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*--------------------------------- Cut here ----------------------------------*
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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 6
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-=========================================================+<OOOOOOOOO>|)
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D D AAAA RRR G GG O O N N N Z I N N N E || Issue 4
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DDDDD A A R R GGGG OOOO N NN ZZZZZZ I N NN EEEE ||
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\\
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\
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- DargonZine Volume 6, Issue 4 12/07/93 Cir 1153 --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- Archives at etext.archive.umich.edu in pub/Zines/DargonZine --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- Contents --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Vengeance is Mine ... Max Khaytsus Yule 10-23, 1014
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1 Vengeance is Mine...
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by Max Khaytsus
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(b.c.k.a <khaytsus@alumni.cs.colorado.edu>)
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Having seen as much as he had of Sharks' Cove burned, pillaged,
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and deserted, Rien was surprised to see the Abyssment standing in
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tact. He was even more amazed to see a trickle of people going in and
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out of the bar, citizens of Sharks' Cove and Beinison troops alike. He
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watched the flow of traffic for a while, then calmly walked down the
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street and into the tavern.
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Inside, nothing had changed since his last visit. It was noisy,
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smoky and very crowded. "Move along!" a rough voice barked and Rien
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hurried past the bouncer at the door, in a hurry to get out of the
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doorway.
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"Ale," he declared at the bar and slapped some coins on the
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counter. The bartender silently scooped up the money and and placed
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the filled mug on the bar.
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Rien picked it up and, although not liking the bitter flavor of
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alcohol, drank, observing the room. So far he had seen no trace of the
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Sharks' Cove militia, but there were quite a few of them here, mixed
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with the Beinison soldiers and sailors, drinking together, laughing.
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It was no surprise the town guard sold out. They were always little
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more than a mercenary troop for hire.
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Off in the far corner Rien noticed a familiar face and a man he
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did not know sitting with her. Sitting down on a stool, Rien looked
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away, hoping the woman had not seen him. He wanted to talk to her
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alone, preferably in a place more private than this, but the table she
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sat at would do just as well. Rien glanced over his shoulder at the
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man at the table. He was well dressed, clearly not a laborer. Perhaps
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a merchant or an aristocrat or a minor noble. Not likely to be
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Baranurian at all.
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"Another ale," Rien told the bartender. He was growing impatient
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from the need to find out what happened to Adrea and the urgency in
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his voice clearly betrayed his emotional state. He did not know what
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to think about her absence. She could have escaped or perhaps been
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killed, but she could also be a prisoner somewhere or hurt and in
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trouble. It was those last two possibilities Rien worried about most.
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Those were the ones that she would need help to escape and so long as
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he did not know what had happened to her, he was helpless to do
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anything.
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He secretly held the hope that she had escaped, although the more
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likely possibility was that Adrea had been killed. He did not want to
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believe in that second alternative. He knew she was too good to get
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into trouble like that. He hopped that she had gotten out of the city
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in time.
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Without noticing it, Rien finished the second mug of ale and when
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he looked back to the corner table, the man was no longer there.
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"Give me two glasses of red wine," Rien told the bartender. "The
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good wine, not what you water down. And in real glass."
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"Two Rounds," the man said.
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A bit on the stiff side, probably due to the low supply and war
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time inflation. Rien dug out the two silver coins and put them on the
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counter before himself. The bartender came back empty handed, probably
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not expecting Rien to pay, but at the sight of the coins, scooped them
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up and left.
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Having finally received the two glasses, Rien made his way to the
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corner table and sat down without being asked.
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"So what does a good doctor go for in Sharks' Cove these days?"
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The woman looked at him. "Life's cheap. What about a mercenary?"
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Rien put one of the glasses in front of her. "Life's cheap on
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both sides of the war."
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She smiled, a touch of irony in her expression. "So which side of
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the war are you on, Rien the Mercenary?"
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"Does it matter?" He was still trying to find out if she was
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trustworthy.
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"You'd be surprised. Revolutionaries, vigilantes, terrorists. You
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wouldn't want to get caught in the wrong part of town..."
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Rien took a sip of wine, watching the people pass through the
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room.
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"Which one are you?"
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"I'm sorry. Which am I?"
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"Vigilante? Revolutionary?"
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"Tourist."
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"In a place like this?"
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Rien let a smile slip. "Sharks' Cove has everything. Slums, high
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society, exotic goods, Quirin, a swamp, mountains...even the Beinison
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army. Where else in Baranur can you get all that?"
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"There's struggle and death here," Jenye said. "That's all there
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is in Sharks' Cove. That's all there ever was."
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Rien leaned back in his chair. "I'm looking for a friend. I need
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your help."
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Jenye folded her arms, studying him. "What makes you think I'll
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help you?"
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"Old times."
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"We've had no old times! And Isom is still looking for you."
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"Does he know who I am?"
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"He knows you're a tall blond man who cost him thousands of Marks
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and that's enough to keep looking."
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"You didn't sell me out?" Rien was somewhat surprised.
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"Rien the Mercenary? There must be thousands of you out there
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right now!"
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"Of me?"
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"Not by name, but the battlefields are littered with men like
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you."
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Rien took another sip of wine. Was she serious or facetious? "And
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if I tell you my full name and where I'm from?"
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"I may think you want me to visit." She motioned a serving girl
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over and whispered something to her. Something about a room.
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"But will you think I want Lord Isom to visit?" Rien asked when
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Jenye turned back.
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She shook her head. "I have nothing to gain by selling you to
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him. I wouldn't've told you how to find him in the first place, if I
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liked the man."
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"What's your problem with him?" Rien asked.
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"I don't..." Jenye looked around, casting a particularly long
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glance at the Beinison soldiers two tables away. Her voice was quieter
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whens she started speaking again. "I don't like the idea of people
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being sold as cattle."
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Rien nodded. "I approve."
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"I know," Jenye looked away. "That's why I helped you last time."
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The serving girl returned before Jenye could answer and handed
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her a key. "Eli said you can have it as long as you need."
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"Thank you."
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Rien watched the girl go, wanting to ask what that was all about
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and waiting for the answer to the question he had already asked.
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"Come with me," Jenye stood up.
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Rien also got up, picking up both wine glasses. He handed one to
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Jenye. "I brought this so I could get you drunk and more cooperative."
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She smiled. "Good try, but I don't drink."
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"You don't? You did when I met you last Nober. It certainly
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looked like wine."
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Jenye laughed. "Eli gives me water and I add coralline to make it
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red. I hate alcohol."
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"Sorry," Rien sighed and put his own glass back on the table.
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"Oh, don't leave it," Jenye said. "Maybe I can get you drunk and
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cooperative. Come along."
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Rien picked up the glass and followed Jenye up the stairs to a
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room at the end of the corridor where she unlocked the door and let
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him go in first.
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"This used to be the best room at the inn, possibly the best room
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for rent in town. The furniture, the view, the status. There isn't
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much left now. Not much other than the furniture."
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Rien walked over to the window and looked out. A burned street
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lay before him, opening into a destroyed market square. "I see what
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you mean..."
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"That house over there, with the burned top floor, used to belong
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to the Captain of the Town Guard. The fighting was most severe here.
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The Guard tried to protect his residence, but the Benosian troops kept
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coming, wave after wave. I was here watching as they stormed the
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house, dragged him up to the roof, chained him there and set the whole
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place on fire." She shivered at her own words. "And just like that the
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whole city became theirs..."
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"Why did they let the Abyssment stand?"
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"Gaius isn't a man without influence. He made deals. I wouldn't
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be surprised if he bought the regiments controlling the city..." Jenye
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sat down on the edge of the bed. "...what's left of the city, anyway."
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"What about Quirin?" Rien asked, looking at the silver spire
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raising above the river, beyond the burned portion of the city. "Did
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Gerald and Morgan make it out?"
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"Probably," Jenye said. "God only knows. Certainly no one here
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does."
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Rien let a smile slip. "Are you Stevene?" he asked, recognizing
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the monotheistic reference.
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"Yeah. What about you?"
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"I'm a heretic," he said, trying to hide the smile.
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"Benosian? Olean?"
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"No, just a heretic."
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"You don't believe at all?"
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Rien tested her with his eyes. "I believe in Mother Earth and
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Father Sky, in the dark night and the brilliant day. My deities are
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the plants and the rocks and the animals. My gods are the elements
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that create my environment."
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"You do know what my religion says will happen to you?" Jenye
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asked.
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Rien nodded. "It's a risk I'll have to take."
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"Sit down," Jenye indicated to the bed. "We can talk without
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intrusions here."
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"Not about religion, I hope."
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"About why you came here."
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Rien put the wine glass on the window sill and sat down by Jenye.
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"Should I start over?"
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"Please."
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"I'm here looking for a friend and I was hoping you could point
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me to someone who could provide some facts."
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"It must be a good friend to bring you into the middle of a war,"
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Jenye commented.
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"She is. And I hope she's all right."
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"She? Your wife? Lover?"
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"A student...a friend. She stayed longer than she should have."
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"Where was she staying?" Jenye asked.
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"The Tipsy Dragon, by the river," Rien said. "She tended bar."
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"The Tipsy Dragon was destroyed yesterday," Jenye said, wondering
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about the coincidence.
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"I know. I did that." It was not the complete truth, but he was
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not going to say that now.
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"You? You don't look like a mage any more than you do a
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mercenary."
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"I'm not. There were other factors involved."
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"Describe her for me," Jenye asked. "I'll see what I can do."
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"She's a little shorter than you, blond hair, shoulder length in
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Mertz, brown eyes. Athletic, very outgoing. She has a little girl, a
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year and a half old, but they've been separated since early spring."
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"Is the girl with her father?" Jenye pressed Rien for personal
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information.
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"She's with a friend. We were never told who the father is."
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"Is she safe?" there was genuine concern in Jenye's voice.
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"I hope so. It's hard to tell where the war front is these days."
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"What's your friend's name."
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"Adrea Rainer."
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"All right. You give me a day and I'll see what I can do."
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"Thank you." He stood up, ready to leave. "Jenye, if you need
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money or help, let me know."
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"Nothing yet. Just come back tomorrow evening. If I'm not in the
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tavern, ask at the bar."
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"Thank you," Rien repeated himself and left. He still was not
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sure how much Jenye could be trusted, although it appeared that she
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was well on the Baranurian side of the conflict. Either way, going to
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her was better than not going to anyone at all. There had been no
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leads at The Tipsy Dragon at all. Deven had made sure that it and the
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men in it were destroyed for good. Rien did not like the idea of
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coming to Sharks' Cove to attack the Beinison army from the inside,
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but he could understand Deven's bitterness towards these people and
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their country and did nothing to stop him. It was always a good idea
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not to come between a mage and his vengeance.
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His biggest concern now was Adrea. It had been more than a month
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since the invasion and there was no trace of her. What could have
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happened? It had been far too long to tell anything by the condition
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of the tavern. For all he knew, Adrea left days before the attack or
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maybe several months later.
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Rien walked around the Abyssment to look at the charred remains
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of the market square and the destroyed home of the Guard Captain.
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Burned alive. What a horrible death. As hard as he tried, he could not
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understand what could drive someone to do things like this, to draw
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blood with no provocation, to kill and loot and be willing to die. He
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did not understand what drew people into these conflicts and at the
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same time, when drawn into one himself, he was no better than those he
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condemned.
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ReVell Dower was another sore spot, leading an army against the
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Beinison forces, outnumbered five to one. What good could he do? For
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whom? The gleeful heroic charge into battle made no sense. There was
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no point with odds this great, no matter what the intent.
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Rien walked between the burned booths, the street full of litter.
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There were no dead bodies here as the city was still inhabitable and
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such decay would be a way of spreading sickness and disease. But what
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was left of the market square was also empty. He stood alone among
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ruins, the blackened support frames and remainders of walls. It was a
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whole different world, nothing like what Sharks' Cove used to be like.
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"Hey, you!" someone yelled in the Benosian tongue and Rien turned
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to look.
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A Beinison soldier stood, arms folded, at the edge of the street,
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facing Rien.
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"Come here." It was said in Benosian and Rien pretended not to
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understand. He knew that if he spoke, he would never pass for a
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Benosian citizen anyway. Perhaps ignorance would be better.
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The soldier drew his sword and approached Rien. "Are you stupid,
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or what?"
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`Probably stupid,' Rien thought. It was suicide to go into the
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streets with or without a sword, but it may have been better if he had
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his now.
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"You must be stupid, son," the soldier approached, swinging the
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sword for balance. "You're stupid," he repeated in Baranurian, trying
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to provoke a fight.
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Rien took a few steps back, to the remainder of a wall of a
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building.
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"Oh, you're making it so easy..." the Benosian words sounded
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again. The sword started into its strike and Rien, with his back to
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the wall, dropped to his knees and bent forward. The blade impacted
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the wall with a crack, splintering the already damaged wood. The
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soldier's legs were just before Rien and with a quick swing, he sent
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the man tumbling to the ground. The sword remained stuck in the wall.
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Rien got up as the soldier drew a dagger and stepped on his right
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forearm. "Drop it," he said in Benosian, his speech heavily accented.
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The man tried to throw Rien with his struggling and was rewarded
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with a heavy boot crashing down on his wrist. The dagger flew out of
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his hand as he yelled out in pain. Rien knelt down over him.
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"A few years ago I would have broken your arm to make sure you
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never fight again, but I've learned that people like you will learn to
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use their off arm just so they may cause more pain." He drew his own
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dagger.
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"It'll be an honor to die at the hands of an enemy," the soldier
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spat, "to die fighting for my country."
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"We're fighting for my country," Rien answered, running the knife
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across the soldier's throat. Warm blood squirted up and stained the
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ground, the rushing air from the lungs causing it to foam as it ran
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out.
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Rien tossed the dagger aside and leaned against the wall, looking
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away from the body. He could still hear the shallow gurgling gasps and
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the sound made him sick. He was disgusted with what he did, the
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soldier's dying words repeating themselves in his mind. The man was
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already on the ground, helpless and Rien killed him anyway.
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"Damn you!"
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* * *
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Rien held his breath as clanking footsteps fell on the
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wooden bridge above him. The quickly flowing water from the
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recent rainstorm threatened to tear him away from the supports
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he clung to, and he hung on as the clanking of boots above him
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refused to subside. He looked up, not being able to see more
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than shadows passing over the cracks. There must have been over
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a thousand men in this unit. It was as big as the one he had
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encountered up river just a few days before.
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As a single man he would probably be overlooked by the
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Beinison force as relatively harmless, if noticed at all, but
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his cautious nature forced him to hide from the soldiers,
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hoping that avoiding them entirely would also avoid any
|
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possible unexpected conflicts. As the footsteps on the bridge
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ceased, Rien released his grip on the support and maneuvered
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closer to shore. It was wet and muddy, but the bushes were
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green and strong. Grabbing a thick branch above the water, Rien
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pulled himself out on shore. Off on the other side of the river
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he could see the Beinison troops marching in dead precision.
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It was a hot mid-summer day and Rien did not worry about
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staying wet for long, but nonetheless, he took the time to
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shake the water off his clothes and out of his hair. Rien was
|
|
sure that as soon as he was on his way the sun would take care
|
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of the rest and he would be dry, if not clean. He lingered on
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the shore a bit longer, looking into the rapidly flowing waters
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of one of Laraka's many tributaries. The mud he managed to stir
|
|
was quickly being washed down stream and the water was once
|
|
again becoming clear.
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"Hey, you, peasant!"
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Rien set his jaw.
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"I'm talking to you! Bring me water, peasant!"
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Rien pulled the peace binding on his scabbard lose and
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stood up from among the bushes, facing the man who called him,
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a middle aged Benosian in grimy armor sitting atop a tired
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horse.
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The soldier studied Rien, surprised to see someone so young
|
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and armed. He assumed it was some old fisherman in the brush.
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Rien stepped forward, onto the road, looking the soldier up
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and down. The man was clearly a Benosian knight, a blue star
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hanging on a chain draped over his shoulders. This was probably
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not going to turn out well.
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"Well?" the Beinison knight asked. "Where's my water?"
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Rien pointed over his shoulder with his thumb. "Must be in
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the river."
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The soldier pulled his feet out of the stirups and slid off
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his horse. "I hope you use that sword half as well as you use
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your mouth."
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"I'd rather not have to show my skill to others," Rien
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tried backing off, but it was too late, the man had yanked his
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own sword from the saddle scabbard and was approaching, ready
|
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for a fight.
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Rien took a step back, mentally readying himself. The
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Benosian's approach was sloppy, almost arrogant. The sword was
|
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loosely held, the wrist limp, the other arm was just hanging at
|
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his side. Was he really a knight who could not fight or simply
|
|
not what he appeared to be? Could he be trying to play a trick,
|
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hoping to catch his opponent off guard?
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Rien planted his feet solidly on the ground. A single good
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move could solve the problem no matter what the other man's
|
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intentions and proficiencies were. He was glad to have unbound
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his sword.
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|
The Beinison knight closed in to striking range, a clearly
|
|
solid grasp on the hilt of his sword. He thrust in a feint,
|
|
changing the attack to a swing at Rien's weapon arm. It caught
|
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Rien off guard, but he managed to get away with a minor cut,
|
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drawing his sword on the move. He stepped closer, inside the
|
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reach of his opponent's sword, and thrust his own into the
|
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man's gut. The sharp tip easily tore through the chain armor
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and sank into the flesh underneath. The Beinison gasped in
|
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surprise, wrapping his free arm around Rien for support. The
|
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sword fell from his grasp.
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"Water..." was the last thing he muttered before sinking to
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the ground.
|
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* * *
|
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|
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"It's my human half, Deven," Rien explained. "That's the blood
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|
that makes me do these things."
|
|
The mage stirred the fire with a stick, releasing sparks from the
|
|
ambers into the air. "I don't think Eelail are any different from
|
|
humans. You have the same drives, want the same things... You get
|
|
angry for the same reasons."
|
|
"That wasn't just anger. For that one moment if I could have
|
|
reached into his chest and torn his heart out with my bare hands, I
|
|
would have."
|
|
"No. Look where you are. Look at the death and destruction around
|
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you. You're angry and you haven't stopped being angry since the moment
|
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you got here. What do you have to be angry about?"
|
|
Rien looked away. Deven was right. He did not want to be angry,
|
|
but he was. "I don't know," he sighed, although deep inside he knew
|
|
well enough. Between the war and Adrea's disappearance, as well as
|
|
Deven's own rebellion against the orders to stay out of the war he had
|
|
too many things to worry about and it all added to his anger at what
|
|
he saw. He picked at his food, no longer interested in eating. "I did
|
|
it without thinking and all I can see now is that cut I made."
|
|
"You've killed before."
|
|
"Not like this. Not after my opponent was down. Never a helpless
|
|
man."
|
|
"They killed my parents when they were helpless," Deven said. "Do
|
|
you know how the Empire kills it's enemies?"
|
|
Rien shook his head.
|
|
"They cut their eyes, so they can't see and hamstring arms and
|
|
legs, so all they can do is scream. Then the lucky ones are burned or
|
|
drowned. Others are just left for the carrion birds or other
|
|
scavengers, alive and unable to defend themselves. My parents were
|
|
burned. At night I can still hear their screams..."
|
|
"I'm sorry."
|
|
"It's been forty years," Deven said. "It doesn't hurt as much as
|
|
it used to."
|
|
"But you still kill for it."
|
|
"Revenge is a deep cup to drink from and of all people, I admit
|
|
it."
|
|
Rien pushed his plate away. "What if we find that Adrea is dead?
|
|
What then? Revenge on the Beinison army? Go after Vasquez? Talens?
|
|
Untar?"
|
|
Deven shrugged. "We'll see."
|
|
"We'll see what? If we can fight with one thousand to one odds?
|
|
Or do you mean the entire Beinison army?"
|
|
"I mean we'll see. I hope she's safe, but if not, I don't intend
|
|
to forgive."
|
|
"Neither do I," Rien admitted bitterly, "and that's the problem.
|
|
That's the human reaction. My people could never justify killing
|
|
others at random after what had happened to them. Perhaps if I knew
|
|
who, where...but then..."
|
|
"Will you need me tomorrow?" Deven asked.
|
|
"I don't think so," Rien answered. "I'll be meeting Jenye again,
|
|
see what she found out. Day after tomorrow, if she had any news."
|
|
"Then I'd like to use the day to look at the Beinison fleet. They
|
|
seem to be just waiting in the bay. I'd like to see what they are
|
|
waiting for."
|
|
Rien nodded. "Be careful."
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
The annoying fizzling sound of the spell subsided, leaving
|
|
behind traces of what used to be a heavy lock. Deven gave the
|
|
door a push and it opened with ease, the remnants of the lock
|
|
slipping out of the frame and shattering on the ground. Silence
|
|
ruled inside the dark old house, making Deven wonder who the
|
|
previous inhabitants were and what had happened to them now.
|
|
He lit a candle with his finger, choosing to conserve the
|
|
energy that would be required to light the room. The table on
|
|
which the candle stood was littered with empty wine bottles and
|
|
the remains of a meal. He picked up a bottle and smelled it.
|
|
Baranurian wine.
|
|
Something creaked and Deven returned the bottle to the
|
|
table. He was here for a single purpose, a single person. He
|
|
walked across the room to the stairs leading up and as quietly
|
|
as he could, made his way to the second floor. The darkness
|
|
here was very deep, the light of the candle on the table
|
|
downstairs unable to penetrate this far. He muttered a curse
|
|
and an incantation, creating a glowing sphere the size of a
|
|
chicken egg. He needed the light.
|
|
The top of the landing fanned out in three directions, a
|
|
door in each of the alcoves and another one behind him. Which
|
|
room? Were all occupied? He should have asked more questions of
|
|
the urchin before coming here, but all he thought to find out
|
|
was if there were any guards.
|
|
Something creaked again, behind the door to his right, and
|
|
Deven carefully approached it, the glowing sphere trailing
|
|
after him. He carefully reached for the door and pushed it
|
|
open. The light of the sphere behind him projected his shadow
|
|
into the room, casting a deep blue glow around his outline.
|
|
Someone gasped.
|
|
Deven moved forward, the light sphere trailing him, better
|
|
illuminating the room. On the bed sat a woman, holding a
|
|
blanket to her chest. Her widely opened eyes expressed fear and
|
|
concern.
|
|
"I am looking for Lord Asart Geldavery," Deven said in his
|
|
native Benosian.
|
|
"Next room," the woman whispered, pointing.
|
|
"Thank you," he turned and left, the sphere bobbing up and
|
|
down behind him. He hoped she would not yell in view of the
|
|
fact that he had not only presented himself as a mage, but a
|
|
Benosian as well. Deven pulled the door closed after himself,
|
|
satisfied with his prediction. First thing first. Asart and who
|
|
ever else, if there was trouble.
|
|
He walked to the central alcove and pushed the door open.
|
|
There was instant scrambling in the room as his glowing shadow
|
|
announced his presence. "Lord Asart Geldavery?" Deven asked of
|
|
the man in bed. A woman unsuccessfully hid behind the man.
|
|
"I am."
|
|
"Grandson of Count Jaril Geldavery?"
|
|
"Yes?" His voice sounded less sure, somewhat puzzled.
|
|
"Your grandfather wishes to see you." A ball of light fell
|
|
to the bed from Deven's outstretched hand, quickly enveloping
|
|
it and half the room in fire. "Tell him Baron Yasarin still has
|
|
followers."
|
|
The last of the words were drowned out by agonizing
|
|
screams.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
It was shortly before sunset that Rien started for the Abyssment.
|
|
He spent the morning looking over the city, trying to look less
|
|
conspicuous than the day before and avoiding soldiers and the
|
|
remainder of the almost invisible town guard as much as he could. It
|
|
almost worked.
|
|
At one of the alley ways he noticed a small group of youths. They
|
|
loitered, talked, one muttered a hello as Rien walked by, then, when
|
|
he was half way down the block, he heard yells and sounds of
|
|
commotion. When he turned, he saw four Benosian soldiers being pelted
|
|
with rocks by the youngsters. He did not give the situation much
|
|
thought, but when the soldiers drew their swords and charged into the
|
|
alley after the boys, Rien ran back, hoping to prevent a massacre.
|
|
He made it to the corner in time to see a large log tumble off a
|
|
wall of crates, crashing into the soldiers and causing boxes to rain
|
|
down on them. The running boys returned, gathering around the pile of
|
|
shattered boxes, obviously scared, but wanting to take their task to
|
|
its obvious conclusion. One bent down to take a sword from an unmoving
|
|
soldier when, to everyones surprise, the unmoving man's hand locked
|
|
around his wrist and the soldier planted a dagger into the youngster's
|
|
side.
|
|
The rest of the boys ran as the soldiers got up with war cries
|
|
and charged after them.
|
|
Rien cut around the boxes, blindsiding the last of the soldiers
|
|
and getting his sword. The man sprawled out on the ground confused and
|
|
disoriented. The other three stopped their charge and turned. A
|
|
sinking feeling hit Rien. He did not want to fight and kill after what
|
|
had happened the day before, but at this point there was no backing
|
|
out.
|
|
He waited. Attacking first was asking to lose advantage with this
|
|
many opponents. Waiting could mean the same thing. As they started
|
|
spreading out to surround him, he moved back, to the alley wall, to
|
|
keep all of them in his field of vision.
|
|
With a yell one of the soldiers jumped forward and swung. Rien
|
|
parried and continued moving back. There were only a few more steps to
|
|
the wall when the soldiers rushed him. He sidestepped one, elbowed
|
|
another. Surprisingly, the third fell on his own. The last man,
|
|
without a sword, did nothing. Rien did not wait for his good fortune
|
|
to change. He parried another swing, feinted a strike, and his sword
|
|
connected with the arm of his confused opponent. With a scream of
|
|
pain, the man backed off. The attack came easer than Rien expected. It
|
|
came from his reflexes, without thought.
|
|
Three to go. Two. The man who had fallen was not getting up. His
|
|
sword was picked up by the unarmed man.
|
|
Rien parried two more strikes and made one of his own, when one
|
|
of the men stiffened up and fell forward. Both Rien and his remaining
|
|
opponent stopped fighting to look at him.
|
|
"Mage!" the man with the injured arm yelled and ran.
|
|
What he did not see at a distance was a black arrow sticking out
|
|
of the soldier's back. "You're probably next," Rien told his remaining
|
|
opponent.
|
|
The man answered with a vicious swing that Rien barely dodged.
|
|
His back was now against the wall, a dead body at his feet and a
|
|
Beinison soldier viciously swinging his sword to keep him off balance.
|
|
There was no strategy in the foreigner's attack.
|
|
Rien swung his sword to break the soldier's pattern, parried a
|
|
hit and feinted a head shot. As his opponent's sword came up to block
|
|
the shot, Rien brought his swing down, sinking the blade into the
|
|
man's side.
|
|
The soldier looked at Rien in surprise, staggered and fell with
|
|
the sword still lodged in his body. The methods of killing did not
|
|
change in one day, nor did they feel differently. The look in the eyes
|
|
of the dying was the same fear as always.
|
|
Rien stepped away from the wall and scanned the roof tops of
|
|
surrounding buildings. Nothing. No archer, not even a trace that
|
|
anyone had ever been up there. He bent down to examine the arrow. It
|
|
had a black shaft, dyed by its looks, black fletchings and, when he
|
|
pulled it out, a black flint tip. The construction appeared to be
|
|
flawless, as did the aim. The arrow penetrated the soldier's mail
|
|
between the shoulder blades, just to the left of the spine. He was
|
|
probably dead before he hit the ground. Examining the other man, Rien
|
|
discovered that an arrow penetrated his chest and broke when he fell
|
|
on it. These shots were obviously aimed to kill, not injure or
|
|
disable.
|
|
Scanning the rooftops one more time, Rien hurried from the alley
|
|
before the sun set and submerged it into complete darkness. There was
|
|
no need to sit here in the dark and wait for the escaped man to bring
|
|
reinforcements. And the boys who started this fight were long since
|
|
gone.
|
|
To his surprise, Rien found the last soldier lying face down just
|
|
short of the exit into the street. A black shaft protruded from the
|
|
base of his skull. No longer being able to resist the mystery, Rien
|
|
pulled out the arrow and hid it under his tunic, now hurrying to meet
|
|
Jenye.
|
|
It was completely dark when he made it to the Abyssment. The
|
|
tavern was crowded with people, not a single table or chair available
|
|
to use, not even at the bar. Rien could not remember ever seeing this
|
|
pace so busy. Jenye was no where in the crowd. After a moment he
|
|
walked over to the bartender and asked for an ale. "Is Jenye around?"
|
|
he asked when the drink was served.
|
|
"Who's asking?"
|
|
"Rien."
|
|
"Room five, up the stairs."
|
|
Leaving the ale at a table surrounded by drunks, Rien proceeded
|
|
upstairs. This was not the same room as the previous morning,
|
|
positioned on the opposite wall, facing north, away from the river. He
|
|
knocked.
|
|
Jenye opened the door. She was dressed in travelling clothes, a
|
|
change from the flashy styles she usually wore. "Come in."
|
|
He did. "Did you learn anything?" he asked as she closed the
|
|
door.
|
|
"Maybe. Eli found out that The Tipsy Dragon had been occupied by
|
|
Beinison forces since the day of the invasion. Whatever happened to
|
|
your friend must've happened on the same day."
|
|
"Then we need to find the people who were present that same day,"
|
|
Rien said.
|
|
"I'm ahead of you," Jenye smiled. "I was going to ask you to do
|
|
that with me tonight."
|
|
"Let's go."
|
|
"If the first place won't work out, we can go to another, but it
|
|
may require bribes."
|
|
"I'll take care of them."
|
|
"All right, then," Jenye agreed. "We'll start with a street
|
|
vendor I know."
|
|
They left the crowded tavern and headed west, towards the docks,
|
|
Jenye leading the way.
|
|
"I have a question for you," Rien said. "I witnessed something
|
|
today that strikes me as bizarre, even for Sharks' Cove."
|
|
"What?"
|
|
He took the black arrow from under his tunic and showed it to
|
|
Jenye.
|
|
"Oh, God!" she exclaimed. She grabbed it from his hands, tore off
|
|
the fletchings, broke off the tip and threw the parts in different
|
|
directions. "Come on," she broke into a run.
|
|
Rien followed her. "What's wrong?"
|
|
She did not answer until they ran a few blocks. "The penalty for
|
|
carrying that is death," she gasped when she stopped.
|
|
"Death?"
|
|
"Where did you get it?"
|
|
"In a dead body that I was fighting. What is it?"
|
|
"I told you yesterday we have vigilantes and revolutionaries
|
|
here. The most wanted of them is Ga'en the Blind, an archer who uses
|
|
black arrows."
|
|
"The Blind?"
|
|
"They say that he's completely blind because he wears a helmet
|
|
with no eye slits." She turned away and looked back the way they came.
|
|
"Many think that he was a soldier in the Legion of Death, caught by
|
|
the Beinisons and tortured. His eyes were burned out and he was
|
|
released into the wilderness, where he somehow became what he is."
|
|
"The Legion of Death?" Rien asked. The Legion were two regiments
|
|
in the Combined Host of Baranur, the Red Death and the Grey Death. Two
|
|
of the perhaps best trained heavy infantry archer regiments on all of
|
|
Cherisk. Their mention alone has been known to shatter enemy morale
|
|
and send armies off the field of combat.
|
|
"He's been called `The Black Death'," Jenye explained, "because
|
|
of the arrows he uses. The reward for him now is ten Marks, but no one
|
|
knows who he is."
|
|
"That may be," Rien said, "but I doubt he's blind. I saw those
|
|
shots and I doubt I could duplicate them...and I consider myself
|
|
skilled with the bow."
|
|
"He could be aided by magic," Jenye suggested.
|
|
Rien shrugged. "I've learned that a lot of myths and legends tend
|
|
to be placed on common things that seem to defy explanation."
|
|
"I think this town needs all the heroes of myths and legends it
|
|
can get," Jenye said. "He goes around attacking thieves and the
|
|
Beinison army and that rallys people to his cause. What did happen
|
|
with you, anyway?"
|
|
"Some kids were attacked by Beinison soldiers and I tried to help
|
|
them get away. The next thing I knew, there were black arrows sticking
|
|
out of the patrol."
|
|
"Well, that's the reason there's such a high reward for his
|
|
head," Jenye said. "The Beinison army lost quite a few men to him."
|
|
As they talked, they reached their destination and Jenye knocked
|
|
on the door of a small wooden house, little more than a two room shack
|
|
constructed of old rotting planks and a torn ship sail, to keep the
|
|
wind and the rain out. A woman of Jenye's age, although appearing ten
|
|
years her senior, cracked open the door.
|
|
"Yes?"
|
|
"Walda, good evening to you. Is your husband home?"
|
|
"Come in, please," she opened the door completely.
|
|
Rien followed Jenye into the house.
|
|
"Moldan, Doctor Calyd is here to see you."
|
|
A balding, tired looking man appeared at the door to the back
|
|
room. "What can I do for you, Doctor?"
|
|
"Please, sit down," Walda indicated to a low bench along the
|
|
wall. "Can I bring you something to eat?"
|
|
"No, thank you, Walda. I'm fine."
|
|
Rien refused as well. This family did not seem to have enough to
|
|
feed themselves, much less strangers.
|
|
"Moldan," Jenye started, "I'm looking for a woman who was in town
|
|
at the start of the invasion. She tended bar at The Tipsy Dragon. I
|
|
need to find out what happened to her."
|
|
"A pretty young thing, yes, I remember," he muttered. "Last I saw
|
|
her was a few days before the Beinisonian ships came."
|
|
"We need to find her, Moldan," Jenye cast a glance at Rien.
|
|
"Could you find out? Ask around? If you can find the people who were
|
|
at The Tipsy Dragon that..."
|
|
"If they're alive and in town," Moldan agreed.
|
|
There was a scream from the back room and everyone jumped up.
|
|
Walda rushed out through the doorway.
|
|
"My son, Barar," Moldan explained. "I fear he's seen too many
|
|
horrors of the war."
|
|
"Let me take a look," Jenye offered.
|
|
"I have nothing to pay you with, Doctor," Moldan protested.
|
|
"Then you won't have to," she said and disappeared through the
|
|
curtained doorway.
|
|
Moldan followed her, shaking his head. Rien stepped up to the
|
|
curtain, to look in the other room. Walda and Jenye knelt by a skinny
|
|
boy, perhaps eight or ten years old, dirty and crying. Moldan absently
|
|
stood not far away, looking on. As Jenye talked to the boy, Rien
|
|
scooped some coins from his purse and tossed them into the empty soup
|
|
pot leaning against the wall by the fireplace. Perhaps that would give
|
|
them a chance to fill it with real soup tomorrow.
|
|
Jenye soon finished with the boy and they left after Moldan and
|
|
Walda thanked them profusely and promised to do all that they could to
|
|
help.
|
|
"Sad, isn't it," Jenye asked as they walked down the street. "The
|
|
boy, I mean."
|
|
Rien nodded. "You have to wonder why life has to be so unfair for
|
|
those so young."
|
|
She looked at him. "But then it wouldn't be interesting to people
|
|
like you if it were fair, would it?"
|
|
Rien paused, looking at Jenye. Was that a comment on his choice
|
|
of occupation? If it were, it was hardly fair. In his line of work he
|
|
could speak only for himself. Others were responsible for their own
|
|
actions. He was no one's keeper and never intended to take on a job
|
|
such as that. As for it being interesting over fair, that was another
|
|
thing to argue. He always loved the mystery and intrigue of
|
|
`interesting', but would take fair over that any day.
|
|
"No, it wouldn't," he said, "but it'd be simple and easy."
|
|
"And you want a simple life?" Jenye asked, equally surprised.
|
|
"I don't think I'd mind one."
|
|
"I can't see you living on a farm, digging in the dirt," Jenye
|
|
laughed.
|
|
"You can't see me fighting with a sword, either," Rien reminded
|
|
her.
|
|
"I've never seen you with a sword," she shook her hear. "You're a
|
|
hard man to pin down."
|
|
"And you? Working for the worst criminal this city's ever known,
|
|
while selling out his business associates behind his back? And then
|
|
turning around and helping a sick child for no reason at all?"
|
|
"It was a way to pay Moldan for what he said he will do. And it's
|
|
painful to watch the boy suffer like that. He didn't do anything to
|
|
deserve that pain, but now he'll have to live out his life with the
|
|
horrors of this war hanging over him... But then I'm not the only one
|
|
to offer kindness to him, am I?"
|
|
"I'm sure that goes for his parents without saying," Rien agreed.
|
|
"It's not his parents I'm talking about," Jenye stopped. "The
|
|
boy's bed is exactly opposite the fireplace in the big room. I saw
|
|
what you did and I doubt those were stones you threw in there."
|
|
"Just a few coins," Rien shrugged it off. "They need them more
|
|
than I do and they struck me as too proud to simply accept money from
|
|
a stranger."
|
|
"You're a strange man, Rien... What is your family name?"
|
|
"Keegan," he answered without hesitation.
|
|
"And where are you from, Rien Keegan?"
|
|
"I travel a lot."
|
|
"I can see why you would want a simple life, then," Jenye said.
|
|
"But if you want it so much, why haven't you made yourself one?"
|
|
Rien had to think about that. Why indeed? "I don't think I've
|
|
found the right place yet."
|
|
"You must be a hard man to please."
|
|
"Sometimes," a hint of a smile escaped his lips.
|
|
They soon returned to the Abyssment, crowded as it had been at
|
|
their departure.
|
|
"Where else did you want to go?" Rien asked. "You said there was
|
|
someone else."
|
|
"I think Moldan will come through," Jenye said. "I was afraid he
|
|
wouldn't know who you were looking for, but he obviously met her. If
|
|
there's anything to find out, I'm sure he's the one to do it."
|
|
"Then I guess I'd best say goodnight here," Rien stopped at the
|
|
foot of the stairs.
|
|
"Here?" Jenye turned. She was a few steps ahead of him. "I was
|
|
hopping you'd come up."
|
|
Rien glanced around the room, at the Beinison soldiers still
|
|
sitting and drinking. "All right."
|
|
They went up to Jenye's room.
|
|
"Rien, what if we don't find her?"
|
|
"I'll look until I do."
|
|
"What if she's a prisoner somewhere?"
|
|
"I'll have to get her out."
|
|
"And if she's dead?"
|
|
He turned to the window, looking at the blind alley it faced.
|
|
What if she is dead? Would he leave? Attempt revenge? "She's alive."
|
|
There was no proof otherwise. There was no reason for her not to have
|
|
left in time.
|
|
"In the last two months," Jenye said, "I've seen more death than
|
|
I had all my life and you tend to see quite a bit living in a place
|
|
such as this."
|
|
"She has to be alive," Rien said, "for her daughter. She has no
|
|
one else."
|
|
"I hope you're right, but I have to be realistic. I never thought
|
|
I'd live to see a war, much less live in one, but here it is. And
|
|
people do die. It's not some romantic dream the bards tell us about.
|
|
It's very, very real."
|
|
"I know," Rien nodded. "But all I have right now is hope, so
|
|
that's what I do."
|
|
"Tell me a little about Rien Keegan," Jenye asked. "Who is he?"
|
|
"I am he," Rien turned back to his companion. "It's all that
|
|
simple."
|
|
"No. You said you travel. Where? What do you do there?"
|
|
"Asbridge, Dargon, Arvalia, Narragan, Quinnat..."
|
|
"Well, that pretty much covers this part of the country. Your
|
|
horse must be very tired."
|
|
"I never asked."
|
|
"Where are you from originally?"
|
|
"Arvalia."
|
|
"It must be nice there this time of year."
|
|
"It has it's good points," Rien smiled thoughtfully. "It being
|
|
home, I think it's always nice there. You're from Magnus, aren't you?"
|
|
he changed the topic.
|
|
"The accent a little thick?" Jenye smiled.
|
|
"Just a little, but there's nothing quite as distinct as a Royal
|
|
Duchy dialect. Are you from Magnus proper?"
|
|
"The Royal City itself. Born there, studied medicine at the
|
|
University, then came here to heal the sick."
|
|
"How long have you been here?"
|
|
"A while. Ten years. Since 1002. Twelve."
|
|
"Do you like it here?"
|
|
"Somewhat. I've found that it was easier to come down river then
|
|
to go back upstream. What about you? How did you become a mercenary?"
|
|
"That'll take longer than I have to be told," Rien avoided
|
|
answering.
|
|
"Longer than you have? I wanted to ask you to spend the night."
|
|
Rien's smile faded.
|
|
"I hope you don't think me forward," Jenye said. "I don't make a
|
|
habit of asking men to sleep with me. I've only done it twice before."
|
|
Rien took a deep breath, not sure what to say. "What happened
|
|
those times?"
|
|
"They both accepted. With time I learned that one was a thief and
|
|
the other a liar."
|
|
"How do you know I'm not both?"
|
|
"Intuition. Experience."
|
|
Rien sighed. "You really don't want to get involved with me."
|
|
"Why not? You're not married."
|
|
"I travel," he forced a smile, but it faded quickly. "I was home
|
|
last month. Saw someone I hadn't seen in years and found I still had
|
|
feelings for her..." He let his words trail off, a bit bitter.
|
|
"Is she no longer interested in you? Is she married?"
|
|
"No...but I think she's grown tired of waiting for me. I'm afraid
|
|
I've hurt her when I left. I didn't realize that for the longest
|
|
time."
|
|
"So what will you do?"
|
|
"I'll wait and hope she forgives me."
|
|
"You're turning me down?"
|
|
"I'm afraid so, but I don't want you to think it's because of
|
|
you. You're the only good thing I've found in this nest of wasps. I
|
|
just don't want to hurt you like I've hurt everyone else I've
|
|
touched."
|
|
Jenye smiled a sad smile. "I appreciate you being honest. There
|
|
was someone who wasn't. He had a wife...and a convenience -- me."
|
|
"I'm sorry."
|
|
She shook her head and kissed him on the cheek. "So am I, but I'm
|
|
glad I wasn't wrong about you."
|
|
Rien stood up, somewhat taken aback by the situation. "Is there
|
|
anyone else we need to see?" he asked again.
|
|
"No. I think Moldan will come through. I'll go see him tomorrow.
|
|
Come back and see me the day after, in the morning."
|
|
"You sure you don't want me to come with you?"
|
|
Jenye shook her head. "I'll bring some herbs for the boy, to help
|
|
him sleep. This sort of doctoring may take a while."
|
|
"All right," Rien agreed, "but be careful out there."
|
|
She laughed. "I'm the only physician in Caligula's service, one
|
|
of the few in this whole city. I'm a desperately needed commodity. No
|
|
one would dare try anything."
|
|
Rien nodded. "Thank you for your help, then...and for..."
|
|
Jenye put a finger to his lips. "Don't thank me until you learn
|
|
the price."
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
It was only three men. One obviously wounded and another
|
|
drunk. They wouldn't be too much of a problem. Certainly, the
|
|
screaming girl had already attracted all the attention she
|
|
could get. The sad thing was, the people of Sharks' Cove were
|
|
so terrified of the invaders, all the screaming did was force
|
|
them to double check their doors and windows to be sure that
|
|
everything was tightly locked.
|
|
When Rien happened across this scene, he was just in time
|
|
to see a Benosian soldier spear a man with a pike and the woman
|
|
begin to scream. He had no idea how the two were related, or if
|
|
they knew one another at all, but the very next moment the
|
|
soldiers surrounded the woman and dragged her into an alley.
|
|
Her terrified screams made Rien's decision for him and he
|
|
started to run well before his brain gave the order to his
|
|
legs.
|
|
Leaping over the dying man, Rien put the force of his
|
|
charge into the back of the soldier nearest him. The man went
|
|
sprawling forward with a yell, his metal armor shaving sparks
|
|
from the cobblestone street. Before the other two could react,
|
|
Rien had the previously wounded man in his grip, forcing his
|
|
long dagger through the man's armor and between his ribs. The
|
|
man screamed and struggled, but was no match for Rien's
|
|
strength. He released the grip on his sword to Rien as Rien's
|
|
hand wrapped around the hilt, and sank to the ground, gasping
|
|
for air.
|
|
"Yield," Rien warned the other man, who still held on to
|
|
the woman.
|
|
The soldier put his sword to the woman's throat. "One
|
|
step!"
|
|
"If you kill her, it's just you and me."
|
|
"But you don't want to see her die."
|
|
"Try me."
|
|
The sword slowly slid along the woman's neck, drawing a
|
|
trickle of blood. Rien could not tear his eyes away from the
|
|
woman's.
|
|
"Let her go!"
|
|
"Not on your life!" The Benosian looked about, at his
|
|
injured companion, slowly bleeding to death behind Rien and
|
|
then at the other, the drunk, sputtering about on the ground
|
|
like a fish out of water. Neither one was of much use to him in
|
|
this situation. For that matter, neither was the woman. The
|
|
sword flashed across the woman's neck, squirting blood in all
|
|
direction and with his leg, he kicked her towards Rien and ran.
|
|
Rien caught the woman with both hands, letting his sword
|
|
fall to the ground. His eyes were still locked with hers and
|
|
deep inside he could somehow feel the terror that spread
|
|
through her. Her tunic was bloody and blood foamed from her
|
|
mouth. He knew there was nothing he could do, except hunt down
|
|
the man that did this, but he held on to her, mesmerized by
|
|
what he saw. She grappled his arms with her own, begging for
|
|
help with her eyes, as she drowned in her own blood. Long
|
|
moments passed with their eyes locked before she passed out
|
|
from lack of air and even more time before Rien lowered her to
|
|
the ground and let her from his grasp. He felt pure rage, with
|
|
no target to vent it on, until spotting the drunken man getting
|
|
up.
|
|
"Pick up your weapon!" the hiss filled the street, but the
|
|
drunk soldier already had that very thing on his mind. He took
|
|
a wobbling step towards Rien, sword held high, then swung at
|
|
his unarmed opponent, still on his knees over the dead woman.
|
|
Rien pushed back, snapping up the sword by him and came
|
|
back up to his feet, just outside of the soldier's reach. A
|
|
single parry sent the soldier's sword, as well as a good
|
|
portion of his arm across the alley and a second sank deep into
|
|
his chest, lifting him off the ground and throwing him back,
|
|
the thrusting point of the sword having passed completely
|
|
though the man.
|
|
But justice was not yet done.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
"...forty three ships, nothing smaller than a bireme. Quite a few
|
|
cogs and carracks. Five galleons," Deven listed out the inventory. "I
|
|
was thinking I'd sink one, to give the sharks a taste of the tough
|
|
meat, but if you've wondered where the mages have been during the
|
|
war..."
|
|
"Yeah," Rien muttered absentmindedly.
|
|
"Rien," Deven shifted to a sitting position. "The Benosian mages!
|
|
I've found them!"
|
|
"How many?" Rien asked. It was late and dark the two men lay on
|
|
the floor of their hide out, sharing their impressions of the day's
|
|
events.
|
|
"I figure there were twenty, at least," Deven guessed. "Perhaps
|
|
an even two dozen. Some scrying, others mixing things. I did notice
|
|
one very powerful clairvoyant. I hope he didn't notice me..."
|
|
"Clairvoyant? Natural?"
|
|
"By all means. I hope he doesn't pick up on my trace energies.
|
|
He's the best I've seen in years."
|
|
"What good is he to them when he's so far from the front?" Rien
|
|
asked.
|
|
"I'm sure they have good messengers," Deven said, "and in case of
|
|
need, they can probably send a message by magical means, just like we
|
|
do."
|
|
"I wonder what his range is," Rien asked.
|
|
"Judging by the fact that the fleet made no attempt to move past
|
|
the delta," Deven guessed, "I suspect he can see into Magnus from
|
|
here."
|
|
"Eight hundred leagues?"
|
|
"Explains why they're winning, doesn't it?"
|
|
"It certainly cuts down on their need for scouts."
|
|
"Listen, Rien," Deven shifted noisily, "I have an idea."
|
|
Rien opened his eyes and looked over to the opposite wall, where
|
|
the mage sat.
|
|
"Look at us, two old geezers," Deven laughed. "All that living
|
|
and all that experience and we're now in our primes and we've got that
|
|
chance of a lifetime right here! If there's one man we get out of the
|
|
war by force, let's make it that mage."
|
|
Rien sat up as well. "We were ordered to stay out of it."
|
|
"Or what? We're volunteers as it is and besides, we already broke
|
|
all the rules coming here to look for Adrea! What would it hurt?"
|
|
"I don't think one mage will make a difference in this war," Rien
|
|
said. "If anyone, Untar's the one to go after."
|
|
"Next to Haralan, I suspect Untar is the best guarded man in all
|
|
of Baranur right now," Deven said. "Besides, I know I can't take on
|
|
someone like Mon-Taerleor, but there are other good fish in the
|
|
bay..."
|
|
"So you're willing to swim out to a ship full of mages who all
|
|
together are ten times as powerful as Mon-Taerleor?"
|
|
"Dying to!"
|
|
"And just think, a year ago nothing would've gotten you out of
|
|
your laboratory for even a moment!" Rien laughed.
|
|
"A year ago I wasn't on the losing team!"
|
|
Rien silently evaluated the proposal. He did not believe that the
|
|
clairvoyant mage was the hinge of the war effort, but he agreed with
|
|
Deven that a mage so powerful could indeed be a valuable asset to the
|
|
enemy and a disaster for Baranur. He had no moral problems with trying
|
|
to stop him. That would more than likely save hundreds of lives in
|
|
Baranur. He himself had seen more death here than in most other places
|
|
he had been and could agree with the statement Jenye made earlier in
|
|
the day.
|
|
"What do you plan on doing?"
|
|
Deven did not answer.
|
|
"Deven?"
|
|
"I'm sorry. I didn't think you'd agree... I was working on my
|
|
argument."
|
|
The corner of Rien's mouth curled up, but he refused to let the
|
|
smile appear. "I didn't tell you this, but a day after I got here,
|
|
before we met at the Dragon, I saw a woman killed in cold blood
|
|
and...she died in my arms. I don't know her name, nor where she's
|
|
from. I don't even know if she's Baranurian... I held her in my arms
|
|
as she died and there was nothing I could do to save her. And she knew
|
|
there was nothing I could do..." He took a deep breath. "I'm never
|
|
going to forget her face, nor the face of the man who killed her. I
|
|
looked for him all night, but couldn't find him... I'm willing to take
|
|
one life if it will save others from a death such as this."
|
|
"I'm sorry," Deven said. "I didn't mean to..." He stopped. "No.
|
|
I'm not sorry. I want you to know what my countrymen are capable off!
|
|
I want you to feel the rage that I feel when you think of them!"
|
|
"Deven, it's not just them. We're all animals inside. When I
|
|
killed that man in the market, all I could see were the wounds on that
|
|
woman and all I could feel was the need for revenge...and when I slit
|
|
his throat and looked in his eyes, all I could see was that woman's
|
|
expression...for that one instant I was as human as you."
|
|
"And you don't like being human, do you?" Deven said in a caustic
|
|
tone. "Well, I've got bad news for you. You're just like the rest of
|
|
us. You're no better and no worse. You have to live the life you were
|
|
given and you have to live it with the rest of us, imperfect as we
|
|
are. Or you can go and hide in the forest, hoping no one will see that
|
|
face of yours in the light of day. But those are your ONLY choices!"
|
|
Rien bit his tongue, holding his words.
|
|
"Look, I'm sorry," Deven went on, "but I'm tired of you using
|
|
your father as an excuse for what you do! Life is a boat and we're all
|
|
in it together and it matters little where we came from and where we
|
|
are going."
|
|
Rien nodded. "I should be apologizing. We have no choice who we
|
|
are born to or where. Our families and heredity are determined by
|
|
events beyond our control. If we're lucky, we're born to good parents
|
|
in a prosperous area and grow up in a good environment. All that we
|
|
have a choice in is our path in life. Beyond our births we make
|
|
ourselves into who we are."
|
|
Deven took a deep breath and slowly let it out. He knew from
|
|
experience that Rien just backed out of a fight for sake of an old
|
|
friendship. He always had a deep conflict with who he was and did not
|
|
feel at home with either of the two races he belonged to. On any other
|
|
day Deven would say that not enough time had been invested by Rien
|
|
into understanding the world he is a part of, but today he had to
|
|
wonder if that world was changing too rapidly to give those in it a
|
|
chance to adjust.
|
|
"I'm the one to speak," Deven sighed. "I'm pulling you in after
|
|
me, to avenge my parents, your country...Adrea..."
|
|
"And with no plan," Rien warned.
|
|
"No plan. It just hit me out of the blue that it might be a good
|
|
idea to sink that ship..."
|
|
"Into the blue," Rien corrected. "It also `just hit' you to
|
|
destroy the Dragon."
|
|
"The Dragon's different," Deven said. "Even if this were all over
|
|
today, I wouldn't be able to go back and live there. We wrote it off
|
|
when we abandoned it. I just made sure it was a casualty of war."
|
|
"The mage?" Rien reinforced the topic.
|
|
Deven shifted, leaning back against the wall. "The best way to
|
|
kill someone, that I know of, still happens to be by bashing their
|
|
skull in."
|
|
"All right," Rien agreed. "Assuming that's what we're doing, how
|
|
do we get to him?"
|
|
"We don't. I certainly don't. The closer I am to him physically,
|
|
the more aware of me he'll be. And if he were actively looking for me,
|
|
I doubt I'd be safe anywhere on this side of the continent."
|
|
"So you want me to swim out into the middle of the bay and do him
|
|
in? Has Brice been telling you stories about my swimming again?"
|
|
Deven laughed. "You can't confront him either. You'd be in as
|
|
much danger as I. Although you don't practice magic, your potential to
|
|
do so is a beacon in itself."
|
|
"Then if we can't do it..." Rien began.
|
|
"...That's what makes it a challenging problem," Deven
|
|
interrupted.
|
|
Rien shook his head. "Deven, I don't want to be taking any more
|
|
risks than we already are by being here. Adrea should be our primary
|
|
concern."
|
|
"She is, but you know I can't go into the street talking to
|
|
people. My accent will give me away in a blink of an eye. I'm
|
|
inobvious only so long as I keep my mouth shut."
|
|
"I'll find her," Rien said. "You just help me get her out."
|
|
"That was the deal all along," Deven agreed.
|
|
"And the mage?"
|
|
Deven rubbed his chin. "Well, if we can't go to him, he has
|
|
little choice, but to come to us."
|
|
"Oh, good," Rien said sarcastically. "I was hoping you'd save me
|
|
the swim."
|
|
"You may yet need to swim," Deven said thoughtfully. "I need to
|
|
think this over."
|
|
"Should I wait or go to sleep?" Rien asked.
|
|
"Go to sleep."
|
|
"Right."
|
|
Deven chuckled. "You wouldn't be this way if you understood how
|
|
desperately the rest of us need this sleep."
|
|
"I could've been in a comfortable bed right now, with a beautiful
|
|
woman, having the highlight of my visit to Sharks' Cove and you're
|
|
laughing?"
|
|
"She asked you to sleep with her?" Deven asked, surprised. "The
|
|
doctor?"
|
|
"Something like that."
|
|
"Rien, I'm flattered," Deven laughed, "but you really should've
|
|
picked her over me."
|
|
"My love life has plenty of problems without any complications
|
|
from Jenye," Rien sighed.
|
|
"Kera?"
|
|
"Kera. Eile."
|
|
"Eile? You saw her?"
|
|
"You know I was in Arvalia."
|
|
"You've been going there at least once every two years since I've
|
|
known you and this is the first time you've made an effort to see
|
|
her," Deven said.
|
|
"I didn't make an effort," Rien said. "We ran into each other."
|
|
"And?"
|
|
"And..." Rien sighed. "I still love her."
|
|
"And she?"
|
|
"I don't think her feelings about me ever changed."
|
|
"And Kera?"
|
|
Rien did not answer, remembering the harsh exclamation Eile made
|
|
at the council of tribes. "If looks could kill..."
|
|
"Looks like you have a big choice to make," Deven said.
|
|
"I had it to make long before that. There is no way Kera and I
|
|
can continue." He said that very bitterly, with much finality,
|
|
although he never really felt any hostility towards her.
|
|
Deven did not answer, giving his friend a chance to vent his
|
|
frustrations.
|
|
"Did I tell you she got me to make her my squire?"
|
|
"No."
|
|
"She did. I think this is a good first step to end our physical
|
|
relationship."
|
|
"Just like that?" Deven asked.
|
|
Rien nodded, not quite sure if Deven could see that in the murky
|
|
light of the dying ambers. "We're of two different worlds. Where will
|
|
we be in ten years?"
|
|
"So you'll never sleep with another human female again?" Deven
|
|
asked.
|
|
"That's the general idea."
|
|
"And you'll get yourself a rich Eelail girl, have five kids and a
|
|
big tree house..."
|
|
"Cut it out," Rien warned.
|
|
"That's what I thought," Deven said. "You can't run away."
|
|
"I can't stay, either."
|
|
"Does Kera know it's over?"
|
|
"I don't know if she understands," Rien said. "She loves me, I
|
|
don't doubt that, but I just don't think she sees the problem."
|
|
"So in your infinite wisdom, as a man who has three women chasing
|
|
after him, which one will you pick?"
|
|
Rien did not answer for the longest time, then finally got up.
|
|
Deven had this way of getting into the problem, making himself a part
|
|
of it. Forcing Rien to think.
|
|
"The one I've hurt the most," Rien sighed. "Who else could I
|
|
pick?"
|
|
He walked over to the door of the shack and slammed it closed
|
|
after stepping out. Deven remained sitting by the wall, knowing full
|
|
well that Rien would need the time alone to think about what he just
|
|
said. The mage chuckled and stretched out on the wooden floor. At
|
|
least one of them needed sleep and for a welcomed change, Deven
|
|
figured he would be the one to get a restful night.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
"Sergeant! Are we free to turn in?"
|
|
"I guess that'll be it for tonight. Go ahead. Tell everyone
|
|
to be ready to sweep further north tomorrow."
|
|
"Yes, Sir!"
|
|
Heavy footsteps echoed down the street as a group of men
|
|
hurried down the dark street to a two story wood building.
|
|
"Sir, what about you?"
|
|
The sergeant turned and looked. "I'll be there in a minute.
|
|
I just want a moment out here alone."
|
|
"Sir?"
|
|
"Fresh air, Lasin! Just smell it!"
|
|
The other man paused, tilting his head up, as if to get a
|
|
better sample of the cool night air. "It's better than the
|
|
stench of burned wood and blood, Sir," the man agreed.
|
|
"Yes, yes. I find it's the evenings I live for now, Lasin,
|
|
when we put our swords away and rest from the day's labours."
|
|
"And enjoy the mead and the women, Sir?"
|
|
The sergeant laughed. "Let's go in. The mead is better than
|
|
fresh air when it comes to making me light headed, to forget
|
|
what I've done during the day."
|
|
The two soldiers hurried from the mouth of the alley after
|
|
their companions and disappeared through a doorway under a kite
|
|
shield. Silence took the street for a time, before shadows
|
|
again moved against the walls of the buildings.
|
|
"You're right. They're staying at the Dragon."
|
|
"We need to go in."
|
|
Silence. Two men crawled along the wall, watching for any
|
|
other activity in the street. Two windows lit up with
|
|
flickering flames above them and laughter floated into the
|
|
alley.
|
|
"Any last words?" Rien asked.
|
|
"No."
|
|
"Deven!"
|
|
The mage paused, looking back.
|
|
"Don't stir trouble!"
|
|
"My god, Rien! We're going in there with a dozen soldiers
|
|
and you're saying don't stir trouble? There are going to be a
|
|
lot of deaths in there tonight. It's either us or them."
|
|
"Don't look for trouble," Rien warned.
|
|
"I don't think you know how much I love life," the mage
|
|
whispered. "I'll do as much as I can to avoid risking it and
|
|
everything that I can to save it!"
|
|
"You do that."
|
|
They moved up to the rear door of The Tipsy Dragon and
|
|
paused one more time.
|
|
"Is it open?" Deven asked.
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
"It never stops to amaze me how often people lock the front
|
|
door to stop intruders, only to leave the back door wide open."
|
|
"Shhh!"
|
|
A scream echoed down the alley.
|
|
"That came from above," Deven looked up. "Perhaps I should
|
|
go with you?"
|
|
"You look downstairs," Rien answered sharply. "The upstairs
|
|
is my problem."
|
|
"You'll run into trouble," the mage protested.
|
|
"Then I'll call for help. Stick to the original plan for
|
|
now!"
|
|
Rien pushed open the back door, allowing a partial view of
|
|
the rear corridor and the kitchen doorway. Everything was dark,
|
|
with only a dim glow of a flickering candle visible in the
|
|
kitchen.
|
|
"It's clear. Go."
|
|
Deven slid past Rien and through the open door, pressing
|
|
himself against the wall once inside. A moment later Rien
|
|
followed, taking the other wall. Both men looked up and down
|
|
the corridor, then advanced forward, pausing at the doorway to
|
|
the kitchen. Rien nodded and Deven slid into the kitchen,
|
|
heading for the stairs leading to the basement. Rien himself
|
|
crept further down the corridor to the rear stairs leading up,
|
|
then, as quietly as he could, ascended into darkness.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
It was still very early when Rien arrived at the Abyssment. The
|
|
tavern was almost empty due to the early hour and ordering a
|
|
non-alcoholic drink, Rien took a seat at the corner table from which
|
|
he could see both the stairs and the front door.
|
|
Some time passed with him watching people coming and going,
|
|
thinking about the events of the last few days. He was becoming
|
|
worried about Adrea, more worried than he was on his way to Sharks'
|
|
Cove. He had been here for six days and in this time made no progress.
|
|
He was no closer to knowing Adrea's whereabouts and as each moment
|
|
passed, the chances of her being found became more and more remote. He
|
|
was angry with himself for letting Adrea talk him into letting her
|
|
stay in Sharks' Cove. There was no need for her to do that and no
|
|
reason for him to agree, other than her talking faster than he could
|
|
reason. The Tipsy Dragon was just another facility that happened to
|
|
make money. There was no reason to maintain it. The funds it provided
|
|
served little use, usually being used to keep the tavern going and
|
|
building maintained, not that other funds were unavailable for these
|
|
tasks.
|
|
Rien mentally kicked himself. Everything was fine. It was just a
|
|
matter of time before Adrea would be found. Safe. He shifted
|
|
impatiently. Jenye was now late. Had something happen to her? Should
|
|
he wait or ask at the bar? He waited longer, now worrying about two
|
|
people, instead of one. Finally giving up, Rien made his way to the
|
|
bar and asked the man on the other side of the counter for Jenye.
|
|
"You're that Ryan fellow?" the bartender asked.
|
|
"Yea," Rien winced at the pronunciation. `Something like that.'
|
|
"Eran," the man called a serving girl over. "Take this man to the
|
|
warehouse and stay there. Don't go back alone."
|
|
"Sure, Eli."
|
|
Rien followed her out of the Abyssment, as soon as she left her
|
|
apron behind the counter. The girl was young, maybe fifteen or
|
|
sixteen. She did not say anything.
|
|
"Why aren't you supposed to come back alone?" Rien finally had to
|
|
ask.
|
|
"Because the soldiers are in the streets," the girl answered,
|
|
almost surprised the question was asked.
|
|
"Well, of course, they're always there! We're at war!"
|
|
She looked at him, obviously surprised. "You didn't hear, did
|
|
you?"
|
|
"Hear what?"
|
|
"About the attempt on Admiral Talens' life?"
|
|
"No." Now Rien was genuinely surprised himself. "When?"
|
|
"Sometime yesterday. An archer just missed him and he ordered
|
|
everyone west of Quirin to be put to the sword."
|
|
"West of Quirin?" That included all of the docks, most of the old
|
|
quarter and all of the merchant quarter. "That's more than half the
|
|
city!"
|
|
The girl did not answer and Rien decided against saying anything
|
|
more. He was thankful that they were out in the east part of Sharks'
|
|
Cove, upstream from Quirin, and concerned about what was happening on
|
|
the other side of town. Just few months ago Sharks' Cove was a
|
|
bustling city of ten thousand, among the largest in Baranur. By the
|
|
time he arrived a few days ago, it was said that the four Benosian
|
|
regiments patrolling the city consisted of more people than what was
|
|
left of the local population. What would the slaughter of another half
|
|
of the people leave? Rien wished he could do something, but he knew he
|
|
was as helpless to stop the enemy as the rest of the populace.
|
|
Within a few minutes Eran brought Rien to a building with a huge
|
|
front door and knocked. A sliding bar could be heard and the door
|
|
cracked open.
|
|
"What is it?" a man, barely visible behind it, asked. All that
|
|
could be seen of him was where a narrow streak of light fell across
|
|
his face.
|
|
Rien nervously looked up and down the street. They were probably
|
|
a half league from the part of town where the people were being killed
|
|
and he could feel a chill in the air.
|
|
"Is Doctor Calyd here?" Eran asked.
|
|
"Who's he?" the man asked cautiously.
|
|
"He's looking for her. Eli told me to bring him here."
|
|
The door opened into a dark room and Rien followed the girl
|
|
inside. The room went much further back than it seemed at first, the
|
|
back part separated from the entrance by a black curtain.
|
|
"She's in the back," the man said. Rien could now see that he was
|
|
dressed in chain armor, complete with a sword and a long dagger on his
|
|
belt and a shield and a helmet lying on a chair.
|
|
Before Eran could indicate for Rien to follow her, the guard
|
|
closed the door, sliding the heavy deadbolt back into place. The room
|
|
submerged into murky darkness, illuminated by a single candle. Eran
|
|
stumbled towards the curtain and brushed it aside. Rien followed her,
|
|
better oriented to the darkness on this side of the curtain. They
|
|
walked through the room and down a short corridor to another, larger
|
|
room, where many people rushed about and about three dozen lay on the
|
|
floor. There was more blood there than all those bodies could account
|
|
for.
|
|
Rien looked at the bodies in desperation, half expecting to see
|
|
Adrea among them, but while there were quite a few women there, he saw
|
|
no trace of her.
|
|
"Come this way," Eran called to him and he followed her to the
|
|
other side of the room where Jenye tended to an injured man.
|
|
Rien knelt by her, taking a bloody gauze she was trying to
|
|
manipulate and holding it in place. As he took it from Jenye's hands,
|
|
he realized that her hand was glowing, radiating a warmth which forced
|
|
the wound to close up. His own arm became pleasantly warm from the
|
|
closeness of the magical source.
|
|
"All right," Jenye took the bandage from Rien. "He'll make it."
|
|
"I didn't realize you were a mage," Rien muttered.
|
|
"Neither did I, until I saw my father die," she picked up the
|
|
lose strips of cloth on the ground and moved to the next patient.
|
|
"I'm sorry," Rien followed her.
|
|
"So am I. He might've lived if I had found out sooner." She
|
|
unwrapped and examined the deep cut on the woman's forearm as blood
|
|
freely flowed to the floor.
|
|
"Can you move your fingers?"
|
|
"No," the woman shook her head, obviously in pain.
|
|
"Hold her arm still," Jenye instructed Rien.
|
|
He did, not understanding the reason, as the woman lay perfectly
|
|
still. Jenye took a glass marble from her pouch and forced it into the
|
|
wound. The woman screamed in agony and Rien had to struggle to keep
|
|
her steady. A glow again emanated from Jenye's hands, making the torn
|
|
skin grow together. The bleeding stopped and the injured woman quietly
|
|
sobbed.
|
|
"Lie still," Jenye told her. "You'll be all right..."
|
|
Rien looked into the injured woman's eyes, realizing for the
|
|
first time that she could be no older than Eran. Just a girl, caught
|
|
in a war. "What happened here?" he asked Jenye.
|
|
"Come on," the doctor answered, hurrying to the next patient, a
|
|
man dressed in chain and some plate. A second man, dressed in the same
|
|
manner, sat by him, unsuccessfully trying to stop the bleeding from an
|
|
open wound in his side.
|
|
"How long was he here?" Jenye asked.
|
|
"I don't know..."
|
|
The wound was so wide and deep, there was no need to remove the
|
|
chain shirt to access it. "You should've gotten me sooner," she
|
|
scolded. "He lost a lot of blood."
|
|
Clanking sounds alerted Rien to look up. Two men carrying a third
|
|
entered the room. "Doctor!"
|
|
"Wait your turn!"
|
|
"He's going to die!" they put the body on the floor.
|
|
"So will this one!" she thrust all of the bandages to Rien and
|
|
saying, "stop the bleeding," hurried to take a look at the newcomer.
|
|
Rien moved closer to the body, pulled the soldier's armored shirt
|
|
up, adjusted the torn and stained tunic and placed a cloth strip over
|
|
the wound. The cut was deep, probably made by a pike or an axe,
|
|
slicing deep into the right side, under the ribs. Rien had no doubt
|
|
that the man's intestines were cut. He threw another layer of cloth
|
|
over the wound as the first soaked up the blood. In a battlefield an
|
|
injury such as this would be considered unsalvageable and he would be
|
|
permitted to die. A third strip of cloth followed the second and
|
|
although unconscious, the man groaned from the pain.
|
|
"What happened?" Rien asked the man sitting by him, while
|
|
continuing his attempts to slow the flow of blood.
|
|
"He's my brother..."
|
|
That was not the answer Rien desired. The bleeding did not stop
|
|
and he continued layering the cloth. The wound was simply too deep,
|
|
too wide. "Jenye!"
|
|
He was not sure where she came from, but her hands checked the
|
|
wound, then rapidly checked the man's throat. They hovered there for a
|
|
moment, then she pushed herself away from the body. "He's dead.
|
|
They're both dead."
|
|
Rien removed his bloody hands from the wound. The man died while
|
|
he was trying to save him and the blood flow was so strong, there was
|
|
no indication that he had died, even now. The man's brother sat
|
|
unmoving, looking at the body. He was probably in shock.
|
|
"Jenye, what happened?"
|
|
"Ga'en missed. The one shot that mattered the most, he missed..."
|
|
"Are you sure?"
|
|
There were tears in her eyes. "I don't know any more..."
|
|
"Doctor!" a man called.
|
|
"Come on," she got up, wiping her eyes and smearing blood on her
|
|
face.
|
|
Rien followed her to the next casualty of war.
|
|
"Get me more bandages," Jenye told the man who called her and he
|
|
rushed off.
|
|
As Rien helped tend to the wounded, he eventually lost count of
|
|
the number of people that passed by him and the types of wounds that
|
|
they had. It all blended together into one long nightmarish string of
|
|
bodies and screams and blood from people whose only fault was living
|
|
on the wrong side of town. Children and elderly, men and women, rich
|
|
and poor all alike had become targets of the Benosian force. At first,
|
|
the calm frozen faces of the dead stayed with Rien, but by
|
|
mid-afternoon even they began to blend together due to their numbers.
|
|
Every type of wound imaginable had passed by him during the day.
|
|
Everything from cuts and bruises to burns and mutilation on young and
|
|
old alike. His clothes became stained with the blood which had covered
|
|
all of the floor of the large room and the trails of which seemed to
|
|
crawl though the doorways, as if trying to reach other parts of the
|
|
building. Each time he closed his eyes, he could see the worst of the
|
|
wounds and hear the screams of the dying and worst of all, the smell
|
|
of death followed him at every step, even after it got dark and there
|
|
were no more people being brought in to be helped.
|
|
The day passed as if in a dream and Rien found himself and Jenye
|
|
sitting in a darkened back room, recovering from their ordeal. Her
|
|
arms were around him, face buried in his hair, spilled over his
|
|
shoulder, and he was only remotely aware of his own arms around her
|
|
waist.
|
|
"I've never seen anything so inhumane in my life," he heard
|
|
himself say, not sure why he was saying it. There was no question that
|
|
half the people were tortured and left to die.
|
|
"You're a soldier," he felt Jenye's warm breath on his neck.
|
|
"I never killed for sport... I always fought for survival."
|
|
"This is a different war. I'm sorry I made you come here."
|
|
"I came of my own free will."
|
|
Rien could feel Jenye's lips on his jaw and then on his own, but
|
|
refused to fight her. He had no more fight left in him tonight and did
|
|
not think she had any, either.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Darkness slowly dissolved into the comforting flicker of
|
|
candles lighting the second floor corridor. Rien held as close
|
|
to the stairs as he could, raising his head just enough to see
|
|
over the top step into the lit corridor. Everything was quiet,
|
|
most of the dozen doors on the floor closed, some with
|
|
flickering shadows of flame seen from beneath them.
|
|
Rien hurried up, knowing he had little time to check all
|
|
rooms before meeting Deven again on the other side. Their goal
|
|
was only to make sure that Adrea was not there. He did not want
|
|
to be forced into a confrontation with the soldiers at the inn,
|
|
even though Deven stressed it was inevitable.
|
|
He checked the first room, with an open door, satisfying
|
|
his curiosity that it was empty. How many soldiers were there?
|
|
At least a dozen. Probably twenty, plus their sergeant. A
|
|
standard squad of men. There were a dozen individual rooms on
|
|
the second floor. Six more in the basement. That would average
|
|
one to a room. Most were probably still in the tavern portion
|
|
of the inn, getting drunk.
|
|
He checked the second open room. Empty. The third had a
|
|
closed door. Rien paused and listened. Nothing. Sounds could be
|
|
heard coming from other rooms, but not from here. He pushed it
|
|
open. Empty.
|
|
The next door hid a lit candle in the very least and he
|
|
debated opening it now. Would it be worth the risk? He pushed
|
|
it open a crack. Nothing. He pushed it open some more and
|
|
stepped inside. Empty. A travel pack on the floor, leather
|
|
gloves, hauberk and camail on the unmade bed. The owner no
|
|
where in site.
|
|
Carefully closing the door after himself, Rien returned to
|
|
the corridor. The next door was also open, the dark room empty.
|
|
`Almost half,' Rien paused at a closed door. From the next room
|
|
down he heard a moan. Pleasure? Agony? It was hard to tell.
|
|
Either way, he would soon have to look in. He paused at the
|
|
current door, listening, when running footsteps sounded at the
|
|
far end of the corridor, where the other set of stairs was and
|
|
not giving things a second thought, Rien pushed the door open
|
|
and entered.
|
|
Dark. Outline of a bed near the shuttered window. A form on
|
|
the bed. Sleeping?
|
|
"Forance? You so drunk you can't find your room again?"
|
|
Rien grunted.
|
|
"Look, I told you it's a bad idea to switch rooms after all
|
|
this time."
|
|
Rien did not move.
|
|
"Look, you dumb kid, get out, or I'll throw you out!"
|
|
The door behind Rien opened and a large framed man stepped
|
|
in.
|
|
"Forance?" the man on the bed asked.
|
|
"Gegurtuny?" the man in the doorway asked and put his hand
|
|
on Rien's shoulder.
|
|
"Who in the name of Sanar is with you?"
|
|
Rien's elbow impacted with the gut of the man standing next
|
|
to him, forcing him to double over, then Rien, grabbing his
|
|
arm, flung him across the room into the bed.
|
|
Forance more slid than flew into the wall, but in the end
|
|
wound up sprawled over Gegurtuny, grunting in pain. Rien
|
|
stepped outside and pulled the door shut after himself. With
|
|
any luck that would be all to his encounter, although deep
|
|
inside he suspected there had to be more to it.
|
|
He had time to quickly verify another empty room before
|
|
coming to the one he heard originate the moan not long ago.
|
|
Five more rooms. He pushed the door open.
|
|
Inside, on the bed, lay a naked woman and in the middle of
|
|
the room stood a naked man.
|
|
"Sorry," Rien closed the door, hoping his accented Benosian
|
|
would not be noticed. He did not recognize either of the pair.
|
|
The next room was also lit, but there was little time to
|
|
hesitate. Rien pushed the door open, coming face to face with
|
|
an armed and armored man.
|
|
"What?" the man turned in surprise.
|
|
"Just my luck," Rien answered in the Baranurian tongue. He
|
|
grabbed the man's arms as the soldier drew his sword and
|
|
smashed him against the wall. The man reversed the grab,
|
|
pushing Rien against the other wall, both tripping over the bed
|
|
and falling on it.
|
|
Rien punched. His opponent kicked. The bed tilted on it's
|
|
side, sending both of them to the floor. Rien kicked. The bed
|
|
turned over completely, falling on the two men.
|
|
"Intru..." Rien's fist connected with the man's jaw, ending
|
|
his warning with a yell of pain. They struggled to their feet,
|
|
the Benosian soldier getting up in the doorway and Rien in the
|
|
middle of the room.
|
|
Not wanting to waste time recovering, Rien put his shoulder
|
|
into the soldier's chest, as he charged out of the room,
|
|
carrying the man across the narrow hallway and crashing against
|
|
the door on the other side. The lock gave way and the door fell
|
|
in, Rien and his opponent tumbling in after it.
|
|
"Keep it down!" A roar sounded from the corridor, followed
|
|
by a female shriek. The man Rien tackled made no sound.
|
|
"Empty room," Rien muttered and got up, stepping outside.
|
|
Three to go. He picked up the sword the soldier he fought
|
|
dropped and hurried over to the next door. Sounds of drinking
|
|
and talking could be heard from the overhang to the common
|
|
room, not far away. The moment of truth was near. Pushing the
|
|
door open, Rien paused in the doorway, looking at a partially
|
|
dressed man leaning over a naked woman.
|
|
"Help!" the woman shrieked.
|
|
Rien brought up the sword as the man moved back.
|
|
At that moment the door half way down the corridor burst
|
|
open to reveal the large man Rien had assaulted moments
|
|
earlier. He looked mad and spotting Rien, headed right for him.
|
|
"Hang on," Rien closed the door. He did not want to deal
|
|
with more than one opponent at a time. To his surprise, he saw
|
|
the large man draw a sword from over his shoulder, not stopping
|
|
as he did so. Rien took a step back as heavy foot steps could
|
|
be heard on the stairs. An armed and armored man appeared at
|
|
the top of the landing, obviously expecting to run into
|
|
trouble.
|
|
"What is going on out...?" the half naked man from the room
|
|
Rien just looked in appeared in the corridor.
|
|
"It's a party," Rien smiled, grabbing his arm and flinging
|
|
him into the man at the top of the stairs. Both tumbled down to
|
|
the main room of the tavern in a tangle of arms and legs.
|
|
Rien's sword bounced down after them.
|
|
"Intruder!" Forance yelled and swung his sword.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
"Let'er go!" A scream filled the air and Rien shifted, not sure
|
|
if it was inside the building or in the street. Jenye, still asleep,
|
|
turned, draping an arm around his neck and wrapping herself around
|
|
him. He moved her arm and lifted his head, trying to listen. There
|
|
were sounds of rushing feet in the corridor outside the room and more
|
|
commotion further away.
|
|
"Come on," he shook Jenye. "We've got to go!"
|
|
"Wha...?" she turned away from him, trying to stretch out on the
|
|
floor.
|
|
"Jenye!" he whispered, grabbing hold of her arms and shaking her,
|
|
"we have to leave now!"
|
|
"What is it?" she looked at him, still half asleep.
|
|
"The soldiers are here. Get dressed."
|
|
That made her move much faster. They dressed as sounds of
|
|
commotion picked up, but this time outside the room. Distinct sounds
|
|
of swords and distant yells could be heard.
|
|
"What's going on out there?"
|
|
Rien cracked the door open and looked out. The hallway was empty,
|
|
but only for the moment. More footsteps sounded and Rien closed the
|
|
door before anyone appeared in site.
|
|
"What is it?" Jenye asked impatiently.
|
|
"Probably soldiers. If they come in here, don't resist. Do what I
|
|
do and when I tell you to go, run like you've never run before."
|
|
Another scream sounded. More rushing feet, the sound of someone
|
|
falling.
|
|
"You're not armed," Jenye suddenly said.
|
|
"Shhh!"
|
|
The door slammed open to reveal two Benosian soldiers with swords
|
|
drawn.
|
|
"Two more in here!" one of the men yelled in his tongue. By the
|
|
looks of her, Rien did not think Jenye understood.
|
|
A sergeant walked in, sword arm bloody up to the elbow, clearly
|
|
not with his own blood. "She'll be good for the men, if she's
|
|
healthy," he looked at Jenye. "Kill the man."
|
|
Rien was glad that Jenye did not speak the language. He was not
|
|
sure if he was glad that he did.
|
|
One of the soldiers turned to Rien, while the other waited in the
|
|
doorway. It was time to think fast.
|
|
"It's bad luck to stand in the doorway," Rien said in their
|
|
tongue. The man approaching him stopped. The sergeant folded his arms.
|
|
"So, you do understand... Kill him anyway."
|
|
Dodging the swing of the sword, Rien slammed himself into the
|
|
door, causing it to crash into the sergeant. The door hit him square
|
|
in the chest, pushing him back, but catching his shoulder and bloody
|
|
arm in the door frame and Rien could hear the satisfying sound of
|
|
cracking bone.
|
|
The two remaining men closed in on him. "If you don't move,
|
|
this'll be quick..."
|
|
Rien planted his back against the wall and pushed the door to let
|
|
the unconscious sergeant fall. He would have to retreat to the
|
|
corridor to get the sword. That was no good.
|
|
Jenye started inching up, trying to sneak up on the soldiers,
|
|
their backs now turned to her.
|
|
"Don't move," Rien warned her in Baranurian and one of the
|
|
soldiers, who apparently understood, spun around.
|
|
Perfect.
|
|
Before he knew it, the man was tumbling down, shielding Rien from
|
|
his companion's sword. It was a quick thrust, unexpected by all in the
|
|
room, and the man Rien knocked off balance went limp. The last soldier
|
|
shouted for reinforcements.
|
|
"I was hoping you wouldn't do that," Rien said, still supporting
|
|
the dead Benosian soldier.
|
|
The soldier backed away from Rien, trying to maneuver closer to
|
|
the door.
|
|
"Here," Rien gave the body he was holding on to a shove at his
|
|
opponent and rushed him as they collided. The door slammed the other
|
|
way, catching the soldier against the wall and stunning him. He slid
|
|
down to the floor, leaving behind a trail of blood.
|
|
"Damn unlucky place to stand," Rien pushed the unconscious
|
|
sergeant out of the doorway. "Come on," he turned to Jenye. "While
|
|
they're out."
|
|
She hurried to him, but paused a few steps short of the door,
|
|
looking him in the eyes. "You're..."
|
|
Rien grabbed her and pulled her out of the room. "Let's..." In
|
|
the corridor lay two bodies of people who helped them take care of the
|
|
injured the day before. Rien had little opportunity to become familiar
|
|
with them, but after the emotional drain of the previous day, he had
|
|
to pause to gather his thoughts.
|
|
"Oh, no," Jenye bent down by one, a deep cut across his chest and
|
|
part way down his abdomen. The other man was clearly dead, his throat
|
|
slashed.
|
|
Commotion could be heard deeper in the building as Jenye's hands
|
|
started to glow green once again and she reached for the injured man.
|
|
"We don't have the time!" Rien grabbed her hands and pulled her
|
|
up. He could feel the magic affecting him.
|
|
"He'll die!"
|
|
"So will we, if we don't get out of here!" He almost carried her
|
|
to get her away from the body. "We don't have the time to do this!"
|
|
"He's my friend!"
|
|
They made it to a side door and Rien forced Jenye into the alley.
|
|
"Then he'll understand! You're no good to anyone dead!"
|
|
"And neither is he!"
|
|
"Jenye, that wound is simply too extensive to spend time on,"
|
|
Rien stopped, forcing her to look at him. "And even if you healed it,
|
|
he wouldn't have the strength to leave and neither would you! You
|
|
can't risk yourself this way."
|
|
"Isn't that what friends are all about?" she asked, pulling
|
|
against his grasp. "I'm going back."
|
|
"No!" Rien said, but Jenye pulled free, rushing towards the edge
|
|
of the alley. "Jenye!"
|
|
She stopped just short of the mouth of the alley, at the sight of
|
|
two Benosian soldiers.
|
|
"Jenye!"
|
|
The soldiers drew their swords.
|
|
"Run!"
|
|
She turned, the soldiers on her heels.
|
|
Not having a sword available, Rien picked up a sturdy plank and
|
|
prepared for an unbalanced fight. Jenye charged past him, closely
|
|
followed by the two men. Rien met the first soldier with his plank,
|
|
connecting with the man as the sword of the other dug into the wood,
|
|
uncomfortably close to Rien's fingers. He twisted the plank, yanking
|
|
the weapon out of the soldier's hands, making both weapons unusable.
|
|
With a yell, the soldier pulled a broadsword from over his
|
|
shoulder, swinging down on the draw, the blade skipping across Rien's
|
|
upper arm, splattering blood in various directions. "For Untar!" The
|
|
sword impacted Rien's side making him fall over, "and for Beinison!"
|
|
The weapon hovered in the air and began its downward plunge. "And
|
|
for..."
|
|
The soldier toppled forward, the sword digging into the ground
|
|
near Rien's head, the edge cutting into his shoulder before coming to
|
|
a rest.
|
|
"Rien!"
|
|
He could not move, the sword dangerously balanced between his
|
|
neck and the soldier on top of him. The Benosian warrior did not move.
|
|
"Rien!"
|
|
Through his pain, his eyes focused on the man above him, a
|
|
trickle of blood forming at the edge of the soldier's open mouth. The
|
|
head dropped down with a final breath and the shifting weight forced
|
|
the sword down. Rien pushed at the ground with his heels, desperately
|
|
trying to get away from the blade, or at least to get his head out of
|
|
the way.
|
|
The body fell on him, but the sword froze in the air, stuck in
|
|
the ground at an improbable angle.
|
|
"Rien?"
|
|
He cautiously opened his eyes, his vision obscured by blood.
|
|
"Rien?"
|
|
Jenye held on to the sword with one hand and pushed the dead
|
|
soldier off Rien with the other. Before he could say anything, her
|
|
glowing hands reached for his wounds. "I'm sorry..."
|
|
Rien did not answer, lying still as the pain in his side began to
|
|
dissipate. He deserved that cut. Both, actually. All three. He let the
|
|
soldier get the better of him. He deserved worse than he got. It was
|
|
just his luck to fight a walking arsenal with no weapons of his own.
|
|
"Go!" Rien caught himself. "Before more come." His voice was a
|
|
mere whisper.
|
|
"You'll bleed to death if I leave you!"
|
|
Rien did not believe that to be the case, but was fully aware of
|
|
the severity of his wounds and that without healing, he would be in no
|
|
condition to go far alone. "Leave me," he repeated.
|
|
"Friends don't do things like that," she said again.
|
|
"Don't be foolish," Rien gasped. "How long have you known me?
|
|
What do you know of me?"
|
|
"I know you're kind, gentle and you care."
|
|
Rien tried to sit up, doing so with a tremendous effort and a
|
|
groan. He could feel the wound in his side tearing and grabbed Jenye's
|
|
arm for support.
|
|
"You're only making it worse," she warned, pushing him back down.
|
|
"No," Rien resisted. "Not in the middle of an alley."
|
|
Jenye looked up and down the street. It was probably the only one
|
|
in Sharks' Cove that happened to be completely free of trash and
|
|
debris. Well, almost completely free. There was one overturned crate
|
|
lying by the wall some twenty yards away. She again reached for the
|
|
wound in Rien's side, forcing it to seal. For the time being, she was
|
|
not going to bother with the one in his arm, or the shoulder. Neither
|
|
was life threatening and he was right, she was tired and the effort
|
|
was already costing her a lot.
|
|
"Get out of here," Rien's left hand locked tightly around her
|
|
wrist, "before more come."
|
|
"No!" she yanked her hand away from his and continued to work,
|
|
ignoring his protests. Finally, Rien seemingly gave up, resting on the
|
|
ground as Jenye closed the major wound. She had to force herself to
|
|
finish the job, in spite of fatigue. She would not have done this for
|
|
many people, but in the last few days Rien impressed her as few others
|
|
would have and even surprised her a number of times.
|
|
When she finished, Jenye sat down, picking up one of the swords
|
|
the Beinison soldier dropped. Although she had no intention, or skill,
|
|
to use the weapon, perhaps if she just held it in her lap, it would
|
|
make her seem a more formidable opponent in this city.
|
|
Rien appeared to be asleep, the wound in his side healed. The
|
|
other two wounds, on his arm and shoulder, still needed attention, as
|
|
blood trickled down to the ground from them, and tearing the dead
|
|
soldier's tunic, Jenye proceeded to bandage them. She paused as she
|
|
tore the man's clothes, noticing for the second time the black arrow
|
|
that cost him his life. She wanted to hate Ga'en for the horrors he
|
|
brought on the city and at the same time was grateful for what he had
|
|
done in this alley. She did not think she could handle losing Rien
|
|
after the previous day and painfully realized that his current
|
|
condition was her fault.
|
|
Finishing with the wounds, Jenye pulled Rien down the alley to
|
|
the large crate that could give them cover for a little while. She
|
|
also moved the two dead bodies and sat them up in a doorway where they
|
|
seemed about as inconspicuous as they had in the middle of the street,
|
|
not that anyone would give them a second thought in this town.
|
|
Coming back to Rien, she sat down, her back against the box and
|
|
let out a deep sigh. Now everything was a matter of time. Both he and
|
|
she needed to recover strength and with any luck, they would move on
|
|
before more soldiers show up. She could, in all truth, leave now to
|
|
look for help or better shelter, but she could not force herself to
|
|
abandon Rien, not after what he had done for her. Lost in her
|
|
thoughts, Jenye reached to check Rien's wounds again. The one in his
|
|
side was repaired to the point of not bleeding, but it still needed
|
|
attention that she could not provide without her tools. The other
|
|
wounds, although less severe, were merely bound and still bleeding.
|
|
"Help me up," Rien's voice startled Jenye as she moved to adjust
|
|
the bandages.
|
|
"I thought you were asleep..." she muttered. "I didn't mean to
|
|
wake you."
|
|
"A pained sleep is a waste of time. Help me up."
|
|
"You're too weak," she protested.
|
|
"Too weak to fight if the situation calls for it. I can
|
|
travel...now."
|
|
"The hell you can."
|
|
"Jenye, that sleep did me a lot of good. Help me."
|
|
She hesitated, but finally offered him a hand, surprised at how
|
|
quickly he accepted it and sat up.
|
|
"The flesh is healed, but the pain will last as it normally
|
|
would. Some things must heal at their own pace."
|
|
"I'll be fine, thank you," Rien answered.
|
|
"I'm sorry," Jenye said. She did not want it to seem to be an
|
|
after thought.
|
|
"I'll be fine," he repeated. "Let's go. We need to find a safe
|
|
place."
|
|
"The Abyssment," Jenye suggested. "It's pretty far east and I'm
|
|
sure Gaius won't let anything happen to it... Can you make it? It's
|
|
almost a full league."
|
|
Rien stood up, exerting more of an effort than he expected he
|
|
would need, but less than what Jenye predicted. At first a little
|
|
unsteady, he regained his feet. "I'll make it. Let's go."
|
|
"Why didn't you leave me?" Jenye asked, offering Rien help. He
|
|
accepted it without argument.
|
|
"Same reason you didn't leave me when I asked, I imagine."
|
|
Concentrating on both walking and the pain was a chore.
|
|
"That's not fair," she protested.
|
|
"But is it true?"
|
|
"Yes. I meant what I said about friends. I make them for life."
|
|
"I hope I was an exceptionally fast case, then," Rien said.
|
|
"You were."
|
|
"It wasn't because of last night, was it?"
|
|
"I was going to ask you about that."
|
|
Rien did not answer, watching the deserted streets pass by. It
|
|
was hard to tell if the fighting in the last day had come this far or
|
|
if the scars on the buildings were from previous conflicts. He
|
|
wondered what to say, not having a good answer to give. He did not
|
|
want to insult Jenye, but neither did he want to give her any false
|
|
hope.
|
|
"I think that at times our desperation becomes so great that we
|
|
are willing to seek comfort in places we know better than to look."
|
|
"It was just a convenience for you," Jenye said. He could hear
|
|
the hurt in her voice.
|
|
"It was a needed escape for both of us, from the horrors we had
|
|
witnessed," he answered, hoping she was more convinced than he.
|
|
"Did it make you feel anything?"
|
|
Rien stopped, taking a deep breath. He needed a rest. The walk
|
|
was taking a lot out of him. "Jenye, you're the only good thing I've
|
|
seen in this city since I arrived here. I'll never forget that...or
|
|
you, but there are things about me you don't know."
|
|
She wrapped her arm around him, for a better grip, and brushed
|
|
his hair back with the other, revealing a pointed ear. "Like this?"
|
|
"Please," he pushed her arm away, almost backing out of her grip.
|
|
"These are demons you don't want to unleash..."
|
|
"Do you really think that being different makes you so horrible?"
|
|
"Jenye..."
|
|
"I slept with you, knowing you were different. I saw your eyes
|
|
change color in the fight this morning. I can't explain some things
|
|
about you, but I didn't run because of them. You need to trust me a
|
|
little more."
|
|
"I do, but you have to trust me when I tell you that it would be
|
|
all wrong." He sank down a little. "Arvalia is more different that you
|
|
think. We can enjoy the moment, but never a lifetime."
|
|
She pulled him back up, her hands glowing.
|
|
"Jenye, don't. You're too tired. One of us in this condition is
|
|
more than enough..."
|
|
Surprisingly, she listened.
|
|
Rien attempted to maintain his breathing at a normal rate,
|
|
avoiding gasps and spasms that made it that much more difficult to
|
|
stand up. "All right," he straightened himself out.
|
|
They returned to the Abyssment, still sparsely populated, even at
|
|
this hour, without any further interruptions. It would appear that all
|
|
the excitement had been limited to the bay and the western portion of
|
|
the city, and the most obvious thing about the tavern was that for the
|
|
first time in a long time, it was empty of Benosian soldiers.
|
|
"My God, Jenye," the bartender, Eli, hurried to her as they
|
|
walked in. "Almost no one got out of the warehouse!"
|
|
"I know," she embraced him. "We barely got out ourselves. I don't
|
|
know how..."
|
|
Eli looked at Rien. "You know the policy on having the injured
|
|
here."
|
|
"He's a special case. I'll take responsibility. We just need a
|
|
room."
|
|
Eli shook his head, but got a key and handed it to her. "I don't
|
|
want to see him down here with all that blood."
|
|
"You won't."
|
|
She took Rien up to a room looking out at the remains of the
|
|
market square and barred the door after them. "Lie down," she
|
|
instructed Rien.
|
|
He did. "Don't waste your strength on me. I'll be fine by
|
|
morning. Just shake me awake."
|
|
"You need to eat something," Jenye protested.
|
|
"I'll eat when I wake up."
|
|
"Just rest. I'll bring something and get some water to clean your
|
|
wounds." She hurried to get everything she needed, but when she
|
|
returned, Rien was asleep and she decided against waking him up. The
|
|
rest would at least restore his strength and the time could be used to
|
|
clean and rebandage the other wounds. Jenye still did not feel strong
|
|
enough to use magic without overexerting herself and passing out. She
|
|
carefully washed and bandaged his arm and shoulder and took the
|
|
opportunity to examine him one more time. Except for the ears, he
|
|
looked like any other normal human male. Yet, he was obviously not
|
|
just like other men, but she still refused to believe in the old
|
|
stories and mythology. There had to be a sensible explanation.
|
|
Having eaten a little of what she brought, Jenye went downstairs
|
|
to talk to Eli about what had happened, find out what he heard and
|
|
tell of the horrors she had witnessed.
|
|
The news was not good.
|
|
The pay back for the assault on Talens was rapid and vicious.
|
|
There was little news about the current condition of the western
|
|
portion of the city and enough people attempted to flee that the
|
|
massacre had spilled over into the eastern half. Hardly anyone who
|
|
fell in sight of Benosian soldiers survived.
|
|
The day before, Gaius Caligula, upon hearing of the order to the
|
|
Beinison troops, sent a number of his people to one of his river
|
|
warehouses to aid those in his employ who were caught in the wrong
|
|
portion of the city. At first they aided just their own injured, but
|
|
as the day went on, others started to seek asylum in this little haven
|
|
and a decision was made not to turn anyone away. Although a criminal,
|
|
Gaius knew which side to take in this battle and supported the
|
|
citizens of Sharks' Cove.
|
|
Trying not to think of all the faces, the people she personally
|
|
knew, who died in her care in the last day, Jenye returned to the room
|
|
where Rien slept and re-examined his wounds. They still oozed blood,
|
|
but appeared much better. Controlled not to be life threatening, but
|
|
still not well enough to permit him to travel.
|
|
"Who are you, Rien Keegan?" she wondered.
|
|
Considering her actions, Jenye undressed for bed, unwrapped the
|
|
bandages on Rien's arm and shoulder and once again attempted to heal
|
|
them and the serious wound in his side. Somewhere along the way she
|
|
passed out from fatigue.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Rien barely managed to move back against the banister as
|
|
the sword cut through the air, catching his arm and tearing
|
|
through cloth and flesh alike.
|
|
Acutely aware that without a sword he was helpless against
|
|
this man, Rien glanced down into the common room where a half
|
|
dozen men stood looking up, and exerted the strength to hurdle
|
|
over the railing before the second swing of the sword could
|
|
catch him.
|
|
Managing to keep his balance below him, Rien landed on the
|
|
edge of a table, causing the far end to swing up, impacting
|
|
with the chin of the man sitting at that end, splattering blood
|
|
and teeth across the room. Others scrambled to their feet,
|
|
those with weapons available drawing steel in preparation for
|
|
combat.
|
|
"Hold it!" a large man by the fireplace stood up. "Who are
|
|
you?"
|
|
Weapons came to a rest as Rien recovered his feet and the
|
|
man at the other end of the table slowly slid out of his chair
|
|
and to the floor, unconscious.
|
|
The sergeant put down his mug and approached Rien, leaving
|
|
his sword to dangle at his side. "You are?"
|
|
Rien took a step back. He beat Deven to the common room.
|
|
And he missed two rooms.
|
|
"I'm looking for a friend, but I think I got the wrong
|
|
tavern..."
|
|
One of the soldiers pulled the unconscious man from under
|
|
the table and the two that tumbled down the stairs untangled
|
|
themselves and got up. At least three people stood on the
|
|
balcony upstairs, looking down.
|
|
"I think you got the wrong tavern, too," the sergeant said
|
|
and returned to his seat. "Kill him. But not here. I don't want
|
|
a dirty floor."
|
|
Two men with drawn swords approached Rien.
|
|
"I wouldn't," Rien warned. He had no idea what he was going
|
|
to do, but stalling for time could not hurt. If anything, it
|
|
would give Deven time to finish his rounds and come up stairs,
|
|
assuming Deven was lucky enough not to run into any trouble.
|
|
Rien was not sure if he wanted Deven to have found Adrea. This
|
|
would be tough enough to get out of. If she were hurt, it might
|
|
make the situation impossible.
|
|
One of the soldiers silently warned Rien with his sword and
|
|
Rien backed up some more. He detected a faint trace of smoke in
|
|
the air, too faint for the others to pick up.
|
|
"Get going!" the soldier made a grab for Rien. He missed a
|
|
seemingly unavoidable target and crashed down to the floor, as
|
|
much to his companions' surprise, as to Rien's.
|
|
"What the..." the other soldier brought up his sword to
|
|
strike Rien, but dropped it as it turned red hot.
|
|
"Mage!" someone yelled, filling the room with panic. Simple
|
|
prestidigitators and conjurors were quite common on Makdiar,
|
|
but serious wizards, of skill such as that presently displayed,
|
|
were quite rare and very dangerous in the field of battle. The
|
|
Benosian soldiers shifted about the room, none wanting to be
|
|
Rien's next target. Even the man who dropped his sword hurried
|
|
to what he felt to be a safe range. The sergeant once again got
|
|
up.
|
|
"Yes, a mage," a deep Benosian voice sounded from the rear
|
|
of the tavern, making all the men with their backs to it jump
|
|
and hurry to place themselves against the safety of the nearest
|
|
wall. Deven stepped out from behind the bar.
|
|
"And who are you?" the sergeant stepped forward, showing
|
|
the initiative the half dozen men with him failed to exhibit.
|
|
Rien's eyes targeted the backs of the two men nearest him.
|
|
Deven calmly walked into the room, reached into his tunic
|
|
and produced a medallion which he let dangle on its chain. "I
|
|
am Lord Skalen Deven Yasarin, rightful heir to the Barony of
|
|
Marolleris, son of Lord Kuvinmel and Lady Ashasan Yasarin. And
|
|
who are you?"
|
|
The sergeant broke into a light chuckle, followed by his
|
|
men, the uneasy laughter turning to full bursts of gut
|
|
splitting contempt. "Kill 'em both."
|
|
The soldier nearest to Deven drew his sword and swung,
|
|
still chocking with glee, as the blade impacted the soft cloak.
|
|
The seemingly soft cloth refused to give to the blade's passage
|
|
and the weapon tumbled from the surprised soldier's grasp. The
|
|
mocking laughter subsided to somber groans as the soldier
|
|
backed away. His own hand reached down to his side and came
|
|
back up stained with blood, from a wound level with how he
|
|
struck the mage. Deven only shook his head.
|
|
Not wasting the precious time, Rien attacked the man
|
|
nearest him, planting his boot into the man's back, sending him
|
|
sprawling forward across tables and chairs, taking down another
|
|
man in his path.
|
|
The man who dropped his sword when trying to attack Rien,
|
|
grabbed a bottle and turned at the sound of the racket, fast
|
|
enough to see Rien close, but not fast enough to react. He
|
|
slammed into a wall and sunk down to the ground.
|
|
None of the other men moved, still watching Deven and the
|
|
man sinking to the floor before him.
|
|
"Sergeant..." a tongue of flame licked at the air through
|
|
the open doorway behind Deven, making the soldiers take another
|
|
step back. "Sergeant, surely you've heard the story of the
|
|
Yasarin family. All dead? Not dead? Two publicly executed, but
|
|
what happened to the children?"
|
|
The large soldier on the stairs, Forance, let out a yell
|
|
and leapt the few feet separating him from the mage, his sword
|
|
held before him, aimed at a stationary target. It sank through
|
|
the cloak, making Rien flinch as he expected Deven to collapse,
|
|
but the mage remained on his feet and only moved his arms to
|
|
lower the stunned soldier to the ground. Forance slipped from
|
|
his grasp and fell backwards on the floor, a deep wound in his
|
|
chest.
|
|
"Sir Keegan," Deven turned to Rien, "leave. These men are
|
|
mine."
|
|
Rien took an unsure step forward, towards the door. He knew
|
|
what his friend intended to do, but was not sure if he should
|
|
let him. His hesitancy did not seem unusual to the Benosian
|
|
soldiers around him, who only backed up even more. He knew the
|
|
risks of challenging Deven's authority now. In spite of what he
|
|
felt to be right, he had to let Deven finish this on his own
|
|
terms. There was simply no other way.
|
|
Rien walked past the sergeant, taking care to be ready if
|
|
the man attacked him, but the old soldier made no move even as
|
|
Rien opened and closed the door. He paused in the street,
|
|
casting a glance back at the tavern, looking at the kite shield
|
|
over the door, displaying a fat green dragon lying on its back,
|
|
a filled bubbling glass in its clumsy claw and a goofy glazed
|
|
look in his eyes. Something in him shattered as he realized
|
|
that this symbol of some of his closest friends had been lost
|
|
to the horrors of war. He would forever remember it as a place
|
|
where Adrea disappeared, where he and Deven made a stand
|
|
against enemy troops.
|
|
Crossing the street to the river, Rien hopped off the wood
|
|
supported embankment onto the soft white sand and walked to the
|
|
rushing waters, looking off into the distance where flickers of
|
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light on the distant southern shore could be seen. Behind him,
|
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in the shuttered windows of The Tipsy Dragon, orange flames
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lapped at the walls of the building.
|
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* * *
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|
Rien opened his eyes, a sensation of extreme hunger foremost on
|
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his mind. He shifted, realizing how sore he was and noticed the lack
|
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of bandages that were on him before. Instead, there was an arm draped
|
|
across his chest.
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|
"Jenye..." he did not know what had happened and the idea was not
|
|
much to his liking. "Jenye?"
|
|
"Yeah?"
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|
"How long have I been out?"
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|
She lifted her head and looked towards the window, where the sun
|
|
had already risen in the east. "Over night. You and I both..."
|
|
"You..."
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She kissed him. "You don't have to thank me."
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|
"Yeah..."
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|
"How do you feel?" she sat up.
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"Sore."
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|
"Just sore?"
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|
He moved his arm. "Just sore. Very sore."
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|
"I'm sorry this happened," Jenye apologized again.
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Rien brushed his hand across her stomach. "Another place, another
|
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time..."
|
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"What?"
|
|
He shook his head. "Thank you for taking care of me."
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Jenye put her arms around him. "I'll be sorry to see you go."
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"I still need to find Adrea," he reminded her.
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|
"You..." Jenye sighed. "I guess there isn't such a thing as a
|
|
good time to tell you. Your friend was killed the first day of the
|
|
invasion."
|
|
"What?"
|
|
"Moldan found a witness. The invasion was so sudden, few had a
|
|
chance to flee. She died at the tavern."
|
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"No!"
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As he spoke, Jenye saw the pupils of his eyes turn steel grey.
|
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"I must speak with the witness!"
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|
"Rien, don't. Please."
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|
"I must."
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His look and the tone of his voice frightened her, but she felt
|
|
the obligation to resist. "You don't know what you're asking..."
|
|
"Yes, I do. Tell me who the witness is!" his voice rose.
|
|
Jenye turned away from Rien. There were things she needed to talk
|
|
to him about now for over a day and this seemed to be the right time.
|
|
She had his attention and the time.
|
|
"You left two coins in Moldan's house. He gave them back to me to
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return to you."
|
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"You're changing the topic," Rien warned.
|
|
"Gold Marks?"
|
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"Jenye!"
|
|
"Do you know what can happen to a commoner with two Gold Marks in
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a town like this?"
|
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Rien grabbed her shoulder and twisted her to face him. "Jenye!"
|
|
"What are you going to do? Find out who killed her? Go kill them?
|
|
Why don't you go after Talens? He's hiding in Quirin while his men
|
|
loot and pillage the city!"
|
|
"Jenye, Adrea was always my responsibility. I trained her. I
|
|
worked with her. I was there when her daughter was born. I'm not going
|
|
to abandon her now, dead or alive!"
|
|
"You won't let her rest until you see blood at the end of your
|
|
sword!"
|
|
"If that's what it takes, but I will look in the eyes of the man
|
|
who killed her and see what's in his soul."
|
|
"The witness is Barar, Moldan's son," Jenye turned away again.
|
|
"It's part of the reason for his nightmares. When I went back, he
|
|
described things to me that he doesn't know the words for. He was
|
|
there that day. He saw it happen...and he'll never forget it."
|
|
"What happened?"
|
|
"A half dozen men chased a girl in to the tavern, a commoner, and
|
|
killed her. Your friend tried to stop them, killed a soldier, injured
|
|
some others... Then they caught her, raped her, gutted her and left
|
|
her to die."
|
|
Rien threw his legs over the edge of the bed and got up. "No..."
|
|
"It'll comfort you to know that they were the ones staying at the
|
|
tavern. You killed them already."
|
|
Rien did not answer.
|
|
"Do you feel better now that you know the truth? Does it please
|
|
you that they died by your hand? You're just like them! Just like any
|
|
other man who ever picked up a sword! It's people like you that make
|
|
this world such a miserable place to live!"
|
|
Fighting the pain and the soreness with his anger, Rien picked up
|
|
his blood stained tunic and put it on. "I am sorry I disappointed you
|
|
with who I am, but I warned you that it would happen. Goodbye."
|
|
She did not move as he walked out. Perhaps what she said was
|
|
enough or too much, but it all stemmed from frustration of the last
|
|
few days and the knowledge that he was going to leave anyway, no
|
|
matter what she would have told him. She was only sorry that the news
|
|
she had to deliver him was bad. She really had no bad will towards him
|
|
or his mission. It just came out sounding that way, her anger was at
|
|
what was happening in Sharks' Cove. Rien was still among the kindest,
|
|
most sensitive people she ever met and seeing him go still hurt, in
|
|
spite of her displeasure with his profession. Perhaps she did do
|
|
wrong, after all.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Rien managed to control himself enough not to slam the door to
|
|
the room behind himself. He was angry at the news and at how he was
|
|
treated, but he could not disagree with what Jenye had said. He
|
|
himself had said the very same thing a countless number of times. He
|
|
just did not expect to hear it from her so harshly. Compounded with
|
|
the news of Adrea's death, he found himself at a complete loss. Worse
|
|
than that, there was nothing he could do, no one to take his
|
|
frustrations out on.
|
|
He paused at the end of the corridor, before going down the
|
|
stairs, and forced himself to calm down. He was not going to do anyone
|
|
any good by staying mad, himself most of all. After a brief rest, he
|
|
proceeded down the stairs and towards the door across the room.
|
|
"Rien!" he heard Jenye's voice when he was half way across the
|
|
common room. In spite of himself, Rien stopped and turned. Jenye stood
|
|
at the top of the stairs, a blanket wrapped around her shoulders. "We
|
|
need to talk."
|
|
For what seemed like forever, he did not move, the eyes of
|
|
everyone in the room either on him or her. He really could not say
|
|
that he hated her or never wanted to see her again. In a way he could
|
|
understand her angry outburst, but at the same time he could see the
|
|
mistake he made with Kera and did not want to repeat it a second time.
|
|
It would hurt now, but it would be easier to get over than in the
|
|
future. She would probably hate him, perhaps as much as he would hate
|
|
himself, but it had to be done.
|
|
As all confused patrons focused on him, he once again turned
|
|
around and left the Abyssment, this time for good.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1 (C) Copyright December, 1993, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd
|
|
<White@DUVM.BitNet>. All rights revert to the authors. These stories
|
|
may not be reproduced or redistributed (save in the case of
|
|
reproducing the whole 'zine for further distribution) without the
|
|
express permission of the author involved.
|
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|