I tend to get in the writing zone, and suddenly it's been two weeks since I've posted anything of substance. So have a look-see at DOTD and the magicked torq "failsafe."
Happy Saturday!
Náli bit back
a sigh and produced the torq from beneath his cloak. Gleaming silver, a broken
circle with knobbed prongs that would sit against Ragnar’s throat, the latch in
front was designed to resemble two wolf heads, one biting the other’s throat.
If the spell worked, once the latch was clicked into place, it wouldn’t be able
to be opened again by the wearer or any outsider; no blacksmith’s hammer could
strike off a magicked torq such as this would be. There was to be a failsafe,
however; a weaving of magic that Náli himself had researched at length all of
yesterday, and which he felt confident he’d be able to achieve. He’d never
performed anything quite like it, but if he could raise entire skeletal armies,
he didn’t think this would be all that difficult.
“Oh,” Tessa
said, when she saw it. “It seems to wrong to say that it’s lovely, but it is,
really.”
“Somehow, I
doubt Ragnar would agree with you,” Oliver said, tone dry. “But the detail is
incredible, I’ll give the smith that.”
“Yes, yes,
it’s very nice. Here.” With his other hand, Náli fished the two small, diamond
pendants he’d promised from his pocket and handed them over. His much larger
diamond hung against his chest, outside his leather doublet. Its weight tugged
at the back of his neck, rested heavy over his heart.
His mother
had picked it up, once, from his dressing table – the sight of it in her hand
had left his stomach rolling – and she’d said, “It doesn’t feel as heavy as you
say.”
Oh,
Mother. If only you knew.
“Put them
on,” he told the cousins, and they complied. “Now. Do you remember the
failsafe?”
Oliver and
Tessa traded a look that he couldn’t interpret: something secret and familiar,
the sort of look they’d likely been trading since they were much younger, which
could have been reassurance, confirmation, or a shared doubt in Náli and his
plan.
“Do you
remember?” he pressed, and knew by Oliver’s raised-brow look that he’d been
snippy. Oh well.
“We
remember,” Oliver said.
Tessa said, a
little awed and breathless, “This torq can only be removed for love.” Then she
frowned. “Does that mean only by someone who loves him? Or for any reason
driven by love?”
“The spell’s
not that specific,” Náli said, with a faint inward twinge of doubt, because the
spell wasn’t that specific. Love was the release, according to very old,
very dead magic scholars. Other emotions could have been used, but given
Ragnar’s lack of popularity among his relatives, he’d thought love the best
bet. Who could love Ragnar? No chance of an escape from his servitude that way.
“Safe to say,” he continued, “no one loves him. It doesn’t matter what type of
love the spell requires when you’re a lying, two-faced, sheep-headed wolf-fucker.”
Tessa
blushed.
Oliver said,
“Eloquent.”
Náli tugged
at his cloak. “I like to think so, yes.”
That made
both of them laugh.
A door
creaked and shut forcefully a few yards away at the palace’s rear façade. A
glance proved that the king himself, followed by Bjorn, was stalking their way.
Náli wiped
the haughtiness from his face and spoke in a hushed, urgent voice. “Listen to
me, both of you. Do not share this with your men. Not with Erik, not with
Rune.” Both looked scandalized. “I’m quite serious. Don’t tell them the
trigger. Tell no one. If you want to keep Leif safe, then you’ll guard this
secret with all you have.” He wouldn’t say with your lives. As someone
with one foot in the grave, he couldn’t ask for a friend’s life.
Their eyes
widened, and the next look they exchanged was unmistakeable: one of united
worry and resolve.
“We promise,”
Tessa said.
Oliver added,
“We won’t breathe a word.”
Something
about his expression gave Náli misgivings – something like I’ll tell someone
if it’s necessary. But, well, that was neither Náli’s worry, nor the most
pressing issue of the moment.
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