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+-+--+-+--+-+ VOLUME NINE NUMBER TWO
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+___________+ FFFFF SSS FFFFF N N EEEEE TTTTT
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| ++ | F S F NN N E T
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| ++ | FFF SSS FFF N N N EEE T
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| | F S F N NN E T
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|_________| F SSS F N N EEEEE T
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/___________\ ==========================================
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| | BITNET Fantasy-Science Fiction Fanzine
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___|___________|___ X-Edited by 'Orny' Liscomb <CSDAVE@MAINE>
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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CONTENTS
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X-Editorial 'Orny' Liscomb
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*Treasure 3 John L. White
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Date: 112387 Dist: 494
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An "*" indicates story is part of the Dargon Project
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All original materials copyrighted by the author(s)
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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X-Editorial
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Greeting. Apologize for lateness of issue. Promise that the next
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issue will be more prompt. Plug stories in current issue. Plug
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stories in next issue. Welcome new subscribers. Close.
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Actually, I could try to pawn the lateness of this issue on the
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fact that the Dargon Project had a minor contradiction come up which
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had to be addressed, but the truth is that I procrastinated bringing
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it up to the authors, so it's still my fault. O well. This time I
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also have to apologize for the size of this issue, although THAT I
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can slough off onto someone else's conscience!
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Two items of news to report. Firstly, the procurement department
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is having difficulty obtaining the prizes for the SF writing contest
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(see last issue's announcement). I am hoping to purchase the prizes
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soon, and I hope that many of you are considering entering a short
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story. The other item of news is that although WISCVM is shutting
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down effective December 15, FSFnet should be able to get through the
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replacement local gateway, and I forsee no interruption of service
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to our internet subscribers.
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But, this editorial must be kept short and sweet. The next issue
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will be out very soon ("No, *really*!"), and will contain a good
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mixture of Dargon and non-Dargon works.
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-'Orny' Liscomb <CSDAVE@MAINE>
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<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
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The Treasure
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Part 3
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Je'en
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"To marriage!"
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The toast was heartily echoed by those around the table, and all
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lifted their flagons and drained them. Congratulations came from all
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over the taproom of the Inn of the Panther causing Kroan to beam
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brightly and toss appropriate replys back.
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Je'lanthra'en leaned back against the wall and thought there
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must be something in the air. Just a month or so ago, she, Cefn and
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Kroan had attended the gypsy wedding of Maks and Syusahn, who was
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none the worse for her imprisonment in the Emerald Hand. Je'en
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remembered the ceremony with fondness, all barbaric splendor and
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exaggerated pomp and solemnity. The party afterwards, which had
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lasted a good three days, was wild enough to make up for the almost
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staid wedding.
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And now, her brother was engaged to be married. The lucky lady
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was named Anorra. She was the daughter of a widower baker and was
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due to take over the family business. Kroan and Anorra had met over
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a shipping dispute six months ago, and it was love at first sight.
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Je'en was quite happy for her brother. She had met Anorra, and
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they got along famously. Anorra was a small woman with long brown
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hair and a wide, expressive face, full of energy and life, and
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already a better baker than her father, who insisted he was proud to
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be leaving the family business to her. Anorra and Kroan made a
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beautiful couple, and Je'en echoed the toast again in her mind.
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Cefn asked, "Why did you set a date so far away? Three months is
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a long time to wait, isn't it?"
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Kroan said, "I wanted Mother and Father to be here, and it's a
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long way from Derenten to Dargon. I got their return letter just
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last week saying when they would be able to get here. As soon as I
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knew that, I talked to Anorra and we set the date. It's..."
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Je'en broke in with, "Wait! Mom and Dad are going to be at the
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wedding? Wonderful! Its been so long since I've seen them." Her
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smile faded after a moment, and she said, "Oh, no."
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"What's wrong?" asked Cefn.
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"My parents don't know about my accident, or that I'm not a bard
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anymore. I was meaning to tell them, but I just haven't gotten
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around to it. So, they probably won't even recognize me as I am now."
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Kroan said, "Well, actually, they do know. I told them when I
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wrote about Anorra. They know everything: the accident; your
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retraining; and the adventures you've had here in Dargon. They both
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send their regrets, and wish you good luck in your new life. I'm
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sure that they will be very happy to see you again at the wedding."
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"Oh, uh, thanks, Kroan. I'm glad they know now, and I'm looking
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forward to seeing them again." Je'en let the topic be turned to
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wedding plans, then dropped out of the conversation. She slouched
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back in her chair and turned her thoughts inward.
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She summoned up a mental image of herself just as she saw
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herself every day in the large piece of polished silver she used for
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a mirror. It was as complete and detailed as a painting: her bardic
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training had sharpened her powers of recall, and she was quite adept
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at seeing concrete images in her mind.
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She looked at the picture of herself, clad in a comfortable
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leather tunic and breeches that went into knee-high suede boots. She
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still bore the marks of her 'accident' more than three years after
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the incident: a dark ribbon circled her throat to hide the scar
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there; her right hand hung uselessly from a black-wrapped wrist near
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the hilt of her sword, right-hung within easy reach of her good
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hand; and, most visible, the silver half-mask that hid the marks on
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her face. She presented a unique, mysterious figure, one that
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belonged in fantastic adventures that, perhaps, a bard would tell.
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Then, she did something she seldom did. She called up an image
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of herself as she had been before the accident. No scars, no masks,
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Leaf-Killer on her left hip and Soft-Winds hanging at her back. She
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set the picture next to her present-day self, and compared the two.
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The one that went bare-faced was the one her parents would be
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expecting despite Kroan's letter informing them of the events of the
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past three years. Briefly, Je'en wondered what she would look like
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now, without the mask. But she found herself backing away from the
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thought hurriedly. The silver mask had become a badge of her new
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life to her, and to cease wearing it was unthinkable.
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As she sat comparing the two images, she began to feel strange.
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At first, she couldn't identify how or why. Then, as it got worse,
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she was able to describe the sensation - it was like someone or
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something was pressing on her mind. It took a few more moments to
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realize that the sensation was almost familiar.
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Instinctively, she began pushing back, concentrating on holding
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her mind together and resisting the intrusion. As soon as she
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started to resist, she felt the pressure lighten and then vanish.
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The pressure had barely vanished when Je'en felt someone nudge
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her arm. She opened her eyes and sat up with a startled 'Huh?' that
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caused the others at the table to laugh.
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Cefn said, 'Wake up, sleepy head. Kroan has to get back to work
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and I thought we should toast him once more." The cowled man lifted
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his flagon and said, "To Kroan and Anorra - a long, happy, and
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profitable life!"
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Je'en reached for her mug of ale to join in the well-wishing.
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She found it difficult to get a grip on the thin handle of the mug,
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but finally she closed her fingers around to and raised it off of
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the table. As soon as she did so, she knew something was wrong. She
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felt the odd pull in the wrist, the pain, and then the splashing
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noise of ale sloshing all over the table.
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She focused on the mug, and then on the faces of her friends
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around the table. She noticed that they were all staring at the mug
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dangling from her hand in shocked disbelief. She started to say,
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"Sorry..." but stopped when she realized why they were staring. She
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finally realized that the mug was dangling from the fingers of her
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right hand!
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Kimmentari
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An ornate stone corridor shapes itself out of the greyness as
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she steps from the between-ways into the hallway outside the
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quarters of the man once known as Kyle BlueSword. She senses the
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pain emanating from the room before her, and she knows its cause.
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Slowly, almost reluctantly, she walks into the room and sees Morion
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writhing in pain on the bed. His arm throbs fiercely red in her
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ihr-sight, revealing the fact that the perenidth has invaded his
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body as far as his elbow. She can also trace the poison with her
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sun-sight, which reveals the greenish cast of the skin on his arm.
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Concern and guilt flood into and over her as she watches by both
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ihr- and sun-sight the poison advance quickly up Morion's arm. She
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walks across the room to him, and feels something break under her
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heel. Awareness comes to her that she has crushed the egg-focus,
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which will make closing the gate that much harder.
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Before she reaches the bed, she sees consciousness fade from
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Morion's body, but she can also see that his life force hasn't
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slackened its fight against the drain of the perenidth.
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She stands next to Morion's now still form, and tries to examine
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the things she is feeling. She feels concern because she likes the
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fierceness of spirit of this fast-liver, and she does not wish him
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pain. He attracts more than her curiosity, and she has been hard
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pressed not to think of him ever since their first meeting. Now, her
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concern shades to fear; fear that she might be feeling what was the
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bane of her race - hoftanau, the fire love. Only a fast-liver could
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inspire the fire love in the slow living, slow feeling hearts of her
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people. When that emotion was ignited, it was usually fatal. That
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was where the guilt came from. She wasn't sure that her last warning
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to Morion had been cryptic according to the pattern of Thyerin's
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Dance, or if she wanted to avoid the destructive force of hoftanau.
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Now she must decide whether to save Morion or to let the poison
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do its work. She reviews the last glimpse of the pattern of the
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Dance she had been given by Thyerin and tries to puzzle out the
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meaning of the threads that govern this part of the Dance. It is
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difficult. Finally she gives up - the strands are too tangled - and
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attempts to make the decision on her own.
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She doesn't have time to agonize, though. She can see that the
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poison has almost reached Morion's shoulder, with tendrils pushing
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ahead of the mass of the evil substance, almost as if it is eagerly
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searching for the man's heart. She knows that he doesn't have much
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time. If the perenidth reaches Morion's heart, she won't be able to
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work fast enough to stem the flow of the poison throughout his
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entire body. If that happens, he will be lost forever, his body dead
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and his immortal self trapped in the other-space from whence the
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demon-poison had been drawn.
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She looks into Morion's tortured face and decides. She kneels
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beside the bed and takes Morion's arm in her hands. As she prepares
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herself for the effort it will take to battle the perenidth, she
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feels the presence of Thyerin in her mind and she sees a part of his
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Dance made clear. She sighs with relief as she sees her strand and
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Morion's entwined and continuing beyond the scope of the Dance. She
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has made the right decision.
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She turns back to her task. Placing her hands about his
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shoulder, she concentrates to place a barrier within Morion's flesh
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that the perenidth cannot pass. She first makes sure that all
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vestiges of the poison are on the arm side of the barrier, then she
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begins to force the barrier, and with it the perenidth, back down
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and out of Morion's arm. It isn't easy. The perenidth seems almost
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to fight back, to resist being expelled from the body of its victim.
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She struggles tenaciously until finally Morion's hand cups a small
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pool of the vilest looking fluid imaginable, much more than could
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have been stored within the tiny egg.
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She relaxes for a moment, gathering her strength for the final
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effort. When she feels herself ready, she again concentrates on the
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barrier that now protects Morion's hand from having the fluid
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re-enter it. The barrier, invisible to sun-sight but barely, bluely
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visible to ihr-sight, closes around the perenidth, sealing it in a
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bubble. The bubble begins to rise, floating slowly up from Morion's
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hand. When it is a safe distance away from him, she begins to force
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the bubble to shrink. This, in turn, forces the demon-poison back
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through the gate to where it came from. When the bubble disappears,
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she turns her energies to closing and sealing the gate that the
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egg-focus had housed.
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When the gate is permanently closed, she slumps back and closes
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her eyes, nearly exhausted. But, she knows that there is more to do.
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The perenidth had been removed from Morion's body, but the damage it
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did while it was there must still be repaired.
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Wearily, she opens her eyes and tries to guage how long it will
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take to properly heal the fast-liver. She estimates at least three
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weeks of deep, healing sleep should suffice, which will leave very
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little time to deliver the circlet. As she worries, she sees a
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possible solution in the pattern of the Dance. The King of the land
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that Morion calls home will celebrate the anniversary of his birth
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just a few days before the deadline. Such an event should bring
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enough power-users together that, with her help, they may be able to
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find a way to send the circlet in time.
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She decides to leave speculation for later. She thinks that
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Morion will know more about who will likely attend his Monarch's
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36th birth anniversary. She needs to start the healing sleep soon,
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before the damage increases and destroys their chances.
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She arranges the still slightly suffering fast-liver more
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comfortably on the bed, and then settles herself next to him. She
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places her hands on his temples and tries to communicate directly
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with his mind. She finds it easy, and pleasurable, to read his mind
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but she must go deeper. She probes for the healing centers of his
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brain, and finds them. She stimulates them to increased effort and
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ties the energy generation areas of her own body in to his to
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provide the necessary building and healing energies. She feels the
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drain, and allows herself to fall into the same healing sleep as
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Morion. Now, even should she wish it, there is no way to prevent
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hoftanau between them.
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Ka'en
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Ka'lochra'en kissed Gillin one last time before giving her a
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hand up onto her horse. He stared after her as she rode back home,
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and reflected that she was probably the best thing to come out of
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this, his latest assignment.
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Ka'en had come to this northern corner of Baranur when he had
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heard news on the grapevine that one of the border Barons of Duchy
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Dargon was looking for someone discreet to do a job. Ka'en's pockets
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were nearly empty, so he decided that he would look into the venture.
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Ka'en had travelled to the Barony of MountainSpur in the guise
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of a minor, unlanded noble name of Lord Kennet'. It had taken some
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convincing to get Baron Kayden, the man looking to hire a thief, to
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believe that he was suited to the job. It wasn't as if Ka'en had a
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detailed history of past accomplishments to expound on, especially
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since most of his best work had yet to be detected. Ka'en had been
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forced to extract a few choice items from the Baron's personal
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treasury to convince the man that he had the necessary skills to do
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the job.
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So convinced, the Baron had confided in Ka'en. Kaydin intended
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to annex the lands of his neighbor, Baron Rombar. Rombar had
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insulted Kaydin some years before by refusing to allow his daughter
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to marry Kaydin's eldest son. To get even, Kaydin intended to depose
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Rombar by discrediting him and having him and his family removed as
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rulers of the barony by Clifton Dargon himself, acting as the due
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representative of the Crown of Baranur. The method of discrediting
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was devious and complicated. Ka'en's part involved some very
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important documents stored in the very lowest vaults of Dargon
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Castle. The ones Ka'en was to steal were both the Primary Charter
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for the Barony of Fir Lake, and the High Charter for Duchy Dargon
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itself. Baron Kaydin would provide a doctored version of the Primary
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Charter of Rombar's Barony that would remove Rombar's family from
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the Barony. Taking the High Charter to the Duchy was a little
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insurance on Kaydin's part since without that specific piece of
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parchment, Clifton could, legally, be removed from the Duchy as
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easily as Rombar from his Barony. Kaydin intended to force Clifton
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into supporting him in his claim to the land of Fir Lake when the
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Barony was disolved.
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It was all just too much politics and legalisms for Ka'en's
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tastes, but he agreed to do the job. One of the convincing arguments
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was Kaydin's youngest daughter, Gillin. There was a strong mutual
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attraction between them, and Ka'en had recently begun having
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thoughts about settling down. Gillin was pretty, intelligent, and
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excellent company. Ka'en hoped that she wouldn't mind moving away
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from MountainSpur, since he refused to live anywhere that there was
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danger of him being exposed as a thief and Gillin's father certainly
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knew who he was now.
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Ka'en cleaned up the little glade wherein he and Gillin had said
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good-bye, repacking his bedroll and the now severly depleted bag of
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rations he had brought along for his trip to Dargon. Fortunately,
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the Ducal city wasn't more than four days away and Ka'en was sure he
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could make the remnants of his food last that long. Besides, it had
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been well worth wasting the time and food to say farewell to Gillin.
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Well worth it.
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Ka'en spent a week researching a way to infiltrate Dargon
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Castle. Baron Kaydin had offered a few suggestions, but no real help
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in getting him near the secret vault. The details were up to Ka'en.
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It didn't take him long to decide on a course of action once he
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had explored all the possibilities. He had even been given a tour of
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the Castle in his masquerade as Lord Kennet'. He had determined that
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there was no possible way for a guest or resident of the castle to
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penetrate the dungeons - there were just too many guards. So, he
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decided to be a guard.
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Given enough time, it was conceivable that Ka'en could have
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become a Castle Guard by the normal route. But he didn't have the
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three years or so that that would take. Instead, he would have to
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fake it. And the first order of business was to make a copy of the
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Castle Guard's uniform.
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The uniform was a simple one. The Guards wore a black
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thigh-length tunic over black trousers that went into black
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knee-high boots. Silver and gold bands added color at the neck,
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cuffs, tunic hem, side seams of the trousers, and the saddle of the
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boots. A sash of silver and gold triangles was fastened to the right
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or left shoulder by a pin of the Baranur Star. Rank was displayed
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within a small red square on the chest. Additional ornamentation was
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provided by small black buttons bearing a gold caltrop at strategic
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places on the outfit.
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Ka'en didn't want to buy enough fabric at any one store to lead
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an inquisitive mind to link the purchase with an extra guard at the
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Castle. So, he searched the second-hand stores for cloth, either in
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old clothes or in bolts, and for the various decorative elements he
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would need.
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He was in a slightly seedy but well stocked little shop
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bargaining for a child's show cape made of cloth-of-gold that he
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could cut up for the sash, when he heard the door open. An
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almost-familiar voice said, "Mergant, did you get in any....Oh, I'm
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sorry, I didn't realize you had a customer. I'll wait until you're
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through. Pardon me, m'lord."
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Ka'en turned to look at the person who had spoken. He was sure
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he knew the voice, but when he saw the speaker, he was just as sure
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that he was mistaken. He didn't know any left-handed women who wore
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silver masks, of that he was definite.
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Ka'en was concluding his business with the shopkeeper when the
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woman stepped up to the counter next to him and said, "Excuse me,
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but aren't you Ka'lochra'en?"
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Ka'en turned and stared into the eyes that were partially hidden
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within the mask, wondering how this woman knew him. It was rare that
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he went by his contracted name in Baranur, much less his full name.
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Finally, made slightly uneasy by the blankness of the mask, he said,
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"That depends to whom I'm talking."
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"Of course, you don't recognize me. How could you, after all,"
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said the woman. "I looked quite different the last time you saw me
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in Derenten. I'm your second cousin, Je'lanthra'en."
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"By the Blood of Argan, you are!" Ka'en finally recognized the
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voice, the figure, the bearing, and even the set of the jaw. "What
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happened to you, Je'en? You're not a bard any more?"
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"Oh, its a long story, Ka'en. Much too long to tell without a
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tankard of ale to ease the telling. But, no, I'm not a bard anymore.
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I am an adventurer along with my partner, Cefn, who is a wizard. Why
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don't you come down to the Inn of the Panther tonight, and we can
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talk then, okay? Good. I'll be there around dinner time and after.
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See you then."
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Ka'en took the cape he had just purchased and left the store as
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Je'en asked Mergant about some special lanterns for which she was
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looking. He wondered what had happened to Je'en. She was so changed.
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The mask, her voice, the strange bracer she wore on her right hand.
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An adventurer, eh? They could be problems. At least the only
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adventurers that Ka'en had ever dealt with had been problems. He
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wondered if her presence in Dargon would complicate his business.
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Blood
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Moonlight filters into a shuttered and dark shop through warped
|
|
boards and air vents. The silvery light glints off large glass jars
|
|
filled with herbs and potions revealing the shop to be an apothecary.
|
|
A shadow among shadows moves slowly and cautiously. It inches
|
|
its way over to the jars and, after a pause to be sure it is alone,
|
|
it begins to fill several cloth bags from the large glass jars.
|
|
Suddenly, its movements lose their fluidity, like a marionette
|
|
whose operator has just sneezed. An elbow strikes and dislodges one
|
|
of the jars and it crashes to the floor, shattering. The shadow
|
|
freezes, and then, under control again, begins to hurriedly complete
|
|
its mission.
|
|
The owner of the shop, who lives on the second floor, has been
|
|
awakened by the noise. He comes down the stairs armed with a large
|
|
club. The shadow seeks a way out, its mission now done, but the
|
|
stairs are closer to the door that it is.
|
|
The owner opens a shopfront shutter, flooding the tiny shop with
|
|
moonlight, and catches sight of the shadow, formless and dark no
|
|
more. Light glints off of a silver mask, the owner gasps out,
|
|
"Je...", and a sword weilded sinisterly slides between ribs. As the
|
|
owner slumps on the stairs, the shadow closes the shutter, wipes its
|
|
sword on the owner's nightrobe, and slips stealthly out of the shop.
|
|
|
|
Cefn
|
|
"So, where is Je'en, anyway?" asked Ka'en.
|
|
Cefn said, "I don't know. She's usually here by dinner unless
|
|
she has something else to do, and she didn't mention anything to me.
|
|
Still, she has been acting strange lately.... I'm sure she'll be
|
|
around eventually. Could you explain again, Ka'en, why the middle
|
|
part of your name isn't the same as Je'en's if you're related to her?"
|
|
As Je'en's cousin tried to explain the complexities of southern
|
|
family trees and their special naming conventions, Cefn wondered
|
|
with more concern than had been in his voice just where Je'en was.
|
|
If Kroan hadn't recognized Ka'en when he entered, the poor man would
|
|
be sitting in a corner wondering where his relative was. It wasn't
|
|
like Je'en to invite someone to meet her at the Panther, and then
|
|
not show.
|
|
Ka'en's dissertation was interrupted by the bells on the door,
|
|
and a few shouted greetings that indicated that Je'en had finally
|
|
arrived. When she finally reached their table, Cefn noticed by her
|
|
manner that she was a little distracted. She said hello to her
|
|
cousin, appologized for being late, and yelled her dinner order -
|
|
"The usual!" - to the cook. She took her seat, and joined Ka'en in
|
|
trying to explain the name thing.
|
|
Cefn listened with far more interest now, but eventually the
|
|
conversation returned to Kroan's coming marriage. Cefn retreated
|
|
from the discussion for the same reason he had tried to side-track
|
|
it earlier: the topic made him nervous.
|
|
Yet, his mind refused to let him just forget the word. He tried
|
|
to deflect the thoughts of being tied for a lifetime to one person
|
|
with thoughts of Je'en and her increasingly odd behavior. But, that
|
|
tactic didn't work, because Je'en was the reason that the thought of
|
|
marriage disturbed him. Perhaps not marriage itself, but rather what
|
|
went with it: love. Cefn was even more disturbed by love than
|
|
marriage, and thinking of Je'en in that context just made him even
|
|
more nervous.
|
|
Cefn had been in love once, long ago while he was still an
|
|
apprentice. The relationship had lasted for almost a year before it
|
|
disintegrated messily. The breakup also resulted in the destruction
|
|
of their partnership, which had almost been worse than the breakup.
|
|
Now, Cefn was feeling the beginnings of what could well be love
|
|
for his partner Je'en. And he didn't want anything at all to happen
|
|
to their friendship, which was why thoughts of marriage made him
|
|
nervous - he had recently been daydreaming of spending the rest of
|
|
his life tied to Je'en.
|
|
Conversation soon turned to the celebration of the King's
|
|
Birthday three days hence. The celebration in Dargon would be token,
|
|
with the Court Ball held by Duke Clifton being the most lavish
|
|
demonstration scheduled to take place. Je'en and Cefn had an
|
|
invitation, and they discussed what they would wear to the event.
|
|
When Cefn offered to wangle Ka'en an invitation, too, the young man
|
|
declined politely, saying that the atmosphere would be far to
|
|
rarefied in the Ballroom for him to be comfortable.
|
|
Eventually, Kroan had to leave as it was getting late and he had
|
|
work the next day. As Kroan left, Ka'en also took his leave. Cefn
|
|
expected Je'en to stay with him for a little while, but she rose
|
|
from the table directly after her cousin and bade Cefn farewell very
|
|
distantly. Cefn looked after her as she left the Inn, and wondered
|
|
what had gotten into her lately.
|
|
Feeling uneasy, Cefn bought a bottle of wine and went home. He
|
|
activated the golden globes he had had installed in the town house
|
|
he had purchased and made sure that all of the windows were properly
|
|
sealed. He then removed his protective cowl and hung it on a peg by
|
|
the front door. He took the bottle, got a glass and his cards, and
|
|
went to the study to do a reading on Je'en to relieve his uneasiness.
|
|
He shuffled, cut, shuffled again, and was ready. The first card
|
|
turned over was the Twelve of Swords reversed. Trouble from the
|
|
start. He swiftly layed out the rest of the Bent Star, the frown
|
|
deepening on his face. When the layout was complete, he filled his
|
|
glass, drained it, filled it again, and drained most of it. Then, he
|
|
looked at the layout again. Nope, it hadn't improved.
|
|
It was one of the worst yet non-commital readings he had ever
|
|
seen. It indicated danger - disaster, even - all around, but it
|
|
couldn't identify the source. Every bad card or position had shown
|
|
up in that reading, but in such a way that it told him little.
|
|
Topping off his glass again, Cefn reshuffled the cards. It took
|
|
some time before they felt right, and when he layed them out he
|
|
found out why - the entire layout was, card for card, the same as
|
|
the first one.
|
|
Eyes wide, Cefn sat back in his chair and drank from the bottle,
|
|
leaving the glass on the table. He had never heard of an exactly
|
|
duplicated layout actually happening before. He wondered what it
|
|
meant and whether Je'en would survive the forces gathering around her.
|
|
|
|
Emissary
|
|
Tanandra en'Elerch lifted the simple brass door-knocker and
|
|
hesitated a moment. As she finally let it fall to strike against the
|
|
shiny plate it was hinged to, she wondered what it would be like to
|
|
see Cefn again. It had been so long since the last time...
|
|
She waited for several minutes before taking the knocker in hand
|
|
again, but as she did so, she could hear noises just inside the
|
|
door. Hastily stepping back, she composed herself and waited for the
|
|
door to open.
|
|
When it finally did open, there was a moment of silence before
|
|
Cefn spoke. "It's... good to see you, Tanandra. Come in, please."
|
|
Tandi wished she could see inside the cowl that Cefn had to
|
|
wear. She couldn't quite fathom the tone in his voice, and she was
|
|
sure that if she had been able to see his face she could have
|
|
interpreted it.
|
|
She stepped into the entry hall of Cefn's town house and turned
|
|
as he shut the door. With a gesture, the single candle lantern that
|
|
had been shining in the little hall went out, and the golden globe
|
|
at the ceiling took over illumination duties. Cefn removed his cowl
|
|
and hung it on a peg by the door, then led her into his study.
|
|
Tandi took in the scene in the study while Cefn asked her if she
|
|
wanted anything to drink. She noticed the spread of cards on the
|
|
table, and even though she knew little about their meanings (she
|
|
hadn't chosen to study them), she could tell that the layout was a
|
|
bad one. She also noticed the bottle on the table, and wondered at
|
|
it since she knew that Cefn didn't do much drinking at home.
|
|
As Cefn handed her a glass of cider, he asked, "Well, how have
|
|
you been, Tandi?"
|
|
Before answering, Tandi took a good look at Cefn. She decided
|
|
that time had treated him well - he still looked as good as when
|
|
they had been ...apprentices together, if not better. She also
|
|
realized that she still has some deep feelings for him which
|
|
suprised her; she thought she had left him behind all those years ago.
|
|
Firmly pushing her uncertain feelings out of the way, she
|
|
recalled the reason she was visiting Cefn. She set the glass down
|
|
and placed her forefingers and thumbs together, forming a crude
|
|
circle. She hummed a low note, and the space within that circle
|
|
began to glow with a swirling green-blue light. She said, "I have
|
|
come on business from the Council, Cefn."
|
|
The blue-eyed mage's smile of welcome vanished at the sight of
|
|
the sigil that the swirling light had formed between Tandi's
|
|
fingers. Cefn said, "I no longer serve your masters, Tandi. You are
|
|
wasting your time."
|
|
Tandi had expected this reaction, and was prepared. Sternly, she
|
|
said, "The Elders never acknowledged your debt as paid. You
|
|
performed a great service for the Council when you finally
|
|
eliminated the last followers of Jhel and the Sword of Cleah. Even
|
|
so, the services they have rendered you have not yet been repaid."
|
|
Before he could interrupt, she continued, "The Council has
|
|
detected certain experiments into the Forbidden Art. They lay to you
|
|
the task of finding who is learning the Art and stopping him. There
|
|
is every indication that the experimenter is Vard."
|
|
Cefn paused a moment, pondering the situation, before answering.
|
|
He said, with a forced calm that Tandi could see through with ease,
|
|
"I cannot help. I...I am otherwise occupied. Something is wrong here
|
|
in Dargon. There is a threat hovering over my partner,
|
|
Je'lanthra'en. She's been acting strange lately - out of character.
|
|
I must stay and help her - after what I have already put her through."
|
|
He turned away, but not before Tandi read the love in his face,
|
|
and the pain of that secret. She reflected that going around with
|
|
one's face hidden by a magically dark cowl didn't give one much
|
|
reason to learn to control one's facial expression. Cefn probably
|
|
didn't even realize how open his face was. She felt the remnants of
|
|
her own love crumble in the face of his deep feelings.
|
|
Sadly but forcefully, Tandi said, "Cefn, the Council has
|
|
empowered me to order you into this; even to lay a gorfodd on you -
|
|
they knew you would resist. But, I don't want to force you. Listen,
|
|
I know what Je'en has been through. You were monitored during that
|
|
mission, as were the events you set in motion. But, she has survived
|
|
admirably. She redirected her life without any help at all, which is
|
|
remarkable considering the loss she sustained. She will be able to
|
|
cope with whatever awaits in her future.
|
|
"Cefn, you are the only person currently available for this
|
|
mission. The others are all elsewhere, or not of sufficient ability
|
|
to deal with someone able to delve into the Forbidden Art. Please
|
|
reconsider. This IS important. You know the possibilities of an
|
|
adept of the Art. Remember Ciraledwen."
|
|
In the silence that followed, Tandi knew that he was
|
|
remembering. The story of the most infamous Elder in history was an
|
|
early lesson, and one that was drilled into every student of the
|
|
Council. Ciraledwen had, through study of the Art, become able to
|
|
reanimate whole armies of the dead - an invincible force. The only
|
|
limit to her power had been the number of lives she could tie to her
|
|
focus - humans enslaved to her will body and soul, and used to
|
|
infuse the corpses with artificial life. It had taken a tremendous
|
|
combined effort of the normally reclusive Elders and all of their
|
|
students to finally breach the shields she had built to protect
|
|
herself and destroy the evil Ciraledwen.
|
|
When Cefn finally turned back to face her, Tandi could see the
|
|
struggle he was undergoing on his too-expressive face. The concrete
|
|
threat of a practicioner of the Forbidden Art had to be balanced by
|
|
the vague threat against his partner and love.
|
|
Finally, he decided. He said, "I...I cannot." His resolve firmed
|
|
as he continued, "Je'en is more important to me than a vague threat.
|
|
You are easily powerful enough to go against Vard, if he is truly
|
|
involved and his name wasn't used just to try to lure me into this
|
|
mission. After all, you have been under the tutelage of the Council
|
|
for all these years since I left. You must be far more powerful than
|
|
I by now.
|
|
"Please understand me, Tandi. I will not go of my own free will,
|
|
and I cannot allow myself to be forced by either you or the council.
|
|
It's been good to see you again, Tanandra. Good bye."
|
|
Cefn turned away again and went over the the table where his
|
|
bottle still sat. Tandi watched him pour another glass full and
|
|
drink half of it in one gulp. Sorrowfully, she began to concentrate
|
|
on the sheet of light filling the circle still formed by her
|
|
fingers. The identifying sigil had been given to her by the Elders
|
|
of the Council, and with it had come a latent spell, a gorfodd, or
|
|
compulsion. It was far more powerful than one she could cast
|
|
herself and (so the Elders hoped) more powerful than Cefn could break.
|
|
As she concentrated on the sigil, the light that formed it began
|
|
to change from green-blue to red-purple. She watched the spell focus
|
|
as it strengthened. She considered Cefn's suggestion that she go in
|
|
his place. She had offered herself to the Elders, a fact that Cefn
|
|
couldn't know. And she had been rejected as not able enough. True,
|
|
she had spent the years since Cefn had gone out on his own with the
|
|
teachers of the Council but she still was not as powerful as Cefn.
|
|
It wasn't her fault. She just didn't have Cefn's ability. Not
|
|
everyone could master the forces of magic to the same degree, and
|
|
she just couldn't do as well as some. Certainly not well enough to
|
|
combat someone able to delve into the forces required to master the
|
|
Forbidden Art.
|
|
The spell was ready. Cefn hadn't turned around yet - he was
|
|
filling his glass again. Tandi said, "Cefn, forgive me but I was
|
|
ordered." And, with a Word, she released the spell.
|
|
Cefn may not have turned around, but he must have suspected
|
|
something. He whirled at the sound of her voice, and Tandi gasped at
|
|
the sight of the hoop he held between his hands. He stretched it to
|
|
about three feet in diameter, the silvery strands threaded across it
|
|
actually weaving closer together as the hoop grew. By the time he
|
|
faced her, the hoop was a shiny mirror held before Cefn's head.
|
|
The purple-black sphere of the gorfodd spell struck the
|
|
hoop-mirror and bounced. Tandi gasped again when she saw that it had
|
|
been perfectly reflected, and would strike her. Before she could
|
|
react, the spell hit her, and she felt the cold tingle of the
|
|
compulsion magic settle over her body and mind. She immediatly felt
|
|
the compelling need to go find the person practicing the Forbidden
|
|
Art. It was like a physical presence inside her, forcing her to
|
|
move. Its little voice whispered to her, 'Get moving, find the man!'
|
|
As she turned to leave, she heard Cefn say, "Tandi, I'm sorry! I
|
|
didn't mean for the spell to return to you. Will you be all right?"
|
|
She opened Cefn's front door, knowing that he couldn't follow
|
|
her because of the moon- and lantern-light on the street. She called
|
|
back, "Of course I'll be fine. Good bye, Cefn. Good bye." She didn't
|
|
close the door behind herself, hoping that that tactic would gain
|
|
her enough time to get away. Now that she had taken the gorfodd, she
|
|
wanted no help or hindrance to her mission. She would find the man,
|
|
and she would destroy him, all by her self.
|
|
She didn't even hear the other tiny voice in her mind, the voice
|
|
of her reason, saying, "I'm dead if this quest succeeds."
|
|
|
|
Morion
|
|
He awoke feeling totally disoriented, almost as though was in
|
|
two places at once. Slowly, almost painfully, he sorted out the
|
|
sensations and realized first that he wasn't dead. He wondered why,
|
|
considersing the vivid memory of the pain the poison had caused him.
|
|
Morion could still feel slight twinges from his arm, and it hurt to
|
|
close the hand that had held the tiny, lethal egg. Of course, he
|
|
couldn't account for the general stiffness of the rest of his body
|
|
by the effects of the poison - if its effect had reached that much
|
|
of him, he wouldn't be around to notice the results.
|
|
Then he realized that he wasn't alone on Kyle's bed. He looked
|
|
at the sleeping form of the strange blue haired woman who had called
|
|
herself Kimmentari and realized that there was now a rapport between
|
|
them that had been instrumental in saving his life. Somehow, he knew
|
|
things about Kimmentari that he couldn't possibly know - things even
|
|
lovers wouldn't tell each other. And he knew that she was
|
|
helplessly, perhaps fatally, in love with him.
|
|
The first stirrings of returned feelings propelled Morion off
|
|
the bed in fear and confusion. How could he possible be in love with
|
|
such an alien creature? He had never even heard of her kind before.
|
|
He...he just couldn't really be in love, could he? She was
|
|
beautiful, in an exotic way, and she had saved his life. Still...
|
|
Thoughts came to him, memories and dreams. They weren't his,
|
|
weren't even human, but they were entrancing. He saw Thyerin, the
|
|
god Kimmentari's people worshipped, and the Dance he laid out as a
|
|
pattern for his followers. He saw what hoftanau meant for one of
|
|
Kimmentari's race, and how deeply the fire love had already burned
|
|
into her. The thoughts were remnants of the healing bond that had
|
|
followed her ridding his body of the poison, not actual mind to mind
|
|
contact. But, Morion remembered the instant of his waking and
|
|
seeming to be in two places at once. And he knew that if someone
|
|
could know him on so intimate a level as to have actually been in
|
|
his mind, and they still cared or loved him, he wouldn't refute that
|
|
love. And, he knew that he loved Kimmentari.
|
|
He looked for a long time at the silken-clad body of the alien
|
|
woman, then reached out tentatively to touch her shoulder. As his
|
|
hand touched her, he felt a brief reprise of the joined sensation
|
|
and she opened her eyes. He stared into the deep red of her eyes,
|
|
willingly getting lost in their depths. He settled slowly onto the
|
|
bed, bent over, and lightly kissed his saviour on the mouth. Her
|
|
response was slow and hesitant, as if she didn't know how to
|
|
respond. But soon, as their mental rapport re-established itself,
|
|
her reactions took on more passion.
|
|
Several hours later, Morion again awoke to the now familiar two
|
|
places at once feeling. He looked up into Kimmentari's ruby eyes
|
|
where she was leaning over him staring at his face. He wouldn't have
|
|
minded taking a few hours more to get to know his love even better,
|
|
but Kimmentari laughed at his thought with a sound like silver
|
|
bells, and said, "There will be time enough and more for that, my
|
|
love, when we have danced our part of the Dance done. Or have you
|
|
forgotten your mission here - the circlet?"
|
|
In fact, Morion had done just that. It took a moment for him to
|
|
recall just how he had ended up where he was: the challenge by Kyle
|
|
BlueSword, meeting Kimmentari on the road to Belliern, the fight in
|
|
the village square, Kyle's story of possession, Morion's task to
|
|
deliver the crystal circlet to his former pupil Je'lanthra'en, and,
|
|
finally, the tiny poisoned egg that had been the revenge of the
|
|
demon-thing that had possessed Kyle.
|
|
"Souls and swords, what day is it, anyway? How much time do I
|
|
have to finish my task?"
|
|
"Calm yourself, my love," said Kimmentari. "My thread has been
|
|
joined to yours in this Dance - the task of delivering the circlet
|
|
has become mine as well. This day is AvansDay of Harvest, just nine
|
|
days from the deadline."
|
|
"But, I...we'll never be able to get to Dargon in nine days,
|
|
that is unless you..."
|
|
Kimmentari smiled as she said, "I cannot move over such great
|
|
distances any faster than you, my love. Alone, my magic cannot solve
|
|
the problem. But I saw something in Thyerin's pattern that might help.
|
|
"Just six days from now, your King Haralan will celebrate his
|
|
six and thirtieth year of life. As I understand it, this is a cause
|
|
of much celebration, and many people will gather in Magnus to help
|
|
him commemorate the event. Among those present, there are sure to be
|
|
enough persons skilled in the shaping of Power to enable us to
|
|
devise a method to deliver the circlet in time. It seems that we
|
|
should be able to reach the Crown City before the celebration, right?"
|
|
Morion said, "That depends on just where this citadel is. Or,
|
|
will that 'lens' thing that Kyle used still work?"
|
|
"Its power has dissapated with the passing of the demon from
|
|
this plane. We shall have to use more conventional means of
|
|
transportation, I'm afraid. Still, I think we can make it. We have
|
|
no choice, really.
|
|
"To be sure, we should leave as soon as possible."
|
|
"Surely a little more...rest...wouldn't hurt?" asked Morion.
|
|
Kimmentari laughed again, and answered, "Well, maybe not a
|
|
little more...," and kissed him.
|
|
|
|
Near sunset of the day before the King's Birthday, Morion and
|
|
Kimmentari rode into Magnus on wild horses she had called out of the
|
|
forest around Kyle's citadel. The ride had been long and hard, and
|
|
they had made it in just five days by leaving an hour before sunrise
|
|
and riding for an hour after sunset every day. That didn't leave
|
|
much time for sleeping, much less other nighttime games, but their
|
|
mission was serious. Morion's rapport with Kimmentari had given him
|
|
as much of an understanding of Thyerin's Dance as he could grasp,
|
|
and he saw what the Dance had planned out for Je'en if she didn't
|
|
receive the circlet in time: full mental possession by a
|
|
power-hungry wizard.
|
|
Morion pondered what to do when they arrived in Magnus. It
|
|
wouldn't be easy to put Kimme's plan into practice: unless very
|
|
powerful, those persons able to harness the Power seldom made it
|
|
generally known that they could, as magic-use wasn't (in general)
|
|
looked upon with much favor. Morion no longer had the contacts he
|
|
once had in the Crown City. He had been away too long. He thought of
|
|
just going to the Castle with the vague hope of meeting some of his
|
|
old military friends when he hit upon the perfect solution. It
|
|
wouldn't be very nice to put an extra load on Coridan, since he
|
|
would certainly be having a busy day as the Falcon Herald at an
|
|
official Baranur function, but the young man was the only person
|
|
that Morion was sure to know at Court.
|
|
He decided not to intrude on whatever last minutes of peace
|
|
Coridan was likely to be having this celebration-eve, and he took
|
|
Kimme to the Inn he stayed in whenever he was in Magnus. They made a
|
|
noticeable pair as the warrior and the alien woman rode through the
|
|
streets. At the Inn, Kimme drew some long stares, but the presence
|
|
of Morion prevented any overt hostility her strangeness might have
|
|
precipitated. The Inn had changed hands since Morion's last visit,
|
|
but its quality hadn't suffered in the exchange and he and Kimme
|
|
spent a very restful night making up for all the shortage of rest
|
|
they had had on their ride.
|
|
Morion and Kimme set off to the Castle early the next morning:
|
|
so early that the kitchen of the Inn hadn't yet opened for
|
|
breakfast, forcing the pair to leave without eating. Despite the
|
|
hour, there were a good number of people up and about making
|
|
preparations for the Celebration Parade that wouldn't even start out
|
|
from the Castle until high noon. It was dark enough in the pre-dawn
|
|
gloaming that Kimme received no undue attention. Morion was careful,
|
|
however, to go out of his way to stay out of even the fringes of the
|
|
Fifth Quarter - he had no intention of risking his life for a few
|
|
less minutes walking time.
|
|
Magnus was a huge city. Morion knew that it had no competition
|
|
for the title of Largest City of Baranur. It could hold an infinite
|
|
number of villages the size of Tench, and even cities the size of
|
|
Dargon or Endeirion would vanish two or three times worth within the
|
|
limits of Magnus. Morion and Kimmentari had several miles walk (not
|
|
including the detour), and the sun was just beginning to peek over
|
|
the horizon by the time they reached the outer wall of the Crown
|
|
Castle itself.
|
|
The walk around and around the rings surrounding the Castle was
|
|
as tiring as the walk from the Inn, and the sun was well up into the
|
|
sky by the time Morion and Kimme reached the entrance to the Castle
|
|
itself. More than an hour later, after bullying his way through more
|
|
minor court functionaries than he could count, Morion finally found
|
|
himself in the reception room of Coridan's quarters. He made
|
|
personally sure that a page had been sent to summon Coridan before
|
|
allowing himself to relax and calmly await the Herald's arrival.
|
|
After what seemed like days but was only about half an hour,
|
|
Coridan appeared. It took a moment for Morion to be certain of that,
|
|
though - the young Herald was dressed in a plain brown tunic and
|
|
leggings, dress more suited to a page, or rather a house-squire
|
|
because of his age. As Morion rose to greet him, the question must
|
|
have been on his face because Coridan, after glancing down at
|
|
himself and smiling, answered, "I am dressed like this because it
|
|
makes it easier to spy. While most of the castle staff know me on
|
|
sight, we have almost doubled the number of servitors in the castle
|
|
for the celebration, and most of the new staff don't know me from
|
|
the king. So, I go around and make sure that things are getting
|
|
done, and nothing is getting stolen. The guards are looking out for
|
|
that sort of thing as well, but it makes me happier to see to some
|
|
of it myself.
|
|
"Besides, you should hear the staff gossip when they think no
|
|
one is listening! I get more news in this disguise than all of the
|
|
king's spies can ferret out. Why, I just heard that Lady Merritan
|
|
had been seen...
|
|
"Sorry, Lord Morion. I forgot myself, please forgive me. Now,
|
|
what brings you here with such urgent business, and who is your
|
|
lovely companion?"
|
|
Morion said, "Master Coridan, allow me to introduce you to the
|
|
Lady Kimmentari, a highborn of the Araf. My Lady Kimmentari, I
|
|
present to you Master Coridan, Falcon Herald of Baranur."
|
|
Coridan and Kimme bowed to each other, then Kimme stretched out
|
|
her hand, and Coridan properly kissed it in greeting. Morion could
|
|
see that Kimme's strangeness fascinated the herald - the young man
|
|
could hardly tear his eyes away from her when he said, "The Araf? I
|
|
don't believe I've ever heard mention of them. Where did you meet
|
|
her, Morion?"
|
|
Kimme answered, "My people are a very secretive race who live in
|
|
tune with the Dances of Thyerin. It was one such dance, that of
|
|
Ahar'yKinel, that crossed the paths of Morion and myself and which
|
|
brings us here."
|
|
Morion continued, "I met Kimmentari on that quest you brought to
|
|
my door so long ago. She appeared out of the rain one day as I was
|
|
going to meet Kyle's challenge, and told me about Belliern. She also
|
|
said that there was a further purpose in my meeting Kyle beyond
|
|
freeing him from the demon that had possessed him and protecting the
|
|
villages of Baranur from his ravages - namely, that I retrieve a
|
|
crystal circlet from his citadel and deliver it to one of my former
|
|
pupils, Je'lanthra'en.
|
|
"When I had defeated Kyle, she appeared again, got the dying
|
|
Kyle to explain what had happened to him. Then, she reminded me of
|
|
my secondary mission and tried to warn me to be careful. I went to
|
|
Kyle's citadel by the same means that he had used to get in and out,
|
|
and eventually found the circlet. But the demon that had possessed
|
|
him had also laid a trap for anyone going after the circlet. That
|
|
trap almost killed me, and would have if not for Kimme's intervention.
|
|
"The healing sleep she had to put us into wasted more than three
|
|
weeks of the time before the deadline established by the pattern of
|
|
the Dance to get the circlet to Je'en. That deadline is just two
|
|
days hence: far too long to get to Dargon even by the fastest mode
|
|
of transport available. And so we came to you, because Kimme had an
|
|
idea about how to get the circlet to Je'en without us traveling
|
|
there. Kimme?"
|
|
"I know an enchantment that will enable us to send the circlet
|
|
by magical means to Je'lanthra'en," said Kimme. "But to send the
|
|
artifact so far will require far more effort than I, alone, can
|
|
muster. In fact, it will take at least a score of human power-users
|
|
to put forth enough effort to get the circlet to Dargon."
|
|
"And," said Morion, "I decided to come to you for help, because
|
|
I figured that you know all of the magicians and sorcerers in the
|
|
Kingdom, or at least who would know them. If you will help us, it
|
|
will save valuable time in gathering enough people to power Kimme's
|
|
spell. So, will you?"
|
|
Coridan took his time pondering the story and what help he might
|
|
possibly be. He believed it - Kimmentari's appearance alone gave all
|
|
the credence necessary to Morion's tale. But magicians were mostly
|
|
reclusive, and wary of letting knowledge of their abilities get out.
|
|
In some parts of the kingdom sorcery wasn't as frowned upon but
|
|
here, in the Crown City, magic was looked down upon except where it
|
|
was always beneficent, like the healers. For some, if the fact that
|
|
they were users of magic became known, it would destroy them and
|
|
their businesses. So Coridan thought long and hard before finally
|
|
agreeing to help.
|
|
A discussion of details kept Coridan from his duties for a
|
|
further hour. It was finally decided that a message would be given
|
|
discreetly to all of the 'power-users' (as Kimmentari put it) that
|
|
Coridan knew of to meet at Coridan's rooms in the last hour of the
|
|
day. Coridan would also distribute the message to the few people he
|
|
knew that would have a broader acquaintance with users of magic. In
|
|
all, Coridan assured Morion and Kimmentari, there should be well
|
|
over a score of people to aid in the conjuring.
|
|
The time between Coridan's leaving and the arrival of the first
|
|
of the magic users late that night was occupied by three things for
|
|
Morion and Kimmentari: eating (first, a large breakfast, then a
|
|
moderate lunch not too long after the breakfast, a dinner at about
|
|
the proper time, and intermittent snacks, mostly as the evening wore
|
|
on and there was little else to do); preparing for the enchantment
|
|
(which consisted of Kimme listing the things she and the others
|
|
would need, and Morion sending pages looking for the items so listed
|
|
in what, at times, amounted to a treasure hunt all across Magnus for
|
|
the more esoteric needs); and, by far the most pleasurable pass-time
|
|
for the pair, just being together. What with all of the travel and
|
|
worry of the past days, the two hadn't had much time to be alone
|
|
together. Of course, they were more tightly joined than was humanly
|
|
possible for a couple under normal circumstances: Morion could still
|
|
feel the resonances of Kimme's mind within his own when the
|
|
conditions were just right. But it was still nice to just sit and
|
|
touch and talk at times.
|
|
It was after midnight when Coridan arrived in his apartments and
|
|
announced that there would be no one else coming. He joined Morion
|
|
as the only other non-participant in the room over next to one wall
|
|
where they would both out of the way, and watched the thirty-seven
|
|
users of power, directed by Kimmentari of the Afar, begin the ritual
|
|
that she had explained to the first few arrivals, who had then
|
|
instructed those who came later.
|
|
The ritual was taking place in the largest of the rooms
|
|
belonging to Coridan, which had been cleared of furniture as part of
|
|
the preparation that Kimme and Morion had engaged in earlier.
|
|
Cushions on the floor, and two chairs against the far wall were the
|
|
only non-magical trappings left in the room. The 37 magicians were
|
|
arranged in three patterned rings around Kimme. Within the inner
|
|
ring where Kimme sat slightly off center was a forked candle stick
|
|
mounted with a tall red candle and a much shorter purple one. The
|
|
red candle had come out of the castle's stores, but the making of
|
|
the purple one had taken much time and many of the strange
|
|
ingredients the pages had been forced to hunt for.
|
|
When everyone was seated comfortably, Kimme said, "The object of
|
|
this conjuration has been relayed to each and every one of you. Most
|
|
of the detailed effort shall be handled by me, as I have the best
|
|
knowledge of the enchantment required, and I have as accurate a
|
|
mental picture as is possible of the target, one Je'lanthre'en, a
|
|
former pupil of my Lord Morion. The rest of you are to concentrate
|
|
on the two candles before me. Try to keep both of them in focus, but
|
|
of the two, the shorter one is the more important. I shall start a
|
|
chant to get us all in rhythm - from there, each of you use whatever
|
|
method you prefer to pool your power around the candles.
|
|
"Is everyone ready? Then, let up begin. Hmmmmm..."
|
|
Morion watched as the 37 magicians began to chant and sway.
|
|
Slowly, they all began to speak and move as one. When they were as
|
|
attuned as they could get, Kimme eased herself out of the chant-meld
|
|
and began to conjure. She huddled over the silk pillow that bore the
|
|
circlet. The pillow contained even weirder things than did the
|
|
purple candle, and it was from those strange stuffings that Kimme
|
|
was attempting to produce what she called an awyrdyn - a creature of
|
|
another plane that could be bound to this one for a specific
|
|
duration, such as 'until the completion of a given task'. The
|
|
necessity of the pooling of powers was that it was draining to open
|
|
a planar gate (which was the function of the pillow and its
|
|
stuffings), and even more draining to bind the creature so summoned
|
|
to its task (in which the purple candle would aid). Kimme and her
|
|
kind were strongly steeped in the useage of the power, but she
|
|
needed to be sure that both the gate and the bond lasted long enough
|
|
to get the awyrdyn all the way to Dargon safely with the circlet. It
|
|
wouldn't help the spell's effectiveness any that the clearest
|
|
impression/image of Je'en that Kimme could get from Morion's mind
|
|
was very vague and could almost as well be applied to any of Je'en's
|
|
family at least by the criteria that the awyrdyn was capable of using.
|
|
Time seemed to slow down for the two watchers. So little was
|
|
happening, and what was was so boring. Coridan almost nodded off
|
|
several times - but then, he had been up since very early and it was
|
|
very late. Morion had had enough rest that he was able to resist
|
|
closing his eyes, but the sameness of the ritual almost hypnotised
|
|
him into unconciousness at least as many times as Coridan. A rough
|
|
estimate of the time told Morion that more than half an hour had
|
|
passed before he finally noticed the faint blurriness that was
|
|
hovering like a small cloud around the small pillow.
|
|
After rubbing his eyes to be sure that they weren't playing
|
|
tricks on him, he began to pay close attention to what was
|
|
developing on and around the circlet. The wavering cloud thickened
|
|
until it almost blotted out the pillow and circlet, both visible as
|
|
wavery outlines within the form of the wraith-like thing formed
|
|
around them. It was vaguely human in shape, but there was no detail
|
|
to its body - it looked like a wax shop mannequin before it's been
|
|
sculpted to look a little more natural.
|
|
The chant began to speed up a little as Kimme began the second
|
|
part of the ritual, that of impressing the task on the awyrdyn, and
|
|
she started drawing power faster. The red candle had burned rather
|
|
rapidly until it was the size of the purple candle, at which point
|
|
both began to melt at about the same rate (which was faster than a
|
|
normal candle would melt). As the purple candle shortened, the
|
|
awyrdyn seemed to grow darker in shade, from the milky translucence
|
|
it began as to a deeper and deeper violet. Adding color to its form
|
|
didn't help its definition, though - in fact, making it easier to
|
|
see was definitely disturbing. When it was indistinct, its
|
|
formlessness could be accepted. Now that it was fully visible and
|
|
purple, the utter lack of features was unnerving.
|
|
As the ritual continued, signs of fatigue began to show among
|
|
those supplying the power for it. Sweat beaded the brows of most,
|
|
and some were dripping from the exertion. A few of the marginally
|
|
talented who had come only to show off their ability were seriously
|
|
straining to keep up with the rest - they would have dropped out,
|
|
but they all knew what that would do to the rhythm that had been
|
|
built up.
|
|
Finally, both the red and purple candles were little more than
|
|
stubs in the candellabra. Kimme uttered a command that grated on the
|
|
ears of all who heard it - a decidedly unpleasant sensation
|
|
especially from one whose voice was normally so music-like - and the
|
|
awyrdyn began to rise to the ceiling of the room. The circlet rose
|
|
with it, held within its body somehow. Of the pillow that had held
|
|
the circlet, there was no sign. When the wraith-thing had vanished
|
|
from the room, Kimme gave another, more pleasant command, and the
|
|
chant stopped even though no one present could understand the
|
|
language she used. The candles also extinguished themselves, and
|
|
there was silence in the room for almost half a minute, until one of
|
|
the magic users moaned loudly and collapsed.
|
|
Quiet chaos reigned in Coridan's room as the overcome magician
|
|
was taken away to be tended and the other power users filtered away
|
|
to rejoin the celebration below. Finally, only Morion, Kimme, and
|
|
Coridan were left in the room. Coridan said, "Did it work?"
|
|
Kimme, who looked tired but not exhausted, said, "It should
|
|
have. There was enough power present, and enough time to prepare the
|
|
enchantment properly. But I have not been able to see whether this
|
|
will work within the weave of Thyerin's dance, so we can only hope."
|
|
Morion said, "Thank you, Coridan, for letting us use your rooms
|
|
for this, and for all your help in gathering the people we needed to
|
|
make it work. Do you think there are any free guest rooms we could
|
|
sleep in? It's a long way back to the Inn..."
|
|
"Don't even think of moving from this room, you two. You have
|
|
done enough for one day, and you'll take your rest right here. You
|
|
know where the bed is - use it. I have duties elsewhere that I have
|
|
shirked to be here to watch your Lady work. I have to get back to
|
|
them now, so go ahead and sleep. And don't worry about me - if I
|
|
need a rest, I can find places more suited to a busy and single man
|
|
than to a couple who want to sleep for hours. See you in the morning
|
|
- or rather, later this morning. Pleasant dreams."
|
|
As Morion lay letting sleep overcome him, arms around Kimme who
|
|
was already asleep, he wondered whether Kimme's enchantment would
|
|
prove effective. Finally, he decided that it had to - there was
|
|
certainly nothing he or she could do about it now anyway. Time to
|
|
stop worrying about his old mission, and start thinking about his
|
|
future with Kimme at Pentamorlo. With those pleasant thoughts
|
|
running through his mind, he fell asleep.
|
|
|
|
Theft
|
|
Je'en stood in front of the mirror, a battle going on in her
|
|
mind. Her body trembled from the effort she was putting into the
|
|
fight. Her left hand was locked, white knuckled, on the edge of her
|
|
mask, and much of the battle going on was over how to move that hand.
|
|
The room she was in was one of the lesser guest rooms in Dargon
|
|
Castle. Sounds of merriment came faintly to her from the Ball in the
|
|
High Court, and from the smaller celebrations that had been brought
|
|
to some of the rooms in the guest wings. She was alone in the room,
|
|
and no one knew she was there, which was as the thing in her mind
|
|
commanded. The thing that had forced her there, and that was trying
|
|
to force her to remove her mask.
|
|
The thing - the presence - in her mind had been gaining strength
|
|
ever since that day that she had learned of her parents coming to
|
|
Dargon for Kroan's wedding. It had finally been able to force her
|
|
into Abernald's Apothecary just a few nights ago. Abernald had been
|
|
killed that night. She wasn't quite sure that she had done the
|
|
killing - she didn't remember. Perhaps someone might have slipped in
|
|
through a door left open by her to do it. But she had a sinking
|
|
feeling that the deed had been done by her - or the thing in her mind.
|
|
She knew that Cefn was worried about her. She had been aware of
|
|
his concern for a long time, but the thing had enough control of her
|
|
mind to force her not to react. She turned aside his questions, and
|
|
simply ignored him when he got too insistent.
|
|
He had put on a good show of normalcy earlier that day when he
|
|
had arrived at her house to escort her to the Ball. They were almost
|
|
normal together. But she knew what she had in the satchel she
|
|
brought, and had a vague idea what the thing intended for her to do.
|
|
She knew that the Ball would be far from normal for her.
|
|
Somewhere around the 10th hour of the night, she broke away from
|
|
Cefn at the command of the thing in her mind. She had been covertly
|
|
eyeing all of the unattached males at the Ball, as per instructions,
|
|
and had selected the perfect specimen for her deception. When she
|
|
left Cefn without a word of explanation and latched onto her choice,
|
|
she saw the hurt in Cefn's stance - she had become very adept at
|
|
reading her partner in ways that didn't involve the face (which she
|
|
seldom saw much of). His hurt hurt her, but she had her orders, and
|
|
she didn't seem to be able to disobey them.
|
|
The young knight, resplendent in his green jeweled belt and
|
|
golden spurs, was much flattered by Je'en's attentions. He willingly
|
|
let her lead him around, especially when she led him away to what
|
|
she said was her room. As soon as they were alone in the empty room,
|
|
Je'en slipped from her belt pouch one of the small spheres she had
|
|
made from the things taken from the Apothecary. It broke properly
|
|
when dropped, releasing a fast-rising cloud of white powder that
|
|
soon had the knight sleeping peacefully on the bed.
|
|
Je'en then slipped unnoticed out of that room, and made her way
|
|
to another. She slipped into dark clinging clothing from her pack,
|
|
and donned a hood. And then came the moment when she stood in front
|
|
of the mirror fighting the presence in her mind's command to remove
|
|
her mask. Everything she had done at its command so far she hadn't
|
|
been able to resist, no matter how repellent to her. But removing
|
|
her mask was too much of a violation of her self. She had to fight it.
|
|
The presence again commanded her to remove the bright silver
|
|
mask. It was easily recognized, and hard to hide. Je'en again
|
|
refused. It was her strongest link to her new self, and without it,
|
|
she felt she would just be a songless bard with a maimed right hand.
|
|
The presence insisted, and Je'en could feel the pressure on her mind
|
|
increasing until she could no longer bear it. With a satisfyingly
|
|
final gesture, her left hand moved away from her face, bringing the
|
|
mask with it. A casual toss relegated the silver object to the
|
|
shadowy corners of the room, where it was forgotten.
|
|
The once again fully controlled Je'en pulled her hood down over
|
|
her face, hefted her satchel, and slipped out of the room, heading
|
|
for the depths of Castle Dargon.
|
|
Three-quarters of an hour later, Je'en stood before a huge door
|
|
in the deepest and oldest part of Dargon Castle. Few people knew
|
|
about the sub-dungeons she now stood in, or that they had been built
|
|
long before the Castle itself had. The somewhat faded Dargon Crest
|
|
painted on the vault door before her covered, but did not well hide,
|
|
the original markings on the door - markings in the runic style of
|
|
the Fretheod Empire.
|
|
Six people normally stood guard around this most secret vault.
|
|
All six had been taken care of by the dust in the spheres as easily
|
|
as all of the other guards Je'en had passed on her way down. She
|
|
walked up to the next obstacle in her path and examined the series
|
|
of locks that bound the vault closed. From a separate pouch in her
|
|
satchel, she removed a small wineskin that was filled with another
|
|
special mixture. Placing the nozzle in the largest keyhole, Je'en
|
|
gently squeezed the fluid into the locking mechanism. When the
|
|
wineskin was empty, she stepped back and waited.
|
|
Soon, thin white smoke began issuing from the keyhole. Je'en
|
|
still waited, until the smoke turned black, then ceased. She went
|
|
back over to the vault door and lightly touched the handle. Finding
|
|
it hot, as expected, she used the wineskin to protect her skin as
|
|
she pulled the door open with ease. As it came open, a grainy grey
|
|
powder began to leak out of the bolt hole - all that was left of the
|
|
locking mechanisms.
|
|
The vault itself was huge, but mostly empty. Along the wall
|
|
opposite the door was a small locked cabinet and there were some
|
|
shelves on the left hand wall that bore some decrepit antiques, so
|
|
poorly maintained that there was no telling what they had once been.
|
|
But Je'en wasn't interested in what was in the vault - she was
|
|
looking for what was under the vault.
|
|
In the very center of the vault's floor was an ornate inlay of
|
|
what seemed to be a compass rose, save that the four main points
|
|
were lettered in runic Fretheodan, and they didn't point in the
|
|
normal directions. Je'en didn't even notice this, but went to stand
|
|
on one of the lesser points. She gave the passwords that would open
|
|
the vault-within-a-vault, three nonsense syllables in Low
|
|
Fretheodan. The words came to her from the presence in her mind, and
|
|
she repeated them out loud. When the last echo had died, a rumbling
|
|
began. Slowly, the main axis of the 'compass' began to rise, bearing
|
|
with it the treasure Je'en had been directed to retrieve - the map
|
|
to the hiding place of the keseth, the key to unlock that hiding
|
|
place, and the skull of the only person who knew how to get by the
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traps guarding that hiding place.
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Another Theft
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Ka'en changed into the Castle Guard uniform he had pieced
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|
together after entering an empty guest room as close as he could
|
|
find to the servant's wing of the Castle. Getting into the Castle
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|
hadn't been as difficult as he had feared - he still retained some
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|
of the sneak-thief skills his first master had taught him.
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|
He had spent as little time as possible at the Ball itself,
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|
mostly from fear of meeting his cousin and her friends and being
|
|
recognized. He hadn't accepted their invitation to go to the Ball
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|
with them because it would have complicated his mission to have to
|
|
alibi himself to them when he vanished. He put the finishing touches
|
|
on his disguise and slipped out of the room and down into the cellars.
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|
Once into the under-levels of the castle, Ka'en began to walk
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|
purposefuly through the hallways, as if he were on an important
|
|
errand. He came to the first set of stairs leading into the dungeons
|
|
proper and was astonished to see the posted guard lying on the floor
|
|
next to the portal. He knelt next to the prone man and noticed a
|
|
light dusting of fine white powder on and around him. A touch to the
|
|
side of the throat assured Ka'en that the man was just sleeping even
|
|
though he was breathing so shallowly that he seemed dead to the
|
|
casual glance. Ka'en wondered exactly who and what had happened to
|
|
the man as he continued onward and downward.
|
|
By the time he reached the second sub-level, which was as far
|
|
down as most people thought the Castle went, Ka'en was getting
|
|
annoyed. Someone had preceeded him into the depths of Dargon Castle
|
|
and without a shread of the subtlety that he had taken so long to
|
|
insure. Each and every guard Ka'en had passed had been lying on the
|
|
floor, covered in white powder, asleep. It was a crude but effective
|
|
way to gain access to the lowest levels of the castle and it made
|
|
Ka'en's guard disguise utterly useless.
|
|
He entered the foundation levels of the castle quietly and
|
|
cautiously, wary of whoever had drugged the guards since they could
|
|
still be down there. The age and style of the architecture he passed
|
|
through was lost on him - he didn't have the experience to recognize
|
|
ancient Fretheodan ornamentation or construction techniques nor the
|
|
concentration to spare even if he had the knowledge. He began to
|
|
hear noises from up ahead, strange sounds like conversation but not
|
|
in any language he understood. He finally came to the end of the
|
|
hall he had been following and saw the open vault door, the vault
|
|
that was his own reason for being here this evening. He saw the
|
|
small vault within the larger vault that held the papers he had been
|
|
hired to procure; he saw the shelves on the walls with their
|
|
strange, incomprehensible contents; and he saw someone dressed in
|
|
black standing on the design in the center of the floor and watching
|
|
a portion of that design rise slowly into the air.
|
|
When the hidden crypt had fully revealed itself, the person in
|
|
black pushed back his - no, her - hood and squatted down to retrieve
|
|
the contents. It took Ka'en a moment to place the familiar face, but
|
|
when he finally recognized Je'en (the scar threw him off for a
|
|
moment), he gasped involuntarily, realizing that she must have been
|
|
the one to drug the guards. He wondered what was so valuable about
|
|
the contents of the hidden crypt that would draw Je'en to steal them.
|
|
Je'en heard Ka'en gasp and whirled and straightened with a grace
|
|
and fluidity that again astonished Ka'en. He knew that she was now a
|
|
warrior but to see the skill in her stance and bearing proved what
|
|
he had been told. She scanned the room looking for a weapon, since
|
|
she hadn't brought her own. Her eyes fell on one of the antiques,
|
|
and she dashed over to it. Drawing it left-handed, she continued her
|
|
dash right over to Ka'en. When he saw the murder in her eyes, his
|
|
instincts overcame his confusion, and he drew his steel to meet her.
|
|
But Ka'en was a thief, not a warrior. He could defend himself
|
|
against the types he was likely to meet in his job, but not against
|
|
one who made a living by the sword. Also, there was the fact that
|
|
Je'en was family to restrain his reactions. On her part, Je'en
|
|
wasn't pulling her blows for any reason, and Ka'en wasn't even sure
|
|
that she recognized him at all. He parried like mad, and tried the
|
|
few disarming tricks he knew, but Je'en's skill was too great. After
|
|
only a few minutes of frantic battle, she slipped her borrowed blade
|
|
deep into her cousin's side.
|
|
Ka'en knew intense pain and his blade clattered to the floor,
|
|
his body following it seconds later. His wound bled freely, and
|
|
Ka'en could feel the warm pool growing against his side. He watched,
|
|
too weak to protest or call for aid, as Je'en calmly pulled a bag
|
|
from her satchel and filled it with the three objects from the
|
|
hidden crypt. Then, she put the bag back away and walked over to the
|
|
vault door, without even a glance for her cousin and victim.
|
|
The blood that drained from Ka'en's side also drained his
|
|
strength. He tried to pull himself after her, but he could barely
|
|
even move his arms, much less his whole body. And then something
|
|
happened to assure him that he was on his way to death. Just as
|
|
Je'en reached the vault door, there was a faint *pop* and a
|
|
beautiful silver and white circlet appeared, hovering about three
|
|
feet off the ground. It wavered back and forth between Je'en and
|
|
Ka'en, but she didn't even notice it and kept walking. When she
|
|
turned the corner to head for the stairs, the circlet seemed to make
|
|
up its mind. It drifted quickly over to Ka'en and settled gently to
|
|
the floor right in front of him. His efforts to touch it to see if
|
|
it was real sapped the last of his strength, and he fainted dead away.
|
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|
|
Mystery
|
|
Cefn was getting ready to leave when the guards came to get him.
|
|
He had only stayed as long as he had because of a conversation Kroan
|
|
had gotten him into with a visiting Countess - he had managed to
|
|
forget about Je'en's peculiar behavior until Margreth had been
|
|
called away. He was on his way to say good bye to Kroan when a man
|
|
and a woman dressed in the uniform of the Castle Guards came up to
|
|
him and asked him if he would come with them. Puzzled but not
|
|
worried, he followed them as they led him down into the cellars,
|
|
then the dungeons, then the sub-levels, and finally to a part of the
|
|
castle he had never known about, a part obviously older than the
|
|
rest. They had passed little groups of guards and other castle staff
|
|
clustered about apparently sleeping guards on the way down, and
|
|
there was a much larger congregation of guards and staff on the
|
|
lowest level of the castle. Cefn was lead through the confusion of
|
|
people and into what appeared to be a huge vault. He noticed the
|
|
strange contents as he was lead through it and over to another
|
|
cluster of people near one wall.
|
|
One of his guides said, "Sergeant Hammin, here is Lord Cefn as
|
|
you requested."
|
|
A woman rose from the cluster of people and smiled. "Greetings,
|
|
Lord Cefn. We seem to have a little problem here. None of the Castle
|
|
healers can be reached right now, and this man is very near death. I
|
|
was wondering if you might be able to help him pull through so that
|
|
we can find out just what went on here?"
|
|
As Hammin was speaking, the cluster of people broke up revealing
|
|
to Cefn the bloody body of Ka'en. He immediatly stooped down and
|
|
made sure that Je'en's cousin was still alive. Cefn wasn't a healer
|
|
- his talents didn't run in that direction. But he was good with
|
|
artifacts, and he made sure that he kept some healing crystals on
|
|
his person for emergencies. He quickly fished in his belt pouch and
|
|
drew out three long green rods. He carefully rearranged Ka'en's body
|
|
so that he could get to the wound, and touched the first of the rods
|
|
to it. It began to glow, and the blood stopped oozing from the
|
|
wound. When the rod began to shorten as if it was being absorbed
|
|
into Ka'en's body, Cefn grasped the hilt of the sword firmly and
|
|
drew it out of the wound. The first rod was soon gone, and Cefn used
|
|
his knife to cut away Ka'en's tunic from the wound. Then, he applied
|
|
the second and third rods one after the other. As each rod was
|
|
absorbed, the wound closed more and more, and Ka'en's color improved
|
|
from the deathly pale of heavy bloodloss, to an almost healthy (in
|
|
comparison) slightly wan.
|
|
By the time the last rod was gone, Ka'en had begun stirring. The
|
|
properly fatal wound in his side had been reduced to a bad slash and
|
|
nothing more. Enough of his vital fluids had been replaced that he
|
|
was in no danger of death - at least from his wound. From the looks
|
|
of the guards, though, Ka'en had better have a good reason for being
|
|
in the vault wearing a makeshift guard's uniform.
|
|
Cefn left Ka'en to the care of Hammin for a moment, and went to
|
|
examine the crypt that stood open in the center of the vault. He
|
|
looked in the holding tray and saw that it was empty. He examined
|
|
what he could see of the mechanisms, but could tell little save that
|
|
they were very old and very well made. He could sense a subtle magic
|
|
around the crypt, but it wasn't a strong enough impression to
|
|
determine type or purpose.
|
|
His attention was drawn to a knot of people around one of the
|
|
sleeping guards, who did not seem to want to wake up. Cefn went over
|
|
to where the guard lay, and noticed for the first time the white
|
|
powder that covered him and the wall and floor around him. Searching
|
|
carefully, he produced shards of what seemed to be unnaturally
|
|
brittle wax. He brushed his finger through the powder, and sniffed
|
|
it. Sleeping dust. He isolated the main ingredients in his mind, and
|
|
realized that the most important one could only have come from
|
|
Abernald's - the shop whose owner had been killed not long ago after
|
|
a break in. He told a guard what would act as an antidote, then went
|
|
back to check on Ka'en.
|
|
Je'en's cousin had recovered even further as the healing
|
|
elements of the green rods continued to do their work even inside
|
|
his body. Ka'en was sitting propped up against the wall, drinking
|
|
from a wineskin someone had brought with them. Cefn checked him over
|
|
again to make sure that he would be alright, and then Sergeant
|
|
Hammin asked him just what he was doing dressed as a guard in the
|
|
most secret vault in Dargon.
|
|
Ka'en circumvented the direct question by telling them instead
|
|
about how he had seen Je'en open the hidden crypt and how she had
|
|
attacked him and left him for dead, taking the contents of the crypt
|
|
when she left. No one had even known that the crypt existed, and no
|
|
one knew what signifigance the scroll, key, and skull might have to
|
|
anyone. Then, Ka'en told about the appearance of the circlet. Cefn
|
|
examined it as he had the crypt and again found faint but unreadable
|
|
traces of magic, both on it and in it. From what he could tell,
|
|
though, the magic he could sense on it was whatever had been used to
|
|
make it appear in the vault. The magic within the circlet was like
|
|
nothing Cefn had ever sensed before though if there had been more of
|
|
it he might have been able to figure it out.
|
|
Cefn eventually managed to talk Hammin into letting him go after
|
|
Je'en. He reasoned with her that he had more experience in chases
|
|
like this would be, and that he had another motive for finding her -
|
|
Je'en didn't normally go around stealing things that no one else
|
|
even knew existed. Something strange was going on, and Cefn wanted
|
|
to find out what, and help Je'en out of whatever trouble she was in.
|
|
Ka'en had more difficulty getting himself out of trouble, but he
|
|
hadn't even taken anything after all. When Hammin pronounced him
|
|
free, he stated that he wanted to help Cefn help Je'en. They left
|
|
the Castle together, both trying to figure out how to find Je'en.
|
|
-John L. White <WHITE@DUVM>
|
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