wasn’t that he was obscured by falling debris, rather that the runelord simply wasn’t there any more. He had vanished. It was as if the earth had swallowed him. As the storm of dust and grit rolled over them, Morgrim buried his head under his hands and prayed to Grungni they would survive.
Blackness became abject, sound smothered by an endless tide of debris. Stone chips, bladed flakes sheared from a much greater whole, cut Morgrim’s face despite his war helm. He snarled but kept his teeth clenched.
Tremors faded, dust clung to the air in a muggy veil. Light prevailed, from above where the ceiling had caved in. It limned the summit of a pile of rocks no dwarf could ever hope to squeeze through.
Snorri coughed, brought up a fat wad of dirty phlegm and shook age-old filth from his hair and beard. Clods of earth were jammed in his ears, and he dug them out with a finger.
‘Think most of Karak Krum just fell on top of us.’
‘At least we are both alive, cousin.’
Snorri grunted something before spitting up more dirt.
Morgrim wafted away some of the dust veiling the air. ‘What about Lord Silverthumb?’
‘That old coot won’t die to a cave-in, you can bet Grungni’s arse he won’t.’
Morgrim agreed. For some reason he didn’t fear for the runesmith. The old dwarf had known what was going to happen and left them to be buried. If anything, he was more annoyed than concerned.
Barring the mucky overspill from the cave-in, the temple was untouched. Its archway still stood, so too its ceiling and walls. Grungni sat still and silently at the back of the room, watching, appraising perhaps.
Morgrim touched the rune on his war helm and gave thanks to the ancestor.
Snorri was already up, pulling at the wall of rock that had gathered at the only entrance to the temple. It was almost sealed.
‘Did you also bring a pick and shovel when you picked up the lantern, cousin?’ he asked, heaving away a large chunk of rock only for an even larger one to slam down violently in its place. A low rumble returned, the faint suggestion of another tremor. Motes of dust spilling from the ceiling thickened into gritty swathes.
‘Leave it!’ Morgrim snapped, reaching out in a gesture for Snorri to stop what he was doing. ‘You’ll bring whole upper deep down on us. It’ll flood the chamber with earth.’
Snorri held up his palms.
‘Buried alive or left to rot in some forgotten tomb,’ he said, ‘neither choice is appealing, cousin. How do you suggest we get out?’
‘Use a secret door.’
‘Would that we had one, cou–’
Snorri stopped talking when he saw Morgrim hauling aside the statue of Grungni. Behind it was a shallow recess in the wall that delineated a door. It was open a crack and a rune stone had been left next to it that caught Morgrim’s attention. He pocketed it and gave the door another tug.
‘Get your back into it,’ Snorri chided.
‘How about yours?’ he replied, red-faced and flustered.
‘I’m wounded,’ said Snorri, showing off his half-hand.
Morgrim spoke through gritted teeth and flung spittle. ‘Get your chuffing arse over here and help me move this thing.’
Together, they dragged the door wide enough to slip through. Musky air rushed up to greet them, the scent of age and mildew strong enough to almost make them gag. A long, narrow darkness stretched before them. The gloom felt endless.
‘We can stand here,’ said Snorri, pulling out his axe, ‘or we can go forwards. I vote for the dark.’
‘Aye,’ nodded Morgrim, and drew his hammer.
They had gone only a few feet when Snorri asked, ‘What did he mean?’
‘About magic? Chuffed if I know.’
‘No, about my destiny. It being great and “lifting the doom of our race” and “he who will slay the drakk”? Those words were meant for me, I am sure.’
‘Agreed,’ said Morgrim, ‘but you’re the son of the High King of Karaz-a-Karak, of course your destiny will be great.’ Morgrim led the way, following veins
Charles Tang, Gertrude Chandler Warner