The Revenge of the Dwarves (77 page)

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Authors: Markus Heitz

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BOOK: The Revenge of the Dwarves
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“Accursed actor!” Swift as lightning Flagur seized the diamond. He stared at his own fist; from deep down, dark laughter sounded and his pink eyes flashed with cruelty. “At last!” he bawled, jumping up. “The trick worked! Ubar be praised!” Sirka went to his side, brandishing her battlestick at the showman. “See what a magnificent rune master I am,” he continued. “Feel my power!” Then his countenance transformed itself. He grinned at Rodario, who had drawn his sword courageously. “What do you think of my acting skills?”

“What?” The theater man blinked. His breath was labored and he looked as if someone had just yelled in his ear to rouse him from deep sleep.

“My performance. How was it?”

“Your… your
performance
? Very funny! I nearly cut your throat!” Rodario gave a rueful glance in Tungdil’s direction. “Great hero! You’re looking particularly relaxed.” Tungdil grinned, then he laughed out loud and all the others joined in. “Right, I understand! You’ve rehearsed this little scene to get me really scared?” He pulled a face. “I’ll have my own back for that one, I promise. Nobody challenges the Emperor of the Stage with impunity! Nobody.”

Tungdil patted him on the shoulder. “You’re right. I’d already spoken to him about our worries. Lot-Ionan examined him with magic and couldn’t find anything untoward.”

“It was good of you to alert us,” said Lot-Ionan, smiling. “But you deserved a fright after your idiocy back there—”

“Thanks, thanks. Got it now.” Rodario cut him short. Can we get back to what’s important?”

Sirka and Flagur sat down again, grinning. But Flagur’s mirth quickly disappeared. “The diamond never used to look like that before!” He passed it to Sirka.

“Cracks, black patches,” she observed. “Where are they from? The unslayable’s touch?” She held it to the light. “It looks as if it could shatter at any moment.”

“That’s the only explanation I can come up with,” Lot-Ionan stroked his snowy beard—or at least what was left of it after the fireblast in the cave. “I expect the älfar forced it; he must have used the last of his own magic to break its protective shield.”

“And the glow we saw: was it the power of the stone or the unslayable’s magic?” wondered Tungdil.

“It was the diamond. It was a pure, clear light. The contamination must have happened shortly after that.” Lot-Ionan looked at Flagur and Sirka. “It’s vital to know whether the artifact will work with the diamond in this state or not.”

“Might it not produce the very opposite effect?” Rodario asked to inspect the stone and rubbed it gently with one finger. Even though it seemed uneven, the surface was as smooth as glass. He could not detect the cracks. “If the evil
is in there, won’t we just risk waking it up? Or to put it another way,” he said, putting the stone in the middle of the table, “what if the artifact summons up evil instead of repressing it?”

They fell silent and watched the diamond follow the movement of the waves, tipping this way and that. It looked so harmless; however mighty and significant, it betrayed no sign of the power stored within. No one knew what its effect might be.

“Did you feel anything when you used the stone, revered magus?” asked Sirka. “You know about magic. You’ve studied it. Was there anything odd?”

Lot-Ionan recalled Nudin’s voice and mysterious appearance. “No,” he lied calmly. He assumed the events related to himself rather than to the diamond. “No, it allowed me to use it. And I’m a long way from being on the side of evil.” He took a quick gulp of his wine and, as he bent forward, felt a stabbing pain in his back. He nearly dropped the beaker.

Tungdil took a deep breath. “It’s probably best not to tell the rulers our doubts.”

Rodario had got over his sulk and was joining in again. “I quite agree. They would rather send an army to the Black Abyss against the monsters rather than risk using an artifact that can’t be trusted.” He flicked the diamond. “I’m for trying it out. It might speed things up. Either it will work and no one will realize we were skeptical about it here tonight on the
Waveskimmer
, or it won’t work. Then they can still send out their army.”

“To put it another way: we have no choice,” said Flagur.
“It won’t be long before the monsters notice the barrier is down. The diamond must be put back in its place.”

Lot-Ionan raised his head and gazed out at the sunset-lit waters. “As a last resort there’s still me. The force of the diamond can still provide magic enough to repel the first attack wave.”

“You are sure you have regained all your previous knowledge?” said Sirka carefully, trying to reduce the half insult to a quarter insult.

The magus smiled at her. It was a confident smile, and completely convincing. “I feel I have the power of two magi,” he responded. “Blood has reached all parts of my body now and has washed away the last traces of the stone I was turned to.” He touched himself on the temple. “Here, too. I can see the formulae clearly again like in my heyday.” After a short pause he added, “This
is
my heyday. The fight with the unslayable has shaken me awake.”

“Then let’s leave it at that,” Tungdil summed up and then stretched. “We’ll go to the Outer Lands and we’ll employ the diamond. After that, may the gods Vraccas and Ubar show what they can do for us, because we will have done everything we can to avert disaster.” He stood up and strode to the door. “Excuse me for a moment.”

“Dwarf-water offering for Elria?” Rodario joked. “Be kind to the goddess. She has let us off lightly more than once.”

Tungdil laughed and left the cabin for a pee. He had chosen to do it from the bows of the ship. Elria’s goodwill or not, his own water was determined to leave him now.

When he had relieved himself he stayed at the railing,
experiencing the gentle rise and fall of the vessel and enjoying the cool air.

For him water was still an uncanny element. Many of his kind would steadfastly refuse to go near a lake or even a stream. Or even to step into a big puddle. They believed Elria had cursed them. The undergroundlings, on the other hand, seemed to relish travel on water. What a difference.

He gazed over the light swell on the lake’s surface. It looked like liquid night that had dripped down from the sky and collected on the earth.

“I’d like to congratulate you on defeating my creator,” said a clear quiet voice behind him. Tungdil recognized it at once. Death had returned.

Swiveling slowly, he saw the älfar seated cross-legged near the chest where the extra canvas was kept. His spear lay at his feet. His armor showed black against skin that was otherwise pale. Long hair hung down over his face. His gauntleted hands were resting on his knees and in one armored fist he held a lock of black hair. “What will you do now?”

Tungdil knew he himself was only carrying a knife. “What is your name?”

“My begetter never gave me one. He said my enemies would find a name to suit me.” He did not take his eyes off Tungdil. He seemed alert but not aggressive or nervous, as if aware of his superior strength. “But the names I’ve heard don’t please me. Nobody wants to be known by a curse. And so I have chosen Aiphatòn. Like the star.” He raised his right arm and pointed to the sky, where it glittered against the dark. “It is the life-star of the elves. My begetter
said the star would grow dim whenever an elf died in Girdlegard. In the last few orbits I could hardly see it at all. Something’s happening with the elves.”

“Most of them are waging war and are probably being wiped out. Because they are guilty of treason against Girdlegard,” Tungdil explained. “Do you consider yourself an elf?”

“I look like an elf. Am I not an elf?” came the surprising question.

“What did your begetter tell you that you were?”

“He told me nothing. But he and the creating spirit mother looked like elves.” He lowered his head and his face was hidden under the curtain of hair. “I am glad he is dead. He demanded and committed atrocities.” His metal hand scraped over the tionium plates sewn into his flesh.

“Is that why you told us where your begetter was heading?”

“Yes. I sensed you would defeat him. I was not able to.” He raised his head once more. “What will you do now?”

“We…” Tungdil hesitated. The älfar did not know that he had been born as the elves’ deadliest enemy. It might well be that he was playing a low trick and that he was pursuing the same despicable ends as his father before him. But if he wanted the diamond, why was he not attacking?

“You don’t trust me, although I spared your life in Toboribor? Although I told you where to find my begetter? And you are still alive although I could so easily have killed you and tossed you overboard?” He stood up with a swift and elegant movement that combined strength and agility. “Then I shall tell you what I want. Take me to the elves
that are different from my creator father. I know there are elves that are good and peace-loving. I wish to live amongst them.” He stepped out of the shadows toward the dwarf.

Tungdil saw his dark eyes. “You are not an elf,” he said solemnly. “You are an älfar. They are merciless enemies of the elves, Aiphatòn. You cannot live with them. They would kill you outright.”

“Why? I have not harmed them.”

“But you belong to the race that persecuted their kind for a very long time and nearly wiped them out. They will never forgive you your lineage.”

The älfar clicked his tongue. “Let me speak to them and we’ll see.” He folded the black lock of hair into a piece of waxed cloth and slid it inside his glove.

Tungdil shook his head. “Aiphatòn, listen to me. I advise you to hide away from dwarves and humans and elves. No one will see you without feeling fear and hatred. Leave Girdlegard and seek your own kind.”

“But I don’t want to join those you call älfar,” he hissed, baring his teeth. “If they are like my begetter it’s best I kill them all.” He raised his hand and reached for the spear that was still lying on the deck. The runes on the weapon started to glow. It leaped into his hand. “I don’t want to be like them.”

Tungdil still did not have the slightest idea whether the älfar could be trusted. Everything pointed to the opposite: both what he knew from stories and what he had personal experience of. Sinthoras, Caphalor and Ondori were the älfar he had met in combat himself. But then there had been Narmora, the half-älfar woman who had been Furgas’s
companion. In spite of her ancestry she had fought for the good and had paid a high price: she had surrendered her happiness and the lives of her children. Her own life, too.

“What can you tell me about your begetter and the dwarves?” he asked, to turn the conversation in a different direction.

“They are dead. What is there to say?”

Tungdil hesitated. “Did you see Furgas? The man who was kept captive by the dwarves?”

“Yes.” Aiphatòn raised his armored hand. “It was he who turned me into what I am. My begetter asked him to. He made me like I am. He was their…” He struggled to find the word. “They did what he said and they followed his orders,” was how he expressed it. “There was a lot that I heard.”

“He was their leader?”

“Yes, that’s it. He discovered the island together with the dwarves, and he came with soldiers to take it over. The humans all had to work for him. The magister made machines that he gave to the dwarves and they took them away. He made the constructions he sent through the mountain. They were to locate the monsters. And it was for the monsters that he built the tunnel.” The älfar sat next to Tungdil at the gunwale. “He was in Toboribor, too, looking for orcs to use with his other machines. That’s when he found my creators and the orcs. My creators gave him my siblings and he took them away and made new creatures out of them.”

“How did he know about the magic source? He’s a magister technicus, not a magus.”

“I don’t know. I just know
that
he did.”

However painful it was, Tungdil had to believe the älfar. He had heard the truth first from the mouth of Bandilor and now Aiphatòn was confirming it. Tungdil had wished to hear a different version.

The älfar looked out over the waves. “I’ve told you what I want, I’ve told you what I know and where I’m from. Now tell me what you are going to do.”

“We’re going to the Outer Lands—”

“To the monsters Furgas spoke of?” he interrupted.

“No, not to the west. To the north.” And before Aiphatòn could ask, he said, “You cannot come with us.”

Aiphatòn shrugged his shoulders helplessly. It was difficult to read his state of mind from his face: the black eyes hid all feeling. But his body language spoke of deep distress. “What shall I do here in Girdlegard where nobody will have me?” A red teardrop ran down his cheek, leaving a pink smear. “I have nowhere to go. I only have enemies.”

By now Tungdil was convinced that Aiphatòn was genuine. “Come with me, I’ll introduce you—”

“No.” Aiphatòn’s attitude was determined. He had reached a decision. “If there is no place for me in Girdlegard, then I will make a place for myself.” He smiled kindly. “Whatever you are planning, I wish you success. I am sure we will meet again.” He vaulted over the side of the ship and slipped silently down into the water, the waves closing over his head.

Tungdil leaned over the side. He could not see anything. Aiphatòn was gone as if he had never existed.

“Hey, what’s up?” the watch called out, noticing the dwarf. “Man overboard?” The man came nearer.

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