Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
barrage of orders flung at Snagi in an irritable voice. Between times, he
glared at Leifr, who sat helplessly watching a series of petty
annoyances plaguing Thurid. His tea spilled for no reason, any metal
objects near him behaved bizarrely, and the bread shifted positions on
the table whenever he reached for it. Then he discovered a suspicious,
dark fragment floating in his cup.
“What’s this?” he demanded, trembling with fury.
Peering uninvited over his shoulder, Snagi volunteered
cheerfully, “Looks like a bit of midden to me.”
Thurid stood up suddenly, fixing a hostile glare upon Leifr. “If
there’s muck in the milk, I know who’s responsible,” he snapped.
“We’ve had a peaceful time of it while you’ve been gone, but the
moment you return, all manner of fiendish tricks start happening. It
doesn’t take a wizard to figure out where the trouble comes from.” He
whirled around and strode out the door, half-tripping over a piece of
firewood which had crept out of the box to trip him. Another kettle fell
off the shelf with a heavy crash.
Snagi kept one hand over his mouth to hide a toothless grin.
“You shouldn’t gall him like that, young master, be it ever so funny.
You’re not changed one bit, are you, lad? I remember how you used
to set fire to him.“
Leifr uncoiled somewhat from his aghast wincing and cringing.
The ungoverned magical effects seemed to have halted with Thurid’s
departure. He couldn’t help glancing around nervously, and the
evidence of magical powers tripping around the room had destroyed his
appetite for breakfast.
“He’s the wizard, not me,” he protested feebly. “He must be
doing all this himself.”
Snagi laughed aloud and discreetly turned it into a lengthy cough.
“Wizard! And my grandfather was a haddock,” he wheezed. “You’ll
never admit it, will you? Still got it in for him after all these years—I
declare!” Snickering under a muzzling hand, he turned his back to
hide his glee. “What will you be doing today, young master?”
“I’ll have to go see Sorkvir sometime,” Leifr said grimly. “I’d
best not put it off too long, although I never was a great one for
obligations.” He knew enough by now about Fridmarr to feel quite safe
in that statement.
Snagi’s mirth faded. “If you go to Gliru-hals, you might never
come back again,” he said worriedly. “I remember how it was before.
Sorkvir was the grandest thing you ever saw. You were lucky to have
escaped from him once. Are you sure he’ll let you go a second time?”
“I have a good sword, Snagi, made of Scipling steel,” Leifr
assured him, sensing his fond concern. “Sorkvir’s alog hasn’t touched
it. As long as I have it in my hand, I’ll have a fighting chance of getting
away from Sorkvir again.”
Snagi wagged his head in solemn agreement. “I’ll have the mare
saddled for you. This isn’t like before, when you didn’t want to be one
of us.”
Leifr stared after his patient brown backside, stumping across the
overgrown courtyard toward the stable, and wondered if he would ever
understand Fridmarr completely. An uneasy sense that he was
treading blithely over cavernous depths began to plague him,
especially when he considered what he was about to do. Over the past
three days he had at least learned in which direction Gliru-hals lay, but
everyone seemed to expect Fridmarr to know what awaited him within.
Snagi accompanied him as far as the first gate, which he
ceremoniously opened for Leifr. At that moment, a flock of sheep
pattered across their path and Leifr stopped to let them pass. As the
shepherd went by, Leifr caught a glimpse of a woman’s face beneath the
closely drawn, ragged hood. Twice she looked over her shoulder with a
frown and would have hurried on with her blattering sheep if Snagi had
not called out to her.
“Halloa! Ljosa! Stop a moment!” He hobbled after her, anxious
to impart his news of Fridmarr’s return.
“I’ve heard it already,” she said, with an unfriendly toss of
her head in Leifr’s direction. “Everyone is anxious for me to know that
Fridmarr is back, although I fail to see where the honor lies in returning
forty-odd years after he’s caused his brother to be killed.”
“No! Ljosa!” Leifr gasped, caught completely off balance by an
overwhelmingly poignant surge of recognition sparked by the
carbuncle. With a wave of revulsion, he wished he were posing as
almost anyone else but Fridmarr. The hatred in Ljosa’s eyes struck
deep. Her anger lent a soft blush to her pale and delicate cheek and
added brilliance to her large and alluring eyes. Tendrils of fair hair
escaped from her hood like wisps of mist, agitated by her deep, quick
breathing as she looked at him. The ragged cloak enveloping her
form failed to conceal her regal bearing, made even more haughty by
her indignation.
Ljosa gripped her shepherd’s staff resolutely. “I don’t know what
you’re thinking of to come back here,” she said in a low, forceful tone.
“You can’t possible do more harm than you’ve already done. Or are you
dissatisfied with your handiwork? Is there someone else besides
Bodmarr you’d like to sacrifice? At least my father is out of your
reach now. He died last spring in Sorkvir’s dungeon.” Angrily she
dabbed at a tear with a tatter from her cloak, turning away to hide
her emotion.
“I’m sorry to hear that,” Leifr said unsteadily, flogging
his wits for something appropriate to say. “I know I’m guilty of many
things, but I want to make amends.”
“Amends! Do you think that’s the way to find peace of mind,
Fridmarr?” she retorted. “Can you ever ease your conscience after what
happened to Bodmarr? A lifetime of good deeds will not bring him
back. Amends are futile and vain when lives have been blasted and
shattered.“ She whistled to her dogs to gather the scattered sheep and
strode away.
Leifr gazed at her haughty back, but she did not favor him
with a second glance. He expelled a weary sigh, totally baffled by
Ljosa’s hatred of Fridmarr.
“You almost wouldn’t know her now in those ordinary
observed. “A far cry from what she once was, when
clothes,” Snagi
Hroald was chieftain. Still as haughty as ever she was when Hroald was
seeking a grand match for her. In a few years of sheep-tending, her fine
looks will be all gone, and she’ll be glad for some of the offers she’s
turned down already. If she’d taken Bodmarr—” Seeing Leifr’s quick,
interested glance and misreading it, he hastily finished, “Well, I should
be ashamed for gossiping. I’ll shut my mouth and go back to the house.
Good luck, young master. I hope the Rhbus smile upon your endeavor.”
“So do I, Snagi,” Leifr agreed earnestly, turning his horse toward
Gliru-hals with extreme reluctance. His only source of comfort was his
sword; but that would have no lasting effect upon Sorkvir, according
to Gotiskolker. Perhaps these unknown Rhbus were as good a defense
as any.
When he came within view of Gliru-hals, he stopped and studied
the massive turf-and-timber hall and its outlying buildings, all in good
repair and evidently prosperous, as befitted a chieftain’s hall. Except for
a peculiar lack of the usual clutter of noisy geese, thrall children,
dogs, and orphan lambs, Gliru-hals seemed ordinary enough at first
glance. Then his practiced eye discerned the large number of shields
hanging on the side of the hall and the lances standing in clusters by
the doorways, ready to hand at the first hint of opposition. In addition to
the traditional beaks of enemy ships captured in battle, the doorways of
the hall were ornamented with more grisly trophies; the cloven skulls of
enemies were nailed up as a silent warning to anyone who thought to
cross Sorkvir’s might.
Two guards posted along the road leading to the hall
returned Leifr’s scrutiny in sinister silence, their faces masked in black
to protect them from the sunlight. Long black cloaks trimmed with
embroidery, weasel tails, and dangling bits of tinkling metal
covered them almost to their feet, and they carried shields
embossed with the insignia of their rank—spiders, in the case of these
two. Leifr urged his horse toward them at a cautious pace. Suddenly
they spurred their horses forward, rushing at him with shrill yells and a
clashing of weapons and shields.
Leifr stood his ground, recognizing scare tactics when he saw
them. The two Dokkalfar charged past on either side of him, making his
placid mare dance around nervously. Plowing to a halt, the Dokkalfar
circled, making menacing gestures with their lances, and came
alongside Leifr to look him over carefully.
“What do you want?” The ranking Dokkalfar was marked by a
red spiral painted on his helmet. He peered through his eye slits
suspiciously, with nothing of his face to be seen behind the black mask
stitched to resemble a spider in a web.
“I’m Fridmarr Fridmundrsson, and I’ve come home,” Leifr said
curtly. “I’ve come to beg Sorkvir’s pardon so I can remain with my
father until he dies.”
“Fridmarr, of course.” The guards exchanged a glance. “We’ve
been expecting to hear from you again. If you hadn’t come back to
your old friends on your own, we were prepared to come and find you.
Lucky for you that you came willingly.”
Leifr scowled. “I came here to talk to Sorkvir, not his underlings.
Either lead me to him or get out of my way so I can find him.”
The Dokkalfar made a show of reaching for their weapons,
glaring balefully, then motioned Leifr to follow them. One Dokkalfar
dropped behind, as if to make certain no one mistook the procession for
a friendly association.
Once within the walls of the court, Leifr left his horse reluctantly
to the care of a thrall and let himself be escorted through the tall,
creaking doors into the hall. Leifr glanced sideways at his guards,
strengthening his original supposition that the Dokkalfar felt no
yearning to express themselves in any other medium than blood and
oppression.
The doors were closed against the yellow sunlight and green
fells, and Leifr found himself enveloped in the amber gloom of the
ancient hall. It was long and high enough to store a full-size longship,
and Leifr mentally counted off the paces as he walked the length of the
hall toward the dais at the far end. A half-smothered fire smoked on
the great hearth and several lamps burned dully, as if something in the
atmosphere prevented proper combustion. A knot of dark-clad
Dokkalfar stood around a man seated in a heavy, carven chair, talking
and darting suspicious glances at Leifr. He tried to determine some
essential difference between Dokkalfar and Ljosalfar—Dark Elves and
Light Elves—noting among this group an almost deathly pallor and a
sharpening of the features. A few of them were hideously marred by
vile-looking blotches on their hands or faces, which Leifr attributed to
accidental exposure to daylight. These were high-ranking Dokkalfar,
ornamented with costly gold chains and emblems of owls, wolves, and
foxes. When they turned their narrow backs and moved away like a
remnant of a storm cloud, Leifr breathed much easier.
He gave his attention to the man seated in the chair, and Sorkvir
looked back at him with the same still, deadly stare that the
carbuncle indicated had transfixed him before, filling him with the
proper awe for a wizard who held the powers of death and life at his
command. Sorkvir’s clothing was of the excessively plain and
expensive quality usually reserved for burial garments, and his only
ornaments were the two brooches that held his black cloak, gleaming
gold embossed with his spiral mark. His beard was fine and silken,
carefully combed and trimmed around his narrow face.
Returning Leifr’s scrutiny with displeasure, Sorkvir spoke in a
dry, grim voice. “Well, Fridmarr, you’re much changed. Outlawry had
done you good. I can scarcely believe more than forty years have
passed since I saw you last. Yet I seem to recall banishing you for
life, at the threat of death if you ever returned.”
“Death is a hollow threat,” Leifr replied, in true stoic viking