1470 lines
85 KiB
Plaintext
1470 lines
85 KiB
Plaintext
From WHITE@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU Tue May 12 10:33:57 1992
|
|
Received: from DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU by eff.org with SMTP id AA26766
|
|
(5.65c/IDA-1.4.4/pen-ident for <RITA@EFF.ORG>); Tue, 12 May 1992 10:33:46 -0400
|
|
Message-Id: <199205121433.AA26766@eff.org>
|
|
Received: from DUVM by DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU (IBM VM SMTP R1.2.2MX) with BSMTP id 3302; Tue, 12 May 92 10:30:23 EDT
|
|
Date: Tue, 12 May 92 10:30:14 EDT
|
|
From: "Avid Reader - Fledgling Writer" <WHITE@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU>
|
|
To: RITA@EFF.ORG
|
|
Status: OR
|
|
|
|
1 /
|
|
DDDDD ZZZZZZ //
|
|
D D AAAA RRR GGGG OOOO NN N Z I NN N EEEE ||
|
|
D D A A R R G O O N N N Z I N N N E ||Volume 2
|
|
-=========================================================+<OOOOOOOOO>|)
|
|
D D AAAA RRR G GG O O N N N Z I N N N E || Issue 5
|
|
DDDDD A A R R GGGG OOOO N NN ZZZZZZ I N NN EEEE ||
|
|
\\
|
|
\
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
-- DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 5 10/13/89 Cir 824 --
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
-- Contents --
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
DAG Dafydd Editorial
|
|
Sons of Gateway 2: Magic Jon "Grimjack" Evans Naia 21-Ober 13, '13
|
|
Dragon Hunt 4 Max Khaytsus Yule 8-23, 1013
|
|
Damsel in Distress Wendy Hennequin Sy 24-27, 1013
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Dafydd's Amber Glow
|
|
by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr, Editor DargonZine
|
|
(b.c.k.a white@duvm.BitNet)
|
|
|
|
Today's editorial is to let all of you readers know that
|
|
DargonZine is not alone. Two other magazines of Science
|
|
Fiction/Fantasy have recently come to my attention - Quanta and
|
|
Athene. In a spirit of cooperation, we three editors have
|
|
gotten together in the hopes of increasing the readership of
|
|
each others' 'zines. Please note: we three are in no way in
|
|
competition. All three magazines are free, and all three of us
|
|
would be happy if each and every one of our readers received a
|
|
copy of all the magazines currently available. See the end of
|
|
this issue (and future issues) for more information about both
|
|
Quanta and Athene.
|
|
On a related note, if any of you readers know of other
|
|
electronic magazines about SF/Fantasy, either Fiction or Fact
|
|
'Zines, please let me know about them, and perhaps let the
|
|
editor (if you know him/her) know about DargonZine. I would
|
|
love to have more reading material available to me and I'm sure
|
|
that most of our readers would too.
|
|
Thank you,
|
|
|
|
Dafydd Cyhoeddwr, Editor DargonZine
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 Sons of Gateway
|
|
Part 2: Magic
|
|
by Jon "Grimjack" Evans
|
|
(b.c.k.a. v047kfz7@ubvms)
|
|
|
|
The early morning sun sparkled off the sweat pouring down Ne'on's
|
|
forehead, red from the effort. Symbols flashed through his mind,
|
|
mimicked by interweaving patterns of flying fingers. The final
|
|
incantation, and the command:
|
|
"Burn!" Ne'on concentrated on his target and a branch burst into
|
|
flames. He smiled as he imagined skin of his brother's limbs
|
|
blistering and burning like the twig. He was pleased with himself.
|
|
Just then, a pale ghost of a human being "floated" through the
|
|
wall next to him. It was Qord, astrally projecting himself to summon
|
|
Ne'on. 'It is time,' Ne'on thought.
|
|
"It is time," Qord said. Turning back toward his room, Qord
|
|
"flew" immediately back to his body, walls and tables proving no
|
|
obstacle for him. Ne'on took a quick drink of water from a glass on
|
|
the table and poured the rest on the smoldering branch. Wiping his
|
|
brow, he answered his master's summons.
|
|
"Ne'on Winston, son of Kald, Lord Gateway," called Qord in the
|
|
ritual of the test. "You are charged with a claim to the title of Bark
|
|
- do you deny this claim?" Qord was a little uneasy. Ne'on had shown
|
|
much improvement and discipline since his return from Gateway, and he
|
|
was proud of Ne'on. However, if he failed now, he would be Drained. If
|
|
Ne'on believed he needed more time for study, he could always answer
|
|
"Yes".
|
|
"No," Ne'on replied, tensing for the test.
|
|
"Mage," smiled Qord, "prove your mettle."
|
|
With that, the test began. Potions were concocted and illusions
|
|
shimmered. Energy flew in all forms as every color of the spectrum
|
|
flared. Spell upon spell was uttered; elixers were created and
|
|
destroyed. For hours, the chambers of Qord, Leaf of the Nar-Enthruen,
|
|
glowed, darkened, flared, and faded. And with the setting of the sun,
|
|
the final spell was uttered. Ne'on collapsed in a pool of sweat.
|
|
"You made one mistake, my son," noted Qord, shuffling through his
|
|
robes. "Well, two, actually," he continued, producing two vials. He
|
|
quaffed one of the elixers and extended the second to Ne'on, "First of
|
|
all, you have to work a little more on definition of the images in
|
|
your illusions. Second, you didn't save a strength potion for your
|
|
recovery." Qord smiled. "Lucky for you, I always carry a spare!"
|
|
Ne'on feebly reached for the flask, fumbled with the seal for a
|
|
moment, and quickly inhaled it. Breathing in more of it than he
|
|
swallowed, he choked as he felt the strength returning to his bones.
|
|
"Thank you, Qord," he finally managed to say. A bit anxiously, "Well?
|
|
How'd I do?"
|
|
"If you had failed, Ne'on, you would already be stripped of your
|
|
power. As it happens," Qord's grin grew broader, "I am proud to bestow
|
|
upon you the title of Bark!
|
|
"In celebration of this indubitable honor, I propose a vacation,
|
|
of sorts. A trip! As you know, the Melrin festival begins in nine
|
|
days. Magnus is renowned for its holiday extravaganza, and is only
|
|
four days ride from here. I haven't spent Melrin in Magnus in over
|
|
five years. What say we go? We can laugh, drink, celebrate . . . I've
|
|
a few old friends I would like to see . . . and I'd be proud to have
|
|
you with me."
|
|
Qord was practically bubbling over. He was obviously very happy
|
|
about Ne'on's success, and Ne'on wondered if that potion Qord had just
|
|
taken didn't have more than just a strengthening herb. He supposed
|
|
magicians would have knowledge of such substances. Quite pleased with
|
|
1his own success, his reply was obvious. "Why not? I could use some
|
|
rest. And, speaking of rest . . ." Grunting to stand up, he bid his
|
|
master goodnight. Potions that granted unusual strength usually
|
|
demanded a high price in sleep for their benefits.
|
|
|
|
On the morning of the twenty-fifth of Naia, Qord and Ne'on
|
|
departed for Magnus. With some final instructions to Jordan, the
|
|
servant, they moved their horses onto the brightly lit path of the
|
|
forest. In the early morning light, the dew glistened off the leaves
|
|
of the underbrush, and the shadows of the trees mixed with the moss on
|
|
the ground.
|
|
Around midday, they came across a terrible sight! Lying on the
|
|
path in front of them was a man, half-conscious, and covered in blood.
|
|
He was sprawled out on his back with his head against a tree. "Help
|
|
me..." he gasped weakly, "help...me..."
|
|
Qord leapt from the saddle with a speed be-lying his age and
|
|
rushed to the man's side. "Ne'on, bring the potions, quickly!" Easing
|
|
the man's head down to the ground, he gently probed the man's body for
|
|
the wound, or wounds, robbing the man of his life.
|
|
Just as Ne'on arrived with the potions, the blood soaked man
|
|
raised his arm and pointed behind them. "There..." There was the sound
|
|
of people crashing through the brush and a dull THUNK! as an arrow
|
|
struck the man in his chest! He twitched once, and stopped. Ne'on
|
|
stood still, afraid to move.
|
|
"Turn around slowly, both of you. And step away from that man.
|
|
Very good," he added, as Ne'on and Qord obeyed. "What have they got,
|
|
Red?"
|
|
"Very nice purses, Mackie!" The man they had stopped to help -
|
|
the one with an arrow in his chest! - stood up and walked toward
|
|
"Mackie", presumably the leader of the rogues. "Must be on their way
|
|
to Magnus for Melrin, by the look of them. Well, now, they just
|
|
ensured us a very nice holiday!" The band of men, seven of them all
|
|
told, laughed heartily as Red withdrew the arrow from a wooden board
|
|
hidden under his leather jerkin. "Next time, Mackie, use a little less
|
|
force on the bow, eh? The arrow tip nipped me a bit."
|
|
Ne'on's mind was racing. Qord's life and his were worthless to
|
|
the thieves, and they knew it. If anything ws to be done, it would
|
|
have to be now; but, he didn't know what to do! His stomach knotted
|
|
and his limbs grew unsteady. His pulse beat loudly in his ears, and he
|
|
began to panic.
|
|
"Hold, Ne'on." Once again, the voice spoke to him. "These paltry
|
|
ruffians cannot harm you. With a single thought, their crude weapons
|
|
cannot touch you. And with a single motion, your enemies will flee
|
|
before you."
|
|
"Who are you?" Ne'on called out, no longer aware of his
|
|
surroundings.
|
|
The voice was not the one who answered, though. "Just simple
|
|
travellers on our way to Magnus!" Red's answer brought out more jeers
|
|
and laughter from the thieves. "Yeah! Collecting charity from the good
|
|
people in these parts for our favourite cause: us! Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!"
|
|
The band was quite pleased with itself and the fun it was having, but
|
|
Ne'on was oblivious to them all.
|
|
'Who are you?' he thought, this time.
|
|
"A part of you that wishes to survive. Now," it continued,
|
|
"protect yourself."
|
|
Ne'on closed his eyes. Mystical symbols danced across his mind as
|
|
the low hum of his voice summoned the magic within him.
|
|
"Hey! What's he doin'?" Red called attention to Ne'on and the
|
|
whole party sobered. "You idiots!" he cried. "He's a freakin' wizard!
|
|
He'll kill us all! Shoot him!" In less than two seconds, six arrows
|
|
1were nocked and loosed. Too late. Ne'on's spell was finished and the
|
|
arrows deflected off him.
|
|
"Now, make them run."
|
|
More symbols appeared as he traced runes in the air. His
|
|
incantation finished the spell. Suddenly, a wall of fire burst forth
|
|
between the rogues and the mages! Smoke rose in the air, and twigs
|
|
crackled as they burn.
|
|
"Gods! He's gonna burn us ta death! Let's get out a here!" The
|
|
men dropped money, weapons, and packs in their desperate scramble to
|
|
flee the burning woods. "There," spoke the voice, and a lightening
|
|
bolt struck out of the clear blue sky.
|
|
"And there."
|
|
"And there." More than one of the thieves would be cleaning their
|
|
britches this day as the last bolt struck Mackie and he fell to the
|
|
ground. It would be a long time before they returned to this area.
|
|
The wall of fire dispersed as quickly as it appeared. The
|
|
electrically charred ground of the forest floor vanished, leaving the
|
|
soil marred only by the panicked scamperings of frightened men. Mackie
|
|
lay on the ground, unconscious.
|
|
"Well done," praised Qord as he went to collect their belongings.
|
|
"I almost believed you cast those spells for real! If it weren't for
|
|
this scoundrel's breathing I might not have been able to tell the
|
|
difference. You amaze me more and more, Ne'on. You'll be a great mage,
|
|
one day - you're already a respectable illusionist!"
|
|
"Why is Mackie unconscious?", he thought aloud. He was glad he
|
|
didn't finish the thought verbally for he had meant to kill the rogue.
|
|
"Well, you couldn't expect him to stay conscious, could you?
|
|
After all, the mind believes the body has been struck by lightening.
|
|
It shuts itself down in order to keep the body from experiencing too
|
|
much pain.
|
|
"Now, before he wakes up, let us be moving along." Qord repacked
|
|
the rest of their belongings. "Oh, yes. I almost forgot." He removed a
|
|
silver dagger from within his robes. "Here, I found it near Mackie."
|
|
Ne'on took the knife, admiring it's beauty. "It's a fine blade.
|
|
Very well crafted. Thank you, Qord."
|
|
"Oh, no! Don't thank me. After all, you were the one who chased
|
|
off those ruffians. No, no; you deserve it."
|
|
And with that, they set forth once again for Magnus.
|
|
|
|
The warm summer evening settled heavily on Ne'on's shoulders as
|
|
he watched Qord exit yet another of Magnus' inns. By the look on his
|
|
face, Ne'on knew the answer to his question before it was asked. "If
|
|
we keep this up we'll be spending Melrin in a stable!"
|
|
"Not very likely." Qord was tired. Four and a half days of travel
|
|
took their toll on the seventy year old Leaf. "All the merchants in
|
|
town brought extra horses to carry their wares. There's less room in
|
|
the stables than in the inns." He laid a reassuring hand on his horse,
|
|
"But don't worry, Gal, I know a place where all of us can stay." His
|
|
gaze returned to Ne'on, "A gentleman whom I aided a few years back. A
|
|
mystical being from another dimension fell in lust with him, poor
|
|
chap. She was an atrocious sight. Didn't take rejection well, either,
|
|
I'm afraid."
|
|
|
|
There were fewer street lamps on this side of Magnus, but the
|
|
light from the shops, houses, and taverns kept the street well lit. Up
|
|
ahead, Ne'on noticed, was an inn with the standard of two unicorns in
|
|
battle. The sign read: "The Fighting Unicorns", and Qord assured Ne'on
|
|
they would be able to stay here.
|
|
Before they could reach the inn, there was a loud crash, the
|
|
sound of breaking glass, and a heavy thud! as the door swung open.
|
|
1Silhouetted against the bright light from within was a large man
|
|
swinging another through the air, releasing him at the hight of the
|
|
swing. The smaller man flew through the air, landing in a wagon on the
|
|
other side of the street. The larger man's voice bellowed over the
|
|
noise from within, "Next time you touch one of my girls like that,
|
|
it'll be more than a bottle I break over your head! Now, get out of
|
|
here before I lose my temper - and you lose your neck!"
|
|
"I hope you don't treat all your customers like that, Sir Hawk,"
|
|
Qord spurred up to the light of the inn, removing his cowl as he
|
|
spoke. "I do not think I could survive such a toss, at my age."
|
|
"I treat 'em the way they deserve, old ma- Well! By my sword and
|
|
shield!" Sir Hawk's visage turned from one of annoyance to one of
|
|
great joy. "Qord, you old son of a she-wolf, how are you? And what are
|
|
you doing in such a common part of the city?"
|
|
Qord dismounted and grasped his friend's arm firmly. "I'm here
|
|
for Melrin, of course! And, other than lack of a place to stay, I'm
|
|
fine. Very well, in fact."
|
|
Sir Hawk smiled. He had guessed the reason Qord had ventured so
|
|
far from the nicer districts of Magnus. Thankfully, he could
|
|
accommodate him. "Say no more, my friend! I have just the room for you
|
|
and your companion. Come in! I'll have the boy take care of your
|
|
steeds."
|
|
A servant came at Sir Hawk's behest and took their mounts to the
|
|
stables. Sir Hawk ordered a meal for his guests and cleared a table in
|
|
the well-crowded tavern. The room was loud with song and revelry, and
|
|
Sir Hawk almost had to yell to be heard above the din. "So tell me,
|
|
Lord Winston: why is it you do not spend Melrin in the Royal District?
|
|
I thought it was a matter of etiquette to stay with your family while
|
|
you are visiting Magnus."
|
|
"A matter of honor, sir," Ne'on replied. "My father and my uncle
|
|
were never on good terms. Rather than inconvenience my uncle, and
|
|
embarrass my father, I declined to stay there." It wasn't unknown
|
|
among the nobles of Magnus that Lord Keeper Winston of Gateway Keep
|
|
and his brother, Lord Winston, a minor land holder, associated with
|
|
each other as little as possible. Ne'on sipped his wine.
|
|
Hawk looked confused. "No, not your uncle. I meant your brother,
|
|
Lord Goren."
|
|
Ne'on choked on his wine, spitting a little, and drooling some
|
|
onto his napkin. "My apologies, sir! But Goren is here? In Magnus?!"
|
|
Ne'on instantly became nervous and defensive. What's he doing here?
|
|
Does he know I'm here? Does he know WHY I'm here? What does he want?
|
|
He almost betrayed his emotions to the others; but, once again, the
|
|
voice, like rolling thunder, spoke to him: "Do not fear, Ne'on. Your
|
|
brother could not possibly be aware of your presence here. You need
|
|
not worry."
|
|
Then Hawk spoke. "No need to apologize, my lord. Had I known how
|
|
you would react, I would not have asked. It is I who should apologize.
|
|
Let us have some more wine." Sir Hawk called one of his serving girls
|
|
and ordered more wine.
|
|
"I thank you, Sir Hawk, but I must be getting to bed." Ne'on
|
|
stood up. "I have never been in Magnus during Melrin before, although
|
|
my father often told me of it, and I wish to make an early start
|
|
tomorrow morn." Ne'on made his leave of the mage and the innkeeper,
|
|
and found a servant to lead him to his room.
|
|
|
|
'I'll have to go to the Fifth Quarter,' thought Ne'on, sipping
|
|
his mead. It was the second day of Melrin and most of the populace was
|
|
at the festival, leaving the Fighting Unicorns all but bare of
|
|
customers. Ne'on had not been having a good time in Magnus. He had
|
|
spent all of the previous day trying to enjoy the festival, but he was
|
|
1troubled with the knowledge of his brother's presence in Magnus. It
|
|
was an added worry which he didn't need. Last night, however, Ne'on
|
|
had found his solution: whoever he found to replace Luke as his
|
|
Captain would have a test - find his brother and make him leave town.
|
|
Finding him wouldn't be the hard part, but making him leave town would
|
|
be; Goren isn't one to take threats idly, and he is fairly proficient
|
|
with a sword.
|
|
Just then, Ne'on noticed an argument growing louder in the room.
|
|
It was coming from behind one of the curtained booths to Ne'on's
|
|
right. The curtain drew apart, and a large hulk of a man walked
|
|
through. A smaller man, with a black cloak about his shoulders,
|
|
remained seated.
|
|
"You still owe me fifty gold coins," stated the smaller man as he
|
|
rose from his seat, "and I'll get it from you whether you give it . .
|
|
. or I take it."
|
|
The larger man stopped. He smiled an amused smile and turned
|
|
around. "Well, I don't think you'll be takin' too much from me, Bart."
|
|
The large man had an almost equally large sword sheathed across his
|
|
back. He drew it. "So I think I'll give it to you." A faint smile
|
|
could be seen on Bart's face as the lummox swung his sword through the
|
|
air. Like lightning, Bart drew his own sword with his left hand, to
|
|
parry the attack, while a dagger flew out of his right, solidly
|
|
lodging itself in the man's chest. The giant fell loudly to the floor.
|
|
Bart sheathed his sword and walked over to the corpse. Wiping his
|
|
dagger on the dead man's clothes, he sheathed it and removed a purse
|
|
from within the man's pockets. He tossed a gold coin to the man at the
|
|
bar. "It was self-defense. You don't remember me."
|
|
Bart looked around once, stared at Ne'on for a moment, and left.
|
|
Ne'on hastily finished his drink and rose to make his exit.
|
|
'Apparently', he smiled, 'I won't need to go to the Fifth Quarter
|
|
after all!'
|
|
|
|
The sound of Goren's footsteps echoed off the walls and buildings
|
|
of the street around him. The light of the street lamps were blurry
|
|
and bright, so he raised his hand to block it out. Unfortunately, this
|
|
was the hand which held his wine bottle, and its meeting with his head
|
|
caused him to stumble about the sidewalk, narrowly side stepping the
|
|
sludge-filled drainage gutters between the street and the walkway. He
|
|
was drunk. He was not happy. And what he saw next made him think he
|
|
was dead.
|
|
In the street ahead of him was a man. The man wore a long black
|
|
cloak about his shoulders, disguising much of his body, but his face
|
|
was unhidden. His face was long and thin and well cleaned, his eyes
|
|
were a piercing blue-grey, and his hair . . . His hair was what most
|
|
struck Goren for it was long, as if it hadn't been cut in years. It
|
|
was dirty blond in color, and thin, and it fell lightly about the
|
|
man's shoulders. In the man's left hand was a long, sharp sword, and
|
|
he was pointing it at Goren. Then the man spoke, and his voice was
|
|
deep and deadly.
|
|
"Certain people don't want you in Magnus, Lord Winston." His thin
|
|
lips barely parted when he spoke, and a slight smile broke out on his
|
|
face. "I've been instructed to tell you to leave. By tomorrow noon, on
|
|
the third of Melrin, you should be out of Magnus. This is your
|
|
warning." With deadly grace, the man jumped forward and lunged at
|
|
Goren. Goren was too drunk to react, and his only thought was 'I'm
|
|
dead' as the sword drove toward his skull. However, the blade only
|
|
just cut him above the eyes, causing a lot of bleeding but doing no
|
|
serious harm. Goren could not see with all the blood pouring down his
|
|
face, and he tensed as he anticipated the killing blow.
|
|
It never came. "This is to remember me by," the man said, and
|
|
1Goren heard soft footsteps striding away. Blackness settled on his
|
|
skull.
|
|
|
|
Darkness faded in and out as Goren dreamed. He dreamed of his
|
|
brother, Ne'on, and the man who attacked him. Ne'on gave the man a
|
|
purse of coins and a letter, and told the man to go to Gateway. The
|
|
man left, darkness faded in and out, and Goren awoke, the dream fading
|
|
in his memory.
|
|
"He'll be alright, Lord Winston." The robed healer was hovering
|
|
over Goren and speaking to someone elsewhere in the room. "More than
|
|
likely, it was the wine which made him unconscious, not the wound -
|
|
that was just bleeding a lot - it is nothing serious." Goren saw the
|
|
healer's head and shoulders pull out of his tunnel-visioned line of
|
|
sight. "The bleeding has stopped and the tissue has begun to heal. I
|
|
can heal it completely, if you wish."
|
|
"No, no; let it scar." The second voice was deeper and older than
|
|
the healer's. And familiar. "It will teach him not to walk unguarded
|
|
and inebriated through the streets of Magnus. Besides, it shouldn't
|
|
take more than a week to heal, and there are others who more
|
|
desperately require your services." Now Goren recognized the other
|
|
voice: it belonged to Lord Cameron Winston, his uncle.
|
|
"In that case," spoke the healer, as Goren's vision expanded, "I
|
|
shall take my leave." The healer bowed, "Good morning, my Lords," and
|
|
left.
|
|
After a short while, Goren spoke. "Whe- AHEM! Where am I?" His
|
|
voice was gravely from little sleep and much alcohol, and his mouth
|
|
was filled with paste. When he cleared his throat he became aware of a
|
|
pressure in his skull, and when he moved his head the room seemed to
|
|
have to catch up with him before he could focus. "Ugh! And what
|
|
have . . . I done to myself?"
|
|
Cameron Winston laughed loudly at his nephew's state, and in so
|
|
doing caused even greater suffering to Goren. This effected even
|
|
greater laughter from Lord Winston, and Goren decided he hated his
|
|
uncle. "I apologize, young Goren," Lord Winston began, "but if you saw
|
|
yourself, you would laugh, too." Lord Winston calmed himself and
|
|
waited for Goren to reply.
|
|
"Oh . . . I don't know," spoke Goren, softly, "I might find pity
|
|
on myself . . . and kill me . . ." At any other time, Lord Winston
|
|
might have found this humorous; now, however, he was serious.
|
|
"It seems someone already tried that for you, my nephew." Goren
|
|
looked up and saw only concern in his uncle's eyes.
|
|
"No . . . this was just a warning . . . Whoever did this could
|
|
have killed me . . . Gods! I was sure he would! . . . but he just did
|
|
this, and told me to leave Magnus." Lord Winston's confusion now added
|
|
to Goren's. "And you still haven't told me where I am."
|
|
"Oh! My sincerest apologies, young lord. I had forgotten you and
|
|
your brother have never stayed in my home." Lord Winston extended his
|
|
hand. "If you feel well enough, allow me to give you a tour of House
|
|
Winston." Goren took his uncle's hand and allowed himself to be helped
|
|
to his feet.
|
|
In the next hour and a half, Goren was given the grand tour of
|
|
House Winston. From the master bedroom to the wine cellar, Lord
|
|
Winston instructed Goren on the history of the house and their family.
|
|
Goren was pleased with being able to hear the history, for his father
|
|
never discussed it. It was a large house, bigger than Winston Manor in
|
|
Gateway Keep, yet it was one of the smallest in the Royal District of
|
|
Magnus. Goren's ancestor's, it was explained to him, were not rich.
|
|
However, during the Great Houses War in 97 BY, the Winston family
|
|
sided with House Tallihran, King Haralan's ancestors, and became Lords
|
|
as a result of their fealty.
|
|
1 Lord Winston seemed eager to answer any questions Goren asked
|
|
about the family history; however, when he asked about Cameron's
|
|
feelings toward his father, Lord Winston replied, "I leave that to
|
|
your father to explain, if he will. It is between he and I, mostly,
|
|
and I would not want that to interfere in future generations of the
|
|
Winston family."
|
|
Finally, Goren asked his uncle what he thought of Goren's
|
|
encounter the night before. "Well, Goren," began Winston, "you have
|
|
assured me it is not some young lady's father trying to frighten off
|
|
suitors, so it can only mean one thing."
|
|
"And what is that?"
|
|
"Someone in Magnus believes you pose a threat to him or her. Now,
|
|
you have two rational courses of action. First, you can stay in
|
|
Magnus; I'll give you five of the House guards to protect you for the
|
|
rest of your stay. Second, you can leave Magnus, in which case I
|
|
should still give you those guards to protect your journey." They were
|
|
in the Main Hall, again, and Goren looked at two of the guards
|
|
protecting the outside entrance.
|
|
"No, that won't be necessary. I-" Goren stopped. His vision
|
|
wavered, and he felt weak for a moment. He grasped his uncle's
|
|
shoulder to steady himself, and then it was past. "No doubt I've still
|
|
to recover from last night's activities. But, as I was saying, I do
|
|
not think the guards will be necessary." Goren raised his hand to stop
|
|
the protests he saw building in his uncle. "Do not worry, my Lord, I
|
|
have no intention of staying in Magnus. While I'd love to meet that
|
|
man while I am sober, I have no doubts about his having friends. I
|
|
shall leave within the hour."
|
|
"Well thought, Goren." Lord Winston was surprised. He had heard
|
|
of Goren's usually-rash behavior from Marcus, and his reaction toward
|
|
this matter was unexpected. "I thought you would have wanted to form a
|
|
search party and hunt the man down. It seems I was mistaken."
|
|
"Not really." Goren looked down for a moment, then raised his
|
|
head. "My first thought, when I awoke, was to grab my sword and find
|
|
this man. But I was in no shape to go anywhere - and I don't believe
|
|
you would have let me - so I had the opportunity to think, for a
|
|
while. It seems some problems cannot be solved with a sword."
|
|
Lord Winston smiled, and Goren felt proud of that smile. It was
|
|
meant for him. Already, he began to feel closer to his uncle than he
|
|
did to his father. "I see you've heard my brother's favorite motto,"
|
|
said Winston.
|
|
"Heard!" Goren exclaimed, "I lived it for 23 years!"
|
|
|
|
The sun had just fallen. The lamps of Magnus were being lit by
|
|
men and women on carts, travelling the streets with fire and oil. It
|
|
was night time. A man huddled on one side of an alleyway, his form
|
|
barely visible in the darkness. Another man stood a foot away from
|
|
him, speaking softly.
|
|
"And how will he know who I am?" spoke the second.
|
|
"Give him this letter," replied the first, producing a letter and
|
|
a small sack of coins from within his robes. "And here is a retainer -
|
|
I'll be there in a few more months."
|
|
"Thank you, my Lord. Everything will be ready when you arrive."
|
|
|
|
Fire licked the edge of the stone platform, and molten lava
|
|
boiled for miles about it. Phos laughed. All was proceeding well.
|
|
Control was almost effortless, and his puppet was unaware of his
|
|
danger.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 Dragon Hunt, part 4
|
|
by Max Khaytsus
|
|
(b.c.k.a khaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)
|
|
|
|
The egg Rien held in his hands was much larger and harder than
|
|
that of a chicken, but it in no way revealed itself to be that of a
|
|
dragon. He carefully turned it over, hoping that somewhere there would
|
|
be an indication or marking that would brand the egg uncommon, but not
|
|
finding anything he looked at the wizard.
|
|
Gerim smiled. "How will she know? Trust me, this is just what she
|
|
needs."
|
|
"What do you want for your 'advice'?"
|
|
"Ah, it may have come across as advice, but for me it was just
|
|
another adventure."
|
|
"Sir," Rien sounded vexed, "I do not like carrying debts. Before
|
|
I accept this, what is your price?"
|
|
"No price," Gerim said. "Let it be my good deed to you."
|
|
"You don't even know me," Rien pointed out. "We only met last
|
|
morning."
|
|
"I saw you in the tavern two nights ago," Gerim corrected.
|
|
Actually there was also that time in the forest two weeks before...
|
|
Rien still looked at him, unsure of what to do.
|
|
Gerim waited, thinking what he could offer as collateral, in this
|
|
unstable and lopsided business deal. "When I was your age," the wizard
|
|
spoke, unconsciously bringing his hand to his ear and making Rien's
|
|
gaze jerk up, "I had a friend who was poisoned by a snake bite."
|
|
Rounded ear -- no evidence of elf blood. "They told me there was no
|
|
cure and I watched that boy waste away in a matter of hours." Boy. In
|
|
the elven tongues there is no distinction of age, just gender. "I see
|
|
a similarity here and perhaps this time I can do something to help..."
|
|
Gerim spread his arms out as an offering of peace. "Please, I
|
|
travelled half the world in one night."
|
|
"Very well," Rien finally nodded. The wizard seemed sincere. "I
|
|
wish I could express my thanks. You're saving two lives, not just
|
|
one."
|
|
|
|
In a week and a half Rien and Kera made their way to the path
|
|
where the hidden trail to Maari's house lay. Their rushed pace had
|
|
taken its toll and they made camp a half day's distance from their
|
|
destination, to rest and regain their strength.
|
|
"I'm a little worried," Kera mentioned to Rien, over the early
|
|
evening fire.
|
|
"I'm anxious too," he answered. "I want to get this over with."
|
|
"I keep thinking that she won't help us," Kera continued, staring
|
|
into the fire. "What if she tries something?"
|
|
"That's a possibility," Rien said. "Something to be aware of, but
|
|
at times it's best to hope for the better."
|
|
"How are we going to pay her?"
|
|
Rien shook his head. "I don't know. I refuse to sentence anyone
|
|
to death."
|
|
"What if that means our death?"
|
|
"I can make that choice for myself, but not for you."
|
|
Kera moved herself to sit next to Rien. "I remember a while back
|
|
you told me you saw nothing wrong with killing someone if your well
|
|
being was threatened."
|
|
"Nothing wrong with killing an individual who threatens my well
|
|
being," Rien corrected.
|
|
"I am sure we can find one," Kera smirked.
|
|
"I couldn't condemn an individual to the kind of death that Maari
|
|
has in mind," Rien sighed.
|
|
1 "Can you condemn yourself to lycanthropy?"
|
|
"At this point I am not desperate enough to say 'no'."
|
|
Kera leaned back into the grass, looking up into the darkening
|
|
sky, with the first stars beginning to appear above the forest. "What
|
|
day were you born on?" she asked abruptly.
|
|
"A cold one," Rien smiled.
|
|
"Don't be silly," Kera laughed. "When?"
|
|
"Under the great oak...a green one, in unseasonably cold
|
|
weather."
|
|
"In Yule?"
|
|
"Naia 27," Rien said.
|
|
"Why didn't you tell me?" Kera sounded hurt.
|
|
"Wasn't important," Rien said. "There were too many other things
|
|
to worry about, particularly Maari's request."
|
|
"Melrin wasn't much of a holiday either," Kera agreed. "I'll just
|
|
have to surprise you sometime."
|
|
Rien put his arm around Kera's shoulder and pulled her close, in
|
|
an attempt to comfort her.
|
|
"You remember the weather you were born in?" she asked.
|
|
"Not really. My mother told me it was a little too cold for the
|
|
event."
|
|
"She should have had the windows closed," Kera laughed.
|
|
"It was outdoors," said Rien.
|
|
"Doesn't sound very private," Kera said, "but then you did say
|
|
morals weren't much where you came from."
|
|
"It's traditional," Rien explained.
|
|
"Well, there's your Oak," Kera said, pointing up to the
|
|
constellation of Valonus, materializing slowly in the almost dark sky.
|
|
"When were you born?" Rien asked, sitting up and throwing some
|
|
dirt on the fire.
|
|
"Eighth of Janis," Kera said, sitting up as well. "I'm sure it
|
|
was seasonably cold."
|
|
The fire went out, leaving the clearing covered by the bright
|
|
light of the almost full moon.
|
|
"What happened to your parents?" Rien asked.
|
|
"When I was young, Liriss told me that I was found abandoned. I
|
|
stopped believing him after a while...after seeing how he deals with
|
|
people. I guess my parents got in his way and he had them killed and
|
|
took me." She again leaned back into the grass, admiring the moon.
|
|
"Not having known them I really can't say I that miss them."
|
|
Rien leaned back in the grass next to her, also looking at the
|
|
moon. "Aren't you even curious..?"
|
|
"I'm curious who they were, but...if they are still alive, I
|
|
don't think I'd want to meet them."
|
|
Rien lay quietly, staring up at the sky. "What about your
|
|
parents?" Kera suddenly asked.
|
|
Rien remained quiet for some time. "My mother lives in
|
|
Charnelwood," he finally said.
|
|
"What about your father?"
|
|
Rien shifted uncomfortably on the ground. "He was killed by a
|
|
Dopkalfar hunting party before I was born...before he found out I
|
|
would be born."
|
|
"I'm sorry," Kera whispered.
|
|
"There's nothing to be sorry for," Rien answered. "In spite of
|
|
how we feel, life comes and goes. We're not all friends on this
|
|
planet. Some of us simply don't belong."
|
|
Now it was Kera's turn to fall quiet. The two lay next to each
|
|
other in the dark for a long time, then Rien heard Kera's breathing
|
|
become more even. Exaustion had taken its toll. Carefully pulling his
|
|
arm from under his companion, Rien relocated himself to the other side
|
|
1of the clearing.
|
|
|
|
Kera woke up in the morning to the smell of a roasting rabbit.
|
|
She looked around the clearing to see Rien managing a small camp fire
|
|
with a rotisserie set up over it. "Why didn't you wake me up?" she
|
|
asked.
|
|
"You needed the rest," Rien answered without turning around.
|
|
Kera shuffled around on the ground, then got up. "Let me do
|
|
that," she indicated the rabbit. "I already smell it burning."
|
|
Rien moved away from the camp fire.
|
|
"How did you ever survive in the wilderness alone?" Kera asked,
|
|
taking his place.
|
|
"I don't discriminate against raw meat," Rien said, "even if
|
|
cooked is better. Besides, I know that it's fresh if it's raw."
|
|
"Gross," Kera mumbled. "I'd rather eat it burned."
|
|
"I know," Rien smiled. "I thought the smell of burned flesh would
|
|
get you up."
|
|
Kera laughed and continued preparing the food. "It will all be
|
|
over today, won't it?" she asked a bit later. Her voice suddenly
|
|
somber and serious.
|
|
"I hope so," Rien said. "One way or another." He moved to face
|
|
Kera and continued. "Listen, I've been thinking. When we get to
|
|
Maari's home, I don't want you to dismount. Just stay on the horse and
|
|
if anything goes wrong, leave." Kera tried to protest, but Rien
|
|
continued. "Don't argue. Like you said, this gets resolved today and I
|
|
don't want you to get hurt. If a fight starts, if a spell is cast, go.
|
|
Don't worry about me."
|
|
"I'll agree to this now," Kera said, "but I may not do it when
|
|
the time comes. My best chances are with you and in the end I'm sure
|
|
you agree that it's purely my decision what to do in a situation like
|
|
that and you certainly won't be in a position to argue if it comes to
|
|
that."
|
|
Rien nodded approvingly after a moment. "Well said. You've been
|
|
paying attention."
|
|
Kera smiled back. "I was hoping you'd like it." But in some way
|
|
it appeared to Rien that the smile was false and there would be a lot
|
|
more to do before all would be resolved.
|
|
After breakfast they mounted their horses and in the building
|
|
heat of the afternoon summer sun made their way to Maari's dwelling.
|
|
They rode their horses onto the hidden path, cautiously guiding their
|
|
animals through the thick grass until the roof of the witch's hut
|
|
appeared in the distance. Rien stopped his horse and checked the egg
|
|
one more time; a final inspection in the unlikely event that he had
|
|
missed something previously.
|
|
Kera stopped next to him, shifting restlessly in the saddle.
|
|
"Maybe we should spend some more time preparing..." she said.
|
|
Rien looked up in mid turn of the egg. His companion's voice
|
|
sounded shaky. "Are you alright?" his concerned eyes focused on her.
|
|
"Just a little nervous," Kera smiled awkwardly.
|
|
"You look downright scared," Rien said. He replaced the egg in
|
|
its pouch and moved his horse closer to Kera's. "Get down before you
|
|
shake yourself from the saddle," he said, dismounting to help her.
|
|
Kera half slid, half fell from the saddle and Rien helped her to
|
|
a shaded patch of grass beneath a tree. "What's wrong?" he asked,
|
|
gently pushing her down.
|
|
Kera leaned back against the tree trunk, trying to regain her
|
|
composure.
|
|
"Relax," Rien took Kera's hands in his own. "I won't let Maari do
|
|
anything to you..." He was beginning to understand what her problem
|
|
was.
|
|
1 Kera violently shook her head in response.
|
|
"Nothing will happen," he insisted again, taking Kera in his
|
|
arms. It did not help. "All right," Rien said after a minute,
|
|
releasing Kera and rising. "We're not going to see her. Mount up. If
|
|
we push the horses, we can make it to Magnus in little over a month."
|
|
Kera looked up at him, her shaking not as strong as before. She
|
|
tried to smile. "I'm alright," but it didn't look convincing. "Let's
|
|
talk to her," she managed to say.
|
|
"Are you certain?" Rien knelt before her. She still seemed on the
|
|
verge of a breakdown.
|
|
Kera nodded and started to get up. Rien hurried to help her to
|
|
her horse, but as Kera grabbed the saddle, she looked towards the
|
|
barely visible hut among the trees and again broke into a shaking fit.
|
|
"I can't," her voice shook with fear. "She'll kill me!"
|
|
Rien recognised himself as part of the problem. To Maari, he was
|
|
worthless, but Kera could provide exactly what the old witch wanted; a
|
|
soul to experiment with. He took Kera in his arms again, holding her
|
|
up against the horse. He permitted himself to realize just how much he
|
|
feared and hated humans who practiced magic. He turned Kera around,
|
|
his now grey eyes searching for an answer in hers. Kera held still,
|
|
not understanding what the changes in her companion were. Her fear of
|
|
Maari lessened, replaced by that of Rien, who suddenly thrust her
|
|
away, tore the saddle bag with the egg off his horse and disappeared
|
|
in the direction of Maari's hut.
|
|
Kera stood still, holding onto her horse, watching Rien leave,
|
|
then, her curiosity and concern winning over her fear for herself, she
|
|
advanced forward, with her mount obediantly following her lead.
|
|
Making his way to the clearing, Rien looked around. "I have your
|
|
egg, witch!" he shouted. A moment later Maari appeared from around
|
|
back. She seemed completely unprepared for his visit. "I have the
|
|
egg!" he yelled again, triumphantly holding up the saddle bag. He
|
|
patiently waited for her to approach before dropping the bag to the
|
|
ground and drawing his sword.
|
|
"Bitch!" he stammered, ready to swing.
|
|
Maari answered something in anger, making an unseen force throw
|
|
Rien backwards to the ground. She fell on her knees before the saddle
|
|
bag, tearing it open, to get to the precious egg. It was whole. With
|
|
triumph in her eyes, Maari got up, egg in her hands. "Fool," she
|
|
looked at Rien's unmoving body. "There never was and never will be a
|
|
cure!"
|
|
She turned to leave, when the egg in her hands disloved to a glob
|
|
of slime. It covered her hands and spread slowly to her body, in spite
|
|
of her loud protests, as Kera watched from a cluster of trees at the
|
|
edge of the clearing. As the witch transformed into a puddle of slime
|
|
on the ground, Kera advanced from the trees, for a better view. Her
|
|
fear was completely dominated by curiosity and when she spotted Rien's
|
|
motionless body, she ran towards him, in spite of what she had just
|
|
seen.
|
|
"Don't touch him, girl," a pleasantly accented voice sounded
|
|
above her, as Kera reached Rien's body. She looked around, startled,
|
|
seeing Gerim not ten feet away. How did he get there?
|
|
"Don't touch him," the wizard repeated. "I can only change the
|
|
chain of events if you do what I say."
|
|
Kera took two steps back, looking at Gerim in disbelief, to
|
|
shocked and surprised by the turn of events to ask any questions.
|
|
"He was an innocent victim of poor planning on my part," the
|
|
wizard continued. "Hurry, bring me the large black book Maari has in
|
|
her house."
|
|
Kera bolted before the instructions were complete. She tore into
|
|
the dark two room hut, tripping over a chair and winding up on the
|
|
1floor. A large black cat hissed at her from the corner and quickly
|
|
disappeared into the darkness of the second room. Kera got up and
|
|
looked around. Her heart beat faster, now that she realized where she
|
|
was. She held onto a chair for support. Dark blinds and furniture
|
|
decorated the spartan main room of the witch's dwelling. A heavy,
|
|
murky smell hung in the air, making Kera think of the blocks beneath
|
|
Liriss' private pier. She slowly scanned the room, fearing to walk in
|
|
any further, when she came to face a human skull -- she assumed it to
|
|
be human, anyway, -- which lay on the table behind which stood the
|
|
chair she used for support. She jerked back in surprise, looking at
|
|
the empty sockets that somehow seemed to look back. The lack of a
|
|
bottom jaw made it appear as if this horrid creature had something to
|
|
say.
|
|
Barely forcing herself to look away from the skull's empty gaze,
|
|
Kera realized that beneath it lay a thick book, covered with black
|
|
leather. She cautiously stepped forward, then dashed for the book,
|
|
pulling it out from under the skull, causing the relic to fall and
|
|
roll on the floor and ran out as quickly as she ran in.
|
|
Outside Gerim looked up from the puddle of what was left of the
|
|
witch. "Ah, the book," he said, taking it from Kera.
|
|
Kera watched restlessly as Gerim opened the book and started
|
|
flipping through it. After a while he found what he needed and
|
|
pronounced an incantation. Kera felt her back grow cold, as the spell
|
|
grew to its climax. A low rumble sounded in the cloudless sky and
|
|
Rien's hand twitched.
|
|
Gerim closed the book and let it fall to the ground, kneeling
|
|
before Rien.
|
|
Kera cautiously approached, fearing that the wizard would still
|
|
forbid her to come near. Noticing that, Gerim called her over, saying
|
|
that it was all right.
|
|
"How is he?" Kera asked with a shaky voice.
|
|
"He's fine," the wizard answered. "He's lucky not to be human.
|
|
Elves pay for their long lives by not having a soul. Maari could not
|
|
kill him. She was no more than a necromancer."
|
|
Kera took Rien's twitching hand into her own.
|
|
"Give him some time," Gerim suggested. "His system will overcome
|
|
the shock." He got up to leave, but turned to look back at Kera. "You
|
|
two did me a great service, but I'm afraid I have nothing to repay you
|
|
with. I wish you luck with your quest. May you find what you need."
|
|
With those words the wizard retired into the woods. Rien's hand
|
|
grasped tightly around Kera's.
|
|
|
|
Epilogue
|
|
|
|
Liriss stared coldly at Tilden, who stood before him. This fool
|
|
had the gall to fail and return to tell of his losses. That took guts,
|
|
but certainly no brains. Then again, most of his men had no where else
|
|
to turn and knew no more than mercanary work. "I sent four men to
|
|
bring back two people and what do I see before me?" Liriss asked after
|
|
considering the trapper's story. "I see a bedraggled fighter who lost
|
|
his companions, weapons and mount. I've got half a mind to send you
|
|
off to the blocks."
|
|
Liriss walked a wide circle around Tilden, waiting for fear to
|
|
set in. The man remained motionless, but became noticably more
|
|
nervous. Liriss made a second circle, smiling when behind Tilden. The
|
|
feeling of power can at times be intoxicating and an offer of mercy a
|
|
god-like act. "I should send you to the blocks," Liriss came to face
|
|
Tilden again, "but I won't. I'll assign a real man to do your job and
|
|
in the mean time you can get some simple guard work done."
|
|
Tilden released his breath, which Liriss imagined he had held for
|
|
1quite some time. "Thank you, sir."
|
|
The crime leader walked over to the window and looked into
|
|
Dargon. "Return to your quarters. I will have your new orders sent
|
|
down."
|
|
Tilden left the room with another sigh of relief, permitting his
|
|
master's female attendant to come back inside. The girl closed the
|
|
door and waited patiently for Liriss to notice her. He finally turned,
|
|
looking at her thoughtfully. "Rene, find me Kendall and have him come
|
|
here."
|
|
"The assassin?" she asked. "You said you didn't want to see his
|
|
face again."
|
|
"I don't," Liriss nodded solomnly, "but at least he's reliable."
|
|
|
|
Gerim's loud footsteps sounded in the great hall of the keep.
|
|
"Nagje'," his voice boomed above the loud echos. "Prepare to vacate
|
|
your chair."
|
|
As he approached the large table at the far end of the great
|
|
hall, three gazes met his.
|
|
"I told you," Gerim looked at the man in the center, "once Maari
|
|
is dead, I'll be seeking a council position."
|
|
"Explain to us one thing," the wizard on the left said. "The elf
|
|
was dead. Why did you interfear?"
|
|
"He was caught in the struggle through my intervention."
|
|
"He would have gone to the witch anyway."
|
|
"He would not have gone to her in anger with a dragon egg!"
|
|
"Dragon egg my ass, Gerim! You brought life to a dead man!"
|
|
"I reunited an elf with his spirit, a much easier task than a man
|
|
with his soul!" Gerim stopped, realizing he was now shouting. "I
|
|
tricked him into helping me and repaid him as best I could for the
|
|
services he offered, risks he took and damages he suffered."
|
|
"You broke the rules," Elaff insisted.
|
|
"Whose rules?" Gerim snapped. "Rules of three hypocrites who do
|
|
not follow the advice they give others? There is nothing more to
|
|
discuss. Prepare for the challenge."
|
|
With those words he left the keep.
|
|
|
|
Rien and Kera sat by a creek, looking through the leather book
|
|
that once belonged to Maari. "It's a very old script," Rien said,
|
|
explaining the writing. "I've seen this on old calendars, the ones
|
|
used before the current one was introduced."
|
|
"I wish I could read it," Kera said.
|
|
"So do I," Rien answered. "I never had the time to learn when
|
|
there was an opportunity.
|
|
"So if we can't read the book, then why are we trying?" Kera
|
|
asked.
|
|
"I was hoping there'd be pictures," Rien smiled. "Just curious of
|
|
what's in it, I guess." He flipped a few more pages. "You may have
|
|
heard that those who use magic keep notes on their knowledge and
|
|
experiences, not just a list of spells. Look here," he pointed to the
|
|
open page. "See how messy this is? I'd gamble this isn't a spell, but
|
|
a memo or a description. And over here..." he flipped a few pages
|
|
back. "See how neat and evenly spaced the text here is? This I can't
|
|
say is a spell, but I'd guess it requires care when reading or
|
|
performing."
|
|
"But if you can't read it, why bother with it?" Kera asked.
|
|
"It's worth something to someone," Rien said. "It may be good to
|
|
us."
|
|
"How?"
|
|
"You probably didn't have much experience with this sort of
|
|
thing, but information can at times be more precious than money."
|
|
1 "Like blackmail?" Kera asked.
|
|
"It's an example," Rien nodded. "There are other types. It's like
|
|
an old book, valuble beyond the price of money and sometimes life." He
|
|
closed the volume with a smile. "This maybe such a book."
|
|
"And you're hoping to find someone in Dargon who has use for it?"
|
|
Kera asked, going back to the conversation they had before arriving at
|
|
the creek.
|
|
"It would do us little good in Tench," Rien said, "and Magnus is
|
|
too far away at this point. Dargon should give us a safe margin of
|
|
time to apply what we learned...may learn."
|
|
"I heard Maari say that there was no cure," Kera said.
|
|
"I guess I was out by then," Rien said. "That was foolish of me
|
|
to charge out after her like that. She could have killed me just as
|
|
easily."
|
|
"Does your head still hurt?" Kera asked.
|
|
"It's not as bad as it was," Rien smiled awkwardly, "but I'll
|
|
remember it for quite some time."
|
|
Kera put her arm around him sympathetically. "What if there is no
|
|
cure?"
|
|
"I don't believe that," he answered. "If there is a way to induce
|
|
a condition, then there is a way to reverse it. There are two faces to
|
|
every coin. We'll find something. Tomorrow. It's getting too late to
|
|
go any further tonight. Let's make camp here."
|
|
"Good, I wanted to take a swim," Kera said. "Why don't you join
|
|
me?"
|
|
|
|
"That's all there is," Alicia said. She and Mija stood over a
|
|
dark green patch of ground, after unsuccessfully searching Maari's
|
|
house.
|
|
Mija sat down on the grass next to the dead patch and poked with
|
|
a branch at what looked like a piece of an egg shell. He watched it
|
|
crack and break under the pressure before tossing the branch away.
|
|
"What are you doing?" Alicia asked.
|
|
"Thinking," he shrugged. "Can you figure out what got spilled
|
|
here?"
|
|
Alicia sat down next to Mija, with a thoughtful look on her face.
|
|
"Ever feel helpless without your notes?" she smiled.
|
|
Mija shifted uncomfortably, pushing himself back, as Alicia
|
|
started on a semi-familiar spell.
|
|
"Certainly wasn't a normal potion," Alicia said a while later,
|
|
finishing with her spell. "I never saw anything like this."
|
|
Mija stood up behind her and helped her up. "Something's wrong.
|
|
Maari knew we were coming. Let's inform the coven."
|
|
The pair quickly disappeared in the woods.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 Trial by Fire
|
|
Part III
|
|
Damsel in Distress
|
|
by M. Wendy Hennequin
|
|
(b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)
|
|
|
|
Myrande sat in her hot, little office and stared at the stones in
|
|
the wall. She put her hand to her lips, remembering Luthias' kiss.
|
|
"Are you all right about what happened between you and Luthias
|
|
last night?" Lauren had asked her that morning, almost a week ago when
|
|
Clifton and Luthias had left for Magnus, when neither the Duchess nor
|
|
the seneschal could eat breakfast.
|
|
Suprise had jolted Sable, then some slight resentment crept in.
|
|
She could never manage to keep anything she felt strongly about a
|
|
secret from Lauren--and this time it bothered her. "What do you mean?"
|
|
Myrande hedged.
|
|
"You know what I mean," Lauren replied calmly.
|
|
"Nothing happened. He was drunk. He didn't know what he was
|
|
doing," Myrande replied sullenly, toying with a sausage.
|
|
Lauren smiled. "What makes you think that?"
|
|
"He was drunk," she repeated. "He doesn't want me when he's
|
|
sober. If only--" Myrande tried to finish, but there was nothing left
|
|
to say. "He was so hurt," she confided to the Duchess, who leaned
|
|
forward sympathetically. "I haven't seen him like that since Roisart
|
|
died..." Sable could feel Luthias' pain, a hard, cold, burning lump of
|
|
stone in her heart. "But he was drunk, and I pushed him away. I don't
|
|
know how, I don't know if I should have, I don't even know why, but I
|
|
pushed him away."
|
|
Despair washed over her then, as it had consumed the Baron of
|
|
Connall the night before. "Perhaps you shouldn't have rejected him,"
|
|
the Duchess said coldly. Myrande stared at her, confused and hurt.
|
|
"Perhaps you should have let him continue. Luthias is a man of great
|
|
honor, young as he is. He would have married you--"
|
|
Furious, Myrande leapt to her feet, and her chair flew toward the
|
|
stone wall of the keep, crashed, and tumbled noisily onto the cool
|
|
floor. "I would never do such a thing!" she cried, enraged. "I would
|
|
never compromise Luthias' honor to--" The Duchess of Dargon looked at
|
|
her calmly and compassionately. Sable compressed her lips angrily,
|
|
reached behind her for the chair, righted it, and sat. "You knew
|
|
better," she accused tightly. "You know better. Why did you say that?"
|
|
"So *you* would know why you pushed him away," Lauren explained
|
|
gently.
|
|
And Myrande did understand. She had wondered whether or not she
|
|
had scornfully rejected the only opportunity she would ever have to
|
|
feel Luthias' touch, to be anything like a wife to him, to have his
|
|
love. Tired, sorrowful, her head lowered.
|
|
The Duchess touched Myrande's hand. "It will be all right. I
|
|
know."
|
|
Myrande didn't question her; there were some things that the
|
|
Duchess of Dargon, daughter of the High Mage, just knew. She was
|
|
magical, the Duchess of Dargon was.
|
|
"Do you know what this trial will bring?" Myrande finally
|
|
inquired.
|
|
"Only that Luthias will gain great honor by it," Lauren sighed.
|
|
"Perhaps when he returns, he'll make you Duchess of Dargon."
|
|
"Don't say that; it's ill luck," Myrande hushed her swiftly.
|
|
"Luthias doesn't want to convict Clifton or Michiya. No more does he
|
|
want to be a Duke. I don't wish to be Duchess. The only thing I want
|
|
is Luthias' love." Which I shall never have, she reminded herself
|
|
sternly. "What does your father think of all this?"
|
|
1 "He's consulted his crystal for days," Lauren revealed. The
|
|
Duchess stared at the wall. "And he sees war and blood."
|
|
War and blood. Sir Edward Sothos had told Luthias that he thought
|
|
war was coming. And so the seneschal this day, a week after the Baron
|
|
of Connall left her to try his cousin for treason, sent for
|
|
Macdougalls, who sauntered into her office and her reverie.
|
|
"Hi," said the assistant Castellan casually, seating himself
|
|
without permission. He had know Myrande all her life and had been
|
|
assistant Castellan under her father; he saw no reason to stand on
|
|
ceremony, and Myrande knew it. "What can I do for ye, lassie?"
|
|
Myrande smiled slightly at Macdougalls. He was a short, dark man,
|
|
perpetually wearing a quiver of arrows and a saucy grin. "You can send
|
|
to Dargon for masons and carpenters, since you won't let me out of the
|
|
castle without a guard," she bantered, only half-playfully. The fact
|
|
that Macdougalls did not permit her to go anywhere alone irritated
|
|
her, as did the fact that Luthias had ordered it so. "In case there is
|
|
a war, I want this castle ready. Besides, we're due for the
|
|
maintenance."
|
|
"Aye, lassie," Macdougalls agreed. His grin expanded. "These yer
|
|
orders, or the lad's?"
|
|
"Both, I think." But she didn't want to think of Luthias. "And
|
|
when they arrive, I want you to oversee the repairs. I'm sure you
|
|
know, as well as I, what needs attention."
|
|
"Aye," Macdougalls agreed, "and I would say ye're on top of my
|
|
list." Myrande rolled her eyes in dismissal, but the archer only
|
|
laughed. "Ye've been workin' too hard, lassie. Why don't ye just go
|
|
shootin'?"
|
|
"Will you let me go alone?"
|
|
"Nay. Lad's orders," he reminded her.
|
|
"Then I'm not going," Myrande decided. "I refuse to give up my
|
|
privacy. If I'm going to be surrounded, I might as well stay where I
|
|
am." She paused. "Were you telling me the truth when you said that I
|
|
shoot better than half the archers of the Barony?"
|
|
"Aye, of course, lass," he confirmed confidently. "I wouldn't lie
|
|
to ye."
|
|
Myrande grimaced. "If that's so, you'd better institute a
|
|
mandatory daily archery practice for all the soldiers in the castle."
|
|
Macdougalls laughed loudly and irreverently. "Ye don't have to be
|
|
so accurate when you fire into a whole troop, lassie!"
|
|
There was a discreet knock on her door. "Come," Myrande
|
|
instructed. Mika, her pretty, young assistant, crept into the office.
|
|
"My lady," the girl announced, "the lord of Shipbrook is here to see
|
|
you."
|
|
"My cousin, Lord Warin Shipbrook?" Myrande asked.
|
|
"No, my lady. It is your uncle, the Baron himself."
|
|
"Oh, damn," Myrande breathed. Louder, she ordered, "Seat him in
|
|
the solar, and convey my regrets that I cannot join him immediately.
|
|
Assure him I shall attend him shortly." Mika nodded to the seneschal
|
|
and the assistant Castellan and timidly crept away.
|
|
"What would the Baron of Shipbrook want of ye?" Macdougalls
|
|
wondered aloud. "He knows the lad ain't here."
|
|
Sable's lips twitched with displeasure. "Yes, he knows." Myrande
|
|
knew exactly what Shipbrook wanted. "He came here because the Baron is
|
|
absent, Macdougalls."
|
|
"I'll set a guard in there," the archer decided.
|
|
"No," Myrande countermanded the order. "I don't want him to think
|
|
I fear him." She rose to leave her office. "But keep an eye sharp,
|
|
Macdougalls. I don't trust him."
|
|
"Me neither," Macdougalls agreed as she left the room.
|
|
Myrande sped upstairs to her chambers, threw off the stained
|
|
1muslin overdress and slipped into a semi-formal gown of light blue
|
|
silk. She could not look the seneschal for company, and her pride
|
|
would not permit her to look overworked to her uncle. She quickly
|
|
unbraided her hair, brushed it, and wound it behind her head. Hastily,
|
|
she reached for the two Bichanese hair ornaments Michiya had bought
|
|
her. She smiled; they were beautiful--and deadly. Although topped by
|
|
exquisite Bichanese artwork, the ivory sticks were tipped with a sharp
|
|
silver point. Michiya had told her that often these chop sticks were
|
|
used as weapons for a final defense.
|
|
She finally slipped them into her ebony hair and checked her
|
|
appearance in the mirror.
|
|
As usual, she was dissatisfied; she was short, dark of skin, eye,
|
|
and hair, and looked capable rather than ornamental. Her face was
|
|
well-formed, but not striking. She glanced at her body and wished her
|
|
figure were not so pronounced.
|
|
Oh, to look as the Duchess of Dargon did, tall, willowy, and
|
|
beautiful, with creamy skin and blue-green eyes...to be educated and
|
|
magical, as Lauren was...then, perhaps, Luthias might have loved her,
|
|
if she were beautiful and enchanting.
|
|
But she was small and dark and practical, a seneschal and not an
|
|
enchantress. She sighed and hurried from her room; no matter what she
|
|
felt about her uncle, she would not shame Luthias' house.
|
|
The Baron of Shipbrook, a tall, heavy-set, dark-haired man, stood
|
|
as his neice entered. "You are looking well, my dear," he greeted her
|
|
with a bow Myrande found artificial rather than courteous. "How are
|
|
you?"
|
|
"Well, thank you, your lordship," Myrande addressed him formally.
|
|
Somewhat gracefully, she offered a curtsey. "And you, sir?"
|
|
"I thank you, well," the Baron of Shipbrook said. He sat without
|
|
invitation. "I came to inform you that I have arranged your marriage
|
|
for the twenty-fourth of Seber."
|
|
"I am not marrying," Myrande told him. Did the man really find it
|
|
necessary to go through this again?
|
|
"But, my child," Shipbrook protested in a gentle, wheedling tone
|
|
full of a feigned concern, "you must marry."
|
|
"The Baron of Connall says I needn't; he is my guardian, sir, not
|
|
you."
|
|
Shipbrook's eyes narrowed angrily. "Girl, you have no conception
|
|
of the shame you bring on your family, and on yourself, by remaining
|
|
unmarried. Half the Duchy thinks you Connall's whore--"
|
|
All the blood drained from Myrande's face as rage exploded at the
|
|
comment, but she somehow kept silent. How dare he! Whore? It was true
|
|
that most of the Duchy thought her Luthias' bride --Fionn Connall,
|
|
Luthias' father, had started that rumor years ago--but whore?! How
|
|
dare he! When Luthias returned--
|
|
But he wasn't here now. Her words were slow, careful, and formal;
|
|
she must be careful and keep her rage in check. "I am the seneschal of
|
|
Connall, sir, nothing else, and you know it. My guardian, the Lord
|
|
Baron, has refused permission for my marriage, has he not? When I
|
|
asked him about it, he forbade me to enter into such a marriage."
|
|
Remembering his absolute refusal made Sable smile.
|
|
Shipbrook's lips compressed into thin, pink lines. "He wishes
|
|
that you be a spinster, to be mocked by the Duchy."
|
|
"That is not true," Myrande argued, wondering at the serenity of
|
|
her voice. How cool and placid she sounded! "The Baron of Connall is
|
|
doing his best to see I am happy." Within her, something warm lit when
|
|
she remembered the arguement she and Luthias had had in Dargon before
|
|
the Sy tourney. He had put his arms around her and said then that he
|
|
wanted her to be happy.
|
|
"Don't you want to marry Baron Oleran?" Shipbrook continued.
|
|
1Somehow, he had subdued his anger and was again employing a wheedling
|
|
tone. "He is a handsome man; he's rich and owns a great deal of land
|
|
in the Duchy of Northfield. Granted, he is older than you--"
|
|
"I do not wish to marry," Myrande informed firmly. Her calm was
|
|
wearing thin.
|
|
"Oleran has only seen you once, at a distance, and he is already
|
|
in love with you."
|
|
Myrande supressed a desire to laugh. True, she had never met
|
|
Oleran and that she was judging him by the rumors, but she could not
|
|
conceive of a man of Oleran's evil reputation falling in love with
|
|
anyone, let alone a dark seneschal. "I do not love him," Sable replied
|
|
flatly. "And I shall not marry him. I shall not marry at all--ever!"
|
|
"You must marry!" Shipbrook demanded, rising. He was tall and
|
|
ominous now, his dark, surly eyes wicked. "If you refuse--"
|
|
"What will you do?" Myrande challenged him. "You have no
|
|
authority over me. Luthias has forbidden the match--yet you take
|
|
advantage of his absence to try to convince me to disobey him. I will
|
|
not marry, your lordship. And if you think you can convince me, try,
|
|
but I warn you that a hundred guards will protect me if I so much as
|
|
call."
|
|
Shipbrook grimaced and turned away. "I suppose you will turn me
|
|
out, then."
|
|
"I would not think of shaming the hospitality of Lord Connall,"
|
|
Sable assured her uncle haughtily. "You are welcome to stay for
|
|
dinner."
|
|
|
|
Myrande woke slowly, woozily. In confusion, she stared at the
|
|
ceiling. It was not the low, beamed ceiling in her chamber at Connall.
|
|
Where was she? This was not any room in Connall Keep or Connall
|
|
Castle; she would have recognized it.
|
|
Perhaps she was ill. Yes, at dinner with her uncle, she
|
|
remembered feeling dizzy and sick. That was the last thing she
|
|
recalled. Where was she now? What had happened?
|
|
"You dispatched men to intercept the Castellan's messenger?" she
|
|
heard her uncle's voice say.
|
|
"Yes, my lord. The man was stopped."
|
|
"Good. I don't want the Baron of Connall knowing of this. Make
|
|
sure of it. You may go."
|
|
"Thank you, your lordship." Myrande heard a door close a moment
|
|
later.
|
|
"She is rather lovely, in a dark way," Myrande heard an urbane
|
|
voice appraise her cooly. "Like a fairy child. She will do."
|
|
Where was she?!
|
|
"And the bridal price?" she heard her uncle ask. "I grant it is
|
|
more usual to receive a dowry--"
|
|
"One thousand, as we agreed," Oleran returned politely. "You are
|
|
taking a good deal of trouble to get me my bride; I am willing to pay
|
|
a good deal for her. Besides, as I told you, I need a bride to rescue
|
|
my reputation."
|
|
The door--where was the door? Myrande could not turn her head to
|
|
see--opened and shut rapidly. "Father, what is this?" Myrande heard
|
|
her cousin, Warin, demand. "How did you get Myrande here? Does Luthias
|
|
know of this?"
|
|
"Of course not, and he won't," Shipbrook said firmly. "Lord
|
|
Oleran, I believe you know my son, Warin."
|
|
"Sir," Warin acknowledged the other noble quickly. For a moment,
|
|
Warin's eyes stared at Myrande's. "My God, Father, she looks like
|
|
death. What did you do to her?"
|
|
"I gave her a little callin. It calmed her enough to be more
|
|
cooperative."
|
|
1 "Callin?!" Warin squeaked. Inside, Myrande felt like screaming.
|
|
That--! He had drugged her and taken her from her home. Myrande knew
|
|
of drugs; part of her duties as seneschal involved healing. Callin was
|
|
used to calm people too agitated to relax alone. But its side effects
|
|
included euphoria and susceptibility to suggestion. Her uncle,
|
|
that--!, had probably used this power of suggestion to assure their
|
|
escape from Connall, to convince Macdougalls that all was well.
|
|
But would Macdougalls allow her to get away? No...they had said
|
|
something about a messenger. Which her uncle had done stopped.
|
|
"You drugged her?" Warin continued, outraged. "Father, she
|
|
doesn't want to marry!"
|
|
"I'll convince her otherwise," Myrande heard the urbane voice
|
|
promise. She felt some of her hair move, then felt the point of the
|
|
chop stick on her scalp. But Myrande couldn't adjust her position; she
|
|
was still too drowsy.
|
|
"If not, I still have plenty of callin," Shipbrook reassured
|
|
Baron Oleran. "You'll have a wife yet."
|
|
"You--" Warin began, but did not finish. "Father, you can't just
|
|
kidnap Myrande and marry her off. Luthias--"
|
|
"Is two weeks away in Magnus, attending the business of the
|
|
King," Shipbrook reminded his son cooly. "Now, have you something
|
|
useful to say, son, or am I to take away your birthright."
|
|
There was silence for a moment, then Warin said, "I did actually
|
|
come to tell you something 'useful.' There is a ship our harbor. An
|
|
ambassador from the Beinison Empire, one Count Tyago, has arrived and
|
|
asks hospitality."
|
|
Shipbrook suddenly sounded interested in his son's words. "An
|
|
ambassador from the Beinison Emperor? Where is he?"
|
|
"In the great hall."
|
|
Myrande heard her uncle rise. "Come, Oleran, we must greet the
|
|
man civilly. An ambassador from Beinison in my house!" he concluded
|
|
joyfully. "We must hold a ball in his honor. Warin, send a message to
|
|
the Duchess of the ambassador's arrival, and see that you don't
|
|
mention your cousin."
|
|
The room went dark as the men left it, and Myrande slipped back
|
|
into sleep.
|
|
|
|
Myrande Shipbrook, Seneschal of Connall, woke seething when the
|
|
maid came in to tend her. She rose silently, glared at girl, then
|
|
regretted it. It wasn't her fault, after all. Myrande smiled sadly and
|
|
allowed the maid to dress her (dress her? She was no noble lady like
|
|
Lauren. Sable didn't need or want a maid to dress her). Her sky blue
|
|
gown had been wrinkled by sleep, but the maid provided another of
|
|
peach silk. Myrande gazed at herself in the mirror in disdain. The
|
|
garment's color made her skin appear dirty.
|
|
The maid brought breakfast then, but Myrande shook her head. The
|
|
maid seem confused and left, but she left the tray behind. Myrande
|
|
gazed at it, took a deep breath, and made a decision. Ignoring the
|
|
food, Sable went to the window and gazed out. She was high in a tower,
|
|
the highest tower in Shipbrook's keep. She smiled. She could see the
|
|
towers of Connall.
|
|
|
|
"You must eat!" her uncle raged at her a day later.
|
|
"No," Myrande refused firmly. Although as furious as her
|
|
relative, she refused to raise her voice and lower herself.
|
|
"You'll starve yourself."
|
|
"If I am kept captive."
|
|
"Eat!" Shipbrook commanded.
|
|
"I will not," Sable repeated. She smiled. Luthias had always
|
|
called her stubborn and prideful; thank God she was. She would not
|
|
1allow this toad to win.
|
|
"Oleran will not have a starved bride!"
|
|
"Baron Oleran will have no bride at all," Myrande corrected him.
|
|
"I refuse to marry him, sir. In the ceremony, I am asked to accept the
|
|
bridegroom. It is my choice. You cannot make me marry."
|
|
"I pursuaded you to leave Connall, my girl," Shipbrook
|
|
threatened. "I can use my pursuasion again."
|
|
"Not if I neither eat nor drink," Sable reminded him, smiling
|
|
triumphantly. "How will you drug me again?"
|
|
Her uncle looked shocked at the words.
|
|
A knock sounded. "What?" her uncle shouted angrily. Myrande's
|
|
cousin Tylane opened the door slightly. "Father, the Count of Tyago is
|
|
ready for the ball. Is Myrande coming?"
|
|
"No," the Baron of Shipbrook said flatly. He turned to Myrande.
|
|
"I will not let you out of this room until you agree to marry the
|
|
Baron Oleran." Myrande only smiled at him, and Shipbrook turned back
|
|
to Tylane. "Where is your brother?"
|
|
"Getting ready. He'll meet us downstairs."
|
|
"Very well. I shall also join you there." Tylane nodded, cast one
|
|
sympathetic, helpless look at his cousin, and disappeared behind the
|
|
heavy door. Myrande stared at the door. She heard the bolt slide into
|
|
place every time Shipbrook left, and she knew that there were two
|
|
guards outside it. Shipbrook turned to his neice again. "You shall
|
|
change your mind," he promised. He whirled and left the room.
|
|
A ball tonight. Perhaps she could escape. Lauren would be
|
|
invited; if only she could get a message to her. No; the servants,
|
|
though sympathetic, couldn't risk it. Tylane wouldn't. Warin--perhaps
|
|
he would help. But she could depend on no one but herself.
|
|
As night fell, Sable went to the window again and looked out. She
|
|
smiled as she saw the towers of Connall again, then she examined her
|
|
own tower.
|
|
Her room was over four hundred feet high (can't climb down, she
|
|
decided; not enough bed covers to make a rope); the roof of the tower,
|
|
which was a flat stone floor with crenolations, was only forty feet
|
|
above her. Myrande pulled her head back into the room and examined the
|
|
ceiling. Yes, she could see the trap door, and there were stairs along
|
|
the walls leading to it. Reaching the roof wasn't a problem. She
|
|
looked back out. The top of the tower was accessible from the castle
|
|
walls; she had an escape route. But the walls were patrolled by
|
|
Shipbrook's men and Oleran's; she would never get out alone. If she
|
|
could get a guard's uniform, that might be one thing. She might be
|
|
able to trick the guards and send one away, but she couldn't subdue
|
|
the other one unless she chose to kill him with her Bichanese weapons.
|
|
No; she would not kill.
|
|
Myrande jolted as she heard the bolt slip back from the door.
|
|
Perhaps Oleran had come to beat her, or Shipbrook to try to convince
|
|
her to marry. Her mouth set; she would not let them win.
|
|
A slim figure slipped rapidly into the dim tower room and closed
|
|
the door. "Myrande!" it rasped.
|
|
Myrande smiled slightly and came forward. "Warin! What is it?"
|
|
Warin took her hands firmly, but the grip was also frantic and
|
|
frightened. "Why aren't you eating?" her cousin demanded. "Do you know
|
|
what you're doing?"
|
|
"I know exactly what I'm doing," Myrande assured him. "I'm
|
|
preventing your father from drugging me again. He drugged my food
|
|
before; he isn't going to trick me into marrying Oleran the way he
|
|
tricked me into leaving Connall."
|
|
"Myrande, you must eat something," Warin reminded her, holding
|
|
her hands so tightly that it hurt. "If you don't, you'll die."
|
|
"I'm so glad you went to the University, Warin," Sable teased
|
|
1playfully. "I would never know these things if you didn't tell me."
|
|
"I'm serious!" the frustrated Warin cried out, jerking her hands.
|
|
"Myrande, you could die! Do you want to die?"
|
|
"No," Myrande spat angrily, "of course I don't! Do you think I
|
|
want to give up on life? But I'd rather die honorably than be tricked
|
|
into a marriage and beaten by Oleran. Luthias would rather--" She
|
|
stopped.
|
|
Warin sighed and, defeated, he released her hands. "You're
|
|
right," he conceded, sounding tired. "Luthias would rather you died
|
|
like this than married to Oleran. So would I," he revealed heavily.
|
|
"But I wish there were some other way."
|
|
"Get me out of here," Myrande suggested. "Send someone for
|
|
Luthias. Get me a guard's uniform. Anything."
|
|
"I can't get you a uniform or take you from here. My father has
|
|
the soldiers watching for tricks," Warin told her, collapsing onto her
|
|
feather bed. "And as for messengers--Father's already killed Luthias'
|
|
man that your archer castellan sent out." Young Lord Shipbrook sighed,
|
|
was silent, then sat up quickly. "Myrande--if I bring you the food,
|
|
will you eat it? I understand why you don't trust my father, but--"
|
|
"I'll eat it," Myrande agreed. Perhaps there was a way after all!
|
|
"At the ball...can you talk to the Duchess?"
|
|
"My father's after me like a hawk."
|
|
"He'll disinherit you if he finds out about the food."
|
|
Warin smiled weakly. "I'd rather be right than rich, if it comes
|
|
down to your life, Myrande." He was silent again. Myrande sat down
|
|
beside him. Warin looked up at her, his hazel eyes cloudy in the
|
|
dimness. "We could get married."
|
|
"No," Myrande said softly, but quickly.
|
|
"Why?" Myrande looked away. "Is it that man Luthias told me of,
|
|
the one you're in love with?" Myrande was still, then she nodded. "Who
|
|
is he? Maybe--if he knows you love him--he'll help us."
|
|
Myrande laughed and turned toward her cousin. "I wouldn't doubt
|
|
it!" She sobered quickly. "But it wouldn't do us any good. He's in
|
|
Magnus--"
|
|
"Good God!" Warin cried out, caught between laughter and shout.
|
|
"You love Luthias."
|
|
"Yes," Myrande admitted, sighing. "I love Luthias."
|
|
"He doesn't know? You didn't tell him?"
|
|
"I couldn't."
|
|
"He would marry you, Myrande, if--"
|
|
"For the wrong reasons," she argued. "I don't want him marrying
|
|
me because he feels he should. And I don't want him pitying me,
|
|
either. Let it alone, Warin."
|
|
For a long while, young Lord Shipbrook didn't speak. Finally, he
|
|
stood. "We'll find some way, Myrande," he promised.
|
|
"Thank you," Myrande said, and Warin knocked on the bolted door
|
|
to be let out.
|
|
He turned back. "I'll bring something before dawn."
|
|
Myrande assented, understanding. Her cousin disappeared when the
|
|
door opened. She took the chop sticks from her hair, slipped them
|
|
beneath her pillow, then undressed and went to sleep.
|
|
|
|
Warin slipped into the ball room once the music started. His
|
|
father snagged his tunic angrily. "Where were you?" the Baron of
|
|
Shipbrook demanded of his elder son. "Why are you late?"
|
|
"I was talking to Myrande," Warin explained defiantly. "Do you
|
|
object?"
|
|
"She will marry Oleran," Shipbrook insisted. "I will see to it."
|
|
"I told her that," Warin lied. "She's stubborn, Father, like her
|
|
mother."
|
|
1 Warin watched his father's face; it did not move, but he saw the
|
|
flinch behind his eyes. Yes, that still hurt his ego, that his
|
|
brother, who had no title, no wealth, and at the time, not even
|
|
Knighthood, should have been preferred to him by the loveliest woman
|
|
in the Duchy of her generation. Like her mother, Myrande was immobile
|
|
when she loved another.
|
|
"You are trying to trick me," Shipbrook accused his son in low
|
|
tones. Smiling, the Baron bowed to a passing noble.
|
|
"Not at all. I don't want to see Myrande caged. It would be
|
|
better for her if she gave in," Warin stated, lying again. A brief
|
|
thought cascaded across his brain; if Myrande conceded, would he be
|
|
able to smuggle her out of the keep?
|
|
His father looked him over cooly. "It is good to see you have
|
|
come to your senses," his father finally told him. "Come. You must
|
|
meet the Beinsison ambassador."
|
|
The Baron of Shipbrook led his elder son toward his younger son,
|
|
Tylane, and Tylane's betrothed, Danza Coranabo. With them was a young
|
|
man who looked to be about Danza's age: fifteen. To this young man,
|
|
the Baron of Shipbrook bowed. "Count Tyago," he announced himself. The
|
|
young man, blond and boyish, nodded respectfully. "This is my eldest
|
|
son, Warin. Warin, Count Tyago."
|
|
"How do you do, sir," Warin said politely, bowing.
|
|
"How do you do," replied the Count in an accent pronounced enough
|
|
to be noticed but slight enough not to interfere with understanding.
|
|
He held out his hand to Warin. "A pleasure to meet you."
|
|
"And you, your--" What was the proper term of respect for a Count
|
|
of the Beinison Empire? It was "excellency" here... "And you, Count."
|
|
Warin smiled at the young man. "What brings you here to Baranur?"
|
|
"The business of the Emperor," Count Tyago replied. "I am going
|
|
to Magnus as an emissary from his Imperial Majesty to your King."
|
|
Tyago glanced at Warin's brother. "Your father has offered to me the
|
|
companionship of Lord Tylane."
|
|
"You're going to Magnus?" Warin asked his brother. Tylane nodded,
|
|
almost shyly. "And leaving your bride?" Warin teased. His brother
|
|
blushed, as did Danza.
|
|
"I would not want your son to leave his betrothed," Tyago
|
|
protested. "Please stay."
|
|
"I'll go in his place, Father," Warin volenteered, then cursed
|
|
himself. Who would bring food to Myrande? She'd die for certain!
|
|
"No," Baron Shipbrook refused with finality. "Tylane will go."
|
|
Danza appeared dejected, Tylane sad. "I have given my word." The Baron
|
|
looked over his shoulder and saw the entrance and announcement of the
|
|
Duchess of Dargon. He grimaced. "I must attend to my other guests,
|
|
sir," he said to the young Count. "Pray excuse me."
|
|
Tyago bowed to him as he left, then bowed to Danza as the music
|
|
started. "Would you like to dance, my lady?" Danza blushed again.
|
|
"With your permission, Lord Tylane?" Tylane smiled and nodded, then
|
|
whisked Danza gracefully away.
|
|
Warin grabbed his brother's sleeve. "You're going to Magnus?"
|
|
"Don't get any ideas," Tylane warned him in a hiss. "Father's
|
|
like a falcon; he's watching every move I make. If he--"
|
|
"Take a message to Luthias," Warin breathed. "Tell him what's
|
|
happening. Tell him to get the hell back here before Father marries
|
|
Myrande off to Oleran, before she gets beaten or raped or killed!"
|
|
"I can't," Tylane swore. "If Father suspects, he'll refuse to
|
|
accept Danza for me."
|
|
"Would you rather have Myrande's blood on your hands?"
|
|
"I won't give up Danza!" Tylane vowed angrily. He smiled as the
|
|
Duchess of Dargon passed him. "Not for you, not for Myrande, and not
|
|
for Luthias."
|
|
1 "You'd better," Warin threatened, snagging his brother's sleeve.
|
|
"You *owe* Luthias. You told me yourself that if Luthias hadn't chosen
|
|
to listen to Danza when she said she loved you and not him, she'd be
|
|
married to him now and you'd have no hope!"
|
|
"I won't risk losing the woman I love!"
|
|
"And you are willing to risk Myrande's losing the man she loves?"
|
|
"She loves no one," Tylane stated petulantly. "If she had, Fionn
|
|
Connall would have married her off years ago."
|
|
"She loves Luthias," Warin hissed. "Is it any wonder the late
|
|
Baron held off?" Tylane looked at his brother, then looked away. "It
|
|
isn't hard, Tylane," Warin cajoled. "Just tell him." Tylane looked up
|
|
again, then shifted his gaze. "You owe Luthias."
|
|
"Yes," breathed Tylane reluctantly, "I owe Luthias."
|
|
"You'll do it?"
|
|
"I'll tell him," Tylane promised, sighing. "I can't promise
|
|
anything else, Warin."
|
|
"It's enough," Warin assured him, and he went to dance with
|
|
Pecora Winthrop.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 QQQQQ tt
|
|
QQ QQ tttttt
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aaaa nnnn tt aaaa
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
|
QQQQQQ uuu aaaaa nn nn tt aaaaa
|
|
QQQ
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
|
|
Published monthly, each issue contains short fiction, articles and
|
|
editorials by authors around the world and across the net. Quanta
|
|
publishes in two formats: straight ascii and PostScript* for
|
|
PostScript compatible printers. To subscribe to Quanta, or just to
|
|
get more info, send mail to:
|
|
|
|
da1n@andrew.cmu.edu
|
|
da1n@andrew.bitnet
|
|
|
|
Quanta is a relatively new magazine but is growing fast, with over
|
|
two hundred subscribers to date from seven different countries.
|
|
Electronic publishing is the way of the future. Become part of that
|
|
future by subscribing to Quanta today.
|
|
1 ** ************
|
|
*** *********** **** **** ********* *** **** ***********
|
|
**** ** *** ** *** *** *** ** *** *** **** **
|
|
***** *** *** *** *** **** *** ****
|
|
****** *** ******** ****** ******** ****
|
|
*** *** *** *** *** *** *** **** *******
|
|
*** *** *** *** *** *** ** *** *** ****
|
|
********* ***** **** **** ********* **** *** ****
|
|
*** *** **** **
|
|
*** *** ------------------- **** ***
|
|
****** ***** The Online Magazine ***********
|
|
****** ***** of Amateur Creative Writing ************
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
|
|
>> What is Athene?
|
|
|
|
Athene is a free network "magazine" devoted to amateur fiction
|
|
written by the members of the online community. Athene does not
|
|
restrict itself to any specific genre, but will publish quality
|
|
short stories dealing with just about any interesting topic,
|
|
including (but not limited to):
|
|
|
|
science fiction, fantasy,
|
|
religion, mystery,
|
|
computers, humor,
|
|
psychology, sports,
|
|
politics, business
|
|
|
|
>> Distribution
|
|
|
|
Athene is published monthly (assuming stories come in at a
|
|
reasonable rate), and comes in two formats -- ASCII and PostScript.
|
|
For those who don't have access to a PostScript-compatible
|
|
printer, the ASCII distribution is a text-only file much like
|
|
the mail you are reading at this moment. The content of the
|
|
magazine is identical across both formats.
|
|
|
|
The ASCII version usually runs about 1300 lines, and the PostScript
|
|
edition typically generates about twenty pages.
|
|
|
|
To subscribe, send mail (no interactive messages, please)
|
|
to me at:
|
|
|
|
Jim McCabe
|
|
MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET
|
|
|
|
Please remember to indicate which format (ASCII or PostScript)
|
|
you would prefer to receive.
|
|
|
|
>> Miscellaneous
|
|
|
|
Back issues can be ordered on request by sending mail to me at
|
|
the above address. An index is also available upon request.
|
|
|
|
Please contact me at the above address for further information
|
|
concerning Athene's story submission policy.
|
|
|
|
Jim McCabe
|
|
Editor, Athene
|
|
MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET
|
|
1------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
(C) Copyright October, 1989, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd
|
|
<White@DUVM.BitNet> . All rights revert to the authors. These stories
|
|
may not be reproduced or redistributed save in the case of reproducing
|
|
the whole 'zine for further distribution without the express permission
|
|
of the author involved.
|
|
|