Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
the conflagration, like an arrow into the darkness.
As Leifr groped for shelter among the heaps of rock, still dazzled
by the brilliance of the explosion, his fingers brushed cool metal with a
thrill of recognition. Snatching up the sword, he turned. Sorkvir was no
longer flaming, but the tattered mass confronting Leifr was scarcely
recognizable as either wizard or bear. Elements of both were melted
together; the bear’s face dangled in blackened shreds with Sorkvir’s
face underneath, seared and sooty and twisted with rage as he
struggled to tear the remains of the bear’s paws away from his hands.
The bear’s rippling hide now flapped in tatters from Sorkvir’s
shoulders, like a disreputable hairy cloak saved by mistake from a fire.
Thurid tottered forward with a triumphant crow. “It’s not his
fylgja! It’s only a bearskin spell! Except when he’s coming back
after he’s killed, he doesn’t have the power for a bear fylgja! Destroy
him, Leifr!”
Sorkvir whirled around to face Leifr, crouching like a cornered
beast, teeth bared in hatred. “No Scipling will kill Sorkvir!” he snarled,
lifting his hands for a spell.
Leifr raised his sword and spoke its name, guided by an
impulse born from the reactions of the other Dokkalfar. “
Endalaus
Daudi”
he said. “The Endless Death awaits you, Sorkvir.”
Sorkvir held his blustering pose for another moment, then his
hand dived for the sword hanging at his belt. As it cleared its sheath, the
main doors of the hall slowly grumbled open, revealing Hegna and
the dwarfs standing ready with their weapons, and the Ljosalfar
crowding close behind.
With a curse, Sorkvir struck the first blow at Leifr, muttering the
words of spells that would not work. He fought with skill and the
courage born of desperation, striking glittering sparks from his sword
each time it clashed with Leifr’s, until the edge was pocked with jagged
notches. The point of his sword snapped off and spun away onto the
marble floor, scoring the stone with a black, steaming mark.
Leifr fought grimly, knowing that a touch of Sorkvir’s sword
would inflict the same deadly ice magic as the bolts of the storm giants.
His cuts and thrusts slashed away more of the charred bear skin. To his
surprise, the wounds he dealt to the bear’s hide bled profusely.
“You’re weakening, Sorkvir,” he panted. “Your pelt is bleeding
now. Is your ice magic failing?”
Calmly Sorkvir replied, “Failing, yes, but the fight is not yet
finished. Remember that a bear is hard to kill.”
Leifr dealt the first telling blow of the battle by slashing
Sorkvir’s leg. Sorkvir fell back, grimacing.
“We’re even now on that score,” Leifr said grimly.
Sorkvir parried his next thrust and retorted with a twisted leer,
“But there’s the torque, or did you forget?”
“You won’t be here to watch,” Leifr answered.
Sorkvir made a desperate rush at Leifr, swinging his long sword
with both hands. Leifr ducked and thrust his sword through Sorkvir’s
body with a sense of disbelief. Sorkvir staggered, crumpling to his
knees on the marble pavement, shaking his head slowly as he, too, were
unable to believe.
“Dokkur Lavardur,” he gasped, “you’ve betrayed me. Djofull, my
lord!” He collapsed slowly to the pavement, sinking into a misty form
that flattened and dissipated until nothing remained but a dark
discoloration in the shape of a prone body and a heap of charred
bearskin and singed clothing.
Hegna and the others approached cautiously, surrounding Leifr
and the evidence of his vanquished foe. Leifr, scarcely aware of
anything but his own overwhelming exhaustion, sank down on a rock
with the sword still in his hand, glancing up only briefly when Thurid
gripped his shoulder with tremulous fingers.
“Where’s Ljosa?” Leifr asked.
Thurid sank down beside him, his face gray and ravaged as he
gazed intently at Leifr.
“She’s gone,” he said in a stricken whisper.
Leifr lifted his head a moment, then let it sink down again. “I see.
She didn’t want to stay. It was Fridmarr she loved from the beginning,
wasn’t it?”
“Not like that! It’s—worse than you think, Leifr.” Thurid
revealed a bundle hidden under his cloak which Leifr recognized as
Ljosa’s tattered blue cloak. Inside that was her long gown and the rest
of her habiliment. Leifr gazed at Thurid in blank incomprehension.
“She used the escape spell to rescue you from Sorkvir,” Thurid
said. “It’s a power all Alfar possess. With proper training, an Alfar
can escape and return unscathed. But she was untrained, and without
proper training, there may be no coming back from that void where all
power comes from.”
Leifr stood up unsteadily, still staring at Thurid.
“Then she’s gone—into that void? She disappeared?”
Thurid heaved a heavy sigh, his breath burbling inside his
chest. His eyes slid away from Leifr, haunted and weary.
“She isn’t lost. She has returned to the starting place for all
Alfar. Perhaps the Rhbus are there. All I know for certain is that she
used the last of her power to blast Sorkvir. With some help from
this.” He held out his hawthorn staff, badly charred in the two places
where Ljosa had gripped it with her hands. Leifr gazed at the mark of
each finger, choking back a hideous sense of his own unworthiness.
“She shouldn’t have done it,” he muttered. “This was wrong.
She did it because she couldn’t bear to live any longer without
Fridmarr.“ Thurid looked at the ground. “She wanted to help you— was
save you.”
willing to die to
Leifr winced. “Then she is dead.”
“What does dead mean? She used up her powers pulling you out
of Sorkvir’s grasp. Then he tried to kill her and she used the last of it to
blast him. After that, she went into the void. With magical powers, you
can’t take without giving something in return.”
Leifr shook his head. “I don’t understand it. I thought that good
deeds were rewarded. She gave her life to save me. Where’s the reward
in that for either of us?”
“You’re alive, aren’t you? That’s the only reward she wanted.
You should feel grateful, instead of cheated. You’re a hero, and
you’re still alive. That’s quite an accomplishment.”
“Aren’t you forgetting this?” Leifr showed him the torque, and
Thurid turned white with shock.
“Why haven’t you removed it yet?” he gasped. “It’s only a matter
of hours before it starts—”
“Hjaldr is dead,” Leifr said. “Sorkvir’s last evil trick.”
Thurid clasped his temples with his hands. “This is hideous!” he
whispered. “There must be a way to get rid of it!”
“You’re not messing with it,” Leifr snapped. “If I’ve got only
a few hours left, I want every moment of them. You’ll rob me of even
those if you try tampering with it.”
Thurid shriveled, defeated. “My powers are depleted. I doubt if 1
could do you much good, even if I knew how.”
When the news of Sorkvir’s death spread, more
Ljosalfar poured into the hall to examine the murky outline on
the marble floor and the charred remains of Sorkvir’s garb,
assuring themselves that he was truly destroyed. Next their
attention turned to Leifr with much the same mixture of awe and
disbelief. To spare them the embarrassing necessity of gratitude,
Leifr seized the first opportunity to disappear, hobbling out a
low rear entrance in the company of Thurid and some of the
Dvergar who bore Raudbjorn on a litter, in spite of his protests
that he would rather hobble along like a hero than be carried out
like a loser. Leaving the new hall to the celebrants, Leifr and his
companions sought out the somber refuge of Hjaldrsholl.
His leg was still aching, and he stopped twice on the way
to sit down and rest it. The second of these times, he thought
he detected movement out of the corner of his eye. Turning
quickly, he caught a glimpse of a small gray cat. Remembering
the image of the cat he had thought he saw shooting away when
Sorkvir bit Thurid’s staff, Leifr struggled to his feet. But when he
looked again, there was nothing there.
In Hjaldrsholl, the dead had been cleared away and
buried, along with the helmets that had hung on the wall. Now
that Sorkvir was dead, the dwarfs had no need to cherish their
desire for vengeance. Their morose and silent natures were not
particularly uplifted by Sorkvir’s destruction; their losses had
been too grievous to be easily forgotten in revelry and song, a
compunction not shared by the Ljosalfar.
Leifr eased himself into Hjaldr’s chair with a weary
groan and rested his head on his hands. Thurid sat across the
table and spread out all his rune wands for an exhaustive
scrutiny. Then he scowled over them and finally pushed them
aside impatiently. Standing up, he upended his satchel on the
table and shook out all the contents, which amounted to an
astonishing pile of random objects.
“I’ll return to my original, primitive methods of
divination,” he explained. He gathered the rune wands and
put them back in the satchel, then began pawing through the
other objects, looking for anything else he wanted to keep.
Suddenly Thurid paused, examining a small, wax-covered
packet which he had discovered in the jumble of odd objects. He
stood still, staring fixedly at it.
Leifr’s curiosity was piqued. “What’s that, Thurid?” he
asked. “Your face looks as if you’d just seen a ghost.”
Thurid nodded slowly and tossed the little packet on the
table. “I feel as if I have. Fridmarr gave me this just before the
last time he left. He said, if ever I was in trouble, I should burn
it, and it would summon help. But only if I were in the direst of
need. Somehow I never used it, although I ought to have when
that Irskur Jarl wanted to cut my throat, or that time when I was
thrown in prison for bad debts. Ah, Fridmarr.” He shook his
head with a rueful little smile. “It was the only time he ever
tried to show that he was looking out for me. He did sort of like
me, in his own, peculiar way.”
“He thought of you as his only friend,” Leifr replied.
Thurid sighed and picked up the package again. “I
only wish this would work for us now. It was probably only a
joke at the time. I remember how he threw it at me and
laughed when it landed in my ale horn.” His eyes were
opaque with memories and old regrets. Then he slowly turned
toward the hearth, where a small fire was burning, and dropped
the little packet into the coals. “Well, Fridmarr, this is the end of
your joke.”
In a few moments a plume of black smoke filled the
hearth, swarming up to the smoke hole in a choking, inky cloud.
Hegna and the other dwarves stifled their coughs, swabbed their
stinging eyes, and went to open some doors to let the pungent
smell out. Thurid sat glowering, and Leifr had the urge to laugh.
“He fooled you again, Thurid,” he said with a wry smile.
“Come now, there’s no sense being angry at him.”
“It’s myself I’m angry at,” Thurid snapped. “I should not
have forgotten so soon, in my silly sentimentality, that
Fridmarr loved nothing better than to embarrass me. I’m
frightfully sorry for all this.“ He nodded brusquely toward
Hegna.
“It’s a minor inconvenience and nothing more,” Hegna
replied graciously. “We’ve had worse guests, I’m sure.”
As he spoke, he darted a glance toward Raudbjorn,
propped upright on his sleeping platform and combating the pain
of his wounds with large quantities of Dvergar ale, clutching his
fearsome halberd in one fist.
Rather than persistently inquire how much longer before
sundown, Leifr limped to the outer gates several times to mark
the descent of the sun in the sky. Between Raudbjorn’s ravings
and Thurid’s smoke, the dwarfs’ hall was well nigh
uninhabitable anyway. The dogs followed Leifr, with their tails
drooping and their golden eyes overflowing with tender concern
for their troubled lord. Leifr sat on a rock with his cloak drawn
around him, almost tasting the expectancy he felt closing in on
him as the time grew shorter.
When little more than an hour remained, Thurid joined
him outside in silent disgruntlement.
“I’m sorry for all this,” he finally burst out in helpless