Dolor and Shadow

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Dolor and Shadow Page 52

by Angela Chrysler


  Exhaling, Rune barked a loud laugh.

  “Bergen,” he said, swinging a leg over Astrid and dropping his weight to the ground. With wide strides, he hustled toward the bear-like mass of Bergen, who beamed.

  “Rune,” Bergen said and matched Rune’s lead.

  Sliding from his horse, Bergen sauntered out to meet his king. They embraced, punched each other in the shoulder, and exploded into a set of laughs that left tears in their eyes.

  Clutching Astrid’s bridle, Kallan followed a great distance behind Rune, careful to keep her guard raised and her focus on Bergen.

  “The full moon was a fortnight ago!” Bergen roared, adding a second jab to Rune’s unwounded shoulder.

  “We were detained,” Rune said.

  Several yards behind him, Kallan came to a stop as Bergen’s eyes met hers and the grin on his face fell.

  “By the fires of Muspellsheim,” the berserker cursed.

  The tips of Kallan’s fingers drummed the air, aching to pull on her Seidr. The movement caught Bergen’s eye and he risked a glance to her palm, knowing very well what she was. Cautiously, his hand slid from the pommel to the hilt of his sword, his eyes ever fixed on hers and they moved in the same instant.

  A flame erupted in Kallan’s hand as Bergen raised his sword and Rune jumped between them, his arms spread between them both.

  “Stand down,” Rune shouted. “Stand down. Bergen, sheath your weapon. Kallan—”

  Kallan glanced at Rune then restored her attention to the berserker who stood arms raised with great sword poised. After a heavy pause, Bergen slowly lowered his blade, careful to match Kallan’s pace. Rune exhaled and Kallan, ever vigilant, extinguished her Seidr.

  “Now then,” Rune said with a relieved huff. “Kallan, daughter of Eyolf, Queen and Lady of Lorlenalin, this is Bergen, Son of Tryggve, Lord and heir of Gunir. He is my brother.”

  Kallan looked to Rune, to Bergen, to Rune, and Bergen pulled his helmet from his head, freeing the long, black braids that fell to his waist. Kallan gazed at the berserker. Her attention lingered on the deep scar above his right eye: a souvenir of their earliest encounters. Aside from the length of his hair, his eyes, the scar, and Bergen having spent a considerable amount more time in the barracks, the berserker matched his king’s appearance in almost every detail.

  “Kallan will be accompanying us to Gunir,” Rune spoke, cutting an air of regality through the tension that hovered between the lady and his brother.

  “Like Hel I will,” Kallan said.

  “I don’t see how you’ve a choice,” Bergen said.

  “I’ll not be dragged about by this uskit!”

  Bergen raised his sword and Kallan relit her Seidr.

  “Lady Kallan,” Rune said, “has been invited as my guest.”

  “I decline,” Kallan said, balancing her blue orbs.

  “She will accompany me to Gunir as my guest…” Rune furrowed his brow at Kallan, forcing a civil tone in his voice. “…or be taken there by force…with rope.”

  “Gladly,” Bergen said. Rune shifted a warning look to Bergen.

  “There…” Rune gave the same warning look to Kallan. “…she and I will assemble to discuss our terms for peace.”

  Kallan shifted her attention to Bergen and then to Rune before finally lowering her arms and extinguishing her flames.

  “Now,” Rune said with a great effort to bring about their reconciliation. “Shake hands.”

  Kallan and Bergen didn’t move.

  “Shake hands, Kallan,” Rune said.

  With a silent glance from one brother to the next, Kallan extended a hand to Bergen, who took it, shook once, then snapped their hands down with vehemence.

  Rune grinned with a finality that put the topic to rest.

  “Kallan has agreed to ride with us,” Rune said visibly delighted.

  “Sail,” Bergen corrected with a tone that sounded as displeased with the arrangement as Kallan looked.

  Rune furrowed his brow. “You brought the ships?”

  In the distance, a warrior led Freyja by the reins to where Rune and Bergen stood.

  “There is no direct water way from Gunir to the Raumelfr,” Bergen said. “And there is no crossing the Raumelfr without ships.”

  With her defenses raised, Kallan toggled her attention between the brothers, and backed into Astrid.

  “How far are we?” Rune asked, accepting Freyja’s reins from the warrior.

  “Three days without favoring winds.” Bergen’s answer forced Kallan’s attention that neither noticed.

  Rune nodded. “Then we shall embark.”

  The command sent the men back through the wood toward the shores ahead.

  Clutching Astrid’s reins, Kallan remained immobile, and moved only when Rune stopped and extended an open hand to her.

  A cold in her eyes had settled in.

  “Don’t think this changes anything, Ljosalfr,” Kallan said and Rune lowered his hand to his side. “The first chance I get, I’m going home.”

  Rune dropped his shoulders. “Does what we’ve been through mean nothing?”

  “Should it?” There was a bite in her words.

  “No.” Rune nodded and clenched his fist. “I guess not.”

  After several moments, Kallan pulled on Astrid’s reins and, with a cold shoulder, followed Bergen down to the ships that would carry her to Gunir.

  EPILOGUE

  Olaf sat hunched at his desk. He clutched the tankard in his hand and let his blond hair cover the map. His eyes lingered on Dan’s Reach, where he stared, unable to pull his musings away from the southern lands and Forkbeard.

  He would win back the land of the Northern Way and the people there. They would follow him, abandon their gods, or die. The Empire would hear of his deeds and they would support him. He was certain.

  A sudden sharp chill made him scowl, but before he could bark ‘get out,’ a thick sleep invaded him and he felt his anger ebb. A drugged complacence took its place and he turned to the Seidkona with hair as black as a raven’s wing and eyes as gold as the desert sun.

  “Well?” Fand said with her slick grin poised so perfectly on her lips. They were the color of plums he had seen from the far east. “Where is it?” she asked and his arousal subsided.

  “I lost it,” he growled and turned back to the desk, his map, and brooding.

  “You lost it,” Fand whispered and slid across the carpet of the lavishly decorated tent.

  “We were ambushed,” Olaf said. He threw back his tankard and downed the rest of his mead. “We lost everything, including the witch.”

  “So…” Fand was no longer grinning. “Go get her.”

  “She’s in Alfheim.”

  “She’s in…No matter. It shouldn’t be too hard to retrieve her.”

  Olaf stood, shoving his chair back as he came to his full height. As if boasting his power, he shoved his face into Fand’s and studied the gold that encircled her irises.

  “You never told me she was Lorlenalin’s queen.”

  If Fand ever looked off guard, it was in that moment, just before she smiled and emitted a soft laugh. She stroked the yellow strands of his beard as if patting it down into the fur lapels of his coat.

  “Does it matter?” she asked, not bothering to look in his eyes.

  “It matters,” he said. “My army isn’t equipped to take on the Dokkalfar. She’ll come after me and my men and not even your poisons can hold her back.”

  When she refused to look at him, Olaf caught her by the wrist, forcing her eyes to his.

  “I am organizing a war against Forkbeard,” he said. “We are in the middle of an invasion. I don’t have the resources to defend myself against the Alfar armies. Their numbers are too great. You want the pouch?” Fand yanked her wrist free. “Go get it yourself.”

  “You would give up your chance for eternal life?” she asked.

  “Once I have reclaimed my father’s land, I can move on Alfheim and strip the queen of her pouc
h, her virtue, and her pride,” Olaf said. “Once I have taken back what is mine, then I claim eternal life for myself. Until then, my goal is Forkbeard.”

  Fand turned her back and strode to the door, taking the thick air with her.

  “You will never see your father’s land,” Fand said, stopping at the door, “so long as I have breath in me.”

  She pulled back the hide and a gust of cold engulfed the room as she peered at the king.

  “Forkbeard will be the death of you,” she whispered and, releasing the hide, she took the form of a raven and flew from Olaf’s tent before the hide fell back. The cold caw of the raven lingered like death upon his throat.

  ###

  Thank you for your support. May the kindest of words always find you.

  – Angela B. Chrysler

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  About the Author:

  Angela B. Chrysler is a writer, logician, and die-hard nerd who studies philosophy, theology, historical linguistics, music composition, and medieval European history in New York with a dry sense of humor and an unusual sense of sarcasm.

  Website: http://www.angelabchrysler.com/

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  PRONUNCIATION GUIDE

  A complete list with audio is available at http://www.angelabchrysler.com/pronunciation-guide/

  Alfr (Alf) Elf

  Alfar (Al-far) Elves

  Alfheim (Alf-hame) Elf Home

  Bergen Tryggveson (Bear-gen Treeg-vay-son) Ljosalfar and berserker

  Caoilinn (Kway-linn) Ljosalfar

  Daggon (Day-gon) Dokkalfar

  Dokkalfr (Do-kalf) Dark elf

  Dokkalfar (Do-kal-far) Dark Elves

  Dubh Linn (Doov Linn) Dublin, Ireland

  Dvergr (D-vare-g) Singular

  Dvergar (D-vare-gar) Plural See “Regarding the Dvergar” at www.angelabchrysler.com

  Eilif (A-leef) Dokkalfar

  Eire’s Land (Air’s Land) Ireland

  Elding (El-ding) A mysterious metal infused with the Seidr only used by the Dokkalfar and the Dvergar.

  Elding (El-ding) The age in which the Alfar reach full maturity and stop aging.

  Finn (Fin) The Old Norse word for the Sami

  Finntent (fin-tent) The Old Norse words for a portable teepee-styled tent still used by the Sami

  Fjandinn (Fee-yan-din) The old Norse equivalent to the Christian word “Devil” used by Norsemen prior to the introduction of the Christian culture.

  Freyja (Fray-ya) Norse goddess

  Gamme (Ga-may) The Old Norse word for an earthen home still used by the Sami

  Ginnungagap (Gi-noon-ga-gap) The Great Gap

  Gudrun (goo-droon) Dokkalfar

  Gunir (Goo-neer) The Ljosalfar city in Alfheim

  Hel (Hel) Loptr’s daughter, Hel, guardian and overseer of Helheim

  Helheim (Hel-hame) The Norse version of the Underworld where Loptr’s daughter, Hel, resides.

  Idunn (I-thoon or I-doon) Norse goddess

  Jotun (Yo-toon) Giants

  Jotunheim (Yo-toon-hame) The home of the giants

  Kallan Eyolfdottir (Ka-lon A-olf-do-teer) Dokkalfar

  Loptr (Lopt) The Old Norse name for Loki

  Lorlenalin (Lor-len-a-lin) The Dokkalfar city in Alfheim

  Ljosalfr (Lee-yos-alf) Light Elf

  Ljosalfar (Lee-yos-al-far) Light Elves

  Midgard (Mid-gard) Literal translattion “Middle-Earth.” Midgard is the human realm.

  Nidingr (Ni-thing) Literal translation: “Nothing.” The status of “outlaw” given to a dishonorable coward who has been stripped of his station, property, and citizenship in Norse culture.

  Odinn (O-thin or O-din) Norse god

  Olaf Tryggvason (O-lof Treeg-va-son) Historically, the first king of Norway.

  Note: Olaf Tryggvason has no relation to Bergen or Rune whose last name is Tryggveson. The name of Olaf’s father was “Trygg” while the father of Rune and Bergen is “Tryggve.”

  Seidr (Say-th or Seed) The life source bound to the elements and all living things and referred to as “magic” in the Deserts.

  Seidkona (Say-th-kona or Seed-ko-na) Old Norse for “Witch”

  Surtr (sert) Lord of the Fire Giants

  Sigyn (See-gin) Loptr’s wife

  Svartálfr (Svart-alf) Black Elf

  Svartálfar (Svart-alf-ar) Black Elves

  Svartálfaheim (Svart-alf-a-hame) Home of the Black Elves

  Thing (Thing) The Norwegian Parliament still in existence today in Norway.

  Tryggve (Treeg-vay) Ljosalfar

  Wicce (Witch) Anglo-Saxon word for “Witch”

  A look into Lorlenalin’s Lies: Tales of the Drui Book #2

  CHAPTER 1

  Rune followed Bergen down to the water’s edge. Before they reached the shore, Kallan could see the masts of six wide, longships stretched from the beach where Bergen had them pulled to land with roller logs. The water lapped their sterns causing the wood to whine against the current.

  The keel of each ship rose up and out of the river, reaching to the skies at each end, where they curled into themselves at the top of each bow and stern. Several of the men had settled the yardarms into the trestles and were preparing the sails while others raised the final mast. With a series of ropes, raw strength, and the aid of the mast step, the Ljosalfar pushed the mast upright and secured it into the keelson within the hull.

  Ljosalfar collected fresh water from the river, pouring it into large barrels for drinking while others were busy dumping their weapons and mail into their sea chests onboard.

  “Your majesty…here!” cried a man with an aged and unscarred face. He waved fiercely from the farthest boat in an attempt to attract Rune’s attention. With a nod, Rune pulled a saddlebag from Freyja’s pack and dumped it on the ground before moving to take Astrid’s reins from Kallan who tightened her grip and scowled.

  “Well, you don’t mean to leave him here, do you?” Rune asked in reply. He tried again and, succeeding this time, snatched the reins from Kallan.

  She watched as Rune led Astrid and Freyja down to the water’s edge where a lone ship had docked parallel to the shore. Following the other, Freyja, then Astrid, stepped over the side of the longboat, tipping the entire boat high onto its side. As the horses stepped in, the boat rocked with vigor, forcing the old man to cling to the mast for balance. After accepting the reins from Rune, the old man gave an affectionate, but hearty pat to Astrid’s deep russet neck and gave Rune a welcomed nod.

  He paused for a moment to ogle the unusual breed that was Astrid before running his hand through Freyja’s white, silken locks. Paying more mind to the horses than his footing, the old man caught his ankle on a large mass of orange and white as a cat scampered across the ship in pursuit of a rodent. With a slew of curses, the old man recovered his balance and led Astrid and Freyja to the center of the boat. There, he tied their reins to the mast alongside a handful of fjord horses and a charcoal gray, courser mare.

  “That is Gunnar.”

  Kallan jumped, unaware Rune had returned to her side.

  “He is our horse master,” Rune said, throwing the load over his shoulder.

  With interest, Kallan watched as Gunnar the horse master offered a bucket of grains to Astrid, who ate graciously, happy for the change from apples and grass.

  “He couldn’t be in better hands,” Rune assured her. “Come.”

  When she refused to take his hand, he wrapped an arm around her back and cautiously, led her down to the boats, stopping at the nearest ship.

  The edge of the water sloshed onto
the sands as Rune led Kallan to the gangplank. She took in the ropes and the tie lines, and the grand oak strakes that overlapped each other. Men had taken their seat on top of their sea chests and others had already positioned their oars through the oar ports. A few were preoccupied with fastening their shields to the side of the boat.

  The instant weight of seventy sets of eyes turned her way as her foot touched down on the deck of the boat, and she lowered herself from the gangplank into the first of her enemy’s territory. Kallan raised her face to the sudden silence that blanketed the ship and slowly took in every face staring back with as much hate as she harbored for each.

  Without a word, she released the gunwale as Rune came up behind her. Stopping long enough to acknowledge his men, he extended a hand and directed her to the ship’s stern. Her muffled footfalls sounded too clearly over the river’s gentle waves as Kallan continued to shift her eyes from port to starboard taking in every face that condemned her presence on their ship.

  With a jerk, Kallan stopped too suddenly as she neared the aft of the ship. Bergen’s bare back greeted her. Thin, pale scars made visible in the sun’s light, marred the length of his spine. He bustled with a rope at the side oar, unaware of her arrival. Behind her, Rune closed in, preventing her from bounding back the way she came and running, full speed, back to shore. Her face rose in a sneer as she clenched her fist with the urge to fire. The cold stares of the Ljosalfar soldiers bore down with reminder that, at one point or another, she had attempted to kill each one of them.

  Kallan had nearly finished plotting the dash to Astrid and her escape route, when Rune jarred her thoughts and pulled her out of her daydream with his own petty bickering.

  “Don’t make me remind you who is king,” Rune said.

  “By a random chance granted to you by a few seconds and Freyr’s sense of humor,” Bergen retorted.

  “I have to shove this damn arrow head through my shoulder and I’d prefer a heavy dose of mead to do it, now give me the booze!”

 

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