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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 13
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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 || Number 2
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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 Distributed: 2/18/2000
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Volume 13, Number 2 Circulation: 711
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========================================================================
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Contents
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Editorial Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
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A Matter of Honour 1 Nicholas Wansbutter Sy, 1003
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Vows Victor M. Cardoso 15 Naia, 1016
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Talisman Three 2 Dafydd Cyhoeddwr Fall, 748 FE
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========================================================================
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DargonZine is the publication vehicle of the Dargon Project, a
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collaborative group of aspiring fantasy writers on the Internet.
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We welcome new readers and writers interested in joining the project.
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Please address all correspondence to <dargon@shore.net> or visit us
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on the World Wide Web at http://www.dargonzine.org/. Back issues
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are available from ftp.shore.net in members/dargon/. Issues and
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public discussions are posted to the Usenet newsgroup rec.mag.dargon.
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DargonZine 13-2, ISSN 1080-9910, (C) Copyright February, 2000 by
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the Dargon Project. Editor: Ornoth D.A. Liscomb <ornoth@shore.net>,
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Assistant Editor: Jon Evans <godling@mnsinc.com>. All rights reserved.
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All rights are reassigned to the individual contributors. Stories
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and artwork appearing herein may not be reproduced or redistributed
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without the explicit permission of their creators, except in the case
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of freely reproducing entire issues for further distribution.
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Reproduction of issues or any portions thereof for profit is forbidden.
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========================================================================
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Editorial
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by Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
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<ornoth@shore.net>
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DargonZine's purpose since day one has been to help amateur writers
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improve. Back when the magazine began, I didn't really know what I was
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looking for, but I knew that I wanted to be able to exchange ideas,
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techniques, and works with other writers. I also knew that the Internet
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was a tool with awesome potential for communication between people. What
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I didn't know was that I was looking for the same things as other
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aspiring writers: a community of like-minded writers and a place to
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publish my works. Since there were no such things on the Internet at
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that time, I started both a community and a publishing outlet, and
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(fortunately) they flourished. But still I remember very clearly being a
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solitary writer with no way to reach an audience and no one to turn to
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for critiques, support, mentoring, or understanding.
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Thanks to the Internet, DargonZine can provide those things to
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writers who otherwise might not have a place to publish or other writers
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to work with. That's why I always feel a lot of satisfaction and pride
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when I can welcome new writers to the ranks of those who have had
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stories published in DargonZine. Recruiting new writers not only helps
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our magazine thrive and grow, but is an integral part of our mission to
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support and encourage aspiring writers. Surprisingly, that's something
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we lost sight of for a while. After a strong initial start, as
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DargonZine matured we settled down with a core group of writers. As the
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world of Dargon became more and more detailed and complex, we never made
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much of an effort to find new writers or help those who joined get
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ramped up on the environment. It took a long time for us to notice, but
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we were floored when we finally looked back on the nine years from 1989
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through 1997 and discovered that we had printed only thirteen new
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writers -- barely one new writer per year!
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We all knew that this was a serious problem. If we couldn't attract
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and support new writers, the magazine would soon fold. After that
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realization, the group made a huge effort to recruit, support, and
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mentor new writers. We began asking for feedback about why new writers
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left the project, and what would make things better for those who
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stayed. We gave new writers more information about the milieu, better
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reference tools, more story ideas to key off, better writing guidelines,
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and mentors to support them. Everyone has helped, and those efforts have
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paid off wonderfully. Since then we have printed thirteen new writers;
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in just two years we've welcomed as many new writers as we'd printed in
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the previous nine years combined!
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And in this issue I am delighted to introduce you to two new
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writers -- Nicholas Wansbutter and Victor Cardoso -- who joined us last
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fall. Nick is a student in Winnipeg, and his debut is the first of a
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three-part series that will run in the next couple issues. Victor is the
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son of Portuguese expats and lives and works in Ann Arbor. Be sure to
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congratulate them on getting their first stories through DargonZine's
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lengthy peer-review process!
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We're very pleased to welcome them, as well as all the other
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writers who have joined our ranks in the past two years. The influx of
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new blood has enlivened our discussions and rejuvenated the project, and
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reinforced the importance of welcoming and supporting our new writers.
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And that's something we should never lose sight of again.
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========================================================================
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A Matter of Honour
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Part 1
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by Nicholas Wansbutter
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<ice_czar@hotmail.com>
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Sy, 1003
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A mixture of excitement and fear filled Aleksandr as he stood
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before the family manor, on what was to be one of the proudest days of
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his life. Today, he began the long journey towards becoming a knight: a
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defender of the crown and protector of the people. He would bring honour
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to his family, just as his father, Harbid Heahun, had before him.
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Aleksandr could already picture in his boy's mind riding a great
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stallion into battle, laying King Haralan's enemies low with a flashing
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blade, travelling the width and breadth of the land righting wrongs,
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avenging injustices and perhaps even slaying a flanduil one day. Such
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was every young noble's fantasy. But, even as all of these adventurous
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thoughts filled him, doubt crept into the back of his mind.
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A boy of seven, he was just a little over ten hands tall. He had
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pale white skin beneath a head of bright red hair and ice-blue eyes. A
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fit little boy, he was known for his athleticism and strength for his
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age.
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As he looked around at the familiar thatched houses, the small
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stone church and the deeply rutted dirt roads, Aleksandr felt anxiety
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tighten his chest. He was about to travel to what seemed the end of the
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world. He was, after all, being sent to Fennell Keep, in the baronial
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seat of power. Aleksandr realised it was a great honour to serve in the
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household of Baron Dorja Fennell himself, and that his father had made a
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great many sacrifices to make it happen, but Aleksandr still wished he
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could stay at home. The outside world seemed like an incredibly large
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and frightening place to him. The town was all that he knew.
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Though small and relatively insignificant according to his
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well-travelled brothers, Heahun was to Aleksandr as beautiful a place as
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any he could imagine. Nestled away comfortably in the forests southwest
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of Dargon, it fell within the jurisdiction of the Barony of Fennell. It
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was a somewhat humble barony, subsisting on agriculture for the most
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part. Just fewer than two hundred families lived in Heahun itself. It
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wasn't an especially wealthy town, either. Most of the villagers made a
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life for themselves tilling the croplands to the north and east of town,
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or harvesting wood for Aleksandr's father in the dense forests to the
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south and west. Like all folk in the Barony of Fennell, they were a
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hardy lot, enduring the warm summers and frigid winters with a quiet
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determination that could only be found in the simple, silent forest. The
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town was ruled by Aleksandr's family, the Heahuns, and had been for
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decades. Stalwart knights that served the duke unquestioningly,
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Aleksandr thought the town suited them.
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He heard the familiar footfalls of his father coming up behind him.
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Aleksandr looked up as the powerful figure stopped beside him, taking in
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the town as well. Harbid Heahun was an impressive man, even though he
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was now nearing his fiftieth year. His fiery red hair that Aleksandr
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shared was streaked with silver, as were his flowing beard and
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moustaches. He was tall and his powerful frame still carried much
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muscle. Aleksandr was immensely proud of him.
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Harbid placed a reassuring hand on the boy's shoulder. "Ah, my son.
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Today you take the first step in the family tradition. Your brothers
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have done well, and I expect no less from you." Indeed, his father had
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said many a time that Aleksandr was the most promising of his five sons,
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which was why Harbid had gone to great lengths to have him taken in as a
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page at Fennell Keep.
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"I'm going to become a great knight like Sir Jarek Kelbhen,
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father!" Aleksandr stood a little taller at speaking the name of his
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hero.
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Aleksandr's father looked down at him, his grey eyes warning. "He
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is a robber knight. Not a noble like us!" Aleksandr's shoulders sagged
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with the remark, and he could feel the heat of tears welling up in his
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eyes. He idolised the dashing foreign mercenary. Harbid knelt beside the
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boy and took hold of his shoulders, looking intently into his face. "He
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did serve the baron well during the Shadow Wars, but Baron Fennell was
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not present at the battle on the Coldwell as I was. I was witness when
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your Sir Jarek took the lives of a group of surrendered Northfield
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troops. Hardly conduct becoming of a Baranurian knight, even if his
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prisoners were traitors to the crown. And if he is a true knight why is
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he fled from his lands all the way to Dargon? Think on that, my son."
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Aleksandr continued to look at the ground, refusing to accept his
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father's condemnation of Sir Jarek. Finally, Harbid sighed and patted
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his son on the shoulder. "I am sure you will have his courage, though."
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Aleksandr brightened, and looked up with a smile at his father once
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again. "Maybe I'll even be his squire one day! Tschel told me he's the
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captain of the guards at Fennell Keep, you know!"
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Harbid couldn't help but let out a soft chuckle at his son's zeal.
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He remembered the days long past when he had been the same. He hadn't
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been as well informed about the goings-on outside of Heahun, though.
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Aleksandr *was* an inquisitive one. He ate up everything that his older
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brother Tschel told him from his travels throughout the duchy. Perhaps
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the most ambitious of the Heahuns, Tschel had strayed from the family
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tradition and was the local clerk in the Court of the King's Bench. As a
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result of his vocation, Aleksandr saw him at least once a month, which
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was more often than could be said for others of his siblings that served
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as squires or knights far away.
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"Ah!" Harbid exclaimed. "Speak the names of wicked men and they
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shall emerge!"
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As he spoke, a dapple-grey horse emerged from the stables to the
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rear of the house. Atop the horse sat Tschel, rather casually, wrapped
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in his red robes that signified his position. Beneath his white linen
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cap, curly golden hair protruded, and his bright blue eyes shone with
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mirth. He was more scholarly than any of Aleksandr's other brothers, and
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was a little pudgy, but not too much. To Aleksandr, his face seemed
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perennially formed into a smile.
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"And how's my little brother?" Tschel approached the boy and his
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father. "Ready to leave already? Where's your friend Lev?"
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"He'll be along." Aleksandr absently turned his gaze to the town,
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hoping to see his friend. Aleksandr's father liked to do things early,
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so it was no surprise that Lev and his father hadn't arrived yet.
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Lev Roise was a peasant boy who had been Aleksandr's playmate for
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as long as he could remember. He was a couple of years older, but
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Aleksandr had the size advantage. Lev's father, a woodcutter by trade,
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was taking him with Aleksandr to Fennell to train as a monk in Heart's
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Hope Monastery. There, Lev would be a novice among the Stevenic sect of
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Cyruzhian monks. Aleksandr's father had only converted to Stevenism
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thirteen years ago, but it had taken deep root in Heahun under his
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patronage. He had been zealous in bringing the town into the faith with
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him. The year before Aleksandr had been born, construction of a stone
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church had been completed. Aleksandr was the first of his family to be
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named in that church. In honour of this, his father had not given
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Aleksandr a familial name, but rather, the name of one of Cephas
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Stevene's pupils.
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"Regardless of whether Roise and his son are here," Harbid said,
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"you won't be ready to leave until you've said goodbye to your mother!
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Why don't you go and fetch her, son?"
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"Yes, father!" Aleksandr turned and vaulted into the house.
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He found his mother in the chapel, kneeling before the shrine that
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dominated the small room.
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"Mother?"
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She stood, and turned to look at Aleksandr. Her eyes were misty,
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and her face bore a sadness Aleksandr hadn't seen since her last child
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was stillborn. "Hello, Aleksandr. I was just saying a little prayer for
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you."
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Like most boys his age, Aleksandr thought his mother was the most
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beautiful creature in the barony. She was tall, but just the right size
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for a hug as Aleksandr's arms just fit around her waist. Her chestnut
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coloured hair was hidden beneath an elaborate hood, but Aleksandr knew
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it had a little bit of grey in it nowadays. Her eyes were the colour of
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iron, and smooth skin the colour of milk. She was definitely the most
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pious of the Heahuns, but also the most strict. She had raised Aleksandr
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to be a disciplined boy. She went to the Stevenic church almost every
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day, and Aleksandr had often heard her fight with his father about
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drinking and swearing. She was attentive to the teachings of Stevene's
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Light however, and with her at his side, Harbid and his family were much
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loved by the people of Heahun. Her name was Madeline, and Aleksandr
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thought her the perfect example of Baranur gentility.
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"When will I see you again, mother?" Some of Madeline's melancholy
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was starting to seep into Aleksandr.
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"I don't know, my son." She wrapped the boy into a tender embrace.
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"Not for a long time I think."
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"What's wrong, mother?" He could hear the unsteadiness in her
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voice.
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"Nothing ... It's just that you're my youngest son, and now you're
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leaving." She sniffled a little, and continued to hold onto her son.
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"Don't worry," Aleksandr said, feeling tears of his own beginning
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to form. "I'll come back."
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"Yes." Madeline smiled, and held Aleksandr at arm's length. "Yes,
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and you will be a great knight just like your father, and your
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grandfather Harabin."
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Thoughts of the great family patriarch Harabin brightened
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Aleksandr's spirits. If Aleksandr saw his father as a hero, his
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grandfather was a *legend*. Though a pagan (and the last of the Heahuns
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that was so), he had been a man of great deeds. He had fought side by
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side with Duke Cabot Dargon in battle, and had ruled Heahun with
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justice. Aleksandr was sure that he had slain several flanduils on his
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many quests.
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Aleksandr's thoughts were cut short by the entrance of his father.
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He picked Aleksandr up and ruffled his son's red hair. "Well, my boy.
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Are you ready?"
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"Yes!"
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The three emerged from the house to see Tschel still waiting on his
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horse. A short distance away from him, Bel Roise and his son, Lev, sat
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on an oxen-pulled cart. When Aleksandr saw his best friend, he broke
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away from his parents and rushed to the wagon. The other boy
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methodically dismounted the vehicle, and waited for Aleksandr to arrive.
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"Lev!" Aleksandr enclosed the older boy in a bear hug.
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"Straight, straight!" Lev squirmed free of Aleksandr's grasp, and
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levelled his gaze on his friend. "It's good to see you Aleksandr. I'm
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glad you'll be with me in Fennell."
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Aleksandr patted his arm. "Me too."
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Of the two boys, Lev was always much quieter and much more serious.
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Although stoic and sometimes cold even, he was the best friend anyone
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could ask for. Aleksandr had come to appreciate his intelligence and
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kindness to others, but especially his honesty. Though he was only nine
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years old, he often seemed to Aleksandr a miniature adult. The peasant
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boy was small, at that. He was less than twelve hands tall and very
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skinny. He had big brown eyes, and a mop of thick brown hair. When the
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two boys played together, Aleksandr was always the faster and stronger,
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but Lev's wit sometimes won the games.
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"Well, lads," Bel Roise said from his perch on the wagon,
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"Fennell's not going to come to us."
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"Last one on is a scrud sucker!" Aleksandr shouted, and sprang up
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onto the cart beside Lev's father.
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"Aleksandr!" Madeline scolded.
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"Let the boy be!" Harbid said. "He's off to be a warrior! He'll not
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be quoting Cephas while he lops off heads now will he?"
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Harbid's retort was met by steely silence from Madeline. Lev made
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it onto the cart a heartbeat after Aleksandr had. Everything they needed
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for the journey had already been packed.
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Bel inclined his head to Harbid, "Good day, Sir Harbid. And thank
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you again for allowing me to travel to Fennell with your son."
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"Think nothing of it." Harbid said. "The boy's horsemanship is not
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yet good enough to make a whole day's travel on his own. It is you who
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is to be thanked."
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"You are too kind, sir." Bel bowed again.
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"But enough of this." Harbid gestured toward the road leading out
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of town. "If you are to make Fennell before sundown, you must be off.
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May God be with you."
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With that, the small party began to make its way out of town.
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Aleksandr watched his parents as long as they were within view, his
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mother enveloped by a compassionate arm from his father. It finally
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began to be real to him that he was leaving home. He could feel tears
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wanting to well up in him, but he couldn't allow them to emerge in front
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of Lev. Remembering what his mother had always told him to do when he
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was nervous or scared, he said a prayer to Stevene and to his namesake.
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It made him feel much better.
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Quite rapidly, the thatched houses of Heahun gave way to the
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croplands to the north of town. Several fields lay fallow, while crops
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of wheat and flax could be seen growing around them. At the edge of the
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fields, about three leagues beyond, the forests stood, deep and dark.
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They were at their most dense in the barony of Fennell, and wood was a
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major product of the town. The numerous fir trees in the Fennell forest
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were excellent for building, as they were very straight and easy to cut.
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The small group travelled northeast for several bells, through the
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farmlands and into the forest. When the sun was near the midpoint of the
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sky, they turned due east. The forest was a very pleasant place,
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Aleksandr thought. Birds could be heard chirping all around him, and the
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occasional hare could be seen along the edges of the road. He even saw a
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deer, which he pointed out to Lev. That the beauty of creation
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surrounded them seemed fitting to him, in that both he and Lev were on a
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pilgrimage of sorts.
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They stopped for lunch a little after midday beside a stream that
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ran near the road at one spot. After eating, Tschel and Bel Roise seemed
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content to sit and rest a while. Aleksandr and Lev, restless from many
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bells sitting on the cart, decided to do a little exploring.
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"Alright." Tschel agreed. "But not too far. We'll be leaving soon,
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and we'll go without you if you're not back!"
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So they set off into the woods at a bound. They chased each other
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around for a bit, examined some strange looking fungi growing on trees,
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and were about to head back when Lev came across a group of tall, thin
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stones, the height of a man, sticking straight up from the ground. There
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were two of them, standing on either side of a flat, round boulder that
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to Lev resembled an altar. The rocks were a pure white like snow. He
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called to Aleksandr, and the other boy hurried over.
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"What is it Lev?"
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"Look at those rocks, Aleksandr!" He pointed to the grouping of
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stones.
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"What are they, Lev?" Aleksandr asked.
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"I don't know." The stones were covered in moss, and the area
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looked well deserted. Nevertheless, the clearing had a strange and
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ancient feel to it. Everything was so quiet, the air so still, that he
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could hear his own heart beating. For no particular reason that he could
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think of, he felt very content and happy. Though the air was cool, he
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felt very warm, as if a stone heated in a fire had been placed in his
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chest. There was also a feel that he and Aleksandr were not alone. As
|
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when someone is watching you and the hairs on your neck begin to stand
|
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up. A feeling that, though unexplainable, wasn't frightening at all. It
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was akin to the way Lev felt when he worshipped at the church in Heahun.
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"I think this is a holy place."
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"Then this is a good place."
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"Good place for what?" Lev asked.
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"To become brothers." Aleksandr turned away from the rocks to look
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at Lev. "My brother Pter told me that knights give each other solemn
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oaths and become brothers. It is a sacred pledge of friendship that only
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the best knights can keep. We are best friends, Lev. I think we should
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be brothers, too."
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"How is it done?" Lev's immediate reaction was one of scepticism.
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Warfare was something he was far removed from, and happily so. However,
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he did know that knightly virtues were good and pure.
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"Hold out your hand." Aleksandr pulled his dagger out of his belt
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and grasped the hilt tightly. "Now, put your hand over mine, so that you
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are holding the sword, too."
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Lev obeyed. He was not so ignorant as to think a dagger a sword,
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but he also knew swords to be significant to knights. With their
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diminutive size, the dagger almost was a sword. He also was beginning to
|
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understand the pledge they were about to take. "We must pray to God that
|
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our hearts and our souls may be cleansed, that they are pure to take
|
|
this sacred pledge."
|
|
"Let it be so." Aleksandr said in the tradition of the Cyruzhians,
|
|
but faltered. "I don't remember all of the words Pter told me ..."
|
|
"What you remember will be enough." Lev assured him. God would know
|
|
the words that he missed.
|
|
"In the eyes of God and his most holy prophet Cephas Stevene, we
|
|
make this sacred pledge to be true to one another. Brothers, not through
|
|
blood, but through Stevene's Light. Eternal comrades, never to betray.
|
|
Let these be the final blows between us." Aleksandr smacked Lev in the
|
|
face.
|
|
"What was that?" Lev drew back a little.
|
|
"Hit me." Aleksandr said. "Let these be the final blows between
|
|
us."
|
|
Lev complied. "Let there never again be conflict between us."
|
|
"Brothers."
|
|
"Brothers. It is done." Lev agreed.
|
|
|
|
When the boys returned to the road, Lev's father and Aleksandr's
|
|
brother were ready to go. "Did you get lost?" Tschel asked. "I was
|
|
wondering if you were coming back."
|
|
"Of course we were coming back, Tschel," Aleksandr said. "I
|
|
wouldn't be late for Lord Fennell!"
|
|
They set out once again, and made good time the rest of the way to
|
|
Fennell. The sun was starting to hang low in the sky, casting a reddish
|
|
light, when the party came into view of the city. It was an impressive
|
|
place indeed.
|
|
"It's nothing compared to Magnus," Tschel noted, "but it has its
|
|
own unique power, I suppose."
|
|
Aleksandr and Lev were in thrall. Rising up from the forest like
|
|
some mythical giant, the city perched atop a steep hill. In the centre,
|
|
at the highest point of the hill, rested Fennell Keep, its stone
|
|
ramparts glowing like garnets in the late evening sun. Atop the towers
|
|
the baronial banners fluttered in the breeze, only the red and white
|
|
background of Baron Dorja Fennell visible from this distance. Beneath
|
|
it, they could see well-beaten dirt roads winding between a mixture of
|
|
wood and stone buildings. They were quite different from the simple
|
|
thatched huts in Heahun. Roofs made of wood shingles covered many of
|
|
them. Some were more than one storey high, while others were made of
|
|
several interlocking sections. And the sheer number of them -- Lev had
|
|
never seen so many buildings crowded together. The most prominent
|
|
buildings were churches and temples dedicated to various deities that
|
|
dotted the city. The simple, square buildings of grey rock were easy to
|
|
distinguish from the others, given their pointed spires at each corner
|
|
and in the centre. Another temple Lev recognised as one belonging to the
|
|
Olean pantheon, as it was very similar to the one in Heahun, its domed
|
|
copper roof shining brightly in the diminishing light. There were a
|
|
couple of other large buildings of styles he didn't recognise, among
|
|
them a white-washed arch supported by eight pillars and a cube made of
|
|
red brick. Heart's Hope Monastery sprouted from amidst the smaller
|
|
buildings not far from the keep. It was the second largest building
|
|
besides the keep, and its belltower was the tallest thing in view. It
|
|
was of similar construction to the other Stevenic houses of worship, but
|
|
was much larger and had several wings jutting out from the main
|
|
structure. At the base of the hill, croplands spread outwards until they
|
|
met with the forest.
|
|
As they emerged from the forest and neared the entrance to Fennell,
|
|
Aleksandr knew that the first step towards knighthood had been taken, as
|
|
had Lev's first step toward spiritual completeness.
|
|
|
|
========================================================================
|
|
|
|
Vows
|
|
by Victor M. Cardoso
|
|
<victorcardoso@earthlink.net>
|
|
15 Naia, 1016
|
|
|
|
A brass bell's clangs echoed slowly and loudly through the forest
|
|
of poplar and birch. In shaded hollow and knitted copse the sound
|
|
carried, drifting down gentle slopes covered in prickly-bush to where
|
|
the Coldwell ran. Snow-flecked and rising to meet the crystal sky, the
|
|
Darst mountains and their molehill cousins pondered the ringing in their
|
|
granite way, then replied with a stoic, muffled imitation.
|
|
The eighth bell, Rianna noted. She sat calmly on an uncomfortable
|
|
wooden bench within Coldwell Abbey's atrium. The sun had started its
|
|
descent to the horizon, not quite throwing the monastery's shadow over
|
|
her, but further etching the mortar lines in the surrounding buildings
|
|
and walls. They were simple structures made of stone around a central
|
|
yard, and a few straggling monks hurried in their leather sandals and
|
|
colored frocks towards the refectory on the side farthest from her.
|
|
Robes of blues and grays dominated the population, each hue representing
|
|
a different order.
|
|
For the priests and monks of this place, it was time for supper and
|
|
prayers. She, dressed in a simple, ivory robe, fasted and waited. Three
|
|
years of sporadic visits had taught her the abbey's routine.
|
|
Weather-wise, this middle-time between spring and summer was the most
|
|
enjoyable for her, when leaves hung fresh in the surrounding forest and
|
|
the Coldwell's waters tickled the wind with brisk fingers.
|
|
"M'lady."
|
|
Rianna broke from her thoughts to find the sea-priest, Breinert,
|
|
standing just behind her. The sun caught on the blue robe of his patron
|
|
god, Cirrangill, and played along its folds brightly. He bowed low in a
|
|
show of respect, causing her to smile.
|
|
"Priest," she greeted, being equally as formal.
|
|
Deep-set eyes twinkled at her, hazel beneath modest brows. Brown
|
|
hair, freshly combed, topped the priest's head, flowing back from a
|
|
square face. In silence he offered her his arm, which she accepted, and
|
|
led the way out of the atrium. A multitude of worn and rutted paths grew
|
|
at their feet, bordered by bright sprouts of hill grass.
|
|
"I am extremely sorry for not meeting you sooner," he apologized.
|
|
"One of the visiting Cyruzhian brothers had difficulty with a manuscript
|
|
and asked me to assist. How was the ride down?"
|
|
"Good, but long," she sighed. They passed between two low walls
|
|
fencing the brothers' fields and vineyards. To one side lay upturned
|
|
rows of dark soil, recently tilled, on the other a congregation of
|
|
twisted limbs and posts covered with clingy vines. Rianna admired the
|
|
view as they walked. "Clara, my usual handmaiden, is ill, so I debated
|
|
not coming at all. I scarcely feel now is the time for me to be dallying
|
|
about Kenna at little girl's parties."
|
|
Breinert tsked at her, his usual form of reprimand. "Ahh," he
|
|
replied, "but was it not another, similar event that brought you to the
|
|
monastery in the first place? I would like to think you've benefited
|
|
from my counsel."
|
|
Rianna blushed. "I have," she confessed quietly. She did not want
|
|
to admit that solace was the last thing she had expected to find at
|
|
Coldwell Abbey, especially from a sea-priest who had settled there
|
|
temporarily. The thought that Breinert's "temporary" sabbatical had
|
|
lasted three years pleased her on a selfish level. At least hers were
|
|
not the only plans that could be waylaid.
|
|
A constant wind frolicked along the hills of the Coldwell, at this
|
|
point stirring a row of daffodils thriving along the side of the path.
|
|
The white flowers bloomed enormously among rocks and shoots of grass.
|
|
Rianna marveled that a day's ride away, just beyond the shoulder of the
|
|
Darst, the same blossoms were few and wrinkled. On her land, the last
|
|
few seasons had been severely dry.
|
|
"Perhaps there are other things in store for you on this visit," he
|
|
continued, his thick hair stirring in the breeze. "Besides, m'lady,
|
|
you've shied away from these festivities for quite some time. You have
|
|
responsibilities, yes? What would the other nobles say to your continued
|
|
absence?"
|
|
She took a moment to conjure up images of her social peers,
|
|
unsettling as it was. "The same things they say now," she thought
|
|
bitterly. "My presence will only confirm their gossip."
|
|
But she didn't answer his question aloud. Instead, she moved her
|
|
gaze to the sky and noticed a line of voluminous clouds gathering in the
|
|
west, teasing her with the possibility of rain.
|
|
The priest noticed her evasion. "You do realize there's little to
|
|
worry about at this reception, don't you?" he pressed.
|
|
"And why would I worry about a girl's coming-of-age ball?"
|
|
"Because Tremmel may be there," he answered.
|
|
She winced inwardly at the name. True enough. Tremmel was the same
|
|
lord that had been trying to court her for the past year. On some level
|
|
she had expected to see him tonight. She was obliged to attend these
|
|
events as much as he and there was little doubt he'd intend on meeting
|
|
her there. But, all awkward flirting aside, it wasn't Tremmel who really
|
|
concerned her. In fact, she worried more about the other nobles -- the
|
|
ones who would recognize her dress from receptions past, who would ask
|
|
about the state of her drought-stricken lands.
|
|
Nervously, she rubbed the silver band on her ring finger until she
|
|
became conscious of it. Sighing, she stopped.
|
|
"If Lord Tremmel attends, it will be nice to see him again," she
|
|
lied. "Oh, is that a pig I see rutting in the underbrush, brother? I do
|
|
think the monastery should be more careful with its stores."
|
|
Out of the corner of her eye, she caught Breinert's grin.
|
|
"Rianna," he chuckled, patting her arm, "No matter the reason, I
|
|
and the other monks are always pleased when you stay with us."
|
|
"And I am always pleased to come," she wanted to reply, but
|
|
refrained.
|
|
The river Coldwell coursed within shouting distance of the abbey's
|
|
door. Rianna caught a glimpse of it as they traveled alongside a bluff.
|
|
The waterway's deep bed provided sustenance as well as easy trade for
|
|
the brothers, and travelers going to and coming from the city of Dargon
|
|
appreciated the respite. With the nearby town of Kenna continuing to
|
|
grow, this area of the river saw increased traffic.
|
|
The bluff softened ahead of the couple and provided footing for a
|
|
forest, the trees growing along the steep slopes down to the water's
|
|
edge. Nestled among the primary rows of birch, a set of square,
|
|
roughly-hewn steps descended the hill. Breinert cautioned her as they
|
|
traversed it. A small clearing at the bottom lay not far from the
|
|
river's bank, a thicket of trunks dividing the two. Breinert had set up
|
|
several lines of rope in this area, strung among branches, each line
|
|
supporting a rough cloth. The overall effect was a somewhat private den
|
|
with a water-filled pool at its center. Rianna had seen dozens of
|
|
similar depressions in the rocky foothills leading up to the mountains;
|
|
this particular one had once been a washing yard, but was abandoned when
|
|
the order had tapped the Coldwell from a well on the highland. The abbey
|
|
had given leave to Breinert to use this area for his counsel with
|
|
visitors. After all, what was a water-priest without water?
|
|
Eight unlit candles of various heights sat in fissures along the
|
|
edges of the pool. As usual, by mixture or magic, the priest had laced
|
|
the inland air with a faint smell of the sea.
|
|
Breinert left her side to light the wicks. Rianna knew the ritual.
|
|
She undid her robe, revealing a long, white shift underneath.
|
|
She walked over to the pool's side and dipped her toes. The priest
|
|
had warmed it with the help of a kettle and a fire-pit not too far
|
|
removed. The tepid water felt comfortable and was amazingly clear. She
|
|
could see down to the bowl-like center, various underwater ledges and
|
|
outcroppings providing places to sit. She lowered herself to the closest
|
|
one, swishing her feet as her gown slowly billowed about her.
|
|
Breinert still busied himself with the candles.
|
|
"How do you feel?" he asked, eyes set on the wick before him.
|
|
She watched his calm, deliberate motions, the way his wiry arms
|
|
moved under the coarse blue robe. The sun was obscured by overhead
|
|
branches and surrounding hills, filling the den with a low, mossy light
|
|
which somewhat eased her anxiety.
|
|
Even so, worries lingered. "Anxious," she answered.
|
|
The priest nodded in seriousness. "You know what we're looking for
|
|
today?"
|
|
She nodded in turn, closing her eyes. She didn't have to state
|
|
their purpose aloud. She didn't want to. There had been enough
|
|
discussion of it on her last visit.
|
|
Breinert's sandals scraped the ground gently as he came to kneel
|
|
behind her. There was a sound of a small flask being uncorked, and then
|
|
liquid being poured near her. A stronger, sage-like scent mingled with
|
|
the salt. Warm, soft hands touched upon her temples. His fingers glided
|
|
along the nape of her neck, massaging her.
|
|
"Ease your breathing," his voice instructed. The scent of sage also
|
|
lay on his palms. Muscles hidden deep within her unclenched. She inhaled
|
|
greedily.
|
|
"Not too quickly," he warned, adding the habitual tsk. "Let your
|
|
mind clear. Think not about what lies ahead. Reflect on what has passed
|
|
and allow the water to calm you."
|
|
She directed her focus on the contents of the pool lapping about
|
|
her skin, the repeated warmth and coolness along her shoulders. The
|
|
priest's voice was low and deep -- comforting -- as it guided her
|
|
through the beginning exercises of the release ritual. As the
|
|
instructions became prayers, and the prayers murmurs, Rianna no longer
|
|
controlled her breath; her chest rose and fell of its own accord. She
|
|
vaguely felt the priest's hands as he slid her deeper into the water,
|
|
anchoring her by her shoulders.
|
|
"In the name of Cirrangill," he murmured, his voice distant, "we
|
|
ask that the ways of the mind are opened like the paths of the ocean. We
|
|
seek the shores of the pain, the shoals of the hurt. Allow the waters to
|
|
cleanse this woman as it cleanses all it touches."
|
|
He paused, and the wind rose in his silence.
|
|
"I will submerge you now. Just for a moment. When you rise, we will
|
|
begin to explore more of the pain which haunts you."
|
|
She felt his fingers leave her skin and allow her to float freely.
|
|
Out into the pool. The sound of the river brushing its banks vanished.
|
|
The wind in the trees disappeared. She heard only her breath: shallow,
|
|
even and barely existent. Breinert was still behind her; she felt his
|
|
presence. The priest's hand covered her forehead and pushed down
|
|
lightly. A cool tingle washed over her face and Cirrangill released her
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
White tapestries. White flagstones. Rianna squinted in the
|
|
brightness. It was as if the world had become a reflecting pool for the
|
|
sun. As the shards of light sharpened, images came into focus. A stone
|
|
archway stood at her side, just through it the blue of a cloudless sky.
|
|
She felt weightless.
|
|
"Rianna."
|
|
Breinert's voice whispered around her. It flitted left and right,
|
|
came from the solidifying walls and floor. From her skin.
|
|
"I hear you," she replied, disoriented. Her voice sounded feeble
|
|
and ghostlike in comparison.
|
|
The whisper grew in strength. "Where are you?"
|
|
"In my keep."
|
|
Her keep. She stood on the smooth, cool flagstones of her grand
|
|
hall, bathed in an unnaturally bright light. The ceiling vaulted above,
|
|
its normal shadows chased away in this netherland. She remembered the
|
|
landscape from other sessions with the priest. Even without him, in
|
|
dreams on cold nights, she walked in this place. Dozens of familiar
|
|
objects sat beside walls and on tables: goblets, portraits, heirlooms.
|
|
There were items she had not seen for years, things she had sold in
|
|
secret to ease the growing debt from her stricken lands. She stooped to
|
|
pick up the white rose she plucked ages ago, the one whose dry husk now
|
|
hung in her bedroom. The flower's petals were full and tender here; its
|
|
sweet bouquet filled her nose.
|
|
The whisper interrupted. "Do you see the altar?" it asked.
|
|
Rianna paused. Thoughts formed with difficulty here. Lifting her
|
|
gaze, she looked out beyond the images of memories and relics.
|
|
At the far end of the hall sat a gilded dais, behind it a great
|
|
wall adorned with family heraldry and a tapestry depicting a battle from
|
|
the Shadow Wars. Atop the platform, a shrouded altar stood.
|
|
Rianna nodded, a lump developing in her throat.
|
|
"Go to it," the whisper urged.
|
|
Her legs refused to move at once. Memories trickled into her
|
|
sluggish form. The altar. She remembered. This was what the priest
|
|
wanted her to find. She willed herself to move forward, dropping the
|
|
rose in her wake. The altar. The object that had always been there, in
|
|
all her visitations.
|
|
There had been a time when she believed it to be nothing more than
|
|
a table, off at the far end of the hall. But as she had explored the
|
|
chalices and chests in this place, some vanishing or moving as their
|
|
contents were revealed, the altar's unchanging stature gained more
|
|
prominence. Another voice, one deep inside her, told her to avoid it.
|
|
The altar intimidated her, caused her to want to shy away. Only recently
|
|
had she even mentioned the object to Breinert.
|
|
"This is what we want," he had told her after a previous session,
|
|
the beautiful, hazel eyes firm. He was trying to help her.
|
|
Trying to help. She clenched her fists and moved forward, the
|
|
stones growing noticeably cooler beneath her feet. The rectangular shape
|
|
grew as she approached. Her stomach shrank.
|
|
But there would be no more interruptions, no more avoidances on her
|
|
part. Breinert knew about the thing and was convinced that it was
|
|
important. In all her years visiting him, he had never gotten as excited
|
|
over any of her dream objects as this one. The time had come for her to
|
|
investigate.
|
|
It was several times her girth, with clawed feet anchoring a marble
|
|
hulk to several shallow steps. Fluted corners decorated the edges,
|
|
disappearing under a gauzy shroud. Several long, uneasy moments passed
|
|
as she stopped before it, continuing to stare.
|
|
Around her, she heard the whisper: "Fear withers us, courage
|
|
strengthens us."
|
|
She looked hard at the altar, unmoving. A light breeze stirred the
|
|
shroud's fringe.
|
|
"Fear withers us ..."
|
|
Hesitantly, she reached out and grabbed a corner of the cloth,
|
|
pulling it from its perch. The material felt rough and serrated,
|
|
something related to silk, but much stiffer.
|
|
A marble coverstone as thick as her wrist came into view. Delicate,
|
|
etched vines adorned the top, circling a plaque inscribed with letters.
|
|
She stepped closer to read them, her hands coming to rest on the
|
|
frigid surface of the tomb. Her fear retreated as she comprehended the
|
|
word. Gingerly, she reached out to trace the symbols with her fingers,
|
|
one by one.
|
|
"What does it say?" the whisper asked.
|
|
"Callid," she breathed.
|
|
Her husband.
|
|
Her eyes filled with blazing light. She was in the air, giggling,
|
|
looking down into her husband's face on a summer afternoon. They were
|
|
behind the keep, in a field unsuitable for farming. Her hair was loose
|
|
and about her shoulders, his firm grasp at her waist. It was before the
|
|
dry spell, when the field held hundreds of blooming flowers, their
|
|
yellow and white petals blinding in the sun. Callid looked up at her in
|
|
adoration and mirth, honey-brown eyes smiling as sure as his bearded
|
|
mouth.
|
|
And just as quickly as they came, the flowers withered. The field
|
|
vanished. She lay in bed. A crisp, cold touch of snow-filled air brushed
|
|
her cheek. The only light came from the darkening bed of coals in the
|
|
hearth. Beside her she felt the warm comfort of Callid's form sleeping
|
|
soundly. He was there, lying against her back, his gentle breathing
|
|
whispering through the room.
|
|
The chill thickened. Rain. She stood in the door to the stables.
|
|
The heavy, wet smell of animals and hay filled her nostrils. Callid
|
|
dismounted from his horse and approached her, cloak, tunic, and leggings
|
|
sodden with rainwater. He embraced her and she now smelled the scent of
|
|
his body beneath the clothes, pushing out everything else in the world.
|
|
It was something that lingered on bedclothes and his old cloaks,
|
|
something whose source she longed for dearly.
|
|
The sound of showers ebbed into silence, and she realized she was
|
|
back in the grand hall, on the dais. A man still stood in her grasp. She
|
|
looked up and saw Callid's kind face, with golden eyes somewhat sadder
|
|
now, peering deeply into her own. Gently, he released one of her hands
|
|
from his and lifted it.
|
|
The silver ring shone hotly on her finger. It burned in the white
|
|
surroundings of the hall, a cold, noiseless flame.
|
|
He stepped back, out of her arms.
|
|
"Callid," she started, tears forming. "Please. Just a little
|
|
longer?"
|
|
He took another step back, shaking his head. Rianna felt the warmth
|
|
of his embrace disappearing; cool air filled the space where she had
|
|
once held him. She became aware of a sound coming from the distance: a
|
|
heavy, rushing sigh that grew in volume. Around her, the walls
|
|
shimmered.
|
|
"Please," she pleaded, louder, taking a halting step towards him.
|
|
The hall crumbled.
|
|
|
|
"Callid!"
|
|
Rianna sat up violently in the small pool, screaming her dead
|
|
husband's name. Breinert was instantly by her, thigh-deep in the water.
|
|
"Rianna!" he shouted, trying to grab her flailing arms. "M'lady!
|
|
Awaken!" He crouched down beside her, concern etched on his face.
|
|
She almost didn't recognize him. She stumbled back from his grasp
|
|
like an animal cornered, hand clenched to her mouth. She looked
|
|
bewilderedly about her. The pool. The ritual. Her shift had slid down
|
|
off one shoulder. Self-consciously, she covered her breast and tried to
|
|
regain composure.
|
|
Breinert stood motionless, his sleeves and elbows dripping,
|
|
watching her.
|
|
"Please," she choked, then cleared her throat. "Please, priest, get
|
|
me my robe. I think we're finished for the day."
|
|
|
|
Rianna refused to speak with him about the vision afterwards. For
|
|
the first time in her memory, she didn't care to hear Breinert's advice
|
|
or counsel. There was no time for it. She had obligations. Despite his
|
|
protests, she changed at the abbey and immediately took her carriage to
|
|
Kenna, instructing her driver to take his time in arriving. There was
|
|
nothing else for her to do but attend this ball. There was nothing for
|
|
her to think about.
|
|
Evening had fallen by the time they reached the gates. All the
|
|
ramparts were alight with torches, the guards dressed in their finery.
|
|
Inside, she found the expected crowds of nobles and merchants of the
|
|
region, many of whom feigned delight at seeing her.
|
|
"It's been so long!"
|
|
"The lack of rain's been dreadful for you, hasn't it?"
|
|
"Have you still not remarried, my dear?"
|
|
Rianna made her rounds early, pretending to ignore the hushed
|
|
conversations that blossomed as she left each group. In less than a
|
|
bell, she retired to a quiet corner, away from much of the commotion.
|
|
Before her dark gaze, couples danced to the strings and lute, seemingly
|
|
oblivious and gay. She fidgeted with the ring on her finger, turning it
|
|
obsessively. The band weighed unusually heavy.
|
|
Her new handmaiden, silent on the ride and arrival, meekly stepped
|
|
forward. "Would my lady care for a drink?"
|
|
"Wine," Rianna muttered, not shifting her gaze from the spectacle
|
|
on the floor.
|
|
Relieved at having some purpose, the girl fled.
|
|
"I would be glad to offer you something stronger, m'lady."
|
|
Rianna started at the voice. She found Tremmel standing beside her
|
|
proudly, decked in his family's livery of crimson and silver. The black
|
|
embroidery of a flanduil's head adorned the breast. The lord's dark
|
|
beard was neatly trimmed around a pointed jaw, and his pock-marked cheek
|
|
was less noticeable in the hall's dim light.
|
|
She sighed inwardly. "I don't think that would be a wise choice, my
|
|
lord." She mustered a smile and offered him a hand out of courtesy. He
|
|
accepted, brushing her fingers ever so lightly with his lips.
|
|
"Just as well," he replied, straightening. "I think they water the
|
|
stuff down."
|
|
He lifted an earthen mug to his mouth and took a long draught.
|
|
"There's speculation that it may rain this evening."
|
|
Rianna only hoped the storm would continue eastward, over the
|
|
mountains. She thought of the withered daffodils on the other side of
|
|
the Darst. "Then it's a good thing the feast is indoors," she said
|
|
dryly.
|
|
"Pah," he grumbled. "This is nothing but a parent's show of pride."
|
|
She didn't answer. She didn't have the heart. Rianna prayed that
|
|
this one time Tremmel could feel the awkwardness between them. To her
|
|
best effort, she offered him nothing in the way of outward affection. He
|
|
spoke and she replied aloofly, not meeting his gaze. He stepped closer
|
|
to her and she tensed, wishing to all the gods he would just get away
|
|
from her.
|
|
Conversation fell silent between them, the sounds of the reception
|
|
filling the void. Tremmel took another swig from his mug, draining the
|
|
contents.
|
|
"My lady, a dance?"
|
|
She prepared to decline gracefully, but Tremmel's hand was on hers,
|
|
pulling her onto the floor. The mug he carried must not have been his
|
|
first. Rianna gasped as the lord's left arm clamped about her waist,
|
|
bringing him uncomfortably close.
|
|
The music started. Tremmel had her circle the floor as the
|
|
musicians played festively. Couples wove intricate patterns around them;
|
|
gowns ballooned in response to twirls. In the blur of motion, she saw
|
|
the arms of gentlemen about their ladies, smiles on their countenances.
|
|
She politely resisted other attempts by Tremmel to pull her close,
|
|
pushing away in a side step if his arm grabbed her again.
|
|
Try as he might, the lord's movements were not part of the dance.
|
|
He broke the pattern regularly, drawing attention to them. Rianna
|
|
flushed hotly with each disjointed round. Tremmel managed to pull her
|
|
close one more time as she misstepped. Big teeth smiled from under his
|
|
wiry beard, the stink of ale rank upon his breath.
|
|
Rianna's feet faltered. Tremmel laughed and attempted to drag her
|
|
back into his own rhythm. Gentility fled from her; she pushed away from
|
|
him at last, fleeing to the outskirts of the floor, clutching her middle
|
|
as if out of breath.
|
|
The lord followed in haste. "I've pushed you too hard, my lady?"
|
|
"Yes," she replied, too fiercely. Faces turned in the crowd
|
|
surrounding them.
|
|
The music continued to play, couples danced, but Tremmel's face
|
|
hardened. "Perhaps we should take a walk in the garden to refresh
|
|
ourselves?"
|
|
Before she could reply, his thick fingers locked on to her and led
|
|
her through the groups of revelers.
|
|
A garden was situated just beyond the hall, set within the castle's
|
|
protective bailey. They brushed several nobles on their exit, some
|
|
glancing back as they walked by. The lord made no apologies or excuses.
|
|
Outside, the wind was up, tinged with moisture.
|
|
Tremmel released her once they were on the tailored path, but he
|
|
did not look at her directly. Instead, he marched stiffly ahead, hands
|
|
clasped behind his back.
|
|
"You are not your pleasant self tonight," he called back.
|
|
"Neither are you," she almost retorted, but Tremmel was never
|
|
exactly pleasant.
|
|
When he noticed she did not follow, the lord stopped. "Will you
|
|
deny me this walk as well?" he demanded.
|
|
There was little light out beyond the entrance. Torches placed
|
|
along the path burned foully, their heavy smoke filling the air.
|
|
Uneasily, she came forward, following him on around the edges of the
|
|
garden, pointed spires of shrubs their only eavesdroppers.
|
|
"The day has been difficult," she did say, not knowing how to
|
|
reply. There was ale in Tremmel's blood, and she began to worry.
|
|
"It has been a difficult year," he countered, halting. They stood
|
|
under the lanky branches of a weeping cherry, his face cast in shadow.
|
|
"It is no secret that I have affections for you, m'lady."
|
|
Rianna flushed at the confession. She felt embarrassed for him.
|
|
"Your lands haven't enough water, nor your people enough food," he
|
|
continued. "My wealth can help change that. Why do you resist?"
|
|
Her embarrassment flared to anger. "Your concern is appreciated but
|
|
unwarranted, sir. My lands are my own business!"
|
|
"Your lands are the kingdom's business," Tremmel growled, his hands
|
|
animatedly pointing to the land around them. "You, m'lady, have been
|
|
shown too much leniency in your refusal to remarry!"
|
|
A rustling emerged from along the path. There were others in the
|
|
garden.
|
|
"Rianna," Tremmel started again, lowering his voice. He looked away
|
|
for a moment and then back, as if gathering his thoughts. "I would
|
|
rather you gave yourself willingly than otherwise." He reached out and
|
|
caught her hand, his fingers closing on the ring.
|
|
She pulled back from his touch and slapped him.
|
|
The lord did not recoil from her blow. "That ring," he hissed,
|
|
raising his fist. "You still wear that infernal ring!"
|
|
Strong fingers dug into her arms and her dress, crushing her.
|
|
Fabric ripped. Rianna struggled with him, trying to push his bulk away.
|
|
>From the darkness, a shape emerged, calling out to the guards.
|
|
Tremmel released her, turning to face the intruder.
|
|
Breinert stood by a torch, unflinching against the other man's
|
|
wrath. Tremmel was upon him in an instant, grabbing the priest's collar
|
|
and hoisting him off the ground. But the lord stopped short of assault,
|
|
catching the sound of feet running quickly towards them. Throwing the
|
|
priest down, Tremmel snarled and fled.
|
|
When hands reached for her again, Rianna batted them away
|
|
frantically.
|
|
"Easy, Rianna, easy," Breinert whispered, his voice filled with
|
|
concern. The priest's arms embraced her, an awkwardness in their touch.
|
|
"You left the monastery so abruptly," he tried to explain. "I followed
|
|
... I felt it important to attend. And then I saw you and the brute
|
|
dancing ..."
|
|
She clung to him, realizing this was the first time she had ever
|
|
held him. The scent of sage filled her nostrils -- that curious scent
|
|
which always accompanied calm and serenity, floating freely. It was
|
|
Breinert's peace. Breinert's love.
|
|
Rianna tore away, shaking her head.
|
|
The priest looked confused. "M'lady?" he asked.
|
|
She stood up in her ruined dress and ran into the dark of the
|
|
garden, away from that pillar that touched off a wild craving in her
|
|
heart.
|
|
|
|
Rianna abandoned her handmaiden at the reception and had her
|
|
carriage take her back to the monastery. Refusing an escort, she fled
|
|
the abbey and stumbled her way down the paths to the sound of the river,
|
|
out on the bluff near the priest's pool. For how long she stood on the
|
|
rocky plateau, high above the Coldwell, she could not tell. Instead, she
|
|
focused on trying to discern the course of the river running invisibly
|
|
in the night beyond. There was no moon to illuminate the landscape.
|
|
Clouds blanketed the sky.
|
|
Rianna stood motionless in that darkness. She listened to the
|
|
rushing waters, feeling nothing inside or out, trying to push out the
|
|
arguments in her head.
|
|
How many suitors had courted her? How many had been too loud? Too
|
|
fat? How many of her subjects had gone hungry this winter?
|
|
She swallowed heavily and clasped her hands over her ears,
|
|
whispering over and over, "Please. Please stop."
|
|
But she couldn't stop the reprimands and accusations in her mind.
|
|
The questions. Tremmel's words. Breinert's voice.
|
|
"Have you still not remarried?"
|
|
"Your lands haven't enough water ..."
|
|
She saw Callid as he stood in the grand hall, eyes infinitely sad.
|
|
The wall inside of her, the one that struggled to portray a strong
|
|
noble, crumbled like so many battlements neglected over the ages. She
|
|
shook her head, sobbing, her lower lip trembling. Hot tears streaked
|
|
down her cheeks, and this time she let them fall.
|
|
Fiercely, she grasped the wedding band on her finger and jerked on
|
|
it. The metal clung tightly to her flesh, scraped against it. Rianna
|
|
grew more desperate as she yanked.
|
|
"My vow," she gritted, pulling the ring free and raising it.
|
|
Lightning flashed in the distance. "I honored you, Callid. I loved and
|
|
followed you. I supported and strengthened you. I was your wife!" she
|
|
cried to the river. "Why did you leave me? Why did the gods take you
|
|
from me?"
|
|
Her fingers closed into a fist about the ring, as if she could
|
|
crush or deform the band, break the circle. She cocked her arm to throw
|
|
its burden into the darkness, trembling with the effort.
|
|
But her arm refused to complete its motion. She remained that way
|
|
for moments: clenched and ready to finish the action. What was it that
|
|
stopped her? What prevented her from being rid of this agony?
|
|
"Callid," she breathed, shuddering.
|
|
Her knees buckled and she fell onto them, letting the ring drop
|
|
from her fingers. The band uttered its own high-pitched cry as it struck
|
|
the stone.
|
|
She dropped onto her back, lifting her hands to her face, weeping.
|
|
Rain began to fall swiftly about her, striking her arms with cold,
|
|
stinging drops. Rianna opened her eyes to the wet night, the water
|
|
mixing with her own salty tears.
|
|
Rolling over, she made out the ring just beyond her reach at the
|
|
edge of the drop.
|
|
"No," she whimpered. It was wrong, regardless of what the vision
|
|
told her. Callid was her husband. His memory was her life. His honor was
|
|
in her care. It was all that was left for her. She reached out for the
|
|
band, her fingers brushing it, nudging it closer to the fall.
|
|
From deep within, the whisper of her dreams spoke: "Fear withers
|
|
us. Courage strengthens us."
|
|
She paused, her fingers about to light upon the metal, to grasp it
|
|
or fling it from the cliff. In her mind a thousand thoughts sparked.
|
|
Fear or courage? Flowers blossomed. The unknown or the painfully
|
|
familiar? She smelled the sea.
|
|
Her fingers descended.
|
|
|
|
========================================================================
|
|
|
|
Talisman Three
|
|
Part 2
|
|
by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr
|
|
<John.White@Drexel.Edu>
|
|
Fall, 748 FE
|
|
|
|
Part 1 of this story was printed in DargonZine 13-1
|
|
|
|
Virrila, who had been Kersh's sponsor, stood in the doorway of the
|
|
large room where Kersh had been accepted as a student just a few days
|
|
before. She said, "He's here, Tchad."
|
|
Zarilt, the Tchad -- teacher -- of the students of his Way, was
|
|
alone in the room, standing in front of the stone table that bore the
|
|
five objects that made up the contents of the Treasury of Farevlin. He
|
|
sighed, paused, and then nodded and gestured.
|
|
Virrila stepped to the side, out of sight, and Fessim, a short,
|
|
swarthy man, took her place in the doorway and then started walking
|
|
across the empty floor. Fessim, who had been summoned alone into the
|
|
vault of the Treasury. Fessim, who had done the one thing that was
|
|
forbidden here.
|
|
When Zarilt had become Treasurer upon the death of his Uncle
|
|
Taddis, he'd had no regrets about leaving his former life behind. That
|
|
life had consisted of him being a cooper, and a good one too. His
|
|
barrels had been sought out by merchants and shop keepers who needed to
|
|
keep their wares, from water to flour, safe. He had taken pride in his
|
|
work, and had always striven to make the best barrels he possibly could.
|
|
Unfortunately, Zarilt's home had been in a large city in one of the
|
|
larger states of Farevlin, which had meant that he had not been the only
|
|
cooper plying his trade. And some of his competition had preferred to
|
|
make and sell their barrels shoddy and cheap, rather than of the highest
|
|
quality. When Zarilt had complained to the masters of his guild, they
|
|
had simply indicated that they had no interest in regulating the
|
|
materials their members used, or the prices they charged. When Zarilt
|
|
had pressed his complaint, he had been threatened with expulsion if he
|
|
didn't let the matter drop. He had returned home decidedly the worse for
|
|
his trip; he had been firmly in the bad graces of his guild masters.
|
|
It had become harder and harder to make a living at his chosen
|
|
craft. What with guild dues and state taxes and the increasingly
|
|
frequent city fund levies, Zarilt had been forced to lower his standards
|
|
and produce cheaper barrels, since he couldn't afford to sell his better
|
|
barrels at a loss.
|
|
And then there were the other trials of his former life, like
|
|
slackard apprentices who'd had no love, or even aptitude, for coopering.
|
|
They had only been apprenticing with him because they had been assigned
|
|
to him by the guild. Some of them had been friends with the apprentices
|
|
of other coopers who didn't work their students nearly as hard as Zarilt
|
|
did, which had earned him complaints and even more assiduously shirked
|
|
duties. Only the guild could release an apprentice, but because of his
|
|
reputation with the guild, Zarilt had been unable to get his
|
|
troublemaking apprentices released or traded to another master.
|
|
All of that trouble had vanished when he had become Treasurer of
|
|
Farevlin. Furthermore, since he had discovered his philosophy, his Way,
|
|
and decided to spread that philosophy to others, his shoulders had
|
|
stayed free of the weight of responsibility. Except for one thing, the
|
|
thing that brought Fessim to him today. For Fessim was going to be
|
|
expelled today, and he would gladly have gone back to his old life to
|
|
avoid that task, as necessary as it was to the health of his informal
|
|
philosophical school.
|
|
Fessim halted his walk across the floor several paces in front of
|
|
Zarilt, and at a gesture from him, knelt. Zarilt grabbed the chair next
|
|
to him and sat -- he wasn't young enough any more to kneel for any long
|
|
period of time, but he didn't want to tower over the other man.
|
|
He looked at Fessim for a short while. Of course, Fessim knew why
|
|
he was here. There were only a handful of reasons to be summoned alone
|
|
in front of the Tchad, and Fessim didn't qualify for any of them but
|
|
one. Fessim's brows were drawn together in a petulantly angry look, and
|
|
his mouth was compressed into a thin line.
|
|
"Fessim," Zarilt finally began, "you know why you are here. It is
|
|
my duty, my only duty beyond educating my students, to keep them safe.
|
|
To provide an environment here where they can contemplate my message,
|
|
and find their way to the Way. You have disrupted that environment,
|
|
disturbed the calm of the student body, interrupted the learning of my
|
|
students.
|
|
"Here at the Treasury, all are equal. Everyone takes turns doing
|
|
just enough to keep us all alive and healthy. Everyone takes turns
|
|
working in the fields, or shepherding the animals, cleaning the rooms,
|
|
cooking, making repairs as required, all the little things that must be
|
|
done on a daily basis. With so many hands, the work goes quickly, and
|
|
all of my students have plenty of free time, time to themselves, time to
|
|
study the words of my Way if that is what they wish.
|
|
"But not you. You wanted to change things, to make yourself more
|
|
than equal, which meant making others less than equal. You started by
|
|
trading food for not having to do your share of the work. Then you began
|
|
to make deals of favors between people, making yourself important to
|
|
people who wanted some things that are not normally available here. And
|
|
eventually, you ended up collecting favors instead of trading them,
|
|
making people beholden to you, willing to do things to keep you happy
|
|
with them.
|
|
"Which is exactly the kind of complication that my students come
|
|
here to get away from. Masters and servants, haves and have-nots, always
|
|
a situation where there is someone else to give you worth, to assign to
|
|
you a status. Of all the things that you could have done wrong here,
|
|
storing up power was the worst.
|
|
"You leave me no choice. You were warned several times early on,
|
|
but every time you started again. You do not yet belong here, Fessim.
|
|
You have not let go of the outside world enough to hear my words, to
|
|
understand the Way. You must go.
|
|
"You will be given an escort to Bluebell Rock if you wish. You will
|
|
leave here with only what you brought with you -- nothing you gained
|
|
here can be taken from here. It would be best if you were gone by
|
|
evening. If at some time in the future you decide that you wish to try
|
|
to learn my Way again, you will be welcomed back, but if you do return,
|
|
you will have to earn our trust instead of being granted it
|
|
automatically."
|
|
Zarilt paused, pondering Fessim's crime. He wasn't the first to
|
|
have fallen back into the ways of the outside world, of course. Zarilt
|
|
remembered one of his early students, a man named Adamik, who had done
|
|
much the same as Fessim. But, because Zarilt had just been learning what
|
|
he needed to do to keep his school functioning, Adamik had been able to
|
|
carry on longer, so that he formed a second tier of 'haves'; people who
|
|
were owed favors, but who in turn owed Adamik favors, further
|
|
perpetuating false and destructive hierarchies. Adamik had been
|
|
expelled, but that second tier had simply been chastised. And even
|
|
though each of them had eventually left, they had at least been granted
|
|
the chance to evaluate the Way without distractions once Adamik was
|
|
gone.
|
|
However, Zarilt still didn't understand what motivated these kinds
|
|
of people to rebuild the feudal system in whatever environment they
|
|
found themselves. Why had they left the real world in the first place,
|
|
if that was the kind of thing they wanted?
|
|
He knew that asking his final question was futile, but he decided
|
|
to do it anyway. Taking a deep breath, he said, "I have one last
|
|
question for you, Fessim. Why?"
|
|
Fessim had been looking at the floor in front of his knees for the
|
|
whole time Zarilt had been speaking, and he continued staring for quite
|
|
a long time after Zarilt's final question. So long, in fact, that Zarilt
|
|
was just opening his mouth to dismiss his former student when Fessim's
|
|
head jerked up, eyes burning, mouth now frowning.
|
|
"You want to know why, Zarilt?" asked Fessim in a harsh voice. "You
|
|
want to know why someone would try to usurp your position at the top of
|
|
this collection of spineless sheep? The answer is, because I could.
|
|
That's why."
|
|
Fessim rose quickly to his feet, and continued, "Your little
|
|
pacifist army is weak, Zarilt. Your philosophy is worthless, your
|
|
leadership is flawed, and your Way is an impossible dream. It is only a
|
|
matter of time, Zarilt, until someone comes in here and takes all of
|
|
your sheep-students away from you for slaves. You've collected the
|
|
worthless, the dregs of society, the malcontents here in one convenient
|
|
place for the slavers to come and take them. It will happen, Zarilt,
|
|
someone will come and end your demented dream, and I'm glad I won't be
|
|
here when it does!"
|
|
Fessim turned and stormed to the doors. Without a backward glance,
|
|
he slammed through them and vanished.
|
|
Zarilt looked after the former student for a while. He hadn't
|
|
expected that outburst, but it hadn't bothered him either. Fessim simply
|
|
hadn't grasped the meaning of the Way, or why his students had sought
|
|
him out. He hoped that Fessim would find whatever it was he was looking
|
|
for.
|
|
With a shake of his head and a sigh, Zarilt stood from his chair
|
|
and walked out of the room.
|
|
|
|
A sennight had passed since that first afternoon in the market
|
|
square of Tilting Falls, and Torenda's Troupe was on the move again, had
|
|
been for three days. Three wagons pulled by two horses each carried all
|
|
of their belongings, from the clothes of the players to the stage
|
|
itself, broken down into pieces for convenience of transport. Each wagon
|
|
could carry four people, but usually carried only two on the driver's
|
|
bench. The rest of the troupe walked, which was why they hadn't yet
|
|
reached Roebsach, their intended destination, normally only two days'
|
|
ride from Tilting Falls.
|
|
Thanj, the Troupe's illusionist, and Naka, the master musician and
|
|
one of the four leaders of the Troupe, rode in the front wagon, though
|
|
that wagon wasn't in the lead. That duty fell at that moment to Elin,
|
|
the Troupe's stage manager, and three of the other players who were
|
|
walking in front of the wagon. It was a pleasant day in early fall, and
|
|
the two on the driver's bench had been passing the time in companionable
|
|
silence, enjoying the trees and fields on either side of the trade road
|
|
that lead west and somewhat south through that portion of Farevlin.
|
|
Eventually, Thanj broke the silence by turning to Naka and asking,
|
|
"So, why are you still with the Troupe?"
|
|
Naka looked at Thanj with a surprised expression on her face, and
|
|
responded with an incredulous, "What?"
|
|
Thanj hastily explained himself. "I ... I mean, you could have
|
|
settled down by now, couldn't you? I remember last spring, how Duke
|
|
Gazinnel offered you the position of her court musician, after saying
|
|
how sorry she was that she couldn't afford to sponsor the whole troupe.
|
|
And I've heard that her offer wasn't the first. So, for true, why didn't
|
|
you take it?"
|
|
"The obvious answer is right here," Naka said, touching her hanging
|
|
blue-disk earring. "You know what these mean, and what's more," she
|
|
continued, touching her opposite hip, "what these mean."
|
|
Thanj got a faraway look in his eye momentarily, and nodded
|
|
thoughtfully.
|
|
"I couldn't leave the troupe, if it would mean leaving my
|
|
bond-mates. But ... but, they aren't the only reason."
|
|
Silence passed between them for a while, and Thanj, thinking he
|
|
wasn't going to get any further answer, was about to apologize for being
|
|
so tactless when Naka continued.
|
|
"It's ... for as long as I can remember, I've wanted to travel,
|
|
Thanj. Almost needed to travel. Once I passed my apprenticeship at
|
|
instrument making, the urge became almost unbearable. It wasn't the
|
|
romance of the road, the adventure of seeing new places and new people,
|
|
though. Nothing like that. It was like there was something ... some part
|
|
of me, perhaps ... out there, waiting for me to find it.
|
|
"When I found Torenda's Troupe, and met Orla, Elin, and Kend for
|
|
the first time, I thought I had found it, found that missing piece. And,
|
|
to some extent, I had. I fit into their relationship so easily that it
|
|
seemed a foregone conclusion -- it was like we were destined to be
|
|
together, we belonged together.
|
|
"But the wanderlust, the need to be on the move, to continue
|
|
searching, only abated, it didn't vanish. There is still something out
|
|
there waiting to be found, Thanj. Something that draws me onward. Even
|
|
if, by some horrible turn of bad luck, the bonding was broken ..." Naka
|
|
pinched her blue disk earring and muttered a word of propitiation to
|
|
ward off that very same bad luck, then continued, "I would still need to
|
|
be out traveling, looking for that something ..."
|
|
Silence stretched again, and eventually, Thanj said, in a soft
|
|
voice, "Oh."
|
|
In the middle of Naka's revelation, a few paces away at the front
|
|
of the caravan, Elin had come to a fork in the road. A sign-post stood
|
|
at the junction with an arrow pointing down each branch. Elin glanced at
|
|
it, just to confirm that the road to Roebsach continued on before them,
|
|
but she was surprised to find that the sign pointing to the southward
|
|
branch was the one that bore the lettering for Roebsach.
|
|
She glanced over her shoulder, and debated halting the caravan
|
|
while she made sure. She had thought that there weren't supposed to be
|
|
any turns off of the main trade road between Tilting Falls and Roebsach,
|
|
but she could have been mistaken. She looked at the signpost again, and
|
|
it was the lower sign, pointing south, that said Roebsach.
|
|
Shrugging, trusting the sign, she started out along the southward
|
|
branch. The players followed, trusting Elin to lead them properly. Naka
|
|
was still talking, and Thanj listening, when the lead wagon turned down
|
|
the south path, the horses following the people in front of them in the
|
|
absence of any instructions to the contrary.
|
|
The two players in the middle wagon looked at the signpost and
|
|
wondered why the caravan had turned south. It was clear to them that the
|
|
upper sign indicated Roebsach and pointed along the way they had been
|
|
going all along. They knew, however, that Elin was leading just then, so
|
|
she must have had a reason to deviate from the proper path.
|
|
Kend was driving the last wagon, with Orla sitting beside him. He
|
|
had one hand on the reigns and one hand on her thigh, and they had been
|
|
riding for a long time in companionable silence. But for most of that
|
|
time, Kend had been working up to something. Just about the time that
|
|
Elin steered the caravan south, Kend decided that the time had come.
|
|
"You recovered from your illness back in Tilting Falls quickly," he
|
|
said as evenly as he could.
|
|
Orla responded, after a beat, "Oh, it wasn't anything serious ...
|
|
just a, just ... nothing serious."
|
|
"I see," Kend said. He waited for a few moments, and then said, "I
|
|
was talking to Janile a few days ago. She was telling me about the rest
|
|
of that party in the inn's common room, about some of the jokes that
|
|
went around, about how Naka's playing was, as usual, very well received.
|
|
She even commented on how long after Elin and I went upstairs it was
|
|
before Naka gave up playing, and then how much longer it was before you
|
|
and she went upstairs ... arm in arm."
|
|
"I ... I," Orla stammered.
|
|
As Kend made to reply, the horses pulling the wagon took the turn
|
|
south, following the people walking in front of them. Kend paused,
|
|
looked over at the signpost, saw that the bottom, south-pointing sign
|
|
said Roebsach, shrugged, and turned back to Orla.
|
|
"I'm not angry, Orla. I have no reason to be. I am, however,
|
|
slightly disappointed. We're all bonded, Orla, one unit, but we're still
|
|
separate people. I take it that you just wanted Naka that night, even
|
|
though it was your turn in my bed, right?"
|
|
Orla nodded, and Kend continued, "Then all you had to do was ask.
|
|
Obviously, you talked to the others about it, since they already knew
|
|
what was going on. But you didn't talk to me, and that hurts me, Orla.
|
|
Why wasn't I informed about your desire to switch? Did you think that I
|
|
wouldn't understand?"
|
|
Orla was silent, thinking about what had happened. She said, "When
|
|
I was backstage that day, I mentioned to Elin that Naka had been
|
|
over-tired the night before, and that I was a little sorry that it would
|
|
be two days before she and I could be together again. Elin suggested a
|
|
solution -- that she and I switch turns. We discussed it with Naka, and
|
|
she agreed. We ... we didn't think to ask you, since all of the other
|
|
parties had agreed.
|
|
"That was rude of us, Kend, and I apologize. We simply weren't
|
|
thinking properly. What can we ... I ... do to make it up to you?"
|
|
"Don't worry about it, Orla. Just remember, next time, that I
|
|
wouldn't mind being part of your discussions about who gets to sleep
|
|
with me when. All right?"
|
|
"Absolutely, Kend. We'll never leave you out again. I'll make sure
|
|
the others know. Maybe tonight we can set up two of the tents together,
|
|
and all share the blankets together, eh?"
|
|
She took his smile for an assent, and slid closer to him on the
|
|
bench, placing a hand on his thigh as well.
|
|
The wagon continued on at the rear of the caravan, traveling along
|
|
a road that was getting narrower by the league. Trees closed in on both
|
|
sides of the road, and a grassy hump appeared in the middle, indicating
|
|
that the road wasn't a well traveled one.
|
|
Eventually, Kend roused from his contemplation of the comparative
|
|
ease with which problems in his current relationship got solved --
|
|
certainly not his experience in his previous few relationships -- and
|
|
thought to wonder why the only trade road between Tilting Falls and
|
|
Roebsach should be showing such signs of disuse.
|
|
He called a halt forward, and gradually the whole caravan slowed to
|
|
a stop. Giving the wagon to two players, he and Orla worked their way
|
|
forward along the very narrow road, picking up Naka and Thanj at the
|
|
first wagon and stopping at the front of the caravan.
|
|
"What's wrong?" asked Elin when the other three leaders arrived at
|
|
the front.
|
|
"Are you sure we are going the right way?" asked Kend.
|
|
"It doesn't make sense that the road to Roebsach should be this
|
|
overgrown," added Orla.
|
|
"Well," said Elin, "the sign said that we should go south to
|
|
Roebsach, and we did."
|
|
One of the players standing behind them said, "Your pardon,
|
|
Elianijit, but it did not. The top sign pointed the way we were going
|
|
before, and said Roebsach on it. We thought that you knew a short cut,
|
|
or had some other reason to take this branch."
|
|
The four leaders of the Troupe looked at each other. Kend confirmed
|
|
that he had seen the bottom sign pointing to Roebsach, but the other two
|
|
leaders hadn't seen the signpost, and of the players that had, all
|
|
indicated that the top sign had indicated their intended destination.
|
|
Orla finally said, "Something odd happened back there, and we may
|
|
never know what. But one thing is sure: we can't turn the wagons around
|
|
on this narrow road. We will just have to continue on until we find a
|
|
wider portion, or someone who can tell us where this pathway leads."
|
|
The caravan slowly started moving forward again, with the four
|
|
leaders plus Thanj walking in front. The path didn't get any worse, but
|
|
it didn't get any better either, and they came across no clearings until
|
|
the light was fading as the sun set at the end of the day.
|
|
The clearing they found was to the side of a way-cabin that was
|
|
designed to provide shelter for winter or storm-caught travelers. The
|
|
wooden shack was small and had a crude stone chimney that leaned as if
|
|
against a stiff wind. Since it was time to stop for the night anyway,
|
|
Orla gave the command for the wagons to be parked in the clearing, the
|
|
horses to be seen to, and camp to be set up. Meanwhile, the leading
|
|
group took a look in the way-cabin.
|
|
The cabin was typical of its kind. It had a fireplace covering one
|
|
wall, equipped for both heating and cooking, with a bread oven and all.
|
|
One wall had shelves containing provisions and a door leading to a
|
|
storeroom. Naka peeked into the storeroom to find more provisions and
|
|
good sized stack of firewood. The opposite wall had six bunks, three
|
|
over three, and one of them was occupied.
|
|
Kend went over to the occupied bunk, knelt, and found a dead body.
|
|
It had obviously been lying there for a while. No large animals had been
|
|
able to breach the cabin, but small animals, rodents and the like, had
|
|
been able to get at the body. It was not a pretty sight.
|
|
There wasn't anything identifiable about the corpse, including its
|
|
sex. Picked apart clothes and blankets, bones and desiccated flesh were
|
|
all that was left, except for a satchel hanging on a peg on the last
|
|
wall.
|
|
Thanj took the satchel down and spilled its contents onto a table
|
|
in one corner. Odds and ends were revealed: travel provisions, personal
|
|
gear, some small coins, and a soft-cloth bag embroidered all over with
|
|
silver and gold thread in a strange, blocky and angular script.
|
|
Elin opened the bag and pulled out a strange-looking piece of
|
|
stone. Everyone gathered around to stare at it. It was wedge-shaped,
|
|
about a foot from almost-point to arced base. It looked like it was an
|
|
eighth, or maybe a sixth, of something large and circular that was
|
|
thicker in the middle. One of the two large surfaces was perfectly
|
|
smooth, while the other bore a carving of a falcon and inlaid silver,
|
|
glass, and gold bands crisscrossing and interlacing in the area above
|
|
the carving. The design was incomplete, as the bands were broken across
|
|
the jagged wedge-edges. One band of glass seemed to originate from a
|
|
large mass of glass in the center of the falcon image.
|
|
Thanj looked at the stone, commented, "How pretty ... sort of," and
|
|
left to join the rest of the Troupe setting up the camp.
|
|
The remaining four just stared at the stone. All of them reached
|
|
for it at the same moment, but three just touched it delicately with
|
|
their fingers. Elin first touched the carved falcon, tracing its outline
|
|
for several moments. Then she grasped the stone, held it, and lifted it,
|
|
holding it up and staring at it. Kend, Orla and Naka gathered close
|
|
around her, looking at it with her. Orla said, "What is it?"
|
|
"Important," was the only answer that Elin could come up with, but
|
|
everyone knew that she was right. She picked up the bag and returned the
|
|
fragment to it. No one objected to her claiming the object -- that was
|
|
as right as the previous answer.
|
|
Elin slipped the bag onto her belt, and went to kneel by the side
|
|
of the occupied bunk. "Thank you, fellow traveler, for bringing this
|
|
object to us," she said.
|
|
Kend said, "We will need to bury this one, so that the animals
|
|
don't defile the remains any further. And then, this way-cabin needs to
|
|
be cleaned up somewhat. I wonder how long it has been since anyone has
|
|
been this way? And I still wonder how we happened to be passing this way
|
|
ourselves."
|
|
|
|
A few days after the dismissal of Fessim, the vault room was full
|
|
of students and silence. Zarilt sat by the stone altar and watched as
|
|
most of his student body meditated. Attendance was not mandatory, yet
|
|
all but a double handful of his students were here. Those who were not
|
|
were attending to duties that could not be put off.
|
|
Some of his students claimed that it was easier to meditate when
|
|
everyone else was doing it too. Zarilt thought that was probably true
|
|
for them, but he hoped that someday, if their meditation bore the fruit
|
|
it was intended to, they would find meditating alone just as rewarding
|
|
as that done during the common meditation time.
|
|
Zarilt, who was able to meditate in the middle of the most crowded
|
|
and noisy room, or even while holding a conversation with several
|
|
people, found it restful to meditate with his students. There was
|
|
something about the rhythm of the breathing of so many people, that
|
|
started out sounding like the rumbling of an animal but which slowly
|
|
changed to become a series of rises and falls as groups of people began
|
|
to breathe in rhythm. It had only happened a few times that the entire
|
|
room managed to get into synchronization, but those few times Zarilt had
|
|
been almost overwhelmed by the energy of that union, the oneness of
|
|
everyone being together. He never tried to direct his students into that
|
|
state, knowing that it was better if they found it naturally.
|
|
Suddenly, the silence full of rhythmic breathing was shattered by
|
|
the door of the vault slamming open. A student named Millip ran into the
|
|
room, shouting, "Tchad! Tchad! He's coming! He's coming!"
|
|
The formerly-meditating students sat or stood up and started
|
|
jabbering in confusion as Millip continued shouting his message as he
|
|
ran right up to Zarilt and stopped, panting, fear plain on his face.
|
|
Zarilt said, "Silence, everyone, please!" His students quieted
|
|
after a few repetitions of his command, and he continued, "Now tell me,
|
|
Millip, why have you interrupted our meditation? Take your time, tell it
|
|
slowly."
|
|
Millip nodded, and took a deep breath. Then, he said, "I ... I was
|
|
waiting for the delivery from 'Rock, and finally Lirkal shows up with
|
|
the wagon but more important, he's got news. He says a troubadour who
|
|
was traveling through 'Rock from the south gave it them direct. Bad
|
|
news, real bad.
|
|
"Lirkal says that there's an army growing in Drigalit, working to
|
|
unite Farevlin by conquest. They've had some success with some small
|
|
border states to the west, and now they're coming here. Their leader,
|
|
Warlord Adamik, wants something from here and intends to get it."
|
|
A chaos of noise erupted again as students started shouting
|
|
questions and comments, letting their fear out and calling on their
|
|
teacher to help them, save them.
|
|
When Zarilt finally quieted them again, he said, "Please, my
|
|
students, please control yourselves. You have nothing to fear. This
|
|
warlord has no reason to hurt any of us. It is not for you or I to
|
|
surrender the treasures stored here, and he knows that. No one need fear
|
|
a thing."
|
|
Noise erupted again, but Zarilt's raised hand quieted them quickly.
|
|
Instead of calling out, several students came to the front of the crowd
|
|
and stood with their hands clasped in front of them, looking to their
|
|
Tchad. Zarilt gestured to one, and that one bowed his head and spoke.
|
|
"Tchad, do you know this Warlord Adamik? Do you know what he seeks
|
|
here?"
|
|
"Adamik was once one of my students, like you. And like you, he
|
|
knows what is sheltered here in the Treasury. If his aim is, as Millip
|
|
has relayed to us, the unifying of Farevlin by conquest, then I surmise
|
|
that he wishes to take possession of Hekorivas, the Scepter of Unity."
|
|
The student nodded, a thoughtful look in his eye, and then faded
|
|
back into the crowd. Zarilt gestured to another of the front-standing
|
|
students. She inclined her head in a bow and lifted it again, then said,
|
|
"Should we not seek to prevent this warlord's entry to the Treasury? Is
|
|
that not your duty? There are many of us, and this place is, by accident
|
|
or design, like a fortress."
|
|
Zarilt shook his head sadly, and replied, "I do not doubt the
|
|
resolve, nor the possible prowess of you my students, nor do I lightly
|
|
refuse your help in the upholding of my duty. But, my students, combat
|
|
is not part of the simplicity of the Way. You cannot achieve serenity by
|
|
destroying others. The position of Treasurer is almost wholly
|
|
ceremonial, else why entrust the job to only one? The treasures are
|
|
protected, never fear."
|
|
Zarilt's calm, steady voice and confident demeanor served to
|
|
communicate the same to his students. Several of the front-standing
|
|
students melted back into the crowd without asking any questions,
|
|
relieved by what they had heard. Zarilt nodded to one who remained. That
|
|
one, Virrila, responded as had the other two, and spoke.
|
|
"Tchad, your pardon, but if the treasures are protected, would it
|
|
not be better to leave? To find refuge for a time in Bluebell Rock,
|
|
until Warlord Adamik has time to realize that his plans here are
|
|
futile?"
|
|
Zarilt was silent for a moment, pondering his reply. Finally, he
|
|
said, "Flight is also not of the Way. You cannot find serenity while
|
|
fleeing every possible danger, nor do you need to flee once you have
|
|
found that serenity.
|
|
"However, if any of you, my students, feel that Bluebell Rock would
|
|
be safer than the Treasury during the incursion of the Warlord Adamik,
|
|
you must act on that feeling. Go, if you wish, and return when you feel
|
|
the danger is past. I shall understand."
|
|
Virrila nodded, and retreated a few steps into the crowd. Zarilt
|
|
gestured for another student to speak, while Virrila faded farther and
|
|
farther back. She looked around as she moved, and saw that every single
|
|
one of the other students was staring raptly at the Tchad, caught up in
|
|
his confidence and serenity.
|
|
She reached the back of the crowd, and listened for a short while
|
|
longer as Tchad Zarilt soothed his students' fears and bolstered their
|
|
resolve. Virrila wasn't convinced. She remembered Adamik from his time
|
|
as a student. He knew the Treasury, and he knew the treasures were
|
|
protected. He had to have a plan, one that the Tchad's 'serenity' wasn't
|
|
going to stop. She knew that Tchad Zarilt needed help; they *all* needed
|
|
help. Since no one else thought so, she decided to be the one to fetch
|
|
it.
|
|
She noticed Millip near the back of the crowd, and sidled over to
|
|
him. "Millip, how long did Lirkal say it might be until the warlord
|
|
arrives?"
|
|
Millip took a moment to register Virrila's question, then turned
|
|
distractedly, tearing himself away from his former concentration on the
|
|
Tchad. "Ah ... what? Oh, yes ... The warlord was ... um, only a few days
|
|
away. Maybe half a sennight. Why?"
|
|
"No reason, no reason," Virrila said, but Millip didn't even hear
|
|
her. She shook her head, then turned and walked out of the vault. She
|
|
didn't know where she was going to get help from that fast, but she was
|
|
going to try.
|
|
|
|
========================================================================
|
|
|