Read o 132c9f47d7a19d14 Online
Authors: Adena
pincers, motioning for Leifr to come closer. Leifr approached the
stone, and the Rhbu reached up with the pincers and cut through
the torque in one easy motion. It fell to the ground at Leifr’s feet
in two pieces, and the cut ends glowed with molten heat.
Leifr rubbed his neck, wondering how he had missed
being burned. When he raised his eyes again, with a fervent word
of gratitude on his lips, the Rhbu had vanished, leaving the
grindstone still turning. Leifr searched the shadowy forge with
his eyes, and Thurid found him standing beside the whirling
grindstone, still staring around in amazement.
“The torque!” whispered Thurid. “Hjaldr released you
after all! To think how I reviled him! I should not have been
so blind and distrustful. The powers I serve are just.”
Leifr turned around quickly. “Did you see him? The small,
bent smith? He was here. The same one who sharpened the
sword. The one Elbegast brought in the sledge.”
“That sledge was empty,” Thurid insisted. “If one of the
Rhbus was there, a Scipling wouldn’t have seen him.”
“A Scipling did see him. Three times,” Leifr replied.
“Impossible,” Thurid snorted enviously, peering around
the forge, which suddenly filled with the burly Dvergar, all
regarding Thurid and Leifr with utmost suspicion.
“Who started that stone turning?” Hegna demanded,
shouldering his way to the front of the glowering crowd. “No one
uses that stone. No one is allowed to touch it. The Pentacle may
be upset forever by the treatment it’s gone through today.”
“I didn’t touch it,” Leifr said. “It was turning when I came
into the forge.”
Elbegast came into the forge as he spoke, and the
dwarfs hastily parted before him. “You should know, Hegna,
that it always turns when it is needed, and no one sees who is
turning it—not unless they are particularly favored by the
Rhbus.” His eyes traveled to the broken torque at Leifr’s feet;
then he smiled into Leifr’s eyes as he repeated, “Particularly
favored by the Rhbus. I believe the powers of the Pentacle
will flow again, as of old, at least until you see this stone
turning by itself again.”
“A Scipling, favored by the Rhbus!” murmured the dwarfs
and Ljosalfar, gazing at Leifr speculatively as their minds
entertained such a novel idea.
Hegna was the first to step forward to extend his hand to
Leifr in friendship and trust. “If the Rhbus accept a Scipling,
then a Scipling is good enough for the Dvergar.”
They all offered Leifr their fealty and their lives, if he
required them, while Thurid stood nearby, preening himself
unashamedly.
“I knew there was something unique about Leifr, even
before I knew he wasn’t Fridmarr,” he confided to Elbegast
pridefully. “I daresay he’s eager to get back to his own realm. I
promised Fridmarr I’d send him back, although I have no idea
how to go about it.” He chuckled uneasily, glancing sidewise at
Leifr. “It seems a shame to lose such an ally, just when he might
be a help to us against others like Sorkvir.”
“Others like the Dokkur Lavardur and Djofull.”
Elbegast gazed straight at Leifr with his amber eyes. “We need
the arm that can wield that sword.” “A limping swordsman is no
asset,” Leifr replied with a grim smile.
“Our healers can mend the leg,” Elbegast said. “There is a
place for you in Solvorfirth. Hroald is dead. Take Gliru-hals,
if you want to stay. A warrior needs a home, a place of peace
between battles. Other captured settlements will follow the
example of Solvorfirth and overthrow their Dokkalfar warlords,
particularly with you to lead them.”
The forge rumbled with approval, with a louder rumble
from the archway as Raudbjorn hobbled in, using his faithful
halberd for a crutch.
“Raudbjorn stay with Leifr,” he growled with an earnest
scowl furrowing his brow. “Sorkvir’s bane. Scourge of
Dokkalfar. Hammer and sword of Elbegast. Plenty heads will
roll, eh, Leifr?”
“Adventure and fame,” Thurid added approvingly. There
was an ambitious gleam in the wizard’s eyes at the prospect
of such opportunities. “Not to mention the glory.”
Leifr considered his choices for a short moment. If
he returned to the Scipling realm, he would live the life of a
hunted man for the rest of his life. And here, it seemed, he
was expected to spend all his days in wild combat against
the most powerful leaders of the Dokkalfar—wizards
mightier than Sorkvir.
Slowly he shook his head.
Thurid’s nostrils twitched incredulously. His eyes blazed
with outrage. “What! You reject all that? Fridmarr wouldn’t
have turned down such a chance!”
“You’ll get your glory and wealth some other time,
wizard,” Leifr told him. “You’re not going to rest until you’ve
found Ljosa and brought her back from the void.”
“Me!” Thurid gasped. “Such a feat requires a master
wizard, not a mere beginner such as I am. It’s incredibly
dangerous to reach into the void after someone. It takes
enormous amounts of power. It takes—”
“But it can be done?” Leifr interrupted.
Thurid shrugged doubtfully. “Yes, it can be done, but
whether by me or not is a great question. It might require a Hel
journey, which I have never done. Death rather frightens me as
yet, even as a means of acquiring wisdom and immortality. I
think some other wizard might suit you better.”
“I think not,” Leifr said. “You’ll do it, Thurid.”
Elbegast shook his head. “All you need to know is in
those Rhbu rune sticks Fridmarr gave you, Thurid.”
“But some of them were destroyed,” Thurid protested.
“I’ve tried to make copies from memory, but—”
Elbegast smiled. “I think you’ll find that those copies are
now quite accurate, with no errors. I wish you the best of luck
in finding Ljosa and bringing her back. When you are done,
however, summon me with this.” He put a small, wax-covered
parcel in Leifr’s hand. “Or you may save it for some hour of
direst need, and I shall come for you as I would have come for
Fridmarr. Use it wisely.”
He gripped Leifr’s hand in his strong grasp, and Leifr
felt a wave of power break over him, drawing him under the
spell of Elbegast’s influence.
“One day it will be the Dokkur Lavardur that your
followers destroy,” Leifr said. “Sorkvir and all his kind will have
perished.”
Elbegast smiled, and his eyes darkened for a moment.
“I hope you’re speaking a prophecy, Leifr. But I fear it will be
a longer time than either of us are given by the Norns before
Skarpsey is rid of the Dokkur Lavardur and Djofull. The
Dark One has outlived the Rhbus, who once possessed the
powers to destroy him. We must find the strength again, and the
Ljosalfar need the help of warriors like you, Leifr.”
“And Raudbjorn, too,” Raudbjorn rumbled. “Now
Raudbjorn needs drink and food. Even Dvergar food.”
Hegna raised his arms to quiet a mutter of agreement and
the wry chuckles of the dwarfs. “My fellow Dvergar, we have
received a challenge. We’ll show our guests that our hospitality
isn’t always meager and thin. Bring out our best ale and meat;
and from now on, there will be no more watering it down. This
will be a celebration such as these ancient halls have not seen in
many a long day.”
Amid shouts and cheers, they trooped back into the main
hall, where the hearths were heaped with fuel and more lamps
were filled with whale oil and lit. Harps, lutes, and horns that had
not seen much use in many years were brought out and tuned up.
When the feast was about to start, Elbegast rose to his feet
and addressed the company.
“The time has come to reveal the truth about
Fridmarr,” he announced, casting an amused glance at Leifr,
who saw nothing humorous in his memories of impersonating
Fridmarr and was not certain he wanted to know anything
more about him.
“Fridmarr was unjustly accused by many people,”
Elbegast continued. “Everything he did was under my orders,
except his taking the eitur to prove his loyalty to Sorkvir. He
thought it the quickest way to learn Sorkvir’s secrets. Too late, he
realized that he had taken one step too far down the road to
doom.
“It was I who guided him to the ancient fortress of the
Rhbus in Bjartur, where
Endalaus Daudi
was hidden. I told him
how to find the Rhbu and grindstone in Hjaldrsholl to have the
sword sharpened, but it was too late.
“Sorkvir discovered the scheme and made the alog against
all metal among the Ljosalfar. To do so, he corrupted the powers
of the Pentacle. He played cat and mouse so well that Fridmarr
never knew until too late that his duplicity was discovered.
“Bodmarr was allowed to think that he stole the sword,
believing Fridmarr wanted it for Sorkvir. But Sorkvir was too
clever to fool. When Bodmarr was killed, Fridmarr wanted
revenge, but I took him away before Sorkvir could kill him.
“True to his loyalty to me, Fridmarr never revealed that he
was my spy, although a few guessed the truth at Bjartur when he
took away the sword and a very old satchel of Rhbu magic. He
took the satchel against my orders, but he said there was
someone who could use it.“
Thurid pretended to cough so he could hide part of his face
in his sleeve. “I doubted him sometimes myself,” he muttered.
“If only he had told me. But I guess he couldn’t, if he wanted
to deceive Sorkvir.”
“No, he couldn’t trust anyone, not even Bodmarr—-or me,
in the end.” Elbegast sighed. “I thought him safe, but he was not
finished with Sorkvir. He came back as Gotiskolker to make one
more attempt to regain the sword and try to salvage something
from all the harm that had been done. He wanted to purify the
Pentacle, but he had eitur in his veins, and it was destroying his
Ljosalfar powers. The rest you know.”
Elbegast resumed his seat, and the feast began.
While the celebration went on, there was no one in the
lower hall to see the dark-hooded figure that crept from a
crevice and stole onto the marble pavement, to crouch
beside the dark, charred mass of Sorkvir’s ruin. Long, skillful
fingers poked and pried among the remains of the bearskin,
discovering a few fragments of bones, sweeping together small
heaps of ash, and funneling them into a small leather pouch.
After a thorough search for any remaining physical particles of
Sorkvir, the intruder glided away and disappeared into the dark
tunnels behind the vast hall.
Word of Elbegast’s arrival spread quickly, and before
dawn came, nearly every Ljosalfar within a day’s travel had
convened at Hjaldrsholl, hoping for a look at the Wandering
King. Most brought food and drink, pooling it all together
for a feast of epic proportions which threatened to last for days.
At dawn of the second day, Elbegast and his honor guard
rode from the gates of Hjaldrsholl, accompanied by Leifr, Thurid,
Raudbjorn, and a few of the leaders of the Ljosalfar settlement of
Solvorfirth. Elbegast halted to say a last farewell to the
assembled farmers, fishermen, and laborers.
“Enough speeches have been made already,” he called to
them, and they applauded his statement vigorously. “As my final
words, all I have to say is this: Guard your freedom.” Waving,
amid cheers and shouts of acclaim, he turned his horse to ride
away with those who followed him.
“Now I want to see where Fridmarr is buried,” he said
quietly to Thurid. “I wish to pay him my respects.”
Taken aback, Thurid gaped a moment in astonishment. But
recovering quickly, he moved triumphantly forward to lead the
way.
Leifr dropped to the rear, glad to be out of the center of
attention for a time. He let the horse follow the others with little
guidance. His thoughts were filled with the choices he must soon
make.
A hint of motion caught his eye as he chanced to glance
backward. The little gray cat was following. But almost at once,
as his eyes fell on it, the small form seemed to fade into the
shadow of a rock and was gone.
With his suspicions renewed, Leifr urged the horse to