you are treasonous cowards,” Digur said. “You
seem to have set yourself up as their leader, haven’t you, Ragur? What
will you do if I order them to attack the Scipling?”
Ragur replied calmly, “We won’t do it. We’ll kill you if you
force us to it, but we’d rather you joined us.”
“Then I’ll give you my answer.” Digur dove for his sword,
making a wicked thrust at Ragur, but Ragur defended himself skillfully.
Leifr watched them fight a few moments, then turned and rode
away slowly in the direction of Hjaldrsholl. When he heard no more
clashing of steel on steel, he paused and looked back. Nineteen
mounted Dokkalfar rode away in the opposite direction, with Digur’s
riderless horse following in the rear. Sorkvir had lost the major part of
his allies, except for whatever number he had left to hold Hjaldrsholl.
Leifr whistled for the dogs and started after Sorkvir at a brisk
pace. In a few minutes, the dogs caught up and fell to smelling out
Sorkvir’s trail with the utmost dedication to their task.
After passing the last of the barrows of Grittur-grof, Leifr came
into view of Sorkvir and the sledge. Halting, Sorkvir stood up to look
back for a long, silent moment as Leifr rode slowly out of the shadow of
the barrow.
“Your Dokkalfar have killed their leader and abandoned you,”
Leifr called. “They’re carrying word of our holmgang to the rest of the
Dokkalfar.”
With a curse, Sorkvir raised his arms and sent a bolt of green
flame hurtling toward Leifr like a lance. Stepping aside, Leifr
slashed at the bolt with the sword and was rewarded with a jolt that
nearly tore him off his horse. The bolt arced upward, returning toward
Sorkvir in a cartwheel of ice shards. The sledge horses plunged away in
alarm, nearly jerking Sorkvir off his feet and thus preventing him from
returning another bolt at Leifr.
“You’ll never make it to Hjaldrsholl in time,” Sorkvir
shouted over the rumble of the sledge, finally bringing it to a halt on
the slope of the fell. He shoved something from the rear of the sledge,
then cracked his whip over the horses with a defiant yell.
“Here’s one of your dear friends, Scipling! Take care of him well
and keep him warm, or he will die! You can’t leave him until the sun
comes up to break my spell!”
Leifr followed the dogs, who raced toward the inert mass Sorkvir
had pushed from the sledge. Shoving them aside, Liefr knelt beside the
huge hulk of Raudbjorn, who was snoring heavily and as cold and stiff
as a slab of dead mutton. No amount of shaking would awaken him.
Hastily Leifr scratched together enough wood for a small fire. The dogs
licked Raudbjorn’s face and prodded him with their sharp noses, finally
eliciting a rumbling grunt as the warmth of the fire gradually penetrated
Sorkvir’s spell. Anxiously Leifr scanned the eastern sky, already
discerning the first traces of early dawn. Raudbjorn had a long way to
go yet before he was unthawed enough to travel, and Leifr had no idea
how long the sun would take to unravel Sorkvir’s spell.
Dismayed, he sat down and stared glumly at the dogs clustered
contentedly around Raudbjorn. Kraftig came to sit beside Leifr, perhaps
sensing his master’s low spirits, and sought to cheer him up by trying to
sit on his lap like a puppy. Battling against the hairy, friendly beast,
Leifr was struck by a sudden idea.
“Kraftig! Come here!” He managed to escape from the huge
paws braced against his shoulders and led the dog over to Raudbjorn,
commanding, “Lie down, Kraftig. Stay here. Watch Raudbjorn.”
Kraftig understood the idea immediately, curling up next to
Raudbjorn and stretching out over his chest like a furry, living blanket.
When Leifr rode away, Kraftig was licking Raudbjorn’s ear, perhaps
relishing the unwashed taste and glorious smell that always
accompanied Raudbjorn and his sordid trophies.
By the time Leifr caught up with Sorkvir again, it was nearly
dawn, light enough for him to plot his course to get in front of the
sledge. Sorkvir drew up immediately the moment Leifr’s dim form took
shape in the mist, riding slowly toward him.
“So you abandoned Raudbjorn to die, faithless Scipling?” Sorkvir
chuckled. “It will haunt you, if you live that long.”
“Raudbjorn is provided for,” Leifr answered. “I have no doubt
you’ll see him at the holmgang.”
“He may be there, but he’ll see no holmgang,” Sorkvir replied.
“This time when I lighten my load, you’ll have no chance of
catching me again. Here’s your friend Thurid, stiff as hardfish. I had
plans for him; but if you revive him, I can always find him later, after
I’ve taken care of my business at Hjaldrsholl.”
“Leave Ljosa also and you can make your journey all the faster,”
Leifr said.
Sorkvir rolled Thurid out of the sledge with one foot. “No, she
weighs hardly more than a feather. I’ll keep her as additional insurance.
Then I shall return her to Gliru-hals where she belongs. I need more
winter shepherds, since I lost so many to the trolls last year.” Cracking
his whip and laughing harshly, Sorvir sent the sledge bounding down
the slope.
Thurid was stiffer and bluer even than Raudbjorn, to the extent
that Leifr wondered how he could be alive at all. Frozen with his staff in
his hands, Thurid glared at him, frosty and unblinking, as Farlig and
Frimodig nosed around him, whimpering and tasting the frost ridged
along his beaky nose and eyebrows.
Again Leifr built a fire and commanded Frimodig to lie on
Thurid and keep him warm. He tucked the satchel under one of
Thurid’s stiff arms and said a silent farewell, hoping Thurid would not
be too annoyed when he awakened to find one of the hated hounds
slobbering in his face and smearing its huge, muddy paws on his
clothing.
Leifr cantered his weary horse into Hjaldrsholl just before
sunrise, finding the great outer gates standing open. The
horse’s hooves rang on the cobblestones of the tunnel leading to
the hall. When he reached the hall, he found the doors there standing
open also, blocked by the bodies of two dead dwarfs, blasted and
whitened by Sorkvir’s ice magic. Leaping from his horse, almost falling
when his weak knee buckled under him, Leifr staggered past the bodies
and into the hall, dreading what he would find.
Sorkvir could not have been an hour before him. Ice bolts lay
melting in dark pools among the scattered corpses of more dwarfs. At
last he discovered Hjaldr, still sitting in his chair, pinioned by the sword
thrust through his chest. Knowing after the first glance that Hjaldr was
dead, Leifr turned away and sank down in one of the few upright chairs,
fingering the torque around his throat. In a matter of hours it would
strangle him, although he had found the grindstone and sharpened the
sword, thus ending the alog over Solvorfirth. Somehow Sorkvir had
learned of Hjaldr’s alog; hence his haste to reach Hjaldrsholl before
Leifr did.
Leifr did not waste much time brooding over the unfairness of the
trick fate had played upon him. His temper began to boil, infusing him
with the needful wrath to finish his quarrel with Sorkvir. Standing up
and facing the wall where the helmets of the fallen Dvergar hung, he
drew his sword and raised it to his forehead in salute. Filled with grim
resolve, he strode out of the hall to retrieve his horse.
When he rode out of the outer gates, the first rays of the sun
pierced the misty horizon, touching the high peaks and leaving the
valleys in shadow. Without hesitation, Leifr guided his horse down the
rugged path to the hall in the mountainside. Once a Dokkalfar guard
barred his path with a long, deadly lance.
“Who’s there?” the Dokkalfar demanded, seeing nothing of
Leifr but a dark Dokkalfar cloak and a Dokkalfar helmet.
Drawing the gleaming sword, Leifr answered, “
Endalaus
Daudi
. Either die or let me pass. I have no particular preference.”
“Pass!” the Dokkalfar gasped, falling back into the shadows.
Leifr urged his horse a few steps nearer. “Did Sorkvir pass this
way in a sledge not long ago?”
“He did, not a half hour before.”
“And he’s in the new hall Hjaldr built?”
“Aye, with the doors barred.”
“A piece of advice I’ll give you before I go on. Take yourself
back underground where you’ll be safe. The alog is broken now, and
the Ljosalfar will be looking for any Dokkalfar to take revenge
upon; their swords will be sharp.”
“I’ll do it, even though it means abandoning my post.
They’ve been gathering all night around the new hall, ugly as can
be. I wouldn’t be caught here for anything.” He vanished into the
shadows.
As Leifr approached the gates to the new Hjaldrsholl, he passed
covert knobs of Ljosalfar, all armed with newly sharpened swords, axes,
and lances. They stared with blatant curiosity at Leifr, busily nudging
their neighbors with their elbows. “Look, it’s the Scipling.”
They all regarded him with a mixture of suspicion and awe,
even the Ljosalfar who were neighbors to Dallir, as if they had never
seen Leifr before in all their lives. The first to make a move of
recognition was Young Einarr, who cautiously raised one hand in salute
as Leifr rode past.
“Be you needing any help?” Old Einarr rasped, leaning on a
villainous old halberd with a gleaming half moon of sharp edge
showing through the rust. “If it was Fridmarr, we might not offer—
unlucky fellow, you must surely know. I wouldn’t mind following a
Scipling into a fight. I’m not the sort to be overproud.”
Leifr looked into his earnest, weathered features and nodded
slowly. “I could use some good Ljosalfar at my back. I wish
Fridmarr were here to see it, though.”
Both Einarrs shouldered their weapons, shaking their gray heads
ruefully. Young Einarr passed the back of his hand over his mouth.
“Fridmarr was always high and mighty with pride, even when he was