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+-+--+-+--+-+ VOLUME SIX NUMBER FOUR
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| | ==========================================
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+___________+ FFFFF SSS FFFFF N N EEEEE TTTTT
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| ++ | F S F NN N E T
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| ++ | FFF SSS FFF N N N EEE T
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| | F S F N NN E T
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|_________| F SSS F N N EEEEE T
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/___________\ ==========================================
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| | BITNET Fantasy-Science Fiction Fanzine
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___|___________|___ X-Edited by 'Orny' Liscomb <CSDAVE@MAINE>
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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CONTENTS
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X-Editorial 'Orny' Liscomb
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*Cydric and the Sage Carlo Samson
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Ceda the Executioner: 3 Joel Slatis
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*Spirit of the Wood: 4 Rich Jervis
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*The Dream: Part 2 of 2 John White
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Date: 120686 Dist: 214
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An "*" indicates story is part of the Dargon Project
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All original materials copyrighted by the author(s)
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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X-Editorial
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Well, things have been mighty hectic. I have just returned from
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a visit to New York City over the Thanksgiving holiday, which was
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very entertaining. However, the big news is that FSFnet is no longer
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being sent directly to you, but is being distributed by the LISTSERV
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distributed server network. It certainly makes my job considerably
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easier, and hopefully no one will wind up with format problems. But
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that's all icing on the cake.
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We've got several interesting tidbits in this issue, including
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the conclusion of John White's excellent story, The Dream. Also you
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will find installments of Joel Slatis' Ceda tale and Rich Jervis'
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Spirit of the Wood stories, as well as an interesting story from
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Carlo Samson. I am quite impressed with this issue, and There will
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be at least one more issue out before Christmas, and possibly two
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before the new year. Looking forward, we have another excellent
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story from John White, which I am sure you will enjoy, and the
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continuation of Merlin's Atros epic. Enjoy, and best wishes!
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-'Orny' Liscomb <CSDAVE @ MAINE>
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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Cydric and the Sage
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I. Arrival: The Tavern
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It was late afternoon when Cydric Araesto arrived in the coastal
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town of Dargon. Hot and tired from his journey up from the capital
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of Baranur, he rode through the main street of the town, seeking a
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place to rest. His eyes fixed on a large building near the middle of
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the street; a sign above the door proclaimed:
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BELISANDRA'S
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in bold red letters. Below the name was a painting of a young buxom
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wench raising a large tankard of brew. Cydric dismounted in front of
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the building, put his horse in the adjacent stables, and went inside.
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The common room of the tavern was large and brightly lit by
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lanterns that hung from the rafters. The smells of fresh-brewed ale,
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Comarian tobacco, and wood smoke reached Cydric as he sat down in a
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corner table and mopped his brow with the edge of his cloak. He
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called out to a passing serving girl and ordered a cold pint of
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Lederian Special Brew.
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As the girl left to fill his order, he leaned back against the
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wall and sighed wearily. "I am finally here," he thought. "But
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should I even *be* here? Does my future lie in Dargon, or was it all
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a fever dream?" He shook his head ruefully. "It is too late for
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regrets. I made my choice, and I can never go back."
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He turned his attention outward to the tavern. The place was
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nowhere near capacity, he noted. To his right he saw a young couple
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holding hands and conversing quietly. At a table in front of the bar
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a group of richly dressed middle-aged men talked and drank. Near the
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entrance, a hooded figure in blue robes sat hunched over a mug of
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brew. A thin, bearded man smoked a small pipe in the glow of the
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fireplace. And at a table in the center of the room, a pair of
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leather-clad women arm-wrestled.
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The serving-girl returned and placed a large tankard on the
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table in front of him. She smiled at him as she turned and made her
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way back to the bar, where a stout woman of about forty summers
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watched the arm-wrestling women with a look of mild interest. Cydric
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took a long pull of the cold brew and made a sound of approval. He
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settled back, letting the tiredness bleed from his bones.
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Then, without warning, the strange vision that had been
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recurring in his mind for months once again intruded upon his
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thoughts. He tried to purge it from his mind, but the vision
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persisted. He gave up the effort, having learned early on that the
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only thing he could do was to let it run its course.
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II. Reverie: The Vision
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He was sitting on a large boulder that lay half-buried on the
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shore of a vast golden sea. The sky above him was a deep cobalt
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blue. Far in the distance, on the horizon, an object sparkled and
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glittered. He hopped off the boulder and walked to the edge of the
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sea, straining to see what it was. Then he knelt down and scooped up
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a handful of the golden water. He raised it to his mouth, but before
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he drank it he cast his eyes toward the object on the horizon again.
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He sighed, and his breath turned the golden liquid in his hand to
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plain colorless water.
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The water slipped through his fingers, and where it wetted the
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sand a small lump of a transparent substance appeared. He picked it
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up, and the lump grew into the shape of a life-sized human skull.
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The skull floated out of his palm and came to hover in front of the
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boulder. Beams of white light lanced out of the skull's eye sockets
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and struck the smooth stone, sending up a cloud of dust. After
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several moments, the skull ceased its activity and set down atop the
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boulder. Cydric brushed away the rock dust and saw that the skull's
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eye-beams had carved into the stone an outline of the continent that
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contained the Kingdom of Baranur. A small "x" marked a spot on the
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western coast of the continent. Below the outline were the words
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"Corambis the Sage".
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As soon as Cydric read the words, the transparent skull rose
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into the air and, with a clack of its jaws, sped away over the
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golden sea toward the glittering object on the horizon.
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III. The Tavern: Company
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The vision faded. Cydric looked up as the serving girl returned
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and asked him if he wanted another drink. "No, that will be all, for
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the moment." The girl turned to leave. "Wait a moment," he called.
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"Yes, milord?"
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"Do you know of a person called 'Corambis the Sage' ?"
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The girl looked at him oddly. "Yes, everyone knows of him. Are
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you just arrived?"
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"Yes, I am. Do you know where he lives?"
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The girl cast a glance over her shoulder. "A moment, milord."
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Cydric watched as the serving girl went over and whispered something
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to the blue-robed patron. The person nodded and stood up.
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Cydric's hand instinctively moved to the Zanzillian sundagger he
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wore on his right hip as the blue-clad figure approached and stopped
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in front of his table. The figure removed its hood to reveal a
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feminine face framed by a mane of flame-red hair.
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"Thuna tells me you are looking for the Sage," she said in a
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conversational tone.
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"Do you know where I can find him?"
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"Better than that; I can take you to him. May I sit?"
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Cydric nodded, and the woman seated herself.
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"So," Cydric said, "how much will it cost me for you to take me
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to him?"
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"Merely a moment of your time," the woman replied, smiling.
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Cydric found himself smiling back. She couldn't be very much older
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than his own twenty summers, he decided. He paused a moment before
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replying to study the way the lantern-light reflected from her clear
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green eyes.
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"That sounds reasonable," he said.
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"My name is Holleena," the woman said, extending her hand.
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Cydric took it and pressed it against his cheek in the traditional
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courtly manner. He told her his name.
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"So tell me, Cydric Araesto, what brings you to our humble
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town?" she asked.
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A piece of the vision flashed through Cydric's mind. "My horse,"
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he replied.
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Holleena laughed. "I see. Do you wish to visit the Sage now?"
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Cydric felt his stomach rumble. "Not just yet. I seem to have
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forgotten about supper. Would you care to join me?"
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"I would, indeed," Holleena said. Cydric raised his hand to
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signal the serving girl, but Holleena stopped him.
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"Let's not eat here," she said.
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"Why not?"
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"Belisandra is a good cook, but as anyone in Dargon can tell
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you, you haven't eaten until you've had a bowl of Simon
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Salamagundi's famous stew."
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"Fine," Cydric said. "Let's go." He tossed a couple of coins
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onto the table as they rose to leave. He offered his arm to
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Holleena, and together they left Belisandra's tavern.
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-Carlo Samson <U09862 @ UICVM>
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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Ceda the Executioner: Chapter 3
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Ceda reclined on his bed at the inn that he had previously
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stayed at on his last visit to Pheeng'Am. The guards at the gate had
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(for a small fee) told him that the demon had finally found the
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crown and had left the city without a trace.
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"Then it is over," he he thought to himself. "The demon has the
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crown and has doubtlessly returned to the Overworld, or wherever it
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came from; And I need not travel to the caves of Arnmere." His
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tiredness took him and he fell into a deep slumber.
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Tarnigen had had a long trip to the old continent of Cergaan,
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where it was rumored that a mysterious demon had taken the crown.
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Why it had gone there was a mystery indeed, but Tarnigen could not
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pass up an opportunity of such a fortune as Grobst's Crown. A small
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fishing vessel from Dhernis had dropped him off on the shore off the
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Largely unexplored continent off Cargaan a few hours before, and now
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he got organized before setting out to find the Demon. This was the
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ultimate test for him; A man was what he wanted to be, a real man,
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and this (in his eyes) was a worthy test for it.
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Tarnigen laid down and looked at the night sky that hung so
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still above his head. He wondered if he would ever see it again.
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Yes. He would. He had, for a moment, surrendered his thoughts to
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fear, but this would not ever happen again, he reassured himself. He
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was determined to get the Crown, and he would, or, he said to
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himself 'I am not worthy of the Throne of Caffthorn.
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The cold features of Tarnigens face could just be made out by
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the pale light that came from the fire he had built. His long
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crooked nose was perhaps the the most noticeable thing about him. It
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was, to say the least, enormously out of proportion to the rest of
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his face protruding down over the pale thin lips of his mouth. He
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had narrow blue eyes and long blond hair that hung down to the
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center of his back. Nothing else was really noticeable about him. He
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had a large body and was very strong as were most nobles of Caffthorn.
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The sun had set and Tarnigen was tired; His eyes pulled
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themselves closed and at once he was asleep.
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The sun was almost directly over head when he awoke. Now not
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only the dim outline of the land that he now stood upon was visible.
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It was richly colored by many grey an yellow flowers that grew all
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along the shore line and the trees at the edge of a large forest
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that grew about two hundred yards inland rose higher than any he had
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ever seen before. No roads crossed through the aria, only a few
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animals tracks could be seen on the bank. This was a peaceful place.
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Tarniger was amazed at the utter tranquility of the area. He
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gathered his things and started walking towards the shelter of the
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trees while he made his way west along the shore to the Ruined Tower
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of Threemis Where the Demon almost certainly was.
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Once in the forest, he climbed one of the taller trees to survey
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The area. It was a clear day and he could just make out the outline
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of a tall shape rising above the trees 20 miles up the coast.
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It looked lonely and out of place, a gross sight among the
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plentiful vegetation of the southern continent; like a knife
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stemming out of a mans back, and the man unable to remove it, slowly
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dying. He wished It wasn't there. He wished he wasn't there, but it
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wouldn't help now, he had to prove himself a man and could not leave
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without throwing away his family honor and pride, not to mention the
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throne. However, the thought that man had not yet disturbed the
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solemn beauty of the continent consoled him, and were he not to
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return to Caffthorn, It would surely discourage people from coming
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to this 'New world', and destroying its solitude and innocence.
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But he had to return, there was no doubt about that, for if he
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did not, his people would send a party to look for him. Instead, he
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would tell of beasts fifty feet tall that could kill a man with a
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mere blink of its eye, and of tall trees that swallowed unsuspecting
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animals at night. With that thought in mind, he descended the tree
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and started for the Ruined Tower.
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Tarnigen reached the tower after two day. A river obscured from
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sight by the trees had barred his way so he had to make a small raft
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in order to cross. The wooden gate had long since been torn down and
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was reduced to a pile of rotting wood in a corner of the large
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courtyard that encumbered the tower. Moss grew between every crack
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in the giant stone wall that stood around the tower and the even
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larger wall around the courtyard was totally covered be leafy green
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vines that hung down from the long unused torch holders high above
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Tarnigen head.
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He entered the courtyard steadily walking for the tower
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entrance. As yet, he had not encountered any animals or beasts and
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was, to say the least, a bit puzzled at the odd calmness of the
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continent. Then he remembered what he was there for, a demon waited
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for him in the tower. It was probably aware of his presence since
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the moment that he had set foot in the courtyard.
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He reached into his sack and pulled out his sickle, a weapon
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that he had been training with since he was a child. It was three
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feet long from the base of its handle to the base of the blade an
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the blade was two feet long. The handle was made of a special grey
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wood that could be grown only in Cafthorn and the handle was of a
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dark metal of unearthly origin. Close to the base of the blade was
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an inlaid gem that glowed in a magnificent purple haze.
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Tarnigen then entered the tower gate. The gems glow turned to
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yellow lighting the chamber to reveal a large hall with a stairway
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up at the far end. slowly he moved towards it, looking in all
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directions for any hint of trouble. Upon reaching the stairs, he
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surveyed the room once more before starting up.
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The gem then changed color to a pale white and Tarnigen stopped
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and looked around. The gem continued to glow in the solemn white. He
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took another step, then another; then fell. A trap door had opened
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underneath his feat and had brought him to a lower level in the tower.
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Tarnigen stood up. Luckily, he was not hurt from the fall. He
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looked up to see the trap door twenty feet above him. He examined
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himself, but to his astonishment, he was not hurt.
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The hallway that he had dropped into was long an narrow. It
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sloped downward at an alarming angle ending in darkness some three
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hundred yards down. The gem lit the hall with its luminous white
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light as Tarnigen started his decent.
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The passage ended in a small room with a large hole in the
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center. In the hole, a dark mist swirled around like water in a
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fountain. The gem was still glowing bright white. The the mist rose
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and surrounded him. the room went dark despite the glowing sickle
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that he held in his hand.
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After a brief moment, the mist dispersed. The gem was no longer
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glowing. And to Tarnigens surprise, he was no longer in the tower.
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He now stood in a dark forest that stretched in all direction as
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far as the eye could see. The trees towered above his head, some of
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them out of sight into the low cloud cover.
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A loud cry broke the air and Tarnigen turn just in time to meet
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a small party of tall thin beasts unlike any he had ever seen. The
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foremost attacked him immediately and fell to his blade almost a
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fast. The rest of the party turned and ran, dropping there sacks and
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fleeing in terror into the dark wood. Still confused, Tarnigen left
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the packs there and started in the direction that the beasts had come.
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A short walk brought him to a large stone wall much like that of
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the Ruined Tower's. He walked around until he reached a gate which
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was guarded by four very large beasts not unlike the ones that he
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had come across a little earlier. He cautiously approached the
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largest of the group. It stood unmoving as he approached, it did not
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even seem to breath. Once Tarnigen was in striking distance, the
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beast lashed at him with one of its numerous claws and ripped his
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entire right arm off.
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Tarnigen screamed in disbelief, but he felt nothing. Another
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blow from the monster tore his upper body off throwing both his legs
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in opposite directions, the beast picked up the now helpless
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Tarnigen and opened its gaping jaws and bit his head from his neck.
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Tarnigen watched the jaws close about his head, then felt what
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was left of his severed body being torn away from him. There was no
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pain at all though he could feel that he was reduced to only a head.
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He rolled into the darkness of the beasts stomach and all went dark.
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Then once again the mist cleared. Once again Tarnigen stood in
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the room with the swirling mist in the center. He stood slightly
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dizzy for a moment and then fell to the floor. Tarnigen awakened
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later to find that nothing had changed. His sack lay at his feet,
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his weapon intact in his hand still glowing its solemn white. He
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stood up and looked about the room. The hallway leading in was gone
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and instead, an adjacent room stood in its place. The door to the
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room was understandably missing so he just entered.
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At the center of the room was a large throne inlaid with some of
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the most beautiful Malthoogian gems that Tarnigen had ever seen. In
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the throne sat a bony figure, unmoving and expressionless. And upon
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its bleached head sat the Crown of Grobst D'arbo. The Demon stood
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up, the burning crimson eyes flashing brightly rivaling the strong
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white light that poured out of the sickle in Tarnigens hand.
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The demon looked in Tarnigens direction as it removed the crown
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|||
|
from its head, and with its bony fingers, it placed the artifact on
|
|||
|
the throne. Then, from nowhere, a long sword appeared in its hand.
|
|||
|
Tarnigen raced the Demon with his sickle raised in front of him. The
|
|||
|
demon was shattered in to many small bones and the bones into dust.
|
|||
|
Tarnigen looked to the throne and the crown, but they sank into the
|
|||
|
floor and disappeared from sight.
|
|||
|
A door appeared from nowhere in the wall of the room, and
|
|||
|
Tarnigen entered. The sickle's gem changed to a dull red color that
|
|||
|
barely lit the room. In the corner was a large stone chest that sat
|
|||
|
against the wall. Tarnigen walked over and set his sack down. He
|
|||
|
opened the chest to reveal about fifty thousand ancient Grandydyian
|
|||
|
coins, many diamonds and jewels and under some of the wealth, just
|
|||
|
visible, lay Grobsts Crown.
|
|||
|
The pale light from the sickle danced up and down his forehead
|
|||
|
as he reached into the chest and grabbed the crown.
|
|||
|
"At last," he exclaimed. " the crown is mine as is the throne of
|
|||
|
of Caffthorn."
|
|||
|
The skull rolled out from the inside the crown and within an
|
|||
|
instant was whole again. Tarnigen reached for his sickle which now
|
|||
|
glowed it bright white color, but it was too late. the demon had
|
|||
|
already picked it up.
|
|||
|
Tarnigen stood helpless as the demon changed and grew. The bones
|
|||
|
grew skin and the skin grew hair. Within a moment a fifteen foot
|
|||
|
demon loomed above him. It grinned displaying a mouth full of three
|
|||
|
inch razor sharp fangs.
|
|||
|
"It is but a small man that tries to steal the Crown of Grobst
|
|||
|
D'arbo? Well behold me my true form, human, before you are banished
|
|||
|
to limbo forever, I the Mighty King of Grandydyr decree!"
|
|||
|
With that, the king swept Tarnigen into his hand and flung him
|
|||
|
into the wall shattering most of his bones. Then he picked Tarnigen
|
|||
|
of the floor and replaced the crown into the chest, and vanished
|
|||
|
into a puff of smoke.
|
|||
|
-Joel Slatis <LGSLATIS @ WEIZMANN>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Spirit of the Wood: Chapter 4
|
|||
|
The openness had a smell all it's own. Loric breathed the clear,
|
|||
|
cool air above the trees with a special relish. One borne of the
|
|||
|
open spaces. He believed the stars over his head exhaled a sweetness
|
|||
|
unlike anything in his valley.
|
|||
|
There was a rustling below him and he leaned out to see his
|
|||
|
sister Silsia climbing up behind him. He smiled at her adeptness,
|
|||
|
knowing that it represented many forbidden practice runs. Runs she
|
|||
|
would have been punished for had the men known that a downlander
|
|||
|
would dare the heights and walk among them.
|
|||
|
Loric waited till she came along side of him and gave her a
|
|||
|
signal of greeting. He could not acknowledge her presence without
|
|||
|
penalty, but they had an unspoken code, fingertalk that they had
|
|||
|
learned in the early days of Oldsir's blindness. A skill he never
|
|||
|
used and they never forgot.
|
|||
|
She held her hand out for Loric to grasp. He gripped it tightly
|
|||
|
for a moment, knowing that they both had come here for the same
|
|||
|
reason. He had come to tree-top level to watch the sun set and sing
|
|||
|
a farewell to Oldsir. He sang Oldsirs song to the Spirit of the
|
|||
|
Wood, and then the traditional songs of farewell. He could have gone
|
|||
|
home then, but had lingered to watch for Oldsir's star to appear.
|
|||
|
Everyone felt that since Oldsir had been given his second vision,
|
|||
|
his star would be a special one, even the Downlanders had dared to
|
|||
|
speak of it aloud.
|
|||
|
There was no hope for them to spy it from the ground, and they
|
|||
|
also knew that Silsia would not have missed trying to see it. Loric
|
|||
|
tapped on her palm: "I thought you were journeying to Wood's End?"
|
|||
|
"That was just a rouse and you know it near-man, dear brother. I
|
|||
|
only wanted the villagers to think I was leaving, so they would not
|
|||
|
look for me up here."
|
|||
|
"I have passed all my tests, you can call me a man now."
|
|||
|
"But your Shreaving is not until tomorrow, you can lose all
|
|||
|
there. Would you have me call you a man, and add being here with a
|
|||
|
man to my list? Perhaps you'd want me to dance for you when you
|
|||
|
return? It is not unknown..."
|
|||
|
Loric blushed in the darkness, shocked at what his sister was
|
|||
|
suggesting. Then he heard the stifled giggle, and knew that she was
|
|||
|
joking with him again.
|
|||
|
"The wind blows exceptionally hard tonight." he mused,
|
|||
|
halfturning in her direction. It would serve her right if he caught
|
|||
|
sight of her and let out a call of warning to the other men here in
|
|||
|
the trees. He felt her squeeze his hand tight enough to wring a cry
|
|||
|
from him, but he held silent.
|
|||
|
"Not as hard as a boy will blow to prove his manliness!"
|
|||
|
"A man would have made you crabmeat by now, but list! Is this
|
|||
|
how the Tolorions show respect for the dead? I have not seen
|
|||
|
Oldsir's star, maybe he's not gone yet."
|
|||
|
Silsia's hand went limp and dropped from his for a moment and
|
|||
|
then came back. "He is gone Loric, I know it."
|
|||
|
"How?"
|
|||
|
She gave no anwser, but she handed something around the tree and
|
|||
|
the pungent smell coming from the soft leather bag was all the
|
|||
|
answer he needed. It was Oldsir's hearth-fire ashes.
|
|||
|
Water came to Loric's eyes as he opened the bag and took out a
|
|||
|
pinch of ash. He tossed it over his shoulder, then got another and
|
|||
|
rubbed it onto his chest over his heart. He shook half the rest into
|
|||
|
his own pouch and then tied the pouch onto his belt. The rest would
|
|||
|
be for Dernhelm.
|
|||
|
"Loric? I did something, I mean... I took some of the ash, some
|
|||
|
of Oldsir. Will that bring dishonor to his memory? When he came to
|
|||
|
me while you were taking your tests he said that the Spirit had
|
|||
|
called him and he knew you would pass because you were a Tolorion. I
|
|||
|
was so sad to see him go, that I told him I wouldn't give this to
|
|||
|
you. He said that Spirit only knows why they don't let women into
|
|||
|
the trees, or to have a Hearthfire, but that he knew I would do the
|
|||
|
right thing whether that was to pass his ashes along, or to keep
|
|||
|
them. So I went with him, he wouldn't even tell Dernhelm he was
|
|||
|
going. He refused the escort and witnesses-male witnesses that was
|
|||
|
his due. I was so confused when I got back I took a pinch of the ash
|
|||
|
and threw it into my cooking fire. And it worked Loric! The magic
|
|||
|
worked for me, I'm not a preist or druid or even a man, but I saw
|
|||
|
him! He was young, and I saw mother there as a child, he was showing
|
|||
|
her how to use a river vine to stretch skins... Then it was gone and
|
|||
|
I cryed because of what I had done. I told Eadyie that I was going
|
|||
|
to Wood's End and ran into the forest and wept till sunset. Then I
|
|||
|
came here."
|
|||
|
Loric had remained silent during her long communication. He
|
|||
|
concentrated closely on the words her hands formed. Not knowing what
|
|||
|
to do or say. If Dernhelm heard of this he would have her expelled
|
|||
|
from the village and then he would leave himself out of shame to the
|
|||
|
Tolorion name. Loric wasn't sure he felt the shame that tribal law
|
|||
|
would place on him. He felt that his sister had done something
|
|||
|
daring and had passed a test of her own.
|
|||
|
Perhaps she was more than a woman herself now, but what did the
|
|||
|
making of the Hearthfire for a woman mean? Surely his sister was
|
|||
|
posessed of more magic than any other woman in the
|
|||
|
Village-beneath-the-Trees. Eadyie herself knew only healing herbs
|
|||
|
and roots. He knew that it was the men who carried the favor of the
|
|||
|
Spirit and that made all magic theirs to command.
|
|||
|
Oldsir had a second vision, he had gone to his hearthfire,
|
|||
|
taking only his grand-daughter as honor and escort. Then she had
|
|||
|
made her own hearthfire and had not been consumed. The portents
|
|||
|
where there, if only he could read them a-right!
|
|||
|
"I don't know what to say. How do you feel?"
|
|||
|
"Terrible. Great. Awful. Glad, sad, and mad! How should I feel?"
|
|||
|
"The decisions of a moment..." began Loric.
|
|||
|
"Oh shush child! I know that as well as you! Oldsir did not
|
|||
|
spend all his time instructing you."
|
|||
|
Loric burned again and said "The night wind whispers against the
|
|||
|
past. I will not tell it where to blow next."
|
|||
|
"Shall I break this taboo also Loric? Or shall we keep this our
|
|||
|
secret as the others? Till our hometree's roots reach across the
|
|||
|
plains of Woe? I can think of only one thing to do. I must speak to
|
|||
|
the Druid who lives in the valleys beyond our wood. This is a
|
|||
|
greater matter than I or old 'quote the histories' Dernhelm."
|
|||
|
Loric held her hand tight, then signed slowly giving weight and
|
|||
|
meaning to each word. "I think that is best, for I love you and
|
|||
|
would not have you leave the tribe because you can do something no
|
|||
|
one else in our village can do. A woman who can spell would not have
|
|||
|
a good chance at a husband... nor want one I beleive. But if you
|
|||
|
leave on your own then when I see you on the paths beneath the
|
|||
|
trees, I will not have to spit on your shadow, or utter phrases best
|
|||
|
saved for enemies, not beloved sisters!" With that he reached around
|
|||
|
the narrow truck that sheilded her from him and hugged her to it.
|
|||
|
His arms did not meet, but he held her as best he could. He felt her
|
|||
|
shake with silent sobs.
|
|||
|
Loric looked beseechingly upwards and saw a bright reddish
|
|||
|
streak arc across the sky and fall to earth somewhere way beyond the
|
|||
|
Wood. "Did you see?!" He gasped.
|
|||
|
"I saw, Loric. Oldsir did not choose to stay among his kin in
|
|||
|
the sky. He has given me a sign. That is the direction in which I
|
|||
|
must go!"
|
|||
|
"Hoo-ya!! Hoo-ya!!" Came a call from some tree beyond Loric. It
|
|||
|
was Dernhelm. He must have been watching for Oldsir's star also.
|
|||
|
"Hoo-ya! Hoo-ya! A!" Loric called back. Soon, all the tribesmen
|
|||
|
called out in blessing and happiness for Oldsir: "Hoo-ya! Oldsir the
|
|||
|
Second- sighted! Hoo-ya hoo-ya hoo-ya a! The Spirit of the Wood has
|
|||
|
called him back!"
|
|||
|
Loric reached back to grasp his sister's hand but found only
|
|||
|
rough bark. He wanted to attract her attention to a glow on the
|
|||
|
horizon that he hadn't noticed before, but felt only rough bark.
|
|||
|
Silsia Tolorion had gone.
|
|||
|
-Rich Jervis <C78KCK @ IRISHMVS>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Dream
|
|||
|
Part Four: Choice
|
|||
|
When the child, Herrn, came to the temple for Margala's monthly
|
|||
|
supply of Hanla's Tears, the robed man waiting in the alcove was not
|
|||
|
the usual supplier. But, the priest accepted the large bag of coins,
|
|||
|
and handed Herrn back one just a little smaller. Herrn checked
|
|||
|
within, saw the little red-silver pills, thanked the priest, and
|
|||
|
left. No one saw the triumphant smile of the priest, hidden as it
|
|||
|
was by his deep cowl.
|
|||
|
Herrn arrived back at Margala's House before the empty cache of
|
|||
|
pills was noted by Margala herself. While barely 11 summers old,
|
|||
|
just a child, Herrn was street-wise, and trusted with important
|
|||
|
duties by the old woman who ran the House. One of these duties was
|
|||
|
to keep the supply of Hanla's Tears, that dream drug, current. But,
|
|||
|
Herrn liked to use the little dream-givers himself (without paying,
|
|||
|
of course). And this past week he had overused rather badly,
|
|||
|
exhausting the supply on the morning he was to get the new month's.
|
|||
|
He had hastened to the temple with the money given him by Margala,
|
|||
|
hoping that the old woman wouldn't need any of the pills before he
|
|||
|
returned. That was one reason he hadn't questioned the fact that
|
|||
|
Brother Mikl wasn't in the alcove - he was in too much of a hurry.
|
|||
|
The new supply was barely in its box when Margala entered
|
|||
|
Herrn's room. She said, "Good, little one. You have returned just in
|
|||
|
time. Fix me up with five boxes, and have more ready. This is going
|
|||
|
to be a busy day."
|
|||
|
When Wend and his woman entered Margala's House, Margala was
|
|||
|
ready for them. No whispering was needed - this was the sixth day
|
|||
|
they had come in, and it was the same every time. She took the money
|
|||
|
from Wend, handed him one of the little pill boxes that Herrn had
|
|||
|
given her, and gave them room 21 to use. She watched them climb the
|
|||
|
stairs, and wondered just what they did in that room. She knew that
|
|||
|
they both were Peace-Keepers in one of the upper markets, and they
|
|||
|
both had good pay, and so homes of their own. She didn't suppose
|
|||
|
they used her House as a trysting place, though many did. Perhaps
|
|||
|
she would find an opportunity to ask Wend later - they had known
|
|||
|
each other for a long time, after all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Je'en relaxed on the bed as she had five times so far. Wend said
|
|||
|
that this should be the last time they would need the drug - and it
|
|||
|
was true that Je'en was feeling a lot better now. Ever since the
|
|||
|
accident, she had been repressing her memories, hiding all the
|
|||
|
things that had been very special to her at one point because now
|
|||
|
she had lost them. But, since her arrival in Dargon - the completion
|
|||
|
of the "plan" that had kept her going from the accident, thru Sir
|
|||
|
Morion's School, and to the meeting with her brother - there had not
|
|||
|
been anything occupying her time save her job, which was about as
|
|||
|
exciting as staring at a lake on a windless, grey day. So, her
|
|||
|
memories leaked to the fore, causing her nightmares. But Wend was
|
|||
|
putting a stop to that, helping her deal with the loss of her
|
|||
|
musical abilities in a rational and healthy way. It caused her to
|
|||
|
wonder just what he was doing guarding a bunch of high-class
|
|||
|
shopping stalls: such knowledge as he had used to help her was not
|
|||
|
common, nor easily won.
|
|||
|
Wend took up his place next to the bed, and handed her the pill
|
|||
|
box, and a glass of water. She swallowed the tiny pills with the
|
|||
|
water, and laid back down.
|
|||
|
Normally, she would feel herself relaxing under the influence of
|
|||
|
the drug, and she would fade into sleep. But, not this time. Her
|
|||
|
whole body went rigid seconds after she swallowed the pills, and
|
|||
|
when it relaxed, she found herself in a strange place. It was all
|
|||
|
grey, featureless save for misty outlines of indistinct shapes. At
|
|||
|
first, she thought she was dreaming, but this had no sense of a
|
|||
|
dream. She wasn't awake, either, but in some strange half-state, a
|
|||
|
limbo of the senses.
|
|||
|
She stood, and moved around in the greyness. There seemed to be
|
|||
|
walls here, in shape much like the room she had been in. There was
|
|||
|
no furniture, but the door was where it should have been, and the
|
|||
|
window likewise. Of Wend there was no trace.
|
|||
|
She went thru the door, and into a shadowy version of the
|
|||
|
House's upper corridor. She paced throughout the whole house, but
|
|||
|
didn't quite date to venture outside - looking out the windows, she
|
|||
|
had found outside to be even stranger than it was in here.
|
|||
|
She had searched the whole house and found it empty, but she
|
|||
|
decided to call out anyway, and when she did, she received a
|
|||
|
suprise. Her voice sounded normal. Normal, as in the pure, alto
|
|||
|
tones it had had before her accident, not the husky, almost gravelly
|
|||
|
sound it had settled into once the pain vanished. She tried to sing,
|
|||
|
and succeeded. She went over to a table, and leaned on her right
|
|||
|
wrist, and it didn't give way. Now, she was certain she was dreaming
|
|||
|
- she was fully healed once again!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Wend was looking at the still rigid body of Je'en on the bed
|
|||
|
worriedly. She was very pale, and very rigid, almost deathly so, but
|
|||
|
he could see the shallow rise and fall of her breasts, and her heart
|
|||
|
was still beating, but slowly. He sincerely hoped that he had done
|
|||
|
the right thing. In the past month or so that he had known Je'en, he
|
|||
|
had come to like her. The man who had put him up to this had assured
|
|||
|
him that no harm would come to her, but seeing her now, he couldn't
|
|||
|
be sure.
|
|||
|
He heard the door open behind him, and turned. He said, "She is
|
|||
|
under the influence, Terkan. All has gone as planned."
|
|||
|
Terkan, a short, middle-aged man who dressed like a merchant,
|
|||
|
said, "Yes, I know. Your progress has been monitored. Your duty is
|
|||
|
now done. You may leave."
|
|||
|
"The rest of the price, as we agreed?"
|
|||
|
"Will be delivered to you," answered Terkan, staring avidly at
|
|||
|
Je'en on the bed.
|
|||
|
"I want it now. We agreed. And, your assurance again that she
|
|||
|
will be unharmed."
|
|||
|
"What matters it to you, fool? You will be paid for your
|
|||
|
treachery, and it will not be the first time you have sold your
|
|||
|
honor for a little gold. Now leave; the money will arrive tonight."
|
|||
|
"What are you going to do with her? You must not harm her - she
|
|||
|
has done nothing to you. She doesn't even know you. She hasn't been
|
|||
|
in Dargon long enough to have injured you. No. Leave. Keep your
|
|||
|
second payment, and I will return the first. Tell me how to bring
|
|||
|
her out of this trance, and then leave. You cannot have her."
|
|||
|
Terkan smiled cruely, and said, "No. A deal is a deal, and this
|
|||
|
deal is done. She is ours, now, and that is that. You had best
|
|||
|
leave, and take your payment like a good little turncoat."
|
|||
|
Wend drew his sword and lunged, but, for all Terkan's appearance
|
|||
|
of a middle-aged merchant, he moved faster. Wend never saw the knife
|
|||
|
flick out of the sleeve and into his neck. He fell at Terkan's feet,
|
|||
|
dead. Terkan then turned his eyes toward Je'en, and the sword
|
|||
|
propped up against the wall. For a moment, he thought of taking it,
|
|||
|
but that was too dangerous. It had to be freely given. It was
|
|||
|
dangerous enough for him to be in this room - to have a member of
|
|||
|
the Septent present, involved directly. But, the slightly modified
|
|||
|
Hanla's Tears that Je'en had taken had put her in a state that only
|
|||
|
a Full Adept of Jhel could penetrate, so there was no help for it.
|
|||
|
Perhaps, when Jhel's ministry began to spread again, he could become
|
|||
|
Brother Un somewhere, instead of just Brother Tri, as reward for the
|
|||
|
risk he was taking.
|
|||
|
So thinking, he began to put the finishing touches on his plan.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cefn stopped shuffling the cards, cut them, and layed out the
|
|||
|
Bent Star pattern. It appeared exactly as before. Nothing conclusive!
|
|||
|
Stifling the impulse to curse loud and long (the last time he
|
|||
|
had given vent to such oath-making, he had inadvertantly leveled his
|
|||
|
previous house, and laid waste to about a square hectare of the land
|
|||
|
about it), he was about to sweep the cards from the table yet again,
|
|||
|
when something caught his eye. He extinguished the light globe
|
|||
|
overhead, to better see the cards. Yes, there, the fifth ray, last
|
|||
|
card. Trump 35, The Entwined Oak. It meant danger, and it had always
|
|||
|
been there. But, today, it was reversed - the only change in the
|
|||
|
pattern for the past week. And the Tree reversed meant imminent
|
|||
|
peril, instead of vague danger on the horizon. It was happening.
|
|||
|
Now. Je'en was in trouble.
|
|||
|
He gathered up the cards again, and, using Trump 35 as the
|
|||
|
significator, he layed out a different pattern, a secretly developed
|
|||
|
one taught him by his master a long time ago. It told him exactly
|
|||
|
what he needed to know, and leaving it lying, he left the dark room
|
|||
|
to muster some help for his charge.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Je'en was becomming worried. This weird limbo she was trapped in
|
|||
|
was beginning to wear on her. And, there was the fact of her
|
|||
|
regained ability to contend with. It didn't really feel like a dream
|
|||
|
at all, and she had been trained to recognize such.
|
|||
|
She had returned to the upper room in hopes that Wend would be
|
|||
|
able to reach her better there. She was staring out the window at
|
|||
|
the swirling chaos there when she heard a sound. She turned, and saw
|
|||
|
that she was no longer alone.
|
|||
|
"Welcome, my dear, to your heart's desire. My name is Terkan,
|
|||
|
and I am responsible for your being here. I also have the power to
|
|||
|
let you stay here, if you so wish."
|
|||
|
Je'en stared at the man who had spoken. He was dressed in
|
|||
|
strangely symboled robes that glowed palely, and there was an air of
|
|||
|
mystery and power about him. She said, "What do you mean? Where am
|
|||
|
I, and why would I want to stay in such a shadowy place?"
|
|||
|
"This is but a gateway from our world into another. In that
|
|||
|
other, you would have all of your former abilities, as well as those
|
|||
|
you have gained since the accident. And that is why you would want
|
|||
|
to stay here. I can show you the way into that other world, where
|
|||
|
you would be as you are now, fully healed and whole. There is but a
|
|||
|
small price."
|
|||
|
Je'en grew immediately wary. She believed the man, for there
|
|||
|
were tales of other worlds and passages between them. This limbo was
|
|||
|
not like any of the stories, but then the stories were old. She was
|
|||
|
wary for a different reason. She had obviously been led into this by
|
|||
|
a long and very twisted path, and she wanted to know why. If this
|
|||
|
man Terkan had been acting charitably, he would have simply offered
|
|||
|
her the choice for free, without all this subterfuge. What did he
|
|||
|
want, and why?
|
|||
|
"What price?" she asked. "And what of my companion, Wend?"
|
|||
|
"Ah, Wend. Well, he was in my employ, you see. The drug I used
|
|||
|
on you is illegal in Baranur - and very rare and expensive. Wend was
|
|||
|
well paid to get you into the proper state, but at the last, he
|
|||
|
decided that his salary for the job wasn't enough. You see, that
|
|||
|
sword you carry is very valuable to certain people, but it has a
|
|||
|
spell on it that it cannot be taken, it must change owners by free
|
|||
|
will. My sponsors are willing to pay a large sum of money to me for
|
|||
|
this sword, some of which Wend would have gotten. But, he got
|
|||
|
greedy, and wanted it all. So, I had to kill him."
|
|||
|
"But, why not just come to me and ask for the sword? I have
|
|||
|
little sentimental value for it, and would sell it gladly for the
|
|||
|
right price. Why all of this?"
|
|||
|
Terkan smiled a little nervously, and said, "Well, I thought to
|
|||
|
pay you in other kind, being a little greedy myself. When a little
|
|||
|
research revealed a certain incident in Magnus, I decided to restore
|
|||
|
to you your Bardic abilities, if you so choose."
|
|||
|
It almost made sense to Je'en. But, not quite. It was too
|
|||
|
devious. All of the secrecy, Wend's supposed duplicity, the mild
|
|||
|
drug to lull her senses. There was something more. There had to be.
|
|||
|
But, so what. Terkan was indeed offering her her heart's desire.
|
|||
|
For, tho Wend had cured her of her nightmares, the desire to make
|
|||
|
music remained as much a part of her as ever. And it seemed that
|
|||
|
here, and (if Terkan was to be believed) in the world on the other
|
|||
|
side of this gate, she could be a bard again. Was that worth
|
|||
|
whatever the real reason behind Terkan's manuevering was?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Part Five: Rescue
|
|||
|
Cefn and Mahr rode into Dargon at a gallop. They hadn't actually
|
|||
|
ridden that far - Cefn's home was much too far from Dargon, so they
|
|||
|
had used a little magic to help them on their way. Cefn, robed and
|
|||
|
deeply cowled, led the way at an unsafe speed through the streets of
|
|||
|
Dargon, arousing cries of suprise as they galloped past citizens.
|
|||
|
The wizard reined in just outside of Margala's House. He raced
|
|||
|
to the front door, Mahr behind him, and entered without knocking.
|
|||
|
They dashed past the suprised Margala, and up the stairs, down the
|
|||
|
hall, to room 21.
|
|||
|
They entered the room without any ceremony (after Cefn unbarred
|
|||
|
it by setting a glowing hand on the knob), and Mahr looked around as
|
|||
|
her Master got to work immediately. Mahr saw Je'en on the bed - the
|
|||
|
first time she had seen their charge in the flesh. She looked much
|
|||
|
the same as in the Image Table, or Cefn's Scrying Prism, save for
|
|||
|
the fact that she was obviously in trouble. Her whole body was
|
|||
|
rigid, with just a faint rise and fall in her chest to denote
|
|||
|
breathing. Her face, what could be seen around the mask, looked to
|
|||
|
be drawn in suprise, perhaps pain - her eyes were closed tight shut,
|
|||
|
and her mouth was a compressed line.
|
|||
|
She turned quickly away from the body in the corner. Mahr knew
|
|||
|
who it was. She had seen Wend and Je'en together in the city in the
|
|||
|
Image Table. She was sorry he was dead - he had treated Je'en kindly
|
|||
|
- but she wasn't sure why he was dead, or if he had had any part in
|
|||
|
getting Je'en into the vulnerable position she was in now.
|
|||
|
The other person in the room, a middle aged man dressed like a
|
|||
|
merchant, was kneeling and sitting on his folded-under legs. His
|
|||
|
fingers were contorted into the Triple-cross sign, and his hands
|
|||
|
rested on his knees. He seemed to be concentrating, focusing on a
|
|||
|
small medallion on his lap, but his eyes were closed. His breath
|
|||
|
came as slowly and shallowly as did Je'en. Cefn had explained little
|
|||
|
- their ride had been short and hurried - but Mahr realized that the
|
|||
|
meditating man was one of the enemy. She even fancied she could feel
|
|||
|
an aura of evil about him.
|
|||
|
Cefn said, "Mahr, south-east, quickly."
|
|||
|
Mahr fetched the compass from her belt pouch, and noted the
|
|||
|
requested direction, then pointed. Cefn took a small blue angle and
|
|||
|
placed it on the floor pointing where Mahr had indicated. Then, Cefn
|
|||
|
removed six other angles form a small yellow pouch, all colored red,
|
|||
|
and touched them, one at a time, to the blue one. As they came into
|
|||
|
contact with the first angle, they each began to glow, and as Cefn
|
|||
|
released them, they moved of their own accord to their proper place.
|
|||
|
When the sixth red angle had settled into place, forming, with the
|
|||
|
blue one, a seven-pointed star, the first angle also began to glow,
|
|||
|
causing a webwork of lines to spring up between all of the angles,
|
|||
|
forming a solid seven-sided figure with a seven-pointed star within.
|
|||
|
Cefn beckoned, and Mahr joined him at the center of the figure.
|
|||
|
He asked, "Ready?" Mahr nodded, and Cefn said a word. Blue and red
|
|||
|
flame shot up from the outlines of the figure, climbing to the
|
|||
|
ceiling and blotting out the room around them. It flared for several
|
|||
|
seconds, and then it died, revealing a vastly different scene.
|
|||
|
It was a shadowly, limbo place, vaguely resembling the room they
|
|||
|
had come from. The formerly meditating man, now dressed as a priest
|
|||
|
of Jhel, was speaking. "We don't really have forever, Je'en. The
|
|||
|
drug you were given will wear off in time, and I don't have any more
|
|||
|
with me. You must decide. Which will it be - keep the sword or
|
|||
|
become a Bard again?"
|
|||
|
Cefn said, softly, "Mahr, stay within the septacle. This could
|
|||
|
get messy." Then, louder, "Je'en, don't listen to that man. He has
|
|||
|
lied to you. Whatever you do, do not give him your sword."
|
|||
|
Both parties turned at the sound of the mage's voice. Mahr saw
|
|||
|
that Je'en wasn't wearing her mask here, and there was no scar on
|
|||
|
her suprised face. The priest scowled, and said "Just who do you
|
|||
|
think you are? This woman can make up her own mind - leave her alone."
|
|||
|
Cefn ignored the man, and took a few steps towards Je'en (and
|
|||
|
out of the septacle). "Je'en, this man is a priest of Jhel. Have you
|
|||
|
ever heard of that particular cult? Well, its been outlawed for a
|
|||
|
very long time. The last remaining members of this cult are right
|
|||
|
here in Dargon, and this man is one of them. The sword you bear,
|
|||
|
that you got from the vaults of the College in Magnus, just happens
|
|||
|
to be the key to a prophecy of total world victory for the followers
|
|||
|
of Jhel, and the prophecy is not just words - if the high priests of
|
|||
|
Jhel get hold of that sword, and release what is within it, the
|
|||
|
whole world will fall to them."
|
|||
|
"Why should I believe you, instead of this man?" asked Je'en.
|
|||
|
She was even more confused now. If the tall, cowled man was right,
|
|||
|
the priest's interest was explained, but she couldn't be sure. And,
|
|||
|
if she could really enter another world, and have her heart's desire
|
|||
|
in that world, did she care what happened in the one she had left?
|
|||
|
"Je'en, please. You must listen to me. Just now, when he said
|
|||
|
that the drug would wear off - it won't. You'll be trapped in this
|
|||
|
limbo forever. Even after your body dies, your spirit will wander
|
|||
|
here endlessly. You have regained your bardic skills and whole body,
|
|||
|
but to what use? The beings who inhabit this realm need no music for
|
|||
|
entertainment - they have other amusements. Please, do not accept.
|
|||
|
He will give you nothing in return, and destroy the world in the
|
|||
|
bargain. Deny his offer, come to me, and we will depart."
|
|||
|
There was something about the cowled man that prompted Je'en to
|
|||
|
trust him. Perhaps, it was because he wanted nothing from her except
|
|||
|
to give up what the other man had supposedly given her. She turned
|
|||
|
from him to the priest, and saw the scowl on his face. It was
|
|||
|
actually more than a scowl, it was pure rage and hatred concealed
|
|||
|
badly. Je'en made her decision - she began to walk over to the
|
|||
|
taller man.
|
|||
|
The priest shouted "No!" and flung an arm across Je'en's path.
|
|||
|
>From his fingers a siclky purple-green line of fire flashed across
|
|||
|
the room, between Je'en and the cowled man. The priest swung his arm
|
|||
|
behind him, and the line of fire became a translucent wall dividing
|
|||
|
the whole room in half, with Je'en on one side, and the other three
|
|||
|
on the other.
|
|||
|
Je'en tried to push thru the green-purple wall, but touching it
|
|||
|
caused so much pain that she cried out and fell back. So, she could
|
|||
|
only watch what was going on on the other side.
|
|||
|
Mahr was watching, too. She had never seen her master in an all
|
|||
|
out Duel of magic. Such a thing was very rare, as were magicians of
|
|||
|
most any caliber. She was not suprised that the priest could hold
|
|||
|
his own against Cefn - it had rapidly become obvious that he was
|
|||
|
high up in the priestly order of Jhel, perhaps even in the Septent,
|
|||
|
and it was well known (to those who knew at all) that the highest of
|
|||
|
Jhel's followers were renowned magic users.
|
|||
|
The contest was incomprehensible to non-participants. All that
|
|||
|
was visible of the striving was stray emissions - attacks that did
|
|||
|
not make their mark, the efluvia of shattered thrusts, and leakages
|
|||
|
of gathered force for an attack. Mahr saw her master seemingly just
|
|||
|
standing, cowl thrown back, hands slightly forward of his body,
|
|||
|
facing the priest, who was in a similar position. Light flashed to
|
|||
|
the sides of them, and Mahr started as several stray attacks that
|
|||
|
shattered against the protection of the septacle. She noticed that
|
|||
|
the wall created by the priest was similar protection for Je'en.
|
|||
|
Eventually, the battle began to go against the priest. There
|
|||
|
were few stray emissions around the priest anymore, indicating more
|
|||
|
on-the- mark attacks. He began to sweat, and his hands began to move
|
|||
|
higher and higher as he worked harder to attack and defend himself.
|
|||
|
He began to glance furtively around for a way out. His eyes lit on
|
|||
|
Mahr and her protection, and he smiled.
|
|||
|
His hands began to point different directions, and he began to
|
|||
|
direct energy at the ground around the septacle, as well as at Cefn.
|
|||
|
The ground below the septacle began to thin, but no one noticed, so
|
|||
|
intent were they on the battle. Slowly, Terkan's magic ate away at
|
|||
|
the fabric of the limbo space, until finally it gave way. Mahr
|
|||
|
screamed as she fell thru into somewhere else.
|
|||
|
Cefn turned in time to see his apprentice vanish, along with the
|
|||
|
septacle, intact. With a little cry, he darted over to the hole in
|
|||
|
the floor to try to help her. Seeing his chance, Terkan prepared a
|
|||
|
final blow, aimed at Cefn's defenceless back.
|
|||
|
Je'en saw Terkan smiling at the undefended mage, and knew that
|
|||
|
the mage was in trouble. She braced herself and threw herself at the
|
|||
|
purple-green wall, and at Terkan. Pain lanced thru her, searing
|
|||
|
every nerve, causing her to scream in agony - but she kept going.
|
|||
|
She moved through treacle, taking forever - a forever of agony - to
|
|||
|
reach the man, but reach him she did, knocking him down, causing him
|
|||
|
to lose his concentration, and his spell backfired. Je'en lay
|
|||
|
panting and crying from the pain for several minutes before she felt
|
|||
|
the other man gently move her from on top of Terkan, who seemed to
|
|||
|
be unconscious.
|
|||
|
Cefn examined the priest, and deemed him safe for the moment. He
|
|||
|
returned his attention to Je'en, and said, "Are you alright?"
|
|||
|
Je'en sat up groggily, and looked at her rescuer. She first
|
|||
|
noted his eyes - pure blue all thru. He was handsome, with thin,
|
|||
|
aristocratic features, but his eyes seemed something out of legends.
|
|||
|
She finally said, "Yes, I'm alright. Your friend..."
|
|||
|
"Mahr was my apprentice. She is beyond hope. Perhaps my masters
|
|||
|
will look kindly on her, save her, but she will not return to this
|
|||
|
world. I should have been prepared for treachery. I..."
|
|||
|
"Um, thank you for saving me," said Je'en. "Who are you, anyway,
|
|||
|
and why?"
|
|||
|
Cefn said, "My appologies, Je'en. My name is Cefn an'Derin. My
|
|||
|
occupation should be obvious. What I said about Jhel was true - your
|
|||
|
sword is the key to the priests of Jhel's armageddon prophecy, and
|
|||
|
this man, probably one of the leaders of the cult, was trying to
|
|||
|
wrest it from you. We, Mahr and I, have been involved with the
|
|||
|
downfall of Jhel, and have been watching you carefully, which is why
|
|||
|
he tried to trick you into giving him the sword. Only his brief
|
|||
|
possessive thought alerted my surveilance to the fact that you were
|
|||
|
in trouble. Now, we - I - have the key we need to destroy the rest
|
|||
|
of the Septent of Jhel in Dargon, and destroy her worship for good."
|
|||
|
Cefn reached, perhaps a little wearily, into his belt-pouch and
|
|||
|
withdrew a small hemisphere of dark glass. Je'en watched as he
|
|||
|
placed the glass dome on Terkan's temple, and said a word. The dome
|
|||
|
began to glow, and the unconscious Terkan began to grimace in pain.
|
|||
|
It took about five minutes for the dome to do its work, and by the
|
|||
|
end, Terkan was screaming soundlessly. When the hemisphere ceased
|
|||
|
glowing, Cefn removed it from Terkan's head. It left a charred spot
|
|||
|
where it had rested, and it was no longer dark, but rather a
|
|||
|
swirling milky-white.
|
|||
|
Cefn said, "Within this theryum is all of the priests memories
|
|||
|
and thoughts. With this, I can masquerade as him, gain admittance to
|
|||
|
a high meeting of the Brothers, and destroy them.
|
|||
|
"Come, Je'en. Let us return to Dargon. I think the priest will
|
|||
|
be happy to suffer the imprisonment he meant for you."
|
|||
|
"Wait, Master Cefn. Terkan, the priest, he said that he could
|
|||
|
send me to another world, where I would be able to sing again. Could
|
|||
|
you do that as he said? If so, I would rather not return to Dargon."
|
|||
|
"I'm sorry, Je'en, but that was another lie. There is no way for
|
|||
|
our magics to penetrate the dimensional boundaries. This is another
|
|||
|
plane of existence, and in it, you bear your spirit-body, which is
|
|||
|
as healthy and whole as you wish it to be. But, human life is
|
|||
|
foreign to this plane, and its natural inhabitants enjoy torturing
|
|||
|
anyone or thing foreign."
|
|||
|
Cefn had begun setting up another septacle, orienting the major
|
|||
|
angle on a sense he had of the proper direction. Je'en watched the
|
|||
|
little red angles dart around of their own accord with fascination.
|
|||
|
When it was done, Cefn motioned her into the center of the figure.
|
|||
|
She said, before Cefn could begin to activate the septacle, "So,
|
|||
|
what now? You have the means to destroy this cult of Jhel, but you
|
|||
|
have also lost your apprentice. What will you do when your mission
|
|||
|
is complete?"
|
|||
|
Cefn looked at Je'en, and she saw sadness in his face. He said,
|
|||
|
"Mahr and I worked long and hard to destroy Jhel. I shall miss her
|
|||
|
greatly, yet some kind of loss is fitting, in a way. As to what
|
|||
|
next, I have no idea. My time is finally once again my own. Perhaps
|
|||
|
I'll do some more research, maybe find another apprentice, and pass
|
|||
|
along my knowledge. I just don't know."
|
|||
|
"Why don't we team up," said Je'en. "I have been getting so
|
|||
|
bored in that Peace-keeper job I've got, that it nearly drove me
|
|||
|
mad. But, in a land that is so sparsely populated, and largely
|
|||
|
unknown, there must be some more exciting work for a swordswoman,
|
|||
|
and it will be even more exciting with a real magician along to
|
|||
|
help. Sound good?"
|
|||
|
Cefn was silent for a long time. In truth, the idea seemed a
|
|||
|
good one - but Je'en didn't know very much about him, including the
|
|||
|
part he had played in her present circumstances. Still, the offer of
|
|||
|
adventure sure sounded better than a lot of reclusive research. And,
|
|||
|
he had grown to like Je'en while watching and protecting her. So, he
|
|||
|
finally said, "Sure. Why not? Let's be a team!" And he activated the
|
|||
|
magic that returned them to the real world and Dargon.
|
|||
|
-John L. White <WHITE @ DREXELVM>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-John L. White <WHITE @ DREXELVM>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
|