1458 lines
86 KiB
Plaintext
1458 lines
86 KiB
Plaintext
From WHITE@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU Tue May 12 10:35:37 1992
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Received: from DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU by eff.org with SMTP id AA26847
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(5.65c/IDA-1.4.4/pen-ident for <RITA@EFF.ORG>); Tue, 12 May 1992 10:35:27 -0400
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Message-Id: <199205121435.AA26847@eff.org>
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Received: from DUVM by DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU (IBM VM SMTP R1.2.2MX) with BSMTP id 3309; Tue, 12 May 92 10:31:32 EDT
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Date: Tue, 12 May 92 10:31:22 EDT
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From: "Avid Reader - Fledgling Writer" <WHITE@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU>
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To: RITA@EFF.ORG
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Status: OR
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1 /
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DDDDD ZZZZZZ //
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D D AAAA RRR GGGG OOOO NN N Z I NN N EEEE ||
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D D A A R R G O O N N N Z I N N N E || Volume 3
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-=========================================================+<OOOOOOOOO>|)
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D D AAAA RRR G GG O O N N N Z I N N N E || Issue 6
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DDDDD A A R R GGGG OOOO N NN ZZZZZZ I N NN EEEE ||
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\\
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\
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 6 05/04/90 Cir 984 --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- Contents --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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DAG Dafydd Cyhoeddwr Editor
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Materia Medica IV Max Khaytsus and
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Michelle Brothers Yuli 24-30, 1013
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Hunting of the Red Tiger I Wendy Hennequin Neber 1013
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1 Dafydd's Amber Glow
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by Ye Olde Editor, Dafydd Cyhoeddwr
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(b.c.k.a. <white@DUVM.OCS.Drexel.EDU>)
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This editorial will be brief. I just wanted to make you all aware
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that there is (finally!) a source for back issues of DargonZine other
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than myself. I had wanted to test out the access method before telling
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you all about it, and just received the results of that test today. In
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the interest of getting an issue out (it has been over a month, after
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all), I decided not to put a lengthy description about this here -
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look for a longer DAG next issue (out next Friday, if everything goes
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well) which will describe everything you need to know about this
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archive service (or at least as much as I know). If you are really
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anxious to know, you can send me a mail message at either the above
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address or the one in the copyright notice at the end (they are
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equivalent in every respect) about it and I will send you the updated
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DargonZine Info file which has this information in it.
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Thanks for waiting and Enjoy!
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Dafydd Cyhoeddwr
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P.S. Wish me happy birthday - I break three decades on Sunday!
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1 Materia Medica
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Part 4
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by Max Khaytsus
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<b.c.k.a. khaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu>
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and Michelle Brothers
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<b.c.k.a. brothers%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu>
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"I just don't understand why he didn't come back last night,"
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repeated Kera for the fifth time since they had started out from
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Connall Keep, less than two hours ago. "Or at least send a message. If
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he was going to be late he would have sent a messenger back...wouldn't
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he?" The nagging feeling that something dire had happened crept into
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her worried commentary.
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"I am certain he is all right," said Ittosai patiently, also for
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the fifth time. "Merely detained."
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Dawn had just broken when Kera went to Myrande to tell her that
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Rien hadn't made it back during the night, declaring her intention to
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go after him as soon as her horse was saddled. Sable had managed to
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convince her to wait long enough to have Ittosai go with her as both a
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companion and an escort in case of trouble. Not for the first time,
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Myrande thanked god that the Castellan rose early.
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As the pair came within sight of Dargon's walls, Kera pulled the
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hood of her heavy cloak up so that her face was hidden in its shadowy
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folds. Ittosai gave her a questioning look.
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"There are some people in Dargon who would be happy to know I'm
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back," Kera explained evasively. "I don't have the time to be making
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social calls."
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Hiding a faint smile, Ittosai inclined his head in understanding.
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A few minutes later they rode through the main gates of Dargon.
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Kera was able to get them to the inn that she and Rien had stayed
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at in record time. With the strong, comforting presense of Ittosai,
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she felt safe enough to take a few short-cuts and her companion did
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not feel the need to ask how she knew the routes, for which the thief
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gave silent thanks.
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"Have you seen my companion?" Kera demanded breathlessly of the
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innkeeper, as soon as she was inside the inn, while Ittosai tethered
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the horses.
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The man started and looked quickly up from the ledger he was
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leafing through. "Your companion, miss?" he said, looking at her
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blankly.
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"He was supposed to be here last night," continued Kera. "To pick
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up our belongings. We were staying in room three," she added when the
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man continued to look questioningly at her.
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"Ah, yes, that gentleman. Taller than him," the innkeep waved a
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hand at Ittosai as he was coming through the door to join Kera.
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"Blond, slender, long blue cloak?" Kera nodded eagerly. "Showed up
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yesterday evening with plans to move out. Asked me to get him a horse
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and went upstairs, but never came back down. I managed to find him a
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good horse, too," he hinted, but before he finished, Kera was halfway
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up the stairs with Ittosai hot on her heels.
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The door to the room she and Rien had shared was closed, but when
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Kera tried to push it open, it was unlocked. Suspicious, because the
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caution she and her mentor habitually practiced included locking
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doors, Kera pushed the door open. Behind her, Ittosai loosened his
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sword in its scabbard, anticipating trouble.
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The door opened with a low groan.
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Light peeked through the cracks in the shutters and Kera took a
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second to allow her eyes to adjust to the dimness before cautiously
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entering the room. She glanced hastily around, seeking intruders
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1before her gaze was caught by a figure lying sprawled on the bed.
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With a soft curse, Kera stepped over and rolled the body onto
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it's back. Rien's hand, the fingertips stained a dull red, flopped
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over the edge of the mattress.
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"How is he?" asked Ittosai softly as Kera checked to see if he
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was breathing.
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"Alive," she replied after a moment. She shook Rien, in an
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attempt to revive him, but got no reaction. She tried again, harder,
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with the same result. "He's alive," Kera repeated grimly. "But not
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much else. We should get him back to Marcellon as soon as we can." She
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pulled her pouch off of her belt and offered it to Ittosai. "Would you
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please pay for the room and that horse? I'll get him ready to go."
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Ittosai accepted the money with a slight bow and a look of gentle
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sympathy and disappeared down the hall. Kera stared at Rien's immobile
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form and bit her lip to keep the tears back. `This is hardly the time
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to be losing control,' she thought to herself firmly. `You said you'd
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get him ready, so do it.'
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She gathered their possessions together first and carefully tied
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them into as compact bundles as she could, hoping that Rien would wake
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up while she worked. Yet, when she finished, he still hadn't stirred
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at all.
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With a sigh, Kera grabbed Rien's arm to attempt to haul him
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upright so that when it came time to carry him downstairs, he would be
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easier to pick up. With a great deal of effort, she was able to get
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him upright -- Rien was not nearly so light as he appeared -- and then
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dropped him as a low scraping noise caused her to turn quickly,
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reaching for her daggers.
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Rien hit the rough wood floor with a loud crash, Kera's attempt
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at grabbing him coming too late. Ittosai, who had startled Kera with
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his return, ducked inside and joined her at her mentor's side. Rien's
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eyelids flickered and he slowly opened them to look up at the pair.
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"Rien...Rien! Are you all right?" Kera asked, helping him into a
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sitting position from behind.
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"I'm fine," Rien said after a moment. He put a hand to the back
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of his head, where it had hit the floor. "Or rather, I will be in a
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bit." His glance was caught by the red on his fingertips and he
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studied them curiously as Kera let loose a flood of questions.
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"Why didn't you send back a message?" she demanded. "Who knocked
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you out? Why couldn't I wake you up, what happened to your horse and
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are you sure you're all right?"
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Ittosai simply knelt opposite him and observed him quietly,
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prepared to offer Kera a hand should Rien collapse again.
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"I didn't send a message because I hadn't planned on being late,"
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Rien said sharply, pulling his gaze away from his fingers. "That's a
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foolish question to ask." Kera flushed and Rien continued. "Someone
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stole my horse, just after I got into town," he said slowly. "I'm sure
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I'll recall the circumstances later. Did the innkeep find me another
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horse?" he asked suddenly, as though just remembering that he had made
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the request.
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Ittosai nodded. "It is a fine animal," he said. "Light cavalry. I
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have paid for it and your room." He offered Kera back her pouch and
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she absently took it back.
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`Cavalry?' Rien thought. `I just wanted a horse...' "Thank you,
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Castellan," he said aloud. Ittosai bowed and Rien looked down at his
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hands again. "You couldn't wake me, Kera, because I forced myself into
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a jashch," -- she wondered how he managed to get all those sounds out
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without damaging his tongue -- "it's a trance like state that isolates
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me from normal bodily control. I assume I was poisoned," he said,
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looking up once again. "My senses failed me completely."
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"Are you all right? Who would do something like that? Where did
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1it happen?" Kera burst into a string of questions again.
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"I told you already, I'm fine. I don't know who did it or where
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or how. It just happened."
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"Could it...could it have been the disease?" asked Kera,
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swallowing hard.
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"Possibly," Rien said, frowning. "I'm not sure..." He looked back
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to his hand. "I'm sure this is somehow involved," he indicated the red
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stain.
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"We need to return to Lord Marcellon," said Ittosai decisively.
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"He will know. Are you well enough to travel?"
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"Yes."
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"Then let's get moving!" declared Kera, grabbing the bundles that
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contained her's and Rien's possessions. She headed for the door.
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With Ittosai's help, Rien walked out of the inn and mounted his
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newly purchased horse. They left for Connall Keep immediately.
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"That was indeed nightshade," Marcellon said putting away the
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beakers after pouring out the solutions he used. "You say your race is
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immune to the effects of the plant?"
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Rien nodded. "They are. I am surprised it had this effect on me."
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"Have you tried it before? Was there a reaction?"
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"No, I never tried it before," Rien said. "At least not to my
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knowledge and not deliberately."
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"But you are half human..." Marcellon stroked his chin absently,
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staring at nothing in particular. "You could have a different reaction
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to it, especially now that you have the disease to worry about. This
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is the most positive proof that some changes have taken place. Do your
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people respond to it as a narcotic?"
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"No. It's a simple forest grass."
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"None the less," the wizard went on, "it was nightshade and it
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did affect you as a hallucinogen."
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"At least it's not the disease," Kera sighed. She had been
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seriously concerned the entire morning, even after Marcellon assured
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her that it could not be the disease, and only now was beginning to
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relax.
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"Young lady," Marcellon looked over at her. "What happened today
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stressed the one factor which we all should be concerned about. Rien
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is neither human, nor Ljosalfar. In him the disease may take any
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course imaginable. For all I know, he may display more symptoms
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tomorrow morning than you will in the next month. He is one of a kind.
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There is no precedent for what we are dealing with."
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Kera shuddered at the images the wizard invoked with his words,
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as he turned back to Rien. Visions of Rien mutating into a wolfling
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were fore-most in her mind as the wizard continued talking with her
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mentor.
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"This still leave the question of who poisoned you."
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"Over all, I see Dargon as a friendly town..."
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"Any people in town who may for some reason dislike you?"
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Marcellon persisted.
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"None that I could think of, sir," Rien answered.
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"Even the men you rescued Kera from?"
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Damn, he had a good memory! "I would imagine they are still in
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custody of the guard. Penalties for armed assault are stiff...and I
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doubt they had the knowledge to make the poison or the money to
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purchase it."
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"Very well," Marcellon nodded. "One last question. You said you
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forced yourself to pass out. Could you elaborate on that?"
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Rien gave the question some thought. To him it was something
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natural, but equating it to human norms would be a difficult task.
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"Sometimes after sustaining injuries humans go into shock," he said
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1finally. "This reflex is triggered by pain or perhaps loss of blood.
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Jashch is similar to that. It protects from unwanted sensations, but
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it can be triggered by a conscious effort. It is in a way opposite of
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going into shock. The action is controlled at the start, but while
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humans recover on their own, I would have to be `removed' from the
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condition forcibly."
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Kera lowered her eyes as Marcellon looked at her.
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"And you dropped him. On his head."
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She nodded. "It was an accident..."
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"Otherwise I would probably still be unconscious," Rien said,
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feeling the lump on the back of his head, and grinning as Kera flushed
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a deeper shade of red.
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"The condition isn't permanent, is it?" the wizard asked. "There
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must be other ways to regain consciousness."
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"Hunger would have woken me up," Rien said, "but that could take
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a while."
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"Very well," Marcellon stood up. "That satisfies all of my
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curiosity for the moment. Let me return to my work and I shall see
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both of you at dinner."
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Rien and Kera stood up as well.
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"By the way," Marcellon stopped them before they reached the
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door. "Rien, an old friend of mine, someone I attended the University
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in Magnus with, will be stopping by here in a day or two. He is an
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archivist. I am sure he would be interested in meeting with you. Would
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you object?"
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"Not at all," Rien answered and promptly left with Kera. "I hope
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his friend isn't as strange as he is," Rien said as they walked down
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the hall. "He asks far too many questions."
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"You lied to him, you know," Kera said. "You said you didn't have
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enemies in town."
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"Morality from you? Is profession of thievery becoming moral?"
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Rien jested. "I did not lie. I stretched the truth, emphasized some
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misleading facts, but it was not a lie. He suspected someone from
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Dargon attempted to poison me. I believe it was someone from outside
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of Dargon."
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"Huh?"
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"I told him it was not an individual from Dargon who did this."
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"You know who it was?"
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"No, but I suspect. The innkeeper told me an elderly woman came
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around asking for me. The lock to the room was jammed. Marcellon
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established beyond doubt that the poison was administered through the
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hand." He displayed for Kera the still visible red stain. "I assume
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that the old woman, very likely a witch from Maari's coven, came
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around and set up the `trap' for me, most likely expecting the poison
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to kill me. It would have to be left on a surface that I would be
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guaranteed to touch...such as the door. The lock was probably jammed
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so that my exposure would increase."
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"Very convincing," Kera said.
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"So, as you can see, I did not lie. I simply did not tell him the
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whole truth. If he or the Baron were to learn the truth about Liriss
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or Maari, our position could become compromised. In either case, this
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convinced me that Dargon is far too dangerous for us. The sooner we
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can leave, the better it will be."
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"Could it have been Liriss's assassin?"
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"I doubt Liriss would hire someone's grandmother to kill us,"
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Rien smiled. "Usually grandmothers are self-motivated."
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A laugh escaped from Kera's mouth.
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"I would imagine that the assassin is looking for us in Tench by
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now. He will track us here eventually, but we will be gone by the time
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he figures out where we went...I hope."
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1 They walked in silence to the door of one of the rooms given to
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them, considering all the dangers that waited to present themselves,
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then Rien turned to Kera once again. "I do have a question for you
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about Liriss. When I made it to Dargon yesterday, I went by the docks,
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including Liriss's pier. Three men were trying to drown a girl there.
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She was your age, perhaps a bit younger. About five foot, light frame,
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light brown hair, amber eyes... She's the reason my horse was stolen.
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I stopped to help her out and I think she took it. Does that sound
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familiar?"
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"Sorry. I never had a horse stolen like that." Kera grinned. "And
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no one I know is into horse theft. It's too hard to get rid of the
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goods."
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Rien glared down at her. "It's not funny. Do you know the girl?"
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Kera shook her head. "I was the youngest one. His ward, in fact,"
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she added bitterly.
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Rien continued, not really hearing the last part of Kera's
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comment.
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"I've seen those eyes before..."
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"I'm very glad that you were willing to make this record with me,
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Rien. It will be invaluable for future generations. Perhaps we will
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even stop fearing your people because of this."
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Rish Vogel made himself comfortable in the Baron's chair and,
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placing an ink well with a goose quill on the desk, pulled out a long
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rolled up sheet of parchment.
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Rien watched as the old chronicaler set everything up, opening
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pots of ink, pulling out extra pens from a small box engraved with the
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quill and scroll of the Archivist Guild, laying out a blotter and a
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large pile of clean parchment. Vogel came across as a man completely
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dedicated to his profession; perhaps so much so that he seemed to
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forget everything else, although he never forgot information that
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applied to his craft. He even, to Rien's mind, dressed like a
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historian should -- long brown robe with the crumbs of his last meal
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clinging to the front, worn belt with additional quills, a jar of ink
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and several small rolls of parchment dangling from it. Rien had asked
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the reason for the extra equipment and had been told flatly that after
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being caught without paper and having to record a very important event
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on a napkin in wine, Rish had vowed to never be caught without proper
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tools again. Hanging the items from his belt was his way of making
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sure that they were on hand at all times. Rien found this to be highly
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amusing.
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He had agreed to the interview only because he believed in the
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chronicler's desire to have the unknown recorded for later generations
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of people. And he hoped, like Rish, that this information would
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someday lead to friendly contact between the two races.
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"Now," Rish dipped the quill in the ink well and poised his hand
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over the page. "Your name?"
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"Could we set a few `house rules' first?" Rien remained
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motionless in the middle of the room.
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Rish looked up, without actually moving his head, then jotted
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down a few words. The chronicaler was actually writing every word!
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Rien frowned.
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"If you insist," Rish said, "but I intend on making this an
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accurate record."
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"First of all, this record is for your and the Duke's reference.
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No one else is to see it."
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Rish nodded and set his pen to the paper again.
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"You will not use my name or make any specific descriptions that
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relate directly to me. After today, you do not know me. Nor will I
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make any specific references to names, places, or dates to protect my
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1tribe."
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Rish mouthed the last few words as finished writing them and
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looked up. "Understood. How old are you?"
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Rien hesitated. That was a very personal question, but it was not
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something that could compromise him in the long run. The bookish
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chronicaler was not breaking `the rules' and was still getting as much
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information as he could. Rien could see why Rish was able to make such
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complete records -- he knew which questions to ask. Still, Rien
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temporized. "Over a century," was all he permitted the historian to
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write down.
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Rish began writing again. "I understand that your people are
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immortal," he said, his pen scratching over the paper, recording his
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own question.
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"We are not immortal," Rien said. "Not in the true sense of the
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word, anyway. We do have long lifespans and in our recorded history no
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Ljosalfar has died of old age, but we do die." Rien's voice was
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somber. "We suffer from disease and accidents just like humans. And we
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can be slain just as easily."
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Rish paused to dip the quill in to the ink again. "How do you
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live?"
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"I personally?"
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Rish looked up, irritated that Rien could not handle a simple
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question. "How does the society function?"
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"We function as a tribe with a central leader, but each
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individual, once they come of age, has a voice in making the decisions
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that effect the tribe as a whole. For example, the leader might settle
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a dispute between two people, but if there is a question of whether
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the tribe should move elsewhere to winter, it is discussed by
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everyone." Rien drew a deep breath and continued as the chronicaler
|
|
finished writing his last sentence. "We don't have a money based
|
|
economy. Barter is the usual method of distributing goods and skills.
|
|
There are no social classes. Everyone helps to take care of everyone
|
|
else and no one goes hungry. We have no crime and--"
|
|
"No crime?" Rish interrupted Rien, looking up sharply. From years
|
|
of ingrained habit he used the opportunity to get more ink on his pen.
|
|
"There are very few of my race left," Rien said. "We can't afford
|
|
to hurt each other. There are plenty of outsiders who do that for us."
|
|
"No crime at all," Rish repeated musingly, jotting down a quick
|
|
notation on the bottom of the page so that he could cross-reference
|
|
the statement with other records at a later date.
|
|
"Practically none," Rien conceded. "There are recorded cases of
|
|
individuals being cast out, but they are few and far between, and none
|
|
of them recent. The idea of consciously stealing from your sister or
|
|
harming your brother is as foreign to us as the concept of lack of
|
|
crime is to you."
|
|
Rish pulled the ink well closer, not quite satisfied with the
|
|
response, but knowing that he would get nothing else on the subject.
|
|
"From what you said, I assume your tribe is very closely knit...?"
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
"Were you cast out?"
|
|
That hit a sensitive nerve. "No," Rien said, forcing himself not
|
|
to snap. "My father was human. I wanted to explore his world."
|
|
Rish kept scribbling along, not noticing Rien's discomfort.
|
|
"`Keegan' is a human name. Was that the surname of your father?"
|
|
Rien did not answer and the chronicaler looked up. "I am sorry."
|
|
he said, looking a little abashed. "We did have an agreement..." He
|
|
was about to say something else, but Rien spoke.
|
|
"It's the name of the man who trained me. He recommended I take
|
|
it as two names are expected in your society. I was honored by his
|
|
offer, so I accepted the name."
|
|
1 Rish nodded and bent his head to the page again. "Can you tell me
|
|
the early history of your people? And do sit down. This won't go any
|
|
faster if you stand!"
|
|
|
|
Kera sat up in bed with a ear piercing scream. She was in cold
|
|
sweat and out of instinct she tried to dodge the arms reaching for
|
|
her. She slammed into Rien who was lying next to her, to avoid being
|
|
grabbed.
|
|
"A dream..." she muttered to herself, realizing no one was after
|
|
her. She tossed her hair back over her shoulder and wiped the sweat
|
|
from her face. It was chilly in the room, cooler than usual for the
|
|
summer and Kera pulled the blanket up. It was strange, she thought,
|
|
that Rien hadn't responded when she hit him. Usually he was more alert
|
|
than that...
|
|
She turned to look at her companion, expecting to find him still
|
|
asleep, but instead found herself staring into unfamiliar eyes. Next
|
|
to her lay a beast -- she could think of no better word to describe it
|
|
-- with grey-white fur, extended dog-like jaws and large ears at the
|
|
top of the skull. The jaws were partially open, displaying rows of
|
|
snow-white teeth, four of which stood prominently at the front, each
|
|
half the length of her index finger. The creature stared hungrily into
|
|
her eyes and she realized that one of its hands was clamped tightly
|
|
around her wrist.
|
|
Kera tried to pull her arm back, but the creature prevented her
|
|
from withdrawing. Instead the grip tightened further and, using her
|
|
for leverage, it sat up. Kera tried to scream, but her voice refused
|
|
to obey her. Instead of a shout, a small whimpering noise escaped her
|
|
throat. The creature's lips pulled back in a viscous smile, tongue
|
|
lolling out of it's mouth.
|
|
"Let me go..." she managed to whisper.
|
|
The creature responded by forcing her onto her back, its strength
|
|
so great that Kera found herself unable to struggle effectively
|
|
against it.
|
|
"You will be like me," she heard Rien's voice, issuing from the
|
|
creature's throat without accompanying jaw movement. "You will be like
|
|
me," she heard again and this time the mouth moved, the voice a rough
|
|
parody of Rien's usually gentle voice.
|
|
She felt its fur against her chest as it moved to loom over her.
|
|
"No..." she screamed, fear finally forcing the words out.
|
|
"Like me..." the phrase was repeated again, the words distorted,
|
|
barely recognizable. The claws on the arms that held her dug deep into
|
|
her wrists, piercing the skin and bringing up trickles of blood, even
|
|
as her hands went numb.
|
|
"I don't want to be like you!" Kera shouted out at the top of her
|
|
lungs, twisting beneath the heavy body with a last burst of strength.
|
|
"Be like who?" the form above her asked. The voice was strict and
|
|
concerned -- Rien's.
|
|
"Like you!" she shouted again and continued to struggle. She felt
|
|
cold and wet and angry at being restrained, but above all lurked the
|
|
fear of the creature above her. She bit into the arm holding her right
|
|
wrist and it was released immediately. Her next thought was to punch
|
|
up and she did. The figure over her swayed from the blow and she
|
|
continued to hit at it, to drive it away. "I don't want to be like
|
|
you!"
|
|
"Stop it!" Rien's voice sounded again, this time a lot closer and
|
|
a hand locked around her free wrist once more. "Kera! Wake up!"
|
|
She stopped the struggle long enough to look up. Rien was leaning
|
|
over her, holding on to her arms. "It's only a dream. Relax." He
|
|
pulled her up to a sitting position and cradled her protectively.
|
|
"It's going to be all right."
|
|
1 Kera stared to cry softly.
|
|
"I wouldn't want you to be like me," she heard him say. "You'd be
|
|
boring."
|
|
The door burst open and two guards rushed in. One held a readied
|
|
sword and the other a burning torch. "Let go of her!" the first man
|
|
ordered Rien.
|
|
"She had a nightmare," Rien responded, drawing one of the sheets
|
|
around Kera's shoulders. She was cold, covered with sweat and shaking
|
|
from the dream she just had and on top of all that, clammy. It was the
|
|
last that Rien objected to the most, as he held her.
|
|
"Let go of her," the guard repeated, not sure what to believe. "I
|
|
want to hear that she is fine from her."
|
|
Rien sat up straight, holding onto Kera's shoulders. She was
|
|
still sobbing. "Are you all right?" he asked softly.
|
|
"I'm fine," she said, wiping the tears from her eyes. "Really, I
|
|
am," she finished, turning to face the two guards.
|
|
"We'll be in the hall if you need anything," said the man with
|
|
the torch while the other glared at Rien and they stepped back
|
|
outside, pulling the door closed.
|
|
Rien turned back to Kera who was still shivering.
|
|
"Are you sure that you're all right?" he asked, holding her by
|
|
the shoulders and staring intently into her eyes.
|
|
"I'll be fine," Kera replied. She wiped the last of the tears
|
|
from her cheeks. "It was just a nightmare...I dreamed...I dreamed that
|
|
you had changed into a..." She choked on the last part of the sentence
|
|
and Rien pulled her close again.
|
|
"It's all right," he said, stroking her hair. "I haven't changed
|
|
into anything yet and Marcellon will find a cure so see that I don't,
|
|
ever."
|
|
"I hope he can," whispered Kera.
|
|
Rien held her until she finally fell asleep, and stared at the
|
|
wall for a long time afterwards.
|
|
|
|
"Sir Keegan? The High Mage wishes to see you right away." The
|
|
summons came right after a quick knock on the partially open door to
|
|
Baron Connall's study.
|
|
Rien frowned. Rish must have already let it slip that he was a
|
|
knight. At least he hadn't tell the chronicler much more than that. He
|
|
closed the book he was reading and stood up. "Thank you. I will be
|
|
right there."
|
|
The guard left the room and Rien got up to replace the book on
|
|
the shelf. Baron Connall, it seemed, was very preoccupied with the
|
|
`art' of war, but then again so were most other Humans. For some
|
|
reason the society was more interested in perfecting methods of
|
|
fighting, claiming all the while that those preparations did more to
|
|
insure peace than any other occupation. It struck Rien as a
|
|
hypocritical view, but how could one argue that a whole race was
|
|
misinformed?
|
|
Rien made his way to Marcellon's laboratory. The wizard was
|
|
talking with Myrande and Kera and there was some sense of excitement
|
|
about. Rien closed the door and came up to the group. He noticed Kera
|
|
trying to hold back a smile.
|
|
"I believe that I have solved it," Marcellon told Rien and Kera's
|
|
smile finally burst free.
|
|
"You did it?" Rien asked, just to make sure he heard it right, in
|
|
spite of Kera's expression indicating the question was useless. "You
|
|
found a cure?"
|
|
"I believe I did," Marcellon said again. "Believe," he
|
|
re-emphasized the word as Rein started to develop a smile much like
|
|
his apprentice's. "Kera is still capable of seeing in the dark, but
|
|
1there is no other evidence of the disease in her body. The change
|
|
appears to be a permanent physical alteration, but just in case it
|
|
decides to reverse itself, I would like to observe her for a few more
|
|
days."
|
|
Kera jumped off the stool she was sitting on with a laugh and
|
|
embraced Rien, eyes shining.
|
|
"Ah!" Marcellon grabbed hold of her arm and pulled her back.
|
|
"Stay away from him. He's still sick. I want to be positive that you
|
|
don't become ill again through contact with him."
|
|
Reluctantly Kera returned to the stool, the happy sparkle still
|
|
in her eyes. Rien found her good humor to be contagious and was still
|
|
smiling as Marcellon turned back to him.
|
|
"Now," said the wizard, leaning up against the table's edge. "I
|
|
have a good idea what the cure is. We will definitely know tomorrow if
|
|
it is a hundred percent effective. Meanwhile I would like to begin on
|
|
you."
|
|
The High Mage began his work. Kera remained in her seat, watching
|
|
the now familiar procedure, until Marcellon told her to leave the
|
|
laboratory, as contests were the only spectator activity of which he
|
|
approved.
|
|
Annoyed, Kera left the laboratory and wandered around the public
|
|
areas of the keep, trying to find something to do. After five days in
|
|
the laboratory, wistfully thinking of all the things she would like to
|
|
do, she had no idea of what should actually be done with the free time
|
|
she suddenly gained. If nothing else, she could use the time
|
|
productively, Kera decided finally. She went up to her room and
|
|
unpacked the bow that Rien had purchased for her a week ago. Going to
|
|
the stables Kera told the servant she was going for a ride and, after
|
|
saddling her horse, left the keep.
|
|
She followed the road as it passed by the keep's wall, turning
|
|
south-west, then took the road that turned sharply north, heading
|
|
towards the coast line. In an hour the evergreens gave way to a broad
|
|
leaf forest and Kera turned off the road to a small side trail. She
|
|
dismounted a fair distance from the trail, strung her bow and, after
|
|
securing the horse, went in search of game.
|
|
The day was warm and sunny and Kera had no problems finding
|
|
something to shoot at. She spotted a fat magpie perched on a tree
|
|
branch and after a moment of aiming, released the arrow.
|
|
The missile passed just over the bird, crashing into the leaves
|
|
in the upper branches and finally fell back to the ground. The bird
|
|
took the hint at the first sign of trouble and flew away. Retrieving
|
|
the arrow with a muttered curse, Kera went further down the path,
|
|
hoping the next shot she took would be more effective.
|
|
Scrambling up a small hill, she sat down and looked around the
|
|
forest. It was filled with life. Up above birds flew back and forth at
|
|
the tops of the trees, but Kera would not even dare shooting one in
|
|
mid-flight. She spotted a squirrel and took aim, but immediately began
|
|
to feel sorry for the little animal, peacefully nibbling on some
|
|
forest fruit. What if she were to get lucky and hit it? She sighed and
|
|
replaced the arrow she held in the quiver on her back. The squirrel
|
|
happily snapped its tail and kept on eating. Kera smiled at it and
|
|
climbed down the other side of the hill.
|
|
The slope here was much rockier and steeper and it took Kera much
|
|
longer to go the same distance to the forest floor. The woods here
|
|
took a darker appearance, the broad leafed trees once again merging
|
|
with pines.
|
|
Kera looked around. On a second glance the forest wasn't all that
|
|
different. The birds were still high above in the trees and a pair of
|
|
squirrels chased each other around a particularly large stump.
|
|
Kera wandered a little deeper into the forest. One pine had a
|
|
1natural discoloration that looked like a rabbit and Kera drew another
|
|
arrow, thinking that an inanimate target would be as good as a live
|
|
one. She drew the string back to her ear, as Rien had taught her and
|
|
let the arrow fly. Missing its intended target, the arrow struck a
|
|
tree a few feet back.
|
|
Kera threw the bow down in anger and marched over the the tree to
|
|
get the arrow back. Rien ordered these arrows after they returned to
|
|
Dargon a week ago. They were normal except for the fletching that
|
|
permitted the arrow to fly straighter and different color rings
|
|
painted around the shaft, each two finger breadth apart.
|
|
The arrow was stuck in the trunk up to the third ring and Kera
|
|
quickly realized that the arrow was stuck in there for good, at least
|
|
as far as her strength was concerned. She kicked the tree and stomped
|
|
off in anger. After some time of pacing Kera once again picked up the
|
|
bow and tried shooting the tree again. This time the arrow lodged
|
|
itself just above the target and did not go in far enough to get
|
|
stuck.
|
|
Kera practiced for an hour longer and finally felt competent
|
|
enough to shoot at reasonably large, stationary target.
|
|
She returned to her horse and continued north, towards the
|
|
Akmeron Ocean, in search of large game. By mid-afternoon she reached
|
|
the north shore without seeing anything larger than a raccoon. It was
|
|
as if the whole forest knew she was ready to shoot and was avoiding
|
|
her. Broadleaf trees gave way to pale yellow sand and crisp waves
|
|
making their way towards shore. A faint hint of salt permeated the
|
|
air, distinct from the cool, earthy smells of the wood.
|
|
She hopped off the horse and lead it west along the sandy shore.
|
|
At first the animal complained at its hooves sinking into the sand,
|
|
but soon got used to it and followed her obediently.
|
|
Off in the distance Kera noticed a man on top of a horse coming
|
|
towards her. She slowed her pace, moving closer to the water line to
|
|
give him room to pass. As they got closer, she got the dreadful
|
|
feeling that she knew the man approaching her and drew up the hood of
|
|
the cloak, hoping she was not recognized.
|
|
As the two got closer, the man jumped off his horse and
|
|
approached Kera. "Haven't seen you in a long while," he greeted.
|
|
"Yeah, a long while," Kera stopped, her fears of discovery
|
|
realized.
|
|
The man left his horse behind and walked over to her. "Where have
|
|
you been for the last two months?"
|
|
"Tench."
|
|
"Kera, don't give me that look. Liriss is really mad about you!"
|
|
Kera did not expect any less. "That's his problem, isn't it?"
|
|
"You're going to come back with me and tell him that yourself."
|
|
"Keep dreaming, Garold," said Kera coldly. "I'm not going to do
|
|
anything to further your career!"
|
|
"You're coming back with me, whether you want to or not! Even if
|
|
I have to knock you cold." Garold grabbed Kera's arms.
|
|
Kera jerked an arm free and punched Garold in the chest. He did
|
|
not even flinch, but backhanded her as she tried to pull her other arm
|
|
free and permitted her to fall back into the water.
|
|
Kera stood up, wet and angry. In her hand she held a dagger.
|
|
Garold grabbed her arm and twisted until Kera dropped her weapon, then
|
|
started trying to pull her tunic up. "Before we go..." Kera struggled
|
|
more furiously, forcing Garold to use both hands to hold her still and
|
|
preventing him from doing anything more with her clothing.
|
|
"What's the matter? It's not like we haven't done this before."
|
|
He dragged Kera back to the bank and shoved her down. As he leaned
|
|
over her, a glimmer of steel shone in Kera's hand and sharp pain
|
|
engulfed his arm. Kera rolled out of the way as Garold hit the sand in
|
|
1anger and bolted for her horse. Garold got up slowly, his left arm
|
|
dripping blood and drew his sword. "You're dead, bitch! Liriss will
|
|
take you either way."
|
|
As Liriss' thug advanced Kera grabbed the bow and off her horse
|
|
-- she had kept the bow strung, since she was hunting and did not want
|
|
to take the time to restring it each time an animal appeared --
|
|
notched an arrow, and drew back the string. "Stay back!" she ordered,
|
|
aiming at his chest. "Or I'll kill you!"
|
|
Garold either did not hear her or was so taken with his anger
|
|
that he did not even pause at her words and Kera released the arrow.
|
|
It struck its target in the stomach and he gasped, bending forward, as
|
|
if the wind had been knocked out of him.
|
|
Kera quickly prepared another arrow and as soon as Garold moved
|
|
forward again, fired. This arrow took him square in the chest. His
|
|
legs buckled and he sank to his knees. Kera hesitated with the next
|
|
arrow. Garold tried to speak, but blood foamed at his lips and he
|
|
collapsed forward, the two arrow shafts breaking beneath him.
|
|
Afraid that the man hadn't been alone, Kera looked up and down
|
|
the beach and, not seeing anyone, quickly remounted and encouraged her
|
|
horse towards the forest. The animal started out at a lazy walk and
|
|
Kera kicked it as hard as she could with her heels. "Faster!" The
|
|
horse lunged into the forest, leaving behind the body, with its blood
|
|
being slowly washed away by the tide.
|
|
|
|
The sun was just sinking below the horizon when Kera galloped
|
|
through the gates to Connall Keep, eyes straining behind in fear of
|
|
pursuit. She nearly jerked the horse around and bolted when the gate
|
|
guards came out to see what the racket was, but managed a bright smile
|
|
and a wave as they realized who she was and called polite greetings.
|
|
Shivering with a combination of chill and fear, Kera guided the
|
|
horse to the main stable doors and dismounted. As she gathered the
|
|
reins to lead the animal inside to rub down, voices floated out into
|
|
the courtyard.
|
|
"..prentice indeed. If'n he's a knight, she should be a squire,
|
|
not an apprentice," The rough voice of the stable master was easily
|
|
identifiable. Kera froze where she stood, unable to stop listening.
|
|
"Bet he jus' gives the title t' make it sound good, and t' make her
|
|
believe she's more'n just a bedwarmer."
|
|
Kera flushed angrily at the implication the man made, but decided
|
|
that a confrontation would be a bad idea. Drawing her daggers on a
|
|
servant of a baron could be almost as dangerous as leaving Liriss's
|
|
employ. The thief glanced sharply around the courtyard, expecting to
|
|
see yet another of her former master's men lurking about. Feeling far
|
|
too exposed outside, she called for a stablehand to come deal with her
|
|
horse and ducked off towards the main keep before the child made it
|
|
out of the stable to follow her orders.
|
|
Praying that she would meet no one until tomorrow, she pulled
|
|
open the keep door and nearly ran Myrande down on her way inside. Only
|
|
luck prevented Kera from going for her remaining dagger.
|
|
"Kera!" exclaimed the senechal in surprise. "I was just looking
|
|
for you. Dinner's ready and -- my goodness! What happened to you? Your
|
|
shirt's all bloody!" Her dark eyes lingered on the deep maroon stains
|
|
on the other woman's tunic.
|
|
"I decided to go out hunting," began Kera, honestly enough,
|
|
trying very hard to sound normal. "After being cooped up with High
|
|
Mage Marcellon in his laboratory for so long, I needed to get out. I
|
|
tried to shoot a rabbit while I was out and it wasn't quite dead when
|
|
I picked it up." She pulled at the shirt ruefully, hoping that the lie
|
|
didn't sound as transparent as she thought it did. "This was the
|
|
result. Ruined a perfectly good tunic because of the darned creature
|
|
1and couldn't even bring it back in with me to show for the trouble."
|
|
Myrande smiled sympathetically.
|
|
"Go ahead and change then," she said. "I'll have them hold dinner
|
|
and send someone to clean the shirt."
|
|
"I don't feel very hungry, my lady," said Kera quickly. "I think
|
|
I'll just go to bed. If you don't object."
|
|
"No, I don't mind. I'll see you in the morning then. Goodnight,"
|
|
and she continued out into the courtyard.
|
|
Kera breathed a sigh of relief and hurried up to her room,
|
|
bolting the door behind her as soon as she got inside.
|
|
|
|
"I'm simply not sure," said Marcellon, setting the half filled
|
|
vial down on the table in annoyance and looking over at Rien and Kera.
|
|
"I wish I could tell you something more definite, but I can't. The
|
|
infection appears to have been halted, but there are still traces of
|
|
it in Kera's body. Another day, at least, will be required to be
|
|
absolutely positive that she will not relapse."
|
|
Kera sighed deeply and Rien's eyes narrowed in concern.
|
|
"I don't believe that there is any chance of reinfection,"
|
|
continued the mage. "If you two wish to associate, you may. But don't
|
|
DO anything, understand?" He looked sharply from one patient to the
|
|
other.
|
|
At any other time, an admonition like that would have brought an
|
|
amused smile to Rien's lips and a giggle from Kera, but now their only
|
|
response was, "Understood."
|
|
"Good," harumped Marcellon. "Now go, Kera. I need to continue my
|
|
treatment of Rien. Come by again tomorrow morning and we'll see if the
|
|
disease is cleared from your body."
|
|
"All right," said Kera. She gave Rien's hand a squeeze and
|
|
slipped out the door. Resignedly, Rien seated himself on the stool
|
|
that Marcellon indicated with a preemetory gesture.
|
|
|
|
Two days later, Rien found Kera in the courtyard, stretched out
|
|
on the grass with a cup of mead and a book. "I hope this isn't the way
|
|
you spent the last two days," he smiled, sitting down beside her.
|
|
"You're just jealous that I've been able to do this while you
|
|
were cooped up with the mage," Kera retorted with an answering grin.
|
|
"Not that it took a long time," she added pensively. "I expected that
|
|
it would take weeks and weeks to get cured, but it didn't. We had
|
|
better luck in this one place in a shorter amount of time than all of
|
|
the months of travelling combined."
|
|
"Sometimes it works out that way," said Rien with a slight smile.
|
|
"Our luck's finally turned."
|
|
"Gods I'm glad of that," said Kera forcefully. "We deserve some
|
|
good luck for a change."
|
|
They traded the mead back and forth a few more times, watching a
|
|
pair of birds fly in dizzy circles in the sunlight.
|
|
"I was wondering if you want to leave tonight or tomorrow
|
|
morning," said Rien abruptly.
|
|
Kera sat up, surprised. "You're cured?"
|
|
"According to the High Mage himself."
|
|
Kera embraced him with a strength he didn't think she had. "I'm
|
|
glad it's over, but how can he know so quickly? He didn't pronounce me
|
|
healthy until last night."
|
|
"I was his second patient," Rien said. "He already knew the
|
|
disease and the cure."
|
|
"Where do you want to go?" Kera asked.
|
|
"Not Dargon. I want to take care of matters that were brought to
|
|
my attention two weeks ago."
|
|
"The messenger? What was it all about?"
|
|
1 "Have a seat," Rien indicated. "Two months ago a brigand showed
|
|
up in the Duchy of Quinnat. I was asked to go there and remedy the
|
|
problem. That's really all there is to it."
|
|
Kera offered him the cup and he took a sip. "Can't the local
|
|
constable handle it?" she asked.
|
|
"I'm afraid not," Rien said, returning the cup. "The local
|
|
constable, it is reported, made a very valiant effort before dying.
|
|
It's really not his job to control renegade knights in the first
|
|
place."
|
|
"So you're going to do it?"
|
|
"That's why the job was offered to me," Rien said.
|
|
"I really would like to leave right now," Kera said, tactfully
|
|
refraining from commenting about his confidance. "This place is too
|
|
stuffy for me. Everyone is always so proper."
|
|
"Lady Myrande," Rien said, using a stiff and somber tone of voice
|
|
on purpose, "has asked us to stay for a special dinner tonight, as we
|
|
are finally able to return to a normal life in society now."
|
|
"I guess since she asked, we should stay," Kera agreed. Over the
|
|
last week and a half she had gotten to know Myrande rather well and
|
|
could not personally object to such a request. "We can leave in the
|
|
evening, I suppose. It would be safer to travel by night anyway."
|
|
"Safer?" Rien asked.
|
|
"Who'd be able to see us? I guess since I am stuck with being
|
|
able to see in the dark, I might as well make the most of it."
|
|
Rien embraced her and they both fell back in the grass. "Tonight
|
|
it is."
|
|
|
|
"Dinner was just wonderful," Kera said with a smile. "I have
|
|
never eaten this well before in my life."
|
|
Myrande smiled back at her as they walked out of the hall,
|
|
towards the outer doors.
|
|
"It's too bad that you can't stay longer," said Luthias.
|
|
"Yes, well...Rien thinks it's about time we leave," replied Kera,
|
|
stealing a glance behind her. "So..."
|
|
"Are you sure that leaving at night is a wise?" asked Myrande.
|
|
"Travelling it night isn't the safest way to go."
|
|
"Between the pair of us, Rien and I should be able to spot anyone
|
|
or anything coming at us before it sees us," Kera reassured. "We'll be
|
|
all right. Really."
|
|
"And are you certain that you have enough supplies?"
|
|
"Yes, my lady," said Kera patiently. "What you've provided was
|
|
more than generous and we plan to supplement it with our road kill
|
|
anyway, so I'm sure we'll be fine."
|
|
Rien and Marcellon slowly followed everyone down the main
|
|
corridor of the keep. "I am positive the disease has been cured," the
|
|
wizard was telling his patient, "but should you suspect that you still
|
|
have it or that any side effects appear, seek me immediately. I expect
|
|
to be here for a few more months. If you will be unable to locate me,
|
|
my daughter, Lauren, the Duke's wife, will be able to direct you."
|
|
"That's very kind of you, sir. And about our arrangement...?"
|
|
"Don't bother with our agreement," Marcellon answered. "When I
|
|
will need you, I will find you. I suspect you will outlive me as it
|
|
is."
|
|
"And..." Rien began, but Marcellon interrupted him again, as if
|
|
reading his mind.
|
|
"I have promised you and I never go back on my word. Your morals
|
|
will not be compromised."
|
|
They caught up to the others waiting for them under the entry
|
|
arch to the great hall.
|
|
"...welcome here, Kera," Myrande was saying as Rien and Marcellon
|
|
1joined them. "That goes for you also, Sir Keegan. Should you ever
|
|
travel back to Dargon in your adventuring, please come by."
|
|
"Yes," seconded Luthias. "And perhaps next time you and I can
|
|
have that bout I mentioned."
|
|
"Perhaps, lord," said Rien noncommittally. "I would like to thank
|
|
you for your hospitality. I and my apprentice greatly appreciate it."
|
|
He inclined his head respectfully to Luthias and Myrande and Kera
|
|
followed with a quick bow to each. The pair smiled.
|
|
"Good journey to you," said Myrande as they stepped outside.
|
|
"I certainly hope it will be," muttered Kera, and they headed for
|
|
the stables.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1 Hunting of the Red Tiger
|
|
Part 1
|
|
by M. Wendy Hennequin
|
|
(b.c.k.a. <Hennequi@CTStateU>)
|
|
|
|
Donegal na Valenfaer had never thought he'd live to be bored in
|
|
the Port of the Sun, but it had happened. He told Captain Fynystere
|
|
this, and the captain laughed.
|
|
"Well, after seven years of wintering, anything would pale,"
|
|
Fynystere supposed, "even a city on the coast of Duparyn." The captain
|
|
considered. "I once thought as you did--that there were so many things
|
|
to do in the Port of the Sun that I could never do it all. But I did,"
|
|
Fynystere concluded with a smile, and Donegal shouted his laughter.
|
|
"Richard's borrowing my sailboat for a trip to the Isles of the Sun;
|
|
why don't you ask if you can go along with him?"
|
|
And so Donegal had sought Richard just Richard, a shipmate who
|
|
had served--and wintered--with Captain Fynystere nearly twice as long
|
|
as Donegal had. After quickly scouring the house, the surgeon found
|
|
the man he sought in a work shed set up to make and repair arrows.
|
|
This was hardly surprising. Richard was the Eclipse's bowmaster, or
|
|
chief archer; besides expertly shooting a long bow, he manned the huge
|
|
crossbow and tended the hellfire in battle.
|
|
Richard looked up at Donegal and smiled when the surgeon entered.
|
|
"Come in," the archer invited amiably. "I'm almost done."
|
|
Donegal watched Richard glue an arrowhead onto a shaft,
|
|
reflecting as he did so how different he and the archer were. Oh, they
|
|
were about the same height and build, and they were both reasonably
|
|
good-looking, but there was no other likeness. Richard was bright as
|
|
Braigh, his skin bronzed and his hair gilded by sea and sun, and his
|
|
eyes as blue as the water he sailed. As for Donegal, the surgeon
|
|
doubted that even the night goddess could have been as dark as he was.
|
|
His curly hair was raven black; his eyes were a deep, warm ebony; and
|
|
his skin was the color of the smooth, dark chocolates with which his
|
|
former master, the kind leech, had often treated him when he was a
|
|
child. Night and day, Fynystere called them sometimes, night and day.
|
|
And Donegal laughed. Richard looked at the surgeon, smiled
|
|
through his neat beard, and continued repairing arrows. "The captain
|
|
says you're sailing to the Isles," Donegal began, leaning comfortably
|
|
against a wall. "Want some company?"
|
|
"Certainly," Richard accepted quickly, picking up a half-dozen
|
|
newly mended arrows and depositing them in his quiver. "I'll probably
|
|
be in need of your skill, Donegal."
|
|
"What're you doing?" the surgeon wondered eagerly, standing
|
|
straight.
|
|
"I am going to do something I've wanted to do for thirteen
|
|
years." Richard lifted his long bow from a shelf behind him. "I am
|
|
going to hunt the Lowenrote."
|
|
|
|
Now Donegal had heard of the Red Tiger--or Lowenrote, as the Sun
|
|
People called him--that roamed and ravaged the Isles of the Sun, but
|
|
he had never thought anyone would be crazy enough to chase the beast
|
|
down. Well, Richard was strange, all right, but he wasn't boring. So
|
|
despite the madness of the scheme, Donegal sailed at dawn to the
|
|
island of Grian with Richard. The trip was calm and quiet--for which
|
|
Donegal offered brief thanks to Moire--and by mid-day, Richard pulled
|
|
the sailboat onto the beach.
|
|
After several determined attempts, the archer and the surgeon
|
|
managed to yank the small ship past the high tide line, and then took
|
|
the extra precaution of tying the boat to a stout palm tree. That
|
|
done, Richard leaned past the sail for his bow and quiver, and Donegal
|
|
1recovered his Bichanese sword, his knife, and his surgical pouch. "How
|
|
long're we going to be here?" Donegal wondered as Richard strung his
|
|
bow.
|
|
"I don't know," Richard answered simply. He reached beyond the
|
|
surgeon for a small bundle. Unwrapping it, he put a piece of flint
|
|
into a pouch, hung his spying glass on his belt, and slipped two large
|
|
wine skins' baldrics over his shoulders. "We'll leave tomorrow noon at
|
|
latest."
|
|
"I don't know," Donegal hedged, hefting a small backpack
|
|
containing some food, cloaks, and extra medical supplies. Well,
|
|
Richard couldn't very well carry it with that quiver on his back. "I
|
|
hear they sacrifice people here."
|
|
"That's over in the Siopi Islands," Richard corrected swiftly.
|
|
"We'll leave before nightfall, if you like," the archer offered, but
|
|
Donegal could tell that Richard would prefer to stay and hunt the Red
|
|
Tiger.
|
|
Well, that's what they were here to do, and as Richard reached
|
|
for his short sword and knife, Donegal asked him, "Where do we start,
|
|
Rich?"
|
|
The archer straightened and smiled as he placed the weapons in
|
|
their sheaths. "I honestly don't know--" Suddenly, Richard stared and
|
|
grabbed the surgeon's arm. "There! Look!"
|
|
Donegal whirled and caught a brief glimpse of blurred, fiery red
|
|
on the dark, tropical green.
|
|
"It's the Lowenrote," Richard concluded, sprinting toward it.
|
|
"Come on, Donegal!"
|
|
And slightly surprised, the surgeon followed the gold streak that
|
|
was Richard's long hair. Donegal could hear the swiftness of the
|
|
chase, the crashing of the brush, and the cry that could only belong
|
|
to a creature of such ferocity as the Red Tiger. The surgeon followed
|
|
the haphazard trail of broken brush and broken noise that Richard had
|
|
left in his wake with confident speed. Oh, Richard was strong enough,
|
|
stronger than Donegal on any day of the year, and that was his nature;
|
|
but Donegal was swifter by far, the best runner and the quickest, most
|
|
limber fighter on the Eclipse.
|
|
Within moments, the surgeon compacted violently with the archer,
|
|
whose drawn shot sprung, spoilt, from the long bow. Over Richard's
|
|
shoulder, Donegal could see the Lowenrote rear its head and cry out,
|
|
as if laughing, in triumph and invitation. Donegal heard Richard speak
|
|
a foul word--yeah, he and Donegal knew them all--and then, the archer
|
|
drew another colorful arrow.
|
|
Laughing, the Red Tiger sprang into the jungle.
|
|
Without hesitation, Richard relaxed his draw and raced after it,
|
|
and Donegal effortlessly ran after him. "Let me track," Donegal
|
|
begged. "I'm faster."
|
|
"I have the bow," Richard reminded him through slight panting.
|
|
"And I can't shoot," Donegal finished. It was something that the
|
|
surgeon considered a fault. Yes, once they returned to the Port of the
|
|
Sun, Donegal would ask Richard to teach him to shoot a bow.
|
|
They stumbled through the jungle, always just in sight of the
|
|
scarlet flash that was the Lowenrote. Only once did they lose sight of
|
|
the animal, and then, suddenly, there is was, twenty yards ahead of
|
|
them, as if it had waited for them. Richard paused, drew his readied
|
|
arrow, aimed, and--
|
|
The arrow followed the Red Tiger into the dense jungle. Richard
|
|
cursed again, and Donegal followed his companion and the beast.
|
|
The tiger suddenly and conveniently chose a broken, well-used
|
|
path. Donegal had slight misgivings; the People of the Sun weren't all
|
|
that far from barbarians. Richard sprinted without concern, and
|
|
Donegal knew that running a cleared path would be easier for Richard
|
|
1anyway, so the surgeon left his fear in the jungle and followed.
|
|
And abruptly, the pathway stopped. Well, not exactly stopped,
|
|
Donegal amended hastily, just veered right and left instead of
|
|
straight. A quick glance assured Donegal that the Red Tiger was
|
|
nowhere nearby.
|
|
"What now, Rich?" Donegal wondered.
|
|
The archer grimaced, then reached for the spy glass on his belt.
|
|
Gently, Richard took both ends and pulled; the six inch tube expanded
|
|
to twelve inches. Richard put it up to his eye and glanced down both
|
|
trails. "Nothing," he concluded with disgust.
|
|
"What *does* that thing do?" Donegal asked, reaching for it.
|
|
Richard looked over at him abruptly. "Seven years on a pirate
|
|
ship, and you've never looked through one, Donegal?" The surgeon
|
|
smiled brightly but shook his head. Richard handed the contraption to
|
|
him. "Here."
|
|
Slightly dubious, Donegal took the thing and held it up to his
|
|
eye. Richard's beard became gigantic. "By Sanar," Donegal swore with a
|
|
smile. "It makes things bigger."
|
|
"No, it only makes them appear so," Richard explained. "Marcellon
|
|
told me that it has something to do with the shape of the glass
|
|
inside."
|
|
"Who's Marcellon?" Donegal inquired automatically, gaily
|
|
examining treetops and the far edges of the paths through the spying
|
|
glass.
|
|
"An old friend," Richard replied evenly.
|
|
Abashed, Donegal quickly looked away. He had just broken one of
|
|
the two sacred rules of the Eclipse: "Ask no questions." (The other
|
|
was, "Tell no lies.") Whatever happened before a man came aboard, the
|
|
captain had explained to Donegal when he signed on seven years ago,
|
|
was that man's business, and his alone. Anyone might disclose his
|
|
history--Donegal's, for instance, was well-known--but, as a point of
|
|
honor, the entire crew, Fynystere included, avoided interrogations.
|
|
"Sorry, Rich," the surgeon mumbled, handing back the spy glass.
|
|
Richard smiled and clapped his friend's shoulder. "Let's go catch
|
|
a tiger," the archer suggested, and Donegal knew that Richard had
|
|
forgiven him, if, indeed, the man had taken offense in the first
|
|
place.
|
|
"Lead on," Donegal agreed.
|
|
Richard looked left and right, considering, when both he and
|
|
Donegal were startled by voices. Richard again raised the spying glass
|
|
and looked toward the jungle directly in front of him. The archer
|
|
stepped forward, parted the growth in front of him, and peered through
|
|
the glass again. "There you are," he said with satisfaction, and he
|
|
handed the glass to Donegal and pointed. "There she is."
|
|
Donegal took the spying glass and gazed at the indicated spot.
|
|
Graceful and patient, the half-hidden Lowenrote stood across a huge
|
|
clearing filled with about a hundred People of the Sun, twenty-five
|
|
sailors, a great pile of palm nuts, palm fruits, and filled botas.
|
|
"We'd better go around, Rich," Donegal advised as he handed the archer
|
|
the device. Richard folded it and replaced it on his belt. "I hear the
|
|
Sun People worship the Red Tiger as some sort of god, and I don't
|
|
think they'll take kindly to us hunting it."
|
|
"You're right," Richard concurred, lowering his voice. He readied
|
|
another arrow and turned to the left footpath. "Let's go, and quietly,
|
|
Donegal."
|
|
Listening to the Sun People's chatter, Donegal nodded and
|
|
followed silently. Someone replied--no, translated, for he said, "The
|
|
chief demands two iron swords for the fruit and oil."
|
|
All feeling left Donegal's limbs, and he stopped dead. "Rich!" he
|
|
choked.
|
|
1 "What? What is it?" came the quick, concerned reply. When Donegal
|
|
couldn't answer, Richard turned back and joined him. "What is it?" the
|
|
archer asked again.
|
|
"We have to leave," Donegal finally managed to rasp. The leader
|
|
of the sailors gave into the demand for two swords.
|
|
"Beinisonian," Richard realized, listening. "Don't worry,
|
|
Donegal. They haven't seen us."
|
|
"If we go after that tiger, they will," the surgeon, terrified,
|
|
pointed out. "They'll take me back. I won't go back, Rich."
|
|
"You've covered the brand," Richard reasoned, indicating the
|
|
bright, Bichanese band that covered Donegal's forehead. "They won't
|
|
have any idea you were a slave, unless," the bowmaster continued,
|
|
another thought dawning, "there's some other sign. Were all slaves
|
|
like you?"
|
|
"Like me?" Donegal questioned, confused out of his fright.
|
|
"I don't know--curly-haired, maybe, or dark-skinnned."
|
|
Donegal, with much effort, managed to curtail his urge to laugh.
|
|
"Do you think my skin-tone matters to the Beinisons, Rich? They'll
|
|
enslave anyone--dark as me or light as you, tall, short, men, women,
|
|
children, Stevenics, criminals, whatever. If slavery was as plain as
|
|
the skin on my face, do you think they'd bother to *brand* us?"
|
|
Richard bowed his head. "Sorry." He raised his head to peer
|
|
through the trees. "Then you should be safe."
|
|
"I'll never be safe, and I'm not going back," Donegal insisted.
|
|
"I won't risk it."
|
|
"And how much will you ask for the twenty girls?" Donegal heard
|
|
the Beinisonian ask. "I can assure them all good marriages, for there
|
|
are few women in our land."
|
|
Donegal gasped and parted the bush in front of him. "No," he
|
|
breathed. But there they were, twenty lovely, half-dressed young
|
|
women, excited and eager to be sold.
|
|
"He's a liar," Donegal said, more to himself than Richard. "He's
|
|
buying them as slaves."
|
|
"What do you mean, he's a liar?" Richard demanded. Richard, as
|
|
far as Donegal knew, only understood his native Baranurian, which was
|
|
also the language of communication aboard the Eclipse, and a little
|
|
Bichanese. "What's going on?"
|
|
"Twelve pounds of gold, and twelve pounds of silver," said the
|
|
interpreter. "More than that we will not ask, for you have promised
|
|
them honorable marriages."
|
|
"That's a lie," Donegal protested in whispers. "He won't marry
|
|
them off; he'll sell them as slaves. Rich," he began suddenly,
|
|
grasping his friend's arms, "we've got to stop them!"
|
|
"What?" Richard ejaculated, looking at Donegal as if he were a
|
|
madman. "Stop them?"
|
|
"They're buying those girls," Donegal explained hastily,
|
|
indicating the women. "They'll sell them as slaves. We've got to stop
|
|
them!"
|
|
"Stop them!" Richard, shocked, echoed. "Donegal, they are twenty;
|
|
we are two. We can't do anything. Let's hunt the Lowenrote."
|
|
"Rich, listen!" Donegal commanded, pounding the soft, fertile
|
|
earth. "I know what it's like. They'll take those girls, and they'll
|
|
brand them, burn slavery into their foreheads so they can never be
|
|
free--And then they take them across the ocean--no beating or rape, of
|
|
course, for it lessens the value--but half of them won't survive the
|
|
journey. Then, in Beinison, they'll be sold like animals--then beaten
|
|
and raped and--"
|
|
"I thought you were treated kindly," Richard argued seriously.
|
|
"*I* was. Millions weren't. But I know how bad it is, Rich; I saw
|
|
it. I talked to them. I helped my master treat beaten and raped
|
|
1slaves. Many *died*, Rich. We've got to stop them!"
|
|
"You can't stop it," Richard insisted. Donegal opened his mouth.
|
|
"No, hear me out. We know there are twenty, and probably more aboard
|
|
their ship--wherever that is. And even if we could stop these men,
|
|
there will be more coming, Donegal, always more coming. We can't stop
|
|
Beinison." Donegal frowned. "Let's go hunt."
|
|
The surgeon scowled at his friend. "Go ahead," he sneered. "Go
|
|
and chase your cat, Rich. I'm going to do something about this."
|
|
Donegal rose and dashed the way they had come.
|
|
After a few minutes, he crouched behind the brush and listened.
|
|
"Done," said the interpreter.
|
|
"Very well," the sailor replied. "Tell the girls to prepare
|
|
themselves. We'll leave soon. Mon-Arnor, take the oil, nuts, and fruit
|
|
to the ship. I'll follow after the feast with the--the brides."
|
|
Nervously, Donegal drew his knife and pondered. What to do, how
|
|
to do it...
|
|
There was a rustling to his left; with all his swift reflexes,
|
|
Donegal whirled and presented the knife boldly. He heard a tear, and
|
|
Richard, his blousy shirt ripped, collapsed onto his backside.
|
|
"Damnation!"
|
|
"What, did the cat come this way?" Donegal snapped.
|
|
"Don't be an ass, Donegal. You'll never do this alone." Richard
|
|
sat up and squinted through the trees. "What happened? Some of them
|
|
are leaving."
|
|
"Yeah, they're taking palm fruits and palm nuts and oil to the
|
|
ship. The women will follow after they eat, with some of the sailors."
|
|
"Looks like five are staying behind. Good." Richard rose. "Well,
|
|
let's go," Richard directed expectantly. Donegal stared at him.
|
|
"Donegal, trust me. The best bet is to let those fifteen return to
|
|
their ship and then sink it before the women and the other five get
|
|
there. We can pick off the others later. Otherwise, it will be too
|
|
messy--and the women will be killed." Donegal was still confused.
|
|
"Trust me," Richard repeated, holding out a hand to help the surgeon
|
|
to his feet. "Believe me, Donegal. I was trained to run military
|
|
campaigns. And," the Baranurian added, his blue eyes twinkling like a
|
|
sunny sea, "I have a wonderful idea."
|
|
Desperately wondering why Richard had been so trained, Donegal
|
|
rose. "Lead on."
|
|
Richard nodded and began to follow the circular footpath around
|
|
the clearing. "We'll come to their outlet eventually," Richard
|
|
whispered. "We'll follow them to their ship."
|
|
"Then what?" Donegal rasped, crouching close to the archer.
|
|
Before answering, Richard unfolded his spy glass and carefully
|
|
peered through it at the Beinisonian slavers. "They're taking a path
|
|
not far from this one; look, Donegal." He handed the spying glass to
|
|
the surgeon, who dutifully raised it. Fifteen Beinisonians, hefting
|
|
the oil-filled botas and fruit-filled sacks, were making their way
|
|
along an eastward path. "We've got to get ahead of them."
|
|
"I thought you said to follow them."
|
|
"It'll be easier if you get there first. How well do you swim,
|
|
Donegal?"
|
|
"Better than some fish; I use to live on a river."
|
|
"Underwater?"
|
|
"Yeah, some."
|
|
"Good. I have an idea for disposing of most of these men at
|
|
once."
|
|
"Let's hear it."
|
|
"No time," Richard countermanded. He reached across his shoulders
|
|
and divested himself of one of the wine skins. Handing it to the
|
|
physician, he instructed, "Take this, and get ahead of them. Swim up
|
|
1to their ship, and..." The archer grinned. "You'll know what to do."
|
|
"What is it?" Donegal wondered, sniffing the packet. He nearly
|
|
dropped the bota when he smelled the sulfur and pitch. "Hellfire?"
|
|
Donegal smiled wickedly. Hellfire was just the thing they needed.
|
|
But.. "What did you bring hellfire on a hunting trip for?"
|
|
"I had-- We don't have time for this," Richard reminded him,
|
|
rummaging in the backpack that Donegal wore. He retrieved something
|
|
and put it in his belt purse. "You know what to do. I'll meet you at
|
|
the beach. And be careful that no one sees you."
|
|
Donegal nodded once and stealthily ran toward the path. As
|
|
Richard had conjectured, it wasn't far, and Donegal, after a quick
|
|
look either way and a hurried prayer to the Masked God, sprinted out
|
|
upon it.
|
|
After a five minute run--thank the Masked God that the clearing
|
|
wasn't far from the coastal beach and that the captain's sailboat was
|
|
in another cove!--, Donegal came to the edge of a deserted beach.
|
|
Hiding behind a funny-looking plant, Donegal observed a long boat
|
|
resting upon the tranquil sand. In the calm lagoon was anchored a
|
|
small ship--forty man, Donegal guessed with a grimace--with
|
|
Beinisonian flags and markings.
|
|
Behind the bush, the surgeon shrugged out of the backpack and
|
|
removed the surgical pack from his belt. He took off his high boots
|
|
and his shirt and used them to cover the pack and the pouch. He
|
|
secured the skin of hellfire over his shoulder, checked his katana and
|
|
knife, and snuck silently to the water. Without waiting--every second
|
|
he could be observed, killed, or worse--Donegal slid lengthwise into
|
|
the shallow lagoon. He smiled, for the lagoon was as warm and soothing
|
|
as a bath, and stroked quietly toward the ship.
|
|
While taking a breath, Donegal heard the first of the men coming
|
|
close to the beach. They were singing a bawdy song and having, Donegal
|
|
suspected, the time of their lives. Well, the surgeon thought grimly,
|
|
they had better enjoy the time while they had it. Once the hellfire
|
|
was in place, the Beinisonians' pleasures would be over.
|
|
But he would have to move quickly, lest they see him. Keeping his
|
|
strokes as quiet as possible, Donegal approached the ship's bow. For a
|
|
moment, he paused, unsure; on the Eclipse, they spread the hellfire on
|
|
the water with small catapults, not swimmers.
|
|
A little on the ship, then a ring of hellfire, Donegal decided
|
|
after the short consideration. And best to start here at the bow, he
|
|
reasoned, before they get to the beach and can see me. And if I stay
|
|
reasonably close to the ship, its curves should hide me from those on
|
|
board.
|
|
Donegal chose what he deemed a good spot and began treading water
|
|
with his legs. With his arms thus free, it was easy to open the wine
|
|
skin and begin pressing the jelly-like hellfire onto the bow of the
|
|
ship and then onto surface of the water.
|
|
Watching the greasy hellfire float, Donegal remembered how he and
|
|
Richard had discovered the stuff five years ago. They had been looking
|
|
for some way to fuel the Eclipse's lamps; the pirates had run out of
|
|
oil on the latest attack, when they had used it to ignite the victims'
|
|
ship. So Donegal, who knew a little about alchemy from his medical
|
|
training, and Richard, who knew a little about alchemy from Sanar
|
|
knows where, volunteered to try to make something to tide the ship
|
|
over until they reached port.
|
|
The surgeon and the archer started mixing all manner of flammable
|
|
stuff--exotic oils, the yellow sand which Richard called sulfur,
|
|
incense, tar, pitch, potatoes, wine, ink, whatever they could find.
|
|
They found that an excellent, bright, long burning fuel could be made
|
|
of a neutral jelly- grease, sulphur, pitch, and a few other--now
|
|
secret--ingredients.
|
|
1 The hellfire had burned so brightly, Donegal recalled, continuing
|
|
his deployment, and had kept the ship so well and economically lit
|
|
that the captain insisted upon buying the ingredients for the
|
|
yet-unnamed hellfire instead of oil when they reached port. While
|
|
testing the second batch, Donegal accidentally splattered some in a
|
|
filled bucket, and he and Richard realized how extraordinary their
|
|
invention was.
|
|
Soon the Eclipse became the most famous--and feared--ship on the
|
|
Valenfaer Ocean.
|
|
Donegal finished his circle of death by placing some hellfire on
|
|
the slaver ship's stern for good measure. Pleased, the surgeon looked
|
|
toward shore and frowned; the Beinisonians had arrived.
|
|
Donegal cursed internally. He couldn't stay by the ship; only
|
|
Sanar knew where they would bring the long boat. If he struck for
|
|
shore now, they might see him, and that would be his undoing. The
|
|
Beinisonians would hardly think Donegal a native--a Man of the Sun, in
|
|
Bichanese clothes?--and if they removed the headband--
|
|
No, he would kill himself--and some of them--first. And if he
|
|
couldn't, well, then Richard and the hellfire would take care of it.
|
|
The Beinisonians pushed the long boat into the balmy water and
|
|
rowed toward their mother ship.
|
|
Without thinking, Donegal sank himself and swam away from the
|
|
slaving vessel. It will be a long swim, especially as he was taking an
|
|
indirect path to avoid the long boat. A shot of panic seared Donegal
|
|
like lightning. He hadn't swum beneath the waves in so long--
|
|
But Donegal had mastered water and fear as a child, and he
|
|
refused to let them conquer him now. Was he not Donegal, the surgeon,
|
|
the pirate, and the runner? A brief lack of air could hardly vanquish
|
|
him. Determined and again secure, Donegal pulled himself toward the
|
|
shores of Grian.
|
|
He reached the shore only a little short of breath. Am I not
|
|
Donegal, he repeated, laughing silently at himself, the runner and the
|
|
pirate? Aye, and a good thing too. Richard, though strong, could
|
|
hardly survive so long beneath the waves. Satisfied, Donegal pulled
|
|
himself onto a shady spot of the sand, and after only a brief glance
|
|
at the Beinisonians, he dashed behind the funny-looking plant and
|
|
recovered the rest of his belongings. Richard would be coming soon,
|
|
and Donegal would have to be ready to dispose of the rest of the
|
|
slavers once Richard had disposed of their vessel.
|
|
Donegal idly replaced his boots on his feet and carefully watched
|
|
the Beinisonians. The long boat, which had just reached its
|
|
destination, was filled to its capacity, but a large, somewhat sloppy,
|
|
pile of palm fruit, palm nuts, and oil skins still dominated the
|
|
lagoon's shady beach. Four trips at least, the surgeon decided. He and
|
|
Richard had plenty of time.
|
|
"Donegal," a whisper rasped behind him. Donegal waved the archer
|
|
forward. Richard crawled out of the jungle to sit beside him. "All
|
|
ready?"
|
|
The surgeon grinned. "Whenever you are."
|
|
Richard took out his spy glass and watched the long boat. "How
|
|
far away is the hellfire circle?"
|
|
"Not more than ten feet, and I put some on the bow and stern."
|
|
"I can see it. Good job." The Baranurian archer lowered the
|
|
spying glass and considered. "Ten feet...we'll wait for them to start
|
|
the return trip," Richard decided, "which is just as well." He reached
|
|
into his quiver and pulled out five arrows swathed in Donegal's best
|
|
bandages. The surgeon grimaced at the ill use of his medical supplies,
|
|
but Richard sent him an ironic glance that silenced the leech's
|
|
protests and handed his friend a piece of flint. "When I give the
|
|
word, light the arrow."
|
|
1 "Just like on board," Donegal finished, grinning. He drew his
|
|
sword and experimented upon it with the flint. The water on the steel
|
|
prevented a spark. The surgeon frowned and dried the blade with his
|
|
shirt. "We've been through this a thousand times, Rich; I know the
|
|
routine."
|
|
"They have a sweet little cargo there," Richard remarked,
|
|
glancing again through the spy glass at the sailors unloading the
|
|
fruit, nuts, and oil. "It'll be a shame to torch it."
|
|
"Better it burns than the women."
|
|
Richard nodded, but didn't lower the spying glass. "Freedom never
|
|
comes cheaply," he agreed; then abruptly, a shadow of pain crossed his
|
|
face. "I'm still paying for mine."
|
|
Then the archer set the spy glass on the sand and readied an
|
|
arrow. "Get ready," he warned, watching. He stood, looked over the
|
|
distance once more, drew the arrow, and aimed. "Now."
|
|
Donegal struck the flint against the katana, and an eager spark
|
|
leapt to the loose end of the maligned bandage. Richard allowed
|
|
himself a fractioned second to check his aim and let the shaft fly.
|
|
With eerie beauty, the blazing arrow soared across the sky like a lazy
|
|
comet and landed upon the bow of the ship. Another flaming shaft
|
|
followed it closely and struck the water just as the long boat pulled
|
|
ten feet from her mother ship.
|
|
The lagoon, the long boat, and the ship erupted into demonic,
|
|
blue- white flame.
|
|
"Good shot!" Donegal declared, elated with the inferno and the
|
|
screams of the damned. Well was their concoction named hellfire.
|
|
"Get back," Richard warned sharply as he readied another arrow.
|
|
"There'll be stragglers."
|
|
"They won't make it through the hellfire," Donegal protested, but
|
|
he drew his Bichanese sword anyway.
|
|
"Don't count on it," Richard advised. "It's been done before."
|
|
The Baranurian archer smiled with sinister glee. "But it won't be easy
|
|
or painless; freedom never comes cheaply."
|
|
Donegal chuckled. "If Jilana wills, they won't be able to buy it
|
|
at all."
|
|
"I'm so glad I was raised to believe in one God," the archer
|
|
muttered. "I'd never keep track of so many."
|
|
"But monotheism is so dull," Donegal reminded him with a grin.
|
|
"Don't make me laugh," Richard commanded sternly. "I'm trying to
|
|
concentrate."
|
|
Richard often was like that, Donegal noted with a smile, joking
|
|
one moment and ordering people around the next. Yet Richard commanded
|
|
well, Donegal admitted. Perhaps, since he had been trained for
|
|
military strategy, Richard had also been trained in leadership. In any
|
|
case, the leech obeyed.
|
|
"Take my spying glass," the Baranurian said, "and look at the
|
|
water. Is anyone swimming toward shore? Check all directions."
|
|
Once again, Donegal did as he Richard bade him. "Two, coming from
|
|
the long boat. I doubt anyone made it off the mother ship alive--no,
|
|
wait. Two more, heading toward us!"
|
|
Richard squinted. "Four! Damnation!" Re-aiming, he let his arrow
|
|
loose. The archer re-loaded his bow without waiting for the scream
|
|
that confirmed his accuracy, and he shot again. Richard immediately
|
|
loaded his bow.
|
|
Donegal concentrated his spying glass on the ones heading toward
|
|
Richard and himself; those two were, after all, the immediate danger.
|
|
No, not two, one; a slick of blood was rapidly forming on the lagoon's
|
|
surface. "Got him, Rich!" Donegal cried as Richard fired the second
|
|
arrow. In the spying glass, Richard's arrow was seemingly swallowed by
|
|
the other. "Right in the throat!" Donegal exulted gleefully. "Well
|
|
1done!"
|
|
"Two on shore!" Richard cried, turning. He drew another arrow and
|
|
shot.
|
|
Donegal whirled to the pile of tropical produce. Two were indeed
|
|
on shore; they were badly burned, but well-armed. One, whose arm had
|
|
been nicked and bloodied by Richard's swift arrow, had a mean-looking
|
|
cutlass; the other had a bow and--
|
|
"Get down!" the physician screamed, collapsing heavily onto the
|
|
sand. But Donegal heard the shot release--or was it Rich's shaft?--and
|
|
heard it dully contact with a tree. A dull twang sounded; Richard's
|
|
arrow had misfired, and he cursed.
|
|
Brandishing his Bichurian sword, Donegal shouted a Highlander
|
|
war-cry learned from the mate, Cedric of Gallows' Lane, and charged
|
|
the intruders. Aye, intruders, for they had invaded this peaceful isle
|
|
to take advantage of its serenity. Donegal? He only came with Richard
|
|
to hunt the Lowenrote, but Erida could take his soul and devour his
|
|
body before he would just allow these serpents to destroy this
|
|
island's women.
|
|
The Beinisonian archer clumsily prepared a new arrow, and Donegal
|
|
didn't bother to suppress a contemptuous grin. Richard would have had
|
|
another shot off by now--why *didn't* Rich have another shot off by
|
|
now? Donegal dived at the archer, spoiling his shot and breaking his
|
|
shaft. One swift stab--right to the heart, Donegal thought--and it
|
|
would be over for this one.
|
|
The archer twisted with a bestial cry, and Donegal managed to
|
|
plunge the tip of the katana in the man's stomach. The leech withdrew
|
|
the blade, held it high--
|
|
"Donegal!" Richard shouted with alarm.
|
|
The katana fell, and the surgeon heard an arrow make a *thunking*
|
|
sound behind him as it penetrated the swordsman's flesh. A *thump*
|
|
followed as the dead man hit the ground. The now-harmless cutlass fell
|
|
simultaneously off Donegal's back. The archer's blood spurted onto
|
|
Donegal's chest.
|
|
And Richard was beside him, helping him up. "You were almost
|
|
dead," the Baranurian explained. "He had the cutlass ready for you."
|
|
Swiftly waxing angry, Richard violently jostled his friend. "Damn you,
|
|
don't do stupid things like that! I could have picked them off where
|
|
we were, but I couldn't risk shooting you!" The archer took a deep
|
|
breath and smiled. "You stupid surgeon. Are you all right?"
|
|
Donegal nodded. "You?"
|
|
"That arrow sailed right past my ear; God protects archers, I
|
|
guess," Richard laughed. He retrieved the cutlass from the sand and
|
|
inspected it. "A very nice blade," he complimented the corpse and
|
|
slipped the blade into his belt. "Thank you." He took his hunting
|
|
knife from its sheath and began cutting his arrow from the swordsman's
|
|
flesh. "Would you please run back to our little niche and get our
|
|
things? We're going to need the spying glass. I want to see if anyone
|
|
got off of that ship."
|
|
"I think we got them all, Rich," the leech speculated, but he
|
|
returned to the funny-looking plant anyway. Quickly, Donegal slung the
|
|
backpack over his shoulder, slipped the surgical pouch onto his belt,
|
|
tied his shirt around his waist, and retrieved the spying glass.
|
|
Polishing it gently on his shirt, he returned to Richard.
|
|
"Can't be wasting arrows." Richard sighed as Donegal approached.
|
|
He looked seriously at his friend as he cleaned the bloodied head and
|
|
replaced the shaft in his quiver. "We still have much work to do."
|
|
"Aye, that we do," Donegal agreed, offering Richard the glass.
|
|
The archer took the spying glass from his friend and examined the
|
|
blazing ship. It was a glorious sight, Donegal decided, and he
|
|
laughed. The purifying blue-white flames of the hellfire were awesome
|
|
1and beautiful, aye, an apt agent of just death and essential
|
|
purgation. Donegal, satisfied, turned to Richard.
|
|
"Yes, we got them all," the Baranurian declared, folding the
|
|
spying glass. Snatching his bow, he rose and smiled at his old friend
|
|
as he hung the device on his belt. "Shall we get the rest, Donegal?"
|
|
"Let's," grinned the leech.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
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
|
|
______________________________________
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|
A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
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______________________________________
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Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
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Published monthly, each issue contains short fiction, articles and
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editorials by authors around the world and across the net. Quanta
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Electronic publishing is the way of the future. Become part of that
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Athene is a free network "magazine" devoted to amateur fiction
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written by the members of the online community. Athene is not limited
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The magazine is published monthly, and comes in two formats --
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ASCII and PostScript. The content is identical across both formats, but
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the ASCII edition can be read online as well as printed.
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
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(C) Copyright May, 1990, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd <White@DUVM.BitNet>.
|
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All rights revert to the authors. These stories may not be reproduced
|
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or redistributed save in the case of reproducing the whole 'zine for
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further distribution without the express permission of the author
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