Sur le site de l'éditeur il y a un pdf de prévisualisation du livre avec la table des matières qui cite le nom des métiers/archétypes :
- Arpenteur de brumes
- Barde
- Colon
- Guerrier
- Malfrat
- Rôdeur
- Tisseur de Vitner

They then lever-ed Gestr into the mound, and the priest and other
men held him firmly. It voe fifty fathomst deep to the floor of the
mound. Gestr had vound himself in the King's gift, the cloth, and gird
himse 1f 'With the short ever-d. He had the taper in hand, and it k indl ed
as soon as he came dovn,
Gestr looked evervvher-e around the mound. He saw the ship,
stcocn, and, in it, five hundred men. To have been sea 'Worthy carry1ng
so many men the ship vos therefore large, perhaps as I arge as Gn6CI
'Which Asmundr steered. 2 Gestr then boarded the ship. He sov that
they had all been ready to move before some of the candlelight fell
over them, but then they could not stir themselves. Their eyes rolled
and their nostril s fl ared. Gestr hacked at all of their heads vith the
short sword, and it cut as if it slashed through water. He plundered
the ship of all ornaments and had them raised.
A fter'w'or"ds he sear-ched for Raknarr. He then found the descent
into the earth, and there he sov Raknarr sitting on a stool. Very
ill-looking vus he to behold, and it was both foul and cold. A chest
stood at his feet, full of valuables. He had a brilliant neck lace on his throat
and a thick, golden ring on his arm. In a coat of mail he was,
and he had a helmet on his head and a svor-d in hand. Gestr vent up to
Raknarr and greeted him in a manner befitting a king; Raknarr boved in
return.
Gestr said: "You are famous, and, it seems to me, glorious to
look upon. I have come along 'v/ay from home to visit you, so I'm sure
you vould have me ""ell r-evor-ded for my errand. Give me the fjnet
valuables you have, and , shall then bear vttnees 'w'idely to your
hospitality."
Raknarr offered the helmet on his head and Gestr took it, and
next Gestr removed the coat of mail from him and Raknarr 'Was the
easiest about that. He had all the valuables from Roknarr except the
sword, but 'When Gestr 'Was about to take it, Raknarr sprong up and
attacked Gestr. It was then seen that he was neither old nor stiff.
Also, the king's gift, the toper, was by then all consumed. Raknarr
flew into such a troll's rage then that Gestr was completely
overpowered in the fight. It seemed to Gestr that he could see the way
pointing to his death. As 'Well, all of the men in the ship stood up.
Thinking he could endure no more, Gestr called to Barð, his father,
and a little later Barðr arrived. He could do nothing, though, for· the
dead crew handled him so roughly he could come nowhere near Gestr.
Then Gestr promised the one who had shaped the sky and earth
that he vould take up the faith vhich King Olafr preached, if he might
return alive from the mound.
Quickly, Gestr called to King Olafr, exclaiming that the sight of
him would help greatly. Soon Gestr saw King Olafr vho entered the
mound with a great light. At that sight Raknarr was so startled that
his strength disappeared, and, with King Olafr's help, Gestr attacked
so quickly that Raknarr fell backward. Then Gestr hacked off his head
and laid it betveen Raknarr's thighs. Upon the arrival of King Olafr
all of the dead sat down in their places. When this business came to an
end, King Olafr disappeared from Gestr's sight.