Ross Lawhead (20 page)

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Authors: The Realms Thereunder

Tags: #ebook, #book

“Modwyn just said that they hadn't found all the exits yet, so there're tunnels—passages that those yfelgóp things haven't discovered yet. We came along the river. We slipped in, I know that we can slip out again. Maybe we could—”

“There is no safe passage. No escape.” He bent his head back down to the table and finished by muttering, “If there is no escape for us, why should there be any for you?”

“But we're not a part of this—this world. None of this matters to us—we're not important. They might not bother even chasing us.”

“No.”

“But—”

“LEAVE!”

Freya was shocked—the blood drained from her face, leaving her cold, frozen to the spot. She felt Daniel tugging at her arm and whispering her name, but she pulled her arm out of his hands—this was too important to back down from. “We want to leave!” she yelled at the top of her lungs. “But you won't let us! You have knights! You have magic! You have secret tunnels! Let us go!”

Ealdstan's face twisted into an ugly mask of spite. “Stupid little brown-skinned girl,” he sneered through a clenched jaw. In several unexpectedly quick strides, he approached Freya. His ancient hand gripped her arm and with surprising strength he flung her out of the doorway and into the hall. She staggered a little and then ungracefully fell on her rear.

“Hey!” Daniel shouted. “Don't do that!
Don't
do that!”

Ealdstan ignored him and grabbed the edge of the large metal door and slammed it shut with a fluid motion. And because Daniel was still standing in the doorway, he took some of the force on his shoulder and one of the door's rivets punched into his arm. He closed his eyes as excruciating pain flooded his body. He grabbed his arm and swore with all the worst words he knew. He didn't think he'd ever been hit that hard. He kicked and pounded the door, which was so heavy and strong that it hardly made a noise.

“Oi, you!” Daniel shouted between pounds. “Ealdstan! Get out of here, you coward! Why not take me on, instead of pushing around a girl? Oi! Ealdstan!
Ealdstan!

Daniel pounded and kicked for another moment, until his hands and feet ached. Then he turned and saw that Modwyn and the knights were standing around Freya. Ecgbryt must have helped her up—his hand was still on her shoulder. Freya was looking at him with wide, watery eyes.

“Come, lifiendes,” Swiðgar said. “We have matters to discuss.”

He then turned and they all started down the hall.

Grimacing, Daniel came alongside Freya. “Don't worry, Freya,” he said. “We'll find a way to get home—soon.”

4

They all started down the stairs in silence. Modwyn led them to a room on the fifth level that was nothing more than a completely square chamber with carved ledges in the wall that were used for seating. There was a low metal table in the middle of the room. Modwyn pulled a rope and a small bell tinkled in the distance.

“How long has Ealdstan been thus?” Swiðgar asked.

The door opened and Cnafa stepped into the room. “Bring a map of the Niðerland and send Godmund here,” she instructed, and then turned to Swiðgar. “Ealdstan has been in such spirits for some time, even before the siege,” she replied in a hushed voice. “Listless and melancholic. We do not see him for months on end, and when we do, he passes by without acknowledgment or sign, leaving us to wonder if we have, in truth, seen him at all.”

“I am sorry that my temper overcame me, brother,” Ecgbryt apologised. “You should not have let me hound the man.”

“No, it was well that you did. I doubt many have challenged him of late. And I agree—why not simply wake a band of knights to come and break the siege?” Swiðgar asked gruffly. “Drive the nasty filth back into the deep tunnels. The solution is so simple that it's maddening.”

“I would challenge him, were it my place,” stated Modwyn.

“It would not have been right,” agreed Swiðgar. “Ecgbryt and I can be excused our rudeness—”

The door reopened and Godmund entered with a long scroll, which he placed on the table. He unfurled it to show a map of the underground realm, a large oblong with little branches that represented tunnels leading off the sides. Niðergeard was marked in the middle, a small knot of structures and streets. They started talking about where the yfelgóp army was thickest, where they had come from, and many other details. Daniel watched with fascination as the small military strike was planned and tactics discussed.

“We have no idea where their main force is,” Godmund said.

“We suspect it may be here”—he placed a hand on a section of the map—“but who is to say that they do not move it, or that they are split equally in different areas?”

“What are their main routes into the plain?” Swiðgar asked.

“There is no way to know that either. Seeing that you encountered them, it is possible that they have infiltrated most of the upper tunnels—there would be little enough to prevent the beasts from overrunning them. But do they circulate randomly? Are most of them here? Are they gathered somewhere else? How can we know?”

“None of that matters right now,” came an unexpected voice from among them. All eyes turned to Freya, who was standing near the table, looking down on the map.

“We won't learn everything in just one raid,” Freya continued, her voice quavering slightly. “The important thing is to test their numbers, their strength, and their reaction after that—that will tell us a lot. Then we can judge the appropriate measures to take, once we have evaluated our resources. Then we can go home, you can find a way to break the siege, and so on.”

Ecgbryt smiled grimly and placed a huge hand on Freya's shoulder. “The girl has a good head for these matters,” he said.

“I just want to go home,” Freya said, trying to avoid Daniel's gawking stare.

Swiðgar frowned. “Then it's decided,” he said. “We will raid them, leaving through the main gates here.” He brought his hand down on an area of the map. “Enough talking. That is what we will do next.”

5

In addition to Swiðgar and Ecgbryt, the raiding party consisted of Godmund and three of his best men, his champions. To Daniel they looked like superheroes—stocky with a lot of weight in the chest and shoulders. One of them had a red bushy beard and long plaited hair; his armour was made of medium-sized brass rings, interlocked with one another. One man had black hair and skin that was still slightly olive colour, despite being very pale. The third was a man taller than any knight they had seen so far. He was so tall he looked slightly clumsy and uncomfortable. His whitish-blond hair was uncombed and matted, like a sheepdog's shaggy coat. He carried a spear in the same hand as his shield and casually gripped a massive war hammer in the other.

They were all big and strong, and although their dress varied, they all wore helmets made of iron with a sculpted figure of an ox on the crest. The three new knights moved sluggishly and creakily, slower than the others. Daniel and Freya wondered if they had just been woken—and if they could really stand up to the erratic frenzy of the yfelgópes, especially if there were as many out there as they all imagined.

And then, with no more preparations to be made, they were ready to depart. The six knights mounted their stallions and set off through the city at a gentle canter. The torchlight played on their armour, making it sparkle and shine; the gold tracing reflected the light brilliantly. It looked as if living fire were flowing through the metal.

Freya and Daniel followed, walking behind the six riders, and were soon joined by others. Niðergearders working in smithies, guards in their barracks, and masons in their workshops, seeing the knights pass by, dropped what they were doing, stood, and hurried to fall into step behind them. The silent procession had swelled to over fifty people when the knights reached the large city gate. They stood for a few moments making final preparations: adjusting the harnesses of their mounts, shifting weapons in their hands, and whispering short prayers.

Godmund, Shield Thane of Niðergeard and leader of the war host, motioned to two guardsmen on either side of the gate. The gigantic hinges started to creak. The large entrance opened a crack, and then— A bell was heard in the distance—it was a deep, solid toll coming from the other end of the city. The crowd tensed and started to mutter in confusion.

“What's going on?” Freya asked. Daniel shook his head.

The effect of the bell on the knights was instantaneous and dramatic. Several of them jerked back hard on their horses' reigns, causing them to rear upwards and turn around. “Stop the gate!” yelled Godmund to the guard above him. “Shut it!”

The knights leaned forward in their saddles, scanning the buildings in front of them, ready to gallop back into the city.

“Hold!” cried Swiðgar. “Hold! Wait for the horns!”

The gate shut behind the knights. Godmund turned to Ecgbryt.

“Get everyone to the Tall Tower!” he shouted. Ecgbryt trotted through the crowd that opened a path for him.

“Everyone, this way!” Ecgbryt bellowed, leading them back into the city.

“What's going on?” Daniel shouted.

“Niðergeard is being attacked,” someone answered behind him. “That bell tolls a breach at the south wall.”

Just then, the sound of a high-pitched horn was heard from a far corner of the city. The other knights spurred their horses and galloped off along the smooth stone streets and were soon out of view.

“Hurry now,” Ecgbryt said, shepherding the crowd. “Move quickly. I do not know how they breached the wall without being seen, but I suspect devilry!”

6

Daniel and Freya tried their level best to stay with the crowd as they fled for the safety of the Langtorr. The streets, buildings, and city guards blurred past them as they struggled to keep up with Ecgbryt.

Horns sounded from other parts of the city. Freya and Daniel kept their eyes on the Tall Tower, remembering its thick iron doors. Freya grabbed Daniel's shoulder and pointed up at the tower. Following her finger, Daniel saw a flicker of bright red and yellow in one of the windows several stories up. It was Ealdstan, gripping the window frame, with one foot on its ledge. As they watched, he launched himself forward and fell, his robes billowing and flapping around him like flames on a burning arrow. He quickly dropped out of sight, below the roofline of the houses. Daniel tried to shout to Ecgbryt, but it was no use, he couldn't make his voice heard over the clamor.

They had just turned a corner and had their first glimpse of the Tall Tower's gates when the yfelgópes caught up with them. The creatures had scaled the buildings and were jumping from roof to roof towards the centre of the city, out of the reach of the guards.

Nine of the creatures dropped into the road ahead of the crowd. Ecgbryt halted his horse and ushered the fleeing townspeople down a side street. The yfelgópes, each of them sprouting sharp bits of metal from joints and fingers, ran towards them, snarling and barking.

From around the corner of a building, Daniel and Freya watched Ecgbryt charge forward, galloping into one end of the line of attackers. With his spear couched in his arm, he drove into the swarming knot of yfelgópes, skewering a creature on his left with his spear and batting another two away with the edge of his shield. Releasing his spear, he drew his axe and sliced cleanly through the neck of an yfelgóp that was slashing at his leg and stirrup. His horse reared underneath him as one of the twisted men raked at the horse's flank. Ecgbryt kept his saddle and brought his axe down into the attacker's head with a juicy
thok!

The yfelgópes left standing became even more enraged and bestial. With quick, darting movements, they surrounded the lone knight. Ecgbryt reared his horse to make a break out of the ring when a shout rang out from a side street.

Five of the city guards, led by Breca, the guard at the Western Well, swept upon the invaders in a pale, gleaming fury. Their speed was controlled and effective—every blow that fell was either crippling or deadly. In a very short time the yfelgópes were dispatched.


Hwaet
, Breca,” Ecgbryt said, addressing the guardsman.

“What news?”

“The wall has been breached. Few have entered—very few. It is possible that this attack is a feint.”

“Or that the force was not so great as we thought,” Ecgbryt suggested.

“Perhaps,” replied Breca, signaling to his men. “We go to join the forces already guarding the Carnyx. The rest have been ordered to sweep the city.”


Swa swa
, I will join that number,” Ecgbryt replied, tugging on his mount's reins, “when I have delivered the rest to safety.”

“God by ye,” Breca said, and turned to order his men.

Ecgbryt urged his horse forward and away after the fleeing citizens. Plucking his upright spear from the chest of its victim, he caught up with the crowd just as the first and fastest of them entered the gate of the Langtorr. Daniel, with Freya clinging to his arm, turned just as he started up the steps of the torr. He saw Ecgbryt halt his horse and dismount as people flooded in around him. He heard growls and screams as yfelgópes leapt from the rooftops, and two of the knights in the raiding party came into sight, being pursued by a swarm of the twisted creatures.

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