an illusion of any creature I imagine. But when I was a mortal man, there was nothing about me that warranted Bult’s respect. I took after my mother’s folk: light-boned and slender. From my earliest days I’d learned the tricks of balance and leverage because I never had my father’s and brothers’ strength. I could carry Jikkana because I knew where to lift; I could fell a troll because I knew where to balance, where to pivot, how to coil my entire body and release its power in a serpent’s strike.
Knowledge was my weapon, I told myself as I lay there in the dust, blood and bile streaming from my face. I was smarter than Bult; I was better, but first I had to breathe and protect myself from the kicks that came from all directions. Ignoring pain and blurred vision, relying on instinct—knowledge—alone, I caught a foot as it struck my ribs. I twisted it one way as I rolled the other. Finally there was a groan that didn’t come from my throat, and a few heartbeats for me to rise up on my hands and knees.
I choked when I tried to breathe and spat out a tooth or two. My hair dragged in the muck my blood had made of the dust, but my lungs were working again, and my thoughts were clearer. I heard Bult sidestepping, taking aim at my flank. Raising my head, I caught his eye.
“Coward,” I named him in a hoarse, broken whisper. “Can’t fight trolls without the Troll-Scorcher’s say-so. Can’t fight a puny man unless he’s already battered and bloody.”
I nailed Bult, midstride. He backed off, and his mouth worked silently a moment before he said: “Get up, farm boy. Get up on your feet, if you dare, or crawl away as you are.”
We’d heard that trolls could track by scent, that their noses were as good as their night eyes. The way I was bleeding on the ground and clutching my side, Bult guessed I’d be troll-meat whether he hamstrung me or not. And probably he was right: I was a deadman, but I was done running from trolls and wasn’t going to start crawling from my own kind. I got to my feet and stayed there. A few of my fellows sucked their teeth with surprise or admiration. I didn’t know which. I didn’t care. My blood settled.
“Cowards,” I repeated, including my fellows in the curse. Bult took a step toward me. I spat out another tooth that left a bloody mark on his cheek, and he stayed where he was. “Little children, a little bit afraid of trolls, a lot more afraid of the Troll-Scorcher. Eyes of fire!” I recalled my cousin, five years dead and forgotten in the ruins of Deche. “I’ve seen the Troll-Scorcher’s magic, his eyes of fire, just like you. I’ve seen them at the muster—nowhere else. I’ve seen Myron of Yoram burn the heart out of a trussed-up man when we’re all camped for muster, but I’ve never seen his awful magic out here.”
I believed what I said, and I hated Myron of Yoram more than I hated Bult or any troll that ever lived. It gave me the strength to take a step in Bult’s direction.
“Call him, Bult. Call the Troll-Scorcher. Tell him what I’ve done. Tell him to come and burn me with the eyes of fire. I’ll die for him, Bult, that’s what we’re here for, isn’t it? Call him!”
Once a month, as Guthay’s golden face cleared the eastern horizon, we’d all gather around the fire, hand in hand, to shout the Troll-Scorcher’s name to the night. When we’d shouted our throats raw, Bult would drop to his knees, his veins bulged and throbbing across his brow, and he’d tell the Troll-Scorcher how many trolls we’d seen since the last time, what they’d done, and what we’d done, which never changed: they ravaged, and we ran.
“Aye, Bult,” someone behind me said. “Call the Troll-Scorcher. Let him decide.”
“Manu’s right. Maybe the Troll-Scorcher listens to us; maybe he don’t. We see his mighty-bright officers, an’ they tell us he’s wagin’ war somewhere else, but never near us.” Another voice in the crowd.
“Never near no one,” a woman added, sweet honey to my ringing ears. “Never met no one at the muster who didn’t say the same thing: they seen trolls all year, an’ never once seen the Scorcher.”
I could feel the power of persuasion around me. “Call him, Bult,” I taunted, then reached out