These thoughts were followed by another revealing discovery. In the flickering torchlight he had taken the rounded objects on the palisades to be gargoyles, but on closer inspection they turned out to be skulls. The heads of three dozen dead orcs were impaled on the defenses.
Tungdil doubted the wisdom of baiting the enemy in this fashion. As a deterrent, an array of orcish skulls had about as much chance of warding off the orcs as a dead bird would protect a field from crows. In fact, the sight of the severed heads was more likely to incite the brutes to wholesale slaughter.
From this Tungdil deduced that he had crossed the border into Idoslane and that the men hired to defend the settlement were trained fighters but foolhardy with it. Only mercenaries paid by the skull would be reckless enough to provoke the beasts so gruesomely. The bloodied heads had been set out as bait to draw in nearby bands of orcs.
“What are you waiting for?” he called indignantly. “Let me in!”
“Greetings, groundling! This is Goodwater in the fair land of Idoslane. Have you sighted orcs on your travels?”
“No,” he shouted, struggling to keep his temper. To be referred to as a “groundling” was more than he could bear. “And if you don’t mind, I’m no more a groundling than you men are grasslings: I’m a dwarf.”
The sentries laughed. At their signal, the right half of the double door creaked open and Tungdil was allowed to pass. Inside, another pair of heavily armed soldiers was waiting for him. They eyed him distrustfully.
“Well, blow me down,” one of them muttered. “If it isn’t a real-life dwarf! They’re not as tiny as everyone says they are.”
Tungdil was once again reminded that humans knew almost nothing about dwarves. He bristled under the sentries’ stares. “If you’ve quite finished gawking, maybe one of you could inform me where I might find a bed.”
The sentries directed him to the nearest tavern, which lay a short distance along the dusty street. Above the door, a shabby platter and a similarly dilapidated tankard indicated that the place sold food and beer, although, by the look of it, it wouldn’t be anything fancy.
In spite of his best efforts to slip in unseen, the rusty hinges squealed excitedly as soon as he lifted the wooden crossbar and pushed open the door. It was hard to imagine a simpler yet more effective means of guarding against intruders: The shriek of neglected metal was impossible to ignore. The dwarf hesitated for a moment, then entered.
Seated at the tavern’s roughly fashioned tables were ten villagers holding tankards of ale or mead. Tungdil’s nose was assailed immediately by the smell of food combined with tobacco and sweat. The villagers wore simple garments: hessian or coarse woolen shirts to protect against the evening chill. Their feet were encased in thick stockings and laced shoes.
Two of the men nodded hesitantly in acknowledgment; the others were too busy staring. It was always the same.
The dwarf returned the greeting and took his place at an empty table. Naturally the furniture was far too big for him, but he made himself comfortable and ordered his supper and a large ale. In no time a steaming plate of cornmeal and mincemeat was laid in front of him, followed by a tankard of beer.
He tucked in ravenously. The meal tasted wholesome, a little burned, and somewhat bland, but at least it was warm. The pale watery beer disappointed his dwarven palate, but he drank it all the same. He had no desire to cause offense, especially when there was the matter of his lodgings still to settle.
One of the villagers was looking at him so intently that he could almost feel his piercing stare. Tungdil returned his gaze unflinchingly.
“What beats me,” said the man, raising his voice so everyone in the tavern could hear, “is what a groundling would be doing in our village.” A ring of smoke left his pipe and shot toward the sooty ceiling.
“Breaking his journey.” Tungdil chewed his mouthful deliberately, dropped his spoon into the gloop, and wiped his beard. A belligerent villager was the last thing he needed. It was obvious from his manner that the man was sparring for a fight. Well, he’s picked the wrong dwarf! “I’ve no desire to argue with you, estimable sir,” he said firmly. “I’ve spent the past few nights in the open, and Vraccas willing, I’d like to sleep on something other than twigs and leaves.”
There was an eruption of mocking laughter. Some of the villagers prostrated themselves in front of the pipe smoker, calling him “sir” and “your honor”; one even went so far as to set an empty tankard like a crown on his head. They evidently found it amusing that Tungdil should address a humble villager in terms of respect.
“You think you’re quite something, don’t you, groundling?” The man hurled the tankard to the floor and faced his friends angrily. “Go ahead and laugh, you harebrained idiots! What if he was sent by orcs to spy on us? You won’t find it so funny when he sneaks out of bed and opens the gates!”
The mirth stopped abruptly.
At once Tungdil realized he would have to tread carefully. On a practical level, that meant sticking to plain speech. It was bad enough that he was a dwarf, let alone a dwarf with fancy manners.
“Dwarves and orcs are sworn enemies,” he said earnestly. “A dwarf would never throw in his lot with an orc.” He extended his hand toward the man. “Here, have my word that I mean you no harm. I swear it by Vraccas, creator of all dwarves.”
The villager stared at the sturdy fingers and weighed the matter in his mind. At last he gave the hand a brief shake and turned away.
The publican brought the relieved Tungdil another beer.
“Don’t mind him,” he said quickly. “We’re all on edge at the moment. So many villages have been plundered these past few orbits. Orcs are rampaging through the northwest of Idoslane.”
“Hence the mercenaries at the gates.”
“They’re here to protect us until King Tilogorn’s soldiers rid us of the beasts.” He turned to go.
“Wait!” Tungdil laid a hand on his grease-spotted sleeve. The man’s words had given him faint grounds for hope. “Will there be dwarves among them? I heard King Tilogorn has dwarves in his pay.”
The publican shrugged. “I couldn’t tell you, little fellow, but it wouldn’t surprise me.”
“When do they get here?” he asked eagerly. The opportunity of setting eyes on a fellow dwarf was reason enough to delay his mission to the Blacksaddle. All the more potatoes for Jolosin to peel.
“By rights they should have been here three orbits ago,” said the publican, signaling apologetically to the queue of thirsty customers at the bar. Tungdil let him go and returned to his supper, mulling over what he knew of Tilogorn and his kingdom.
The name Idoslane was derived from the land’s bloody past. At the heart of the historical conflict was the throne. The Idos, the kingdom’s great ruling dynasty, had plotted, conspired, and waged war on one another, bringing misery on themselves and their people, who bore the brunt of their feuds. Bit by bit the state was torn apart by their squabbling until every district was governed by a different member of the Ido clan. At last their subjects reached the limit of their endurance and felled every last sibling, cousin, and scion of the dynasty: Ido-slane.
A villager, rather the worse for wear, staggered to his feet and raised his tankard: “Long live Prince Mallen! May he drive King Tilogorn from the throne!” When no one joined in with his toast, he lowered himself to his stool, muttering darkly.
If Tungdil’s memory served him correctly, Prince Mallen was the sole surviving member of the Ido clan. He lived in exile in Urgon, the kingdom to the north of Idoslane, and was forever conspiring to return to his country as its rightful king.
Tacked to the wall of the tavern was an ancient map of Idoslane, its yellowed parchment stained by smoke. The succession of rolling hills, forests, and plains made for a pleasantly varied landscape. It would have been idyllic, if it weren’t for the orcs.
“Not a bad place, is it?” observed a fellow drinker, following Tungdil’s gaze.
“Save for Toborib
or.” Tungdil pointed to the black enclave at the heart of the kingdom: The orcish stronghold was located on Idoslane’s most fertile land. He picked up his tankard and joined the villager at his table. “Why are the brutes on the move?”
“They’re bored, that’s all. Orcs don’t need a reason to plunder and pillage. They attacked a place a few miles from here and set fire to the fields and orchards. Their sort are just monsters. Robbing, fighting, killing… They don’t know any better.”
“And they’re strong,” said another, eyes widening theatrically. “There was a time when —”
“Not that old fable,” groaned the publican, stopping at the table to refill their tankards.
“You don’t have to listen. I was talking to the dwarf.” In spite of his injured tone, the storyteller had no intention of abandoning his tale. “I came up against a whole bedeviled mob of them. Great hulking beasts, they were. It was during my employ in Tilogorn’s army. We —”
“Happier times, they were. The old prattler never had time to scare folks with his stories.”
“What would a publican know about it? If you’d seen the accursed things, you’d have some respect.” He turned back to Tungdil. “I’m telling you, dwarf, they were a terrible sight. A whole head taller than most men and ugly as sin: big flat noses, hideous eyes, and sticking-out teeth. It was worse for the young lads; they nearly died of fright.”
“That’s funny,” murmured Tungdil. “I read a description just like that in —” He clamped his mouth shut, but no one had heard. To cover his embarrassment, he scratched his sunburned head. Any later in the season and his scalp would have burned to a crisp by now. The sun took a bit of getting used to.
“Half an orbit it took to kill those wretched brutes. My, they were tough! When I was young no one would hire mercenaries to keep the orcs from their gates. Orcs or no orcs, Idoslane was safe in our hands. Times have changed,” he said regretfully, mourning the decline of Tilogorn’s army and the passing of his youth. He glanced down and caught sight of Tungdil’s ax. The blade had been put to good use in the woods and was looking somewhat neglected, with blobs of dried sap and splinters sticking to the bit. “Don’t tell me you’ve been using a fine ax like that for hacking wood!” he exclaimed, aghast.
“I had to get through the undergrowth somehow.” Tungdil reddened, hoping to goodness that no one would ask him to demonstrate his race’s legendary axmanship. The truth was, he knew nothing of fighting.
Tungdil had learned everything he knew from Lot-Ionan, who took little interest in weaponry, sword fights, and close combat, leaving his ward without a military education. No one had ever shown him how to wield an ax in anger. The servants chopped wood or killed rats with their axes and that was as far as his handling of the feared dwarven weapon went. His race was supposed to be skilled in axmanship, but if faced with an aggressor, which well he might be, he was resigned to striking out haphazardly and praying that the beast would run away.
“The dwarves are great warriors, or so I’ve heard,” said the veteran trooper. “Runs in the blood, does it? Is it true what they say about a single dwarf putting pay to a pack of ten orcs?”
Tungdil had long suspected that he wasn’t a proper dwarf, but now his fears were confirmed. Listening to the men made him realize that his kinsfolk would laugh if they could see him, which put an end to his enthusiasm for meeting others of his race. Even the thought of the fairer sex seemed more alarming than appealing.
“Ten orcs,” he said, hoping the trooper was right, “absolutely…” He yawned loudly, stretched, and rose. It was time to escape his own doubts, shake off his nosy questioners, and find a bed. “You’ll have to excuse me: I need to get some sleep.”
His fellow drinkers, their initial suspicions forgotten, were reluctant to let him go, but at length he was permitted to make his way to the second floor of the timber-frame house where the publican had quartered him for the night. The room was a dormitory, but a large one, and Tungdil had it to himself.
He used the washbowl to bathe his sweaty feet, which had been confined to his boots since the start of the journey. Savoring the luxury of his third beer, he stood by the window and gazed out over the tiled roofs of Goodwater.
The settlement was a good size, numbering a thousand or so dwellings. The villagers seemed to make their living from the surrounding fields and orchards and what wealth they had was now threatened by orcs. Tilogorn’s anxiously awaited army would have to hurry if there was going to be anything left to save.
Tungdil dried his weary feet, folded his clothes over a chair, and buried himself in the thick feather duvet.
Silvery light shone on the leather bag destined for Gorén, sorely testing his resolve.
Don’t meddle with things that don’t concern you, he told himself sternly.
Even as he fell asleep he thought of Lot-Ionan and Frala, whose talisman was looped through his belt. He missed the sound of her laughter. Tomorrow he would ask the publican for directions to the Blacksaddle and press on without delay.
Muffled sounds roused him from his sleep.
Two men were taking great pains to ready themselves for bed without making any noise. Outside a storm was howling and raging around the settlement.
A whispered exchange followed, during which Tungdil felt certain that he heard Lot-Ionan’s name. He peered warily at the newcomers: a thin, well-dressed gentleman and a taller, broader fellow clad in leather mail with metal plating.
A merchant and his bodyguard? Their garments were clearly worth a gold piece or two. He caught sight of a simple yet striking trinket attached to the larger fellow’s leather lapel. It was embossed with the seal of the magi.
They’re envoys to the magi’s council! “Are you headed for Ionandar?” he asked, abandoning all pretense of sleep. Curiosity had triumphed over caution.
The broad man frowned. “What makes you think that?”
“The brooch.” He pointed to the man’s gown. “You must be envoys.”
The pair exchanged looks of surprise. “Who are you?” the bearer of the trinket demanded. Tungdil introduced himself. “What news of Lot-Ionan?” the man said sharply. “Is he well?”
“Perhaps you could tell me a little about yourselves first,” the dwarf requested with impeccable politeness. They supplied him with their names and occupations: Friedegard, a first-tier famulus apprenticed to Turgur the Fair-Faced, and Vrabor, a warrior in the service of the magi. “Lot-Ionan is in excellent health,” Tungdil informed them. “You’ll see for yourselves when you get there.” He struggled to contain himself, then gave in. “Pray, what is the…” He reconsidered and began more plainly: “What do you want with the magus?”
“Our business is with Lot-Ionan, not his message boy,” Vrabor said dismissively, loosening the buckles on his armor. “Why do you think the council sent an envoy and not a town crier?”
He had barely finished speaking when the storm outside whipped into a frenzy, gusting through chinks in the walls and emitting a strange, unnatural whine, which was followed almost immediately by a high-pitched whistle.
Tensing, the two men reached for their swords.
Not a night to be abroad, thought the dwarf as he watched the moonlit scraps of cloud chase across the gloomy sky.
Just then a slender face appeared at the window. Tungdil looked into the gray-green eyes and felt his mind go numb. The apparition was more bewitching than frightening: Long dark hair swept the beautiful visage, the occasional strand plastered against the rain-drenched skin. So pale, so perfect was the being that it resembled a marble sculpture of an elf, its bedraggled locks like fine fractures in the stone.
The dwarf stared helplessly, transfixed by the creature’s gaze. The countenance was attractive — of that there was no question — but it inspired in him an almost physical revulsion. It was too beautiful, almost cruelly so.
“Over there…” His breathless warning was enough to alert the envoys, who looked up and dove for cover.
At t
hat moment there was an explosion of glass as a long black-fletched arrow shattered the window and whined through the air, planting itself in the wall.
“You get rid of them; I’ll deal with the window,” shouted Vrabor to his companion. Seizing the heavy table, he upturned it and slammed it into the wall, then hurriedly jammed some furniture against the makeshift barricade. There were no other openings for arrows to enter.
Meanwhile Friedegard, eyes closed and head bowed, was chanting silently and tracing strange symbols in the air. In his right hand was a coin-sized crystal set in gold.
“Can someone tell me what’s going on?” Tungdil scrambled out of bed and grabbed his ax because it made him feel safer.
The envoys listened in silence. Although the wind had abated, the rain was falling more heavily than before. They strained their ears, but there was no sound of the mysterious bowman. He seemed to have vanished with the tempest.
“Has the elf gone?”
“I can’t be sure,” said Vrabor. “Perhaps.” He sheathed his sword and sat down on the bed, hands resting on the cross guard of his weapon. “They could be biding their time.”
“They?”
“Älfar, two of them. They’ve been tailing us since Porista.”
So it wasn’t an elf after all… The älfar, a race crueler than any other, were sworn enemies of the elves. They hated their cousins for their purity, a purity that the älfar themselves had been denied. It was hatred and jealousy, according to the history books, that impelled them across the Northern Pass and into Girdlegard. “Is Lot-Ionan in danger?”
“ Lot-Ionan will come to no harm,” Vrabor assured him wearily. “The älfar are powerless against the magi and they know it. The arrow was meant for Friedegard and me; they want to know what we’re carrying. We knew they were following us as soon as we left the capital of Lios Nudin, but they waited until they could be sure of our destination before they attacked. I’m sorry, groundling,” he said, responding to the unspoken question in Tungdil’s eyes. “I’m sure you’re a loyal messenger and I know we’re indebted to your vigilance, but our business is between the council and Lot-Ionan. You’ll have to save your questions for your return.”