The Demon Spirit
Book 2 of the Demon Wars
By R. A. Salvatore
Scanned by an anonymous
scanner
Proofed and formatted by
BW-SciFi
Ebook version 1.0
Release Date: October, 19th,
2003
Praise for THE DEMON AWAKENS,
Book One of The Demon Wars, by R. A. Salvatore
"Salvatore's
best work since the Dark Elf series... An enthralling epic adventure
story, it introduces memorable characters and an intricate scheme of magic the
readers won't soon forget. I am anxious for the next."
—terry brooks
"A
new classic! Wonderfully told! Fans will love it!"
—troy denning
Author of The Parched Sea
"Fans
of R. A. Salvatore's Dark Elf books will love this tale. It has
everything readers have come to expect: compelling characters, fast-paced
storytelling, and battle choreography that dazzles without overshadowing the
story. The archetype of noble ranger finds a worthy incarnation in Elbryan, the
Nightbird."
—elaine cunningham
Author of Elfshadow
"A
vigorous new fantasy adventure series... The narrative roils with the action
and heroism that Salvatore's fans expect."
—Publishers
Weekly
"Bob
Salvatore always makes the most fantastic seem real. His heroes become friends
we care about, and his foes fascinate. The Demon Awakens is a 'good
read' with all the color and gusto I've come to expect from a Salvatore book.
Evil to be smitten, crawling intrigue, glorious battle, heroic sacrifice ...
this one has it all. It left me wanting more. Let us see more of the protectors
of the holy stones—soon."
—ed greenwood
Coauthor of Cromyar: A Novel
"The
Demon Awakens is Salvatore doing what
he does best. Page-turning action provides the backdrop for engaging characters
locked in the eternal struggle of good vs. evil. My favorite since The
Halfling's Gem."
—mary kirchoff
Author of the Defenders of Magic trilogy
"The
Demon Awakens is classic Salvatore.
Fans of his Dark Elf books will find all the familiar elements here—ancient evils,
dazzling magic, and earnest young heroes—in a combination certain to place the
series alongside the best of Eddings and Brooks in the minds of fantasy
readers."
—James Lowder
Author of Prince of Lies
"In
The Demon Awakens, Bob Salvatore weaves all the elements of a great epic
fantasy into an exciting story spanning diverse realms and a large cast of
intriguing characters. He brings the world of Corona into vivid focus, creating
a rich fantasy setting: a place of legendary histories and dire dangers. Most
impressive of all were the fight scenes—Salvatore's action pulls you into the
middle of the fight, so immersing that you can almost feel the wind of each
deadly strike."
—DOUG NILES
Author of A Breach in the Watershed
"Salvatore's
most ambitious book to date."
—Booklist
By R.A. Salvatore:
TARZAN: THE EPIC ADVENTURES*
THE DEMON AWAKENS*
THE DEMON SPIRIT*
THE DEMON APOSTLE**
Forgotten Realms Novels
THE CRYSTAL SHARD
STREAMS OF SILVER
THE HALFLING'S GEM
HOMELAND
EXILE
SOJOURN
THE LEGACY
STARLESS NIGHT
SIEGE OF DARKNESS
PASSAGE TO DAWN
CANTICLE
IN SYLVAN SHADOWS
NIGHT MASKS
THE FALLEN FORTRESS
THE CHAOS CURSE
The Spearwielder's Tales
THE WOODS OUT BACK
THE DRAGON'S DAGGER
DRAGONSLAYER'S RETURN
The Crimson Shadow Trilogy
THE SWORD OF BEDWYR
LUTHIEN'S GAMBLE
THE DRAGON KING
Ynis Aielle
ECHOES OF THE FOURTH MAGIC*
THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER**
*Published by Del Rey
Books
**Forthcoming from Del Rey
Books
Books published by The
Ballantine Publishing Group are available at quantity discounts on bulk
purchases for premium, educational, fund-raising, and special Sales use. For
details, please call 1-800-733-3000.
THE DEMON SPIRIT
Sale of this book without a
front cover may be unauthorized. If this book is coverless, it may have been
reported to the publisher as "unsold or destroyed" and neither the
author nor the publisher may have received payment for it.
A Del Rey® Book
Published by The Ballantine
Publishing Group
Copyright © 1998 by R. A.
Salvatore
Excerpt from Spine of the
World copyright © 1999 by R. A. Salvatore
All rights reserved under
International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United
States by The Ballantine Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.,
New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited,
Toronto.
Del Rey and colophon are
registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
www.randomhouse.com/delrey/
Library of Congress Catalog
Card Number: 98-96542
ISBN 0-345-39152-7
Manufactured in the United
States of America
First Hardcover Edition:
April 1998
First Mass Market Edition:
February 1999
10 9
8 7 6
5
This one's for Scott Siegel and Jim Cegeilski,
two guys who have made this business such a pleasure
for me.
I am afraid, Uncle Mather, not for myself, but for all the goodly people of all the world. Pony and I rode south from the Barbacan with our hearts heavy in grief, but with hope. Avelyn, Tuntun, and Bradwarden gave their lives, but in destroying the dactyl, we had, I believed, taken the darkness from the world.
I
was wrong.
Every
running stride Symphony carried us south would bring us to more hospitable
lands, so I thought, and so I told Pony, whose doubts were ever greater than
mine. I cannot count the numbers of goblins we have seen! Thousands, Uncle
Mather, tens of thousands, and with scores of fomorian giants and hundreds of
cruel powries as well. It took Pony and me two weeks and a dozen fights to
reach the area near Dundalis, and there we found only more enemies, firmly
entrenched and using the remnants of the three towns as base camps for
furthering their mischief. Belster O'Comely and the raiding band we set up
before we went to the Barbacan are gone—to the south as we discussed, I
pray. But so vast is the darkness encompassing the land that I fear nowhere
will be safe.
I
am afraid, Uncle Mather, but I vow to you now that no matter how bleak the
situation becomes, I will not surrender my hope. That is something not the
demon dactyl, not the goblins, not all the evil in all the world, can take from
me. Hope brings strength to my sword arm, that Tempest may cut true. Hope
allows me to keep fashioning arrows as score after score are lost to goblin
hearts—a
line of monsters that seems not at all diminished by my efforts.
Hope,
Uncle Mather, that is the secret. I think that my enemies are not possessed of
it. They are too selfish to understand sacrifice in the hope that it will bring
better things for those who come after them. And without such foresight and
optimism, they are often easily disheartened and chased from battle.
Hope,
I have learned, is a prerequisite for altruism.
I
will hope and I will fight on, and with every battle I am reminded that my
attitude is not folly. Pony grows strong with the stones, and the magical
forces she conjures are indeed incredible. Also, our enemies, for all their
numbers, no longer fight in any coordinated fashion. Their binding force, the
demon dactyl, is gone, and I have seen signs that goblin battles goblin.
The
day is dark, Uncle Mather, but there may yet be a break in the clouds.
—elbryan wyndon
Elbryan Wyndon collected his wooden chair and his precious mirror and moved to the mouth of the small cave. He blinked as he pulled the blanket aside, surprised to see that the dawn was long past. Climbing out of the hole seemed no easy task for a man of Elbryan's size, with his six-foot-three-inch muscular frame, but with the agility given him in years of training with the lithe elves of Caer'alfar, he had little trouble navigating the course.
He
found his companion Jilseponie, Pony, awake and about, gathering up their
bedrolls and utensils. Not so far away, the great horse Symphony nickered and
stomped at sight of Elbryan, and that image of the stallion would have given
most men pause. Symphony was tall, but not the least bit lanky, with a
powerful, muscled chest, a coat so black and smooth over those rippling muscles
that it glistened in the slightest light, and eyes that projected profound
intelligence. A white diamond-shaped patch showed on the horse's head, above
the intelligent eyes, but other than that and a bit of white on the legs, the
only thing that marred the perfect black coat was a turquoise gemstone, the
link between Symphony and Elbryan, magically set in the middle of the horse's
chest.
For
all the splendor, though, the ranger hardly paid Symphony any heed, for, as was
so often the case, his gaze was locked on Pony. She was a few months younger
than Elbryan, his childhood friend, his adult wife. Her hair, thick and golden,
was just below her shoulders now, longer than Elbryan's own light brown mop for
the first time in years. The day was lightly overcast, the sky gray, but that
did little to dim the shine of Pony's huge blue eyes. She was his strength, the
ranger knew, the bright spot in a dark world. Her energy seemed limitless, as
did her ability to smile. No odds frightened her, no sight daunted her; she
pressed on methodically, determinedly.
"Do
we look for the camp north of End-o'-the-World?" she asked, the question
shattering Elbryan's contemplation.
He
considered the thought. They had discerned that there were satellite camps in
the region, clusters of goblins, mostly, supplied by the larger encampments set
up in what used to be the three towns of Dundalis, Weedy Meadow, and
End-o'-the-World. Because the towns were each separated by a day's walk,
Dundalis west to Weedy Meadow, and Weedy Meadow west to End-o'-the-World, these
smaller outposts would be key to regaining the region—if ever an
army from Honce-the-Bear made its way to the borders of the Wilderlands. If Elbryan
and Pony could clear the monsters from the dense woods, there would remain
little contact between the three towns.
"It
seems as good a place as any to start," the ranger replied.
"Start?"
Pony asked incredulously, to which Elbryan could only shrug. Indeed, both were
weary of battle now, though both knew that many, many more fights lay before
them.
"Did
you speak with Uncle Mather?" Pony asked, nodding toward the mirror.
Elbryan had explained Oracle to her, that mysterious elven ceremony in which
someone might converse with the dead.
"I
spoke at him," the ranger replied, his olive-green eyes flashing as a
shiver coursed his spine—as always happened when he considered the ghost of the
great man who had gone before him.
"Does
he ever answer?"
Elbryan
snorted, trying to figure out how he might better explain Oracle. "I
answer myself," he started. "Uncle Mather guides my thoughts, I
believe, but in truth, he does not give me the answers."
Pony's
nod showed that she understood perfectly what the young man was trying to say
to her. Elbryan had not known his uncle Mather in life; the man had been lost
to the family at a young age, before Olwan Wyndon—Mather's brother, Elbryan's
father— had taken his wife and children to the wild Timberlands. But Mather,
like Elbryan, had been taken in and trained by the Touel'alfar, the elves, to
be a ranger. Now, in Oracle, Elbryan conjured his image of the man, an image
of a perfect ranger, and when speaking to that image, Elbryan was forcing
himself to uphold his own highest ideals.
"If
I taught you Oracle, perhaps you could speak with Avelyn," the ranger
said, and it wasn't the first time he had suggested as much. He had been
hinting that Pony might try to contact their lost friend for several days now,
ever since he himself tried, and failed, to reach Avelyn's spirit at Oracle two
days after they had started south from the blasted Barbacan.
"I
do not need it," Pony said softly, turning away, and for the first time
Elbryan realized how disheveled she appeared.
"You
do not believe in the ceremony," he started to say, more to prompt than to
accuse.
"Oh,
but I do," was her quick and sharp retort, but she lost momentum just as
abruptly, as if fearing the turn in the conversation. "I... I might be
experiencing much the same thing."
Elbryan
stared at her calmly, giving her the time to sort out her response.
As
the seconds passed into minutes, he prompted, "You have learned
Oracle?"
"No,"
she answered, turning to look at the man. "Not quite the same as your own.
I do not seek it. Rather, it seeks me."
"It?"
"It
is Avelyn," Pony said with conviction. "He is with me, I feel,
somehow a part of me, guiding me and strengthening me."
"As
I feel about my father," Elbryan reasoned. "And you about yours. I do
not doubt that Olwan is watching over..." His voice trailed away as he
looked at her, for Pony was shaking her head before he finished.
"Stronger
than that," she explained. "When Avelyn first taught me to use the
stones, he was badly injured. We joined, spirit to spirit, through use of the
hematite, the soul stone. The result was so enlightening, for both of us, that
Avelyn continued that joining over the weeks, as he showed me the secrets of
the gemstones. In a mere month my understanding and capabilities with the
stones progressed far beyond what a monk at St.-Mere-Abelle might learn in
five years of training."
"And
you believe that he is still connecting with you in that spiritual
manner?" Elbryan asked, and there was no skepticism in the question. The
young ranger had seen too much, both enchanting and diabolical, to doubt such
a possibility—or
any possibility.
"He
is," Pony replied. "And every morning, I wake up to find that I know
a bit more about the stones. Perhaps I dream about them, and in those dreams
see new uses for any given stone, or new combinations between them."
"Then
it is not Avelyn, but Pony," the ranger reasoned.
"It
is Avelyn," she said firmly. "He is with me, in me, a part of who I
have become."
She
went quiet, and Elbryan did not respond, the two of them standing in silence,
digesting the revelation—one that Pony had not made even to herself until this very
moment. Then a smile spread across Elbryan's face, and Pony gradually joined
him, both taking comfort that their friend, the Mad Friar, the runaway monk
from St.-Mere-Abelle, might still be with them.
"If
your insight is true, then our business becomes easier," Elbryan
reasoned. He held his smile and offered a wink, then turned, moving to pack
Symphony's saddlebags.
Pony
didn't reply, just methodically went about closing down the campsite. They
never stayed in a place more than a single night—often not more than half the
night if Elbryan determined there were goblin patrols in the area. The ranger
finished his task first, and with a look to the woman, to which she responded
with an assenting nod, he took his sword belt and wandered away.
Pony
hurriedly finished her task, then silently stalked after him. She knew his
destination to be a clearing they had passed right before they set camp, and
knew, too, that she would find ample cover in the thick blueberry bushes on its
northeastern end. Stalking quietly, as Elbryan had taught her, she finally
settled into place.
The
ranger was well into the dance by then. He was naked, except for a green
armband set about his left biceps, and was holding his great sword Tempest,
which had been given by the Touel'alfar to his uncle, Mather Wyndon.
Gracefully, Elbryan went through the precise movements, muscles flowing in
perfect harmony, legs turning, body shifting, keeping him always in balance.
Pony
watched, mesmerized by the sheer beauty of the dance, which the elves called bi'nelle
dasada, and her love's perfection of form. As always when she spied on
Elbryan's dance—no,
not Elbryan, for in this fighting form he was the one the elves had named
Nightbird, and not Elbryan Wyndon—Pony had pangs of guilt, feeling quite the
voyeur. But there was nothing sexual or prurient here, just appreciation of the
art and beauty of the interplay between her love's powerful muscles. More than
anything, she wanted to learn that dance, to weave her own sword in graceful
circles, to feel her bare feet become so attuned to the moist grass below them
that they could feel every blade and every contour in the ground.
Pony
was no minor warrior herself, having served with distinction in the Coastpoint
Guards. She had battled many goblins and powries, even giants, and few could
outfight her. But in looking at Elbryan, the Nightbird, she felt herself to be
a mere amateur.
That
dance, bi'nelle dasada, was perfection of the art form, and her lover
was perfection of bi'nelle dasada. The ranger continued his slashing,
weaving maneuvers, feet turning, stepping to the side, front, back, body going
down low and then rising in graceful sequences. This was the traditional
fighting style of the day, the slashing routines of the heavy, edged swords.
But then, abruptly, the ranger shifted his stance, heels together, feet perpendicular to each other. He stepped ahead, toe-heel, and went into a balanced crouch, his knees bending out over his toes, front arm cocked, elbow down, and rear arm similarly bent except that his upper arm was level with his shoulder, his hand up high and hanging loose. He went forward then retreated in short, measured, but impossibly quick and balanced steps, and then suddenly, right from one such retreat, his front arm extended and seemed to pull him. It happened in the blink of Pony's eye, and this morning, as with every such strike, it stunned her. So suddenly, Nightbird had come forward, the tip of Tempest covering at least two feet of ground, his back arm turning down so he made one long and balanced line.
A
shudder coursed down Pony's spine as she pictured an enemy impaled on that
deadly blade, staring wide-eyed in disbelief at the suddenness of the attack.
And
then the ranger retracted, again quickly and in balance—no opening in
his defenses throughout the move—and went back to his weaving dance.
With
a sigh of both appreciation and frustration, Pony snuck away, back to finish
closing down the camp. Elbryan returned to her soon after, showing sweat on his
exposed arms but looking revitalized and ready for the trials of another day
on the road.
They
set out soon after, both astride the great stallion, with Symphony easily
carrying them along. Elbryan guided them north, away from the line of the three
towns, and then west, toward End-o'-the-World, and before midday they had found
the smaller goblin encampment. A quick survey of the area provided the information
they needed, and they retreated to the deeper woods to unlade Symphony and
prepare their assault.
By
early afternoon the ranger was creeping through the woods with Hawkwing, his
elven-crafted bow, in hand. He came upon a group of three goblin perimeter
guards soon enough, and, as was usually the case, the slovenly creatures were
not on their best guarding posture. They were clustered about a wide elm, one
leaning on the tree, one pacing before it and grumbling about something, and
the third sitting at the base, back against the trunk, apparently asleep. The
ranger was somewhat surprised to see that one of these guards carried a bow.
Goblins usually fought with club, sword, or spear, and the sight of the bow
tipped him off that there might well be powries in the vicinity.
The
ranger did a silent circuit of the area, ensuring that no others were about,
then found his best angle of attack. Up came Hawkwing, so named for the three
feathers set on its top end, which separated like the feathered
"fingers" on the end of a hawk's extended wing when he drew back the
bowstring. Those feathers went widely apart now as Elbryan lined up his shot.
Hawkwing
hummed; the ranger had a second arrow up and away almost immediately. He was
the Nightbird now, the elven-trained warrior, and the mere mention of his name
sent trembles through the hearts of even the sturdiest powries.
The
first arrow nailed the leaning goblin to the tree. The second took out its
pacing companion before the creature had time to cry out its surprise.
"Duh?"
the third asked, coming from its slumber when Nightbird prodded it The goblin looked up just in time to
see Tempest's descent, the mighty sword cleaving its head in half.
The
ranger retrieved his arrows, then took a couple from the goblin's quiver. They
weren't well-crafted, hardly straight, but would suit his purposes well enough.
On
he went, drawing a complete perimeter of the encampment He encountered two more
guard positions, and dispatched the guards with equal efficiency. Then he went
back to Pony and Symphony, better detailing the layout his attack plans
already formulated. The goblin camp itself was well-placed on a low bluff
amidst a tumble of boulders. There were only two apparent approaches: one on
the southeast up a trail between shoulder-high walls of stone, a path that turned
in from a thirty-foot sheer drop; the second up the gentler-sloping western
side of the hillock, a wide track of empty grass.
Nightbird
positioned himself in a copse of trees on the western side, where he could find
clearer shooting, while Pony made her tentative way along the top of the cliff
face.
The
ranger moved to a higher position, climbing from Symphony's back to one of the
lower branches of an oak. That still left him below the level of the goblin
camp, but with more than half of it exposed. Pony would wait for him, he
trusted, and so he took his time in selecting his first target, trying to get a
feel for the hierarchy of this patrol. No two groups of goblins were alike, the
ranger had learned, for the smallish, yellow-green creatures were purely selfish
and not devoted to any greater cause than fulfillment of their present desires.
The demon dactyl had changed that—that sudden coordination of the
monsters was the element that had made the darkness so complete—but now the
dactyl was gone and the wretched creatures were fast reverting to their
previous, chaotic nature.
This
encampment reflected that clearly. All the place was a tumult, pushing and
shoving, shouting and grumbling.
"We
goes south for killing!" Nightbird heard one creature shout.
"We
goes the way I says we goes!" replied one especially weasely little runt,
a spindly-armed and bowlegged wretch, short even by goblin standards—which meant
that it barely topped four feet—and with a nose and chin so narrow that they
appeared to be arrow shafts protruding from its ugly face.
The
ranger saw the larger goblin standing before the runt clench its hands in rage,
saw the group of three goblins closest him—all carrying bows, he noted with
disdain—put hands near their quivers. The tension held, silent for many
seconds, just below an explosive level, and then another form rose up, a giant
form, fifteen feet tall and more, two thousand pounds of muscle and bone.
The
fomorian stretched away its sleepiness and ambled over to join the
conversation. The giant beast said not a word, but stood right behind the
weasely goblin—and
how that creature puffed its skinny chest with its bodyguard so near!
"South,"
the other said again, but in a calm and unthreatening manner. "Peoples to
kill to the south."
"We
was told to stay here and guard," the weasely goblin insisted.
"Guard
from what?" the other whined. "From bears or boars?"
"Me
bored," offered another, from the side, drawing a few halfhearted
snickers—laughter
that died away quickly when the weasely goblin put an unrelenting stare on the
jokester.
It
was all taking shape perfectly from Nightbird's perspective, except of course
for the appearance of a fomorian giant. His first instinct told him to put an
arrow into that behemoth's face, but as he considered the general dynamics of
the group, another, more insightful plan began to unfold.
The
arguing continued, followed by more than a few loud threats by the weasely
goblin, the creature gaining in confidence with the giant standing right behind
it. The goblin ended by promising a cruel death to any that defied its
commands, and then it turned about, walking away.
Nightbird,
using one of the arrows he had taken from the goblins, nailed it in the back,
at an angle that sent the missile right between two of the archers at the
camp's edge. The goblin went down hard, squirming and screaming, trying to
reach about to grab the painful bolt, and all the gathering erupted in pushing
and shoving, in accusations and cries of murder.
The
three archers were the most confused, each yelling at the other two, each
counting the arrows in their counterparts' quivers. One cried for a check of
the shaft of the arrow in their leader's back, claiming that its own arrows had
specific markings.
The
enraged fomorian had no such patience for any investigation, though. The giant
stalked over and slugged the protesting archer in the face, launching it head
over heels down the grassy slope. The giant grabbed a second archer as the
third scrambled away, lifting the unfortunate creature and squeezing the life
out of it. All the rest of the camp fell upon the third, taking its flight as
an admission of guilt. Their blood lust in full, they pounded and stomped long
after the poor creature had stopped squirming.
For
the ranger, watching the brutal spectacle was a confirmation of his belief in
the absolutely irredeemable nature of the wretched beasts. The killing was over
quickly, but the pushing and shoving and accusations did not relent. He had
seen enough, though. There were perhaps a dozen goblins left in the camp, not
counting the leader, who wouldn't be up for any fighting anytime soon, and, of
course, the one fomorian. Thirteen against three, counting Symphony.
The
ranger liked the odds.
He
hopped down from the tree, onto the back of waiting Symphony. The great
stallion gave a snort and rushed away, out the back side of the copse. The last
thing Nightbird wanted was to bring the goblins charging down the slope, where
they could scatter. He went west, and then south, and then turned back to the
east, coming in sight of Pony, who was in position at the end of the long and
narrow trail. They shared a wave, and the ranger searched out a new vantage
point. Now came his turn to wait.
The
goblin camp remained astir, with accusations flying. The creatures seemed
perfectly oblivious to the notion that an outsider, might have shot down their
leader, until Pony struck hard.
A
goblin appeared at the end of the trail, leaning on one wall of stone. It
removed its metal helmet—another oddity for the crude creatures-—and scratched at
its hair, then replaced the cap, talking all the while with another who
remained out of Pony's line of sight. She focused on the one goblin, on its
helmet, as she held before her a black, rough-edged stone, magnetite, or lodestone,
by name. Pony fell into the stone, saw through it, down the trail. Everything
blurred and fogged over—everything except for that one helmet, the image of it
sharpening to crystal clarity. Pony felt the energy building within the stone,
energy she lent to it, combined with its own magical properties. She felt the
attraction to that helmet growing, growing, the stone beginning to pull against
her grasp.
As
she reached the pinnacle, as it seemed the stone would verily explode with
tingling magic, she let it go. In the blink of an eye it covered the distance
and smashed against then through the helmet, and the goblin flipped over once
and lay dead.
How
its companion shrieked!
Pony
was not surprised when the fomorian giant turned down the narrow trail, running
full out and bellowing with rage. She held forth another stone, malachite, the
stone of levitation, and before the behemoth had gone three strides, it found
that its feet were no longer touching the ground. It was moving, though, its
momentum propelling its suddenly weightless form in a straight line.
The
trail curved slightly and the giant brushed the wall. It tried to reach down
and find a hold, but the movement came too late and only sent the creature
tumbling head over heels, twisting and turning, reaching desperately for any
potential handhold.
Pony
could hardly believe the effort needed to keep the behemoth aloft, and knew
she would not be able to hold it there for long. She didn't have to, though.
She ducked very low—the giant spinning over more quickly as it grabbed for
her—and let the creature soar past her. Then, as soon as the giant moved out
over the cliff, she dropped her concentration, releasing the stone's magical energy,
and let the brute drop.
Looking
back the other way, she saw a handful of goblins at the far end of the trail,
gaping at her but not yet daring to approach.
Quickly
she went for her third stone, the graphite, and reached deep inside herself to
find some more magical energy. Already she had done more magic in rapid
succession than ever before, and she had little faith that her next casting, a
bolt of lightning, would have much power behind it.
She
took hope, then, in the commotion that sprang up on the hillock behind the
goblins, at the screams and cries of agony, at the sound of charging Symphony
off to the side and the thrum of the ranger's deadly bow.
But
her love could not get there in time to help her, she knew. A line of five
goblins came on, rushing down the narrow trail, howling. One let fly an arrow
that barely missed the young woman.
Pony
stood resolute. She dismissed her fears and focused on the graphite, only the
graphite. The bolt came forth more quickly than she had intended, wrung from
her by sheer urgency as the nearest goblin closed to within three running strides.
Pony
staggered as if hit; the expenditure of energy was more than she could
tolerate. Her knees wobbled and she instinctively ambled away, her eyes hardly
open as she glanced back, with some relief, to see that the lightning had
pushed the goblins back. Three of the five were down, jerking spasmodically,
while the other two fought hard to hold their balance, their muscles trembling
violently.
Up
on the hillock, Nightbird shot one last arrow, catching a nearby goblin right
through its skinny nose, then turned the bow over in one hand, whipping it like
a club as Symphony pounded past another creature. That creature dispatched, he
dropped the bow altogether, drawing out Tempest, the elven blade, light and
strong, forged of precious silverel and crackling with energy, from both elven
magic and the gemstone set in the sword's pommel. The ranger turned Symphony in
line and let the great stallion run down the next goblin, and as Symphony
passed, hardly stumbling, Nightbird swung out with his sword at the next. This
goblin held a metal shield and had it up to block, but the gemstone in
Tempest's ball hilt, a blue stone clouded with white and gray, flared with
power and the fine blade smashed right through the shield, snapping the straps
that fastened it to the goblin's arm, then charged on past the turning metal to
crease the creature's face.
The
hillock was clear, the only goblin in sight in fast flight down the grassy
slope. The ranger, his blood lust high, thought to pursue, but changed his mind
when he heard Pony's lightning bolt behind him, a sparking crackle and not a
thunderous blast, and then heard the groans of goblins still very much alive.
He
rolled backward off the saddle, landing lightly on his feet. Symphony skidded
to a stop and turned about to regard him, and Nightbird couldn't help but pause
and do likewise. The horse's black coat glistened with sweat, accentuating the
powerful muscles. Symphony looked hard at his companion and stamped the ground,
ready, eager for more battle.
The
ranger looked from the horse's intelligent eyes to the turquoise set in his
breast, the gift of Avelyn, the telepathic bond between Nightbird and Symphony.
Elbryan used that bond now to instruct the horse.
With
an agreeing snort, Symphony wheeled and charged away, and the ranger went fast
for his bow, in full run on his way to the narrow trail.
He
came to its lip, sliding to one knee, Hawkwing up and drawn. Only one goblin
remained down now, with two starting off after Pony and two others still
struggling to secure their balance. Off went the arrow, zipping between the two
standing nearby and over the head of the third, to strike the lead goblin in
the back. The creature went into a weird hop then, seeming to fly for several
feet before falling facedown. Its running companion, fearing a similar fate,
howled and dove to the ground.
Elbryan's
second shot got the closest goblin in the chest, and then he was up, Tempest in
hand. He came in hard, sword flashing back and forth, maneuvers designed more
to put the goblin off-balance than to score a hit The creature struggled to
keep up with the flashing blade, its own crude sword ringing against Tempest
only a couple of times in the ten-stroke routine. In short order the goblin was
staggering again, nearly tripping on its own feet as it tried to twist and turn
in tune with the darting blade. Tempest went left, then right, then right
again, then Nightbird started back for the left but cut short the swing, and
then came that signature lunge. Suddenly, immediately, he was simply there,
fully extended, his sword tip two feet farther ahead than it had been, stabbing
the goblin hard through the shoulder.
Down
went the goblin's arm, its sword falling uselessly to the ground. One step
brought the ranger to the side, where he chopped down hard on the head of the
remaining goblin even as it struggled to stand. Then he came back in, ignoring
the last goblin's cry for mercy, driving his blade through the creature's ribs
and into its lungs.
The
ranger glanced down the trail, to see that Pony, no unskilled fighter in her
own right, had come back in, with sword this time and not gems, to finish off
the goblin who had dived for cover. The woman looked up at Nightbird and
nodded, then opened wide her eyes as the ranger let out a startled shout and launched
himself toward her.
He
went right by Pony as she turned, throwing her sword up defensively in fear
that something had come in at her back. Indeed, the giant had returned,
stubbornly climbing the cliff face. It had both hands and one shoulder over the
lip when Nightbird met it, Tempest flashing. The ranger slashed one arm, then
the other, then again and again, all the while dodging the behemoth's futile attempts
to grab at him. Finally the beating opened wide the giant's defenses and its
grasp on the ledge weakened, and Nightbird calmly strode ahead and kicked the
creature in the face.
Down
it went again, bouncing along the thirty-foot descent. Stubbornly, it shook its
head and rolled to its knees, intent on climbing once again.
Pony
was beside Elbryan in a moment. "You might be needing this," she
remarked, handing Hawkwing over.
His
fourth arrow slew the giant, while Pony walked back along the trail and
encampment, finishing the wounded goblins. Symphony returned during that time,
the horse's rear hooves splattered with fresh goblin blood.
The
three friends regrouped shortly after.
"Just
another day," Pony said dryly, to which the ranger only nodded.
He
noted that there was an almost dispirited edge to her tone, as though the
battle, as smoothly as it had gone, had been somehow unsatisfying.
His
wrinkles seemed even deeper now, shadowed by the torchlight. Deep grooves in
that old and weathered face, the visage of a man who had seen too much. By
Master Jojonah's estimation, Dalebert Markwart, the Father Abbot of
St.-Mere-Abelle, the highest-ranking person in the Abellican Order, had aged
tremendously over the last couple of years. The portly Jojonah, no young man
himself, studied Markwart carefully as the pair stood atop the seaward wall of
the great abbey, staring out into All Saints Bay. He tried to compare this
image of the Father Abbot, unshaven, with eyes sunken deep into sockets,
against the memory of the man just a few years previous, in God's Year 821 when
they had all waited eagerly for the return of the Windrunner, the ship
that had delivered four of St.-Mere-Abelle's brothers to the equatorial island
of Pimaninicuit, that they might collect the sacred stones.
Things
had changed much since those days of hope and wonderment.
The
mission had been successful, with a tremendous haul of gemstones taken and
properly prepared. And three of the brothers, with the exception of poor
Thagraine who was stricken in the meteor shower, had returned alive, though
Brother Pellimar had died a short time later.
"A
pity that it had not been Avelyn who was hit in the head by a falling
stone," Father Abbot Markwart had often said in the years hence, for
Avelyn, after achieving the greatest success in the history of the Church as a
Preparer of the sacred gems, had returned a changed man, and in Markwart's eyes
had committed the highest heresy possible in the Order. Avelyn had taken some
of the gemstones and run off, and in that flight, Master Siherton, a peer of
Jojonah's and a friend of Markwart's, had been killed.
The
Father Abbot had not let the theft pass. Indeed, he had guided the training of
the remaining brother from the party of four, a stocky and brutish man named
Quintall. Under Markwart's strictest orders, Quintall had become Brother
Justice and gone after Avelyn, with orders to bring back the man or his broken
body.
Word
had come back to the library only the month before that Quintall had failed and
was dead.
Still,
Markwart had no intention of letting Avelyn run free. He had set De'Unnero, the
finest fighter at the abbey—and, by Jojonah's estimation, the most vicious human being
alive—to training not one, but two Brothers Justice as replacement for
Quintall. Jojonah didn't like De'Unnero at all, considered the man's temperament
unbefitting a brother of the Abellican Church, and so he had not been pleased
when the still-young man had been named to the rank of master as a replacement
for Master Siherton. And the choice of hunters, too, had bothered Jojonah, for
he suspected that the two young monks, Brothers Youseff and Dandelion, had only
been admitted to St.-Mere-Abelle for this purpose. Surely neither of them
qualified above others who had been refused their appointment.
But
both could fight
So
even that choice of admission to the Order, the greatest responsibility of
abbots and masters, had fallen victim to Markwart's desire to clear his own
reputation. The Father Abbot wanted those stones back.
Desperately,
Master Jojonah thought as he looked upon the old Father Abbot's haggard visage.
Dalebert Markwart was a man possessed now, a snarling, vicious thing. If at
first Markwart had wanted Avelyn captured and tried, he merely wanted the man
dead now—and
painfully killed, tortured, rended, his heart torn out and put on a stake before
the front gate of St.-Mere-Abelle. Markwart hardly talked of dead Siherton
these days; his focus was purely the stones, the precious stones, and he meant
to get them back.
All
of that had been put aside for the moment, though, out of necessity even greater
than Markwart's obsession, for the war had at last come to St.-Mere-Abelle.
"There
they are," Father Abbot Markwart remarked, pointing out across the bay.
Jojonah
leaned on the low wall, squinting into the darkness, and there, rounding a bend
along the northern spur of the rocky seacoast, came the lights of a vessel,
obviously sitting very low in the water.
"Powrie
barrelboat," Markwart said distastefully as more and more lights came into
view. "A thousand of them out there!"
And
so confident that they approach in full view with lights burning, Jojonah
silently added. And that wasn't even the extent of their problems, though the
master saw no need to remark on the potentially greater troubles facing the
abbey.
"And
how many by land?" the Father Abbot demanded, as though he had read
Jojonah's mind. "Twenty thousand? Fifty? The whole powrie nation is upon
us, as if all the Weathered Isles had been dumped at our gate!"
Again
the portly Jojonah had no practical response. According to the reports of
trusted sources, a vast army of the four-foot-tall dwarves, the cruel powries,
had landed less than ten miles down the coast from St.-Mere-Abelle. The brutal
creatures had wasted no time in laying waste to the nearby villages,
slaughtering any humans who could not escape. The image of that brought a
shiver along Jojonah's spine. Powries were also called "bloody caps"
for their practice of dipping their specially treated berets—caps made of
human skin—into the blood of their slain enemies. The more blood one of those
berets soaked, the brighter its crimson stain, a sign of rank among the
barrel-bodied, spindly limbed dwarves.
"We
have the stones," Jojonah offered.
Markwart
snorted derisively. "And we'll tire our magics long before we diminish the
ranks of the wretched powries—and of the goblin army that's said to be moving south of
here."
"There
is the report of the explosion far to the north," Jojonah offered
hopefully, trying in any way possible to improve Markwart's surly mood.
The
Father Abbot didn't disagree; whispers from reliable sources spoke of a
tremendous eruption in the northern land known as the Barbacan, reputedly the
land of the demon dactyl who had gathered this invading army. But while those
rumors offered some distant hope that war had been brought to the dactyl's
doorstep, they offered little in the face of the force now moving against
St.-Mere-Abelle, something Markwart emphasized with his next derisive snort.
"Our
walls are thick, our brothers well-trained in the fighting arts, and our
catapult crews second to none in all Corona," Jojonah went on, gaining
momentum with every word. "And St.-Mere-Abelle is better suited to
withstand a siege than any structure in Honce-the-Bear," he added,
preempting Markwart's next glum statement.
"Better
suited with not so many mouths to feed," Markwart snapped at him, and
Jojonah winced as if slapped. "I wish that the powries had been
quicker!"
Master
Jojonah sighed and moved a few steps to the side then, unable to tolerate his
superior's grating pessimism and that last remark; obviously aimed at the
multitude of pitiful refugees who had recently come swarming into
St.-Mere-Abelle, it had, in Jojonah's estimation, been on the very edge of
blasphemy. They were the Church, after all, supposedly the salvation of the
common man, and yet here was their Father Abbot, their spiritual leader, complaining
about giving shelter to people who had lost almost everything. The Father
Abbot's first response to the influx of refugees had been to order everything
valuable, books, gold leaf, even inkwells, locked away.
"Avelyn
started all of this," Markwart rambled. "The thief weakened us, in
heart and soul, and gave hope to our enemies!"
Jojonah
tuned out the Father Abbot's ranting. He had heard it all before—indeed, it had
by now been disseminated to all the abbeys of Corona that Avelyn Desbris was
responsible for awakening the demon dactyl, and thus setting into motion all
the subsequent tragedies that had befallen the land.
Master
Jojonah, who had been Avelyn's mentor and chief supporter through the man's
years at St.-Mere-Abelle, couldn't, in his heart, believe a word of it. Jojonah
had studied at the abbey for four decades, and had never in all that time met a
man as singularly holy as Avelyn Desbris. While he had not yet come to terms
with Avelyn's last actions at the abbey—the theft of the stones and the
murder, if it was a murder, of Master Siherton—Jojonah suspected there was more
to the story than the Father Abbot's version would indicate. More than
anything, Master Jojonah wanted to speak at length with his former student, to
discover the man's motivations, to find out why he had run and why he had taken
the gemstones.
More
lights appeared in the dark harbor, a reminder to Jojonah to stay focused on
the grim situation at hand. Avelyn was an issue for another day; the morning
light would bring the full fury of war to St.-Mere-Abelle.
The
two monks retired then, seeking to gather all of their strength.
"Sleep
well in God's bosom," Master Jojonah said to Markwart, the proper and
traditional nighttime parting.
Markwart
waved a hand absently over his shoulder and walked away, grumbling something
about the wretch Avelyn under his breath.
Master
Jojonah recognized a growing problem here, an obsession that could only bring
ill to St.-Mere-Abelle and all the Order. But there was little he could do
about it, he reminded himself, and he went to his private room. He added many
lines about Avelyn Desbris, words of hope for the man's soul, and of
forgiveness, to his evening prayers, then rolled onto his bed, knowing he would
not sleep well.
Father
Abbot Markwart, too, was speaking words about Avelyn when he entered his lavish
quarters, four rooms sectioned off near the middle of the massive abbey's
ground-level floor. The old man, consumed with anger, muttered curse after
curse, spat Avelyn's name in succession with the names of the greatest traitors
and heretics in the history of the Church, and vowed again to see the man
tortured to death before he, himself, went to view the face of God.
His
reign at St.-Mere-Abelle had been unblemished, and having been fortunate enough
to preside over the Order in the generation of the stone showers, the
tremendous haul of stones—the greatest ever taken from Pimaninicuit—seemed to
solidify his place among the most revered Father Abbots of history. But then
the wretch Avelyn changed that, brought a black mark to his reputation: as the
first father abbot to ever suffer the absolute indignity of losing some of the
sacred stones.
It
was with these dark thoughts, and none for the invasion fleet that had entered
All Saints Bay, that Father Abbot Markwart at last drifted off to sleep.
His
dreams were as razor-edged as his anger, showing stark, clear images of a
faraway land that he did not know. He saw Avelyn, thick and fat and haggard,
snarling orders to goblins and powries. He saw the man fell a giant with a
streak of searing lightning, not out of any hatred for the evil race, but
because this one had not obeyed him without question.
In
the background an angelic figure appeared, a winged man, large and terrible.
The personification of the wrath of God.
Then
Markwart understood.
A
demon dactyl had been the source of the war? No, this disaster had been caused
by something greater even than that dark power. The true guiding force of evil
was Avelyn, the heretic!
The
Father Abbot sat bolt upright in bed, sweating and trembling. It was only a
dream, he reminded himself.
But
had there not been some shred of truth buried within those visions? It came as
a great epiphany to the tired old man, an awakening call as clear as the
loudest bell ever chimed. For years he had been proclaiming Avelyn as the root
source of all the problems, but much of that had been merely a self-defense
technique aimed at deflecting his own errors. He had always known that hidden
truth... until now.
Now
Markwart realized that it had indeed been Avelyn, beyond any doubt. He knew
that the man had unraveled all that was holy, perverted the stones to his own
wicked use, worked against the Church and all of Mankind.
Markwart
knew, without doubt, and in that profound knowledge he was at last able to
dismiss all of his own guilt.
The
old man pulled himself from his bed and ambled over to his desk, lighting a
lamp. He fell into his chair, exhausted, overcome, and absently took a key
from a secret compartment in one drawer and used it to open the lock on a
secret compartment in yet another, revealing his private cache of stones: ruby,
graphite, malachite, serpentine, a tiger's paw, a lodestone, and his most
precious of all, the strongest hematite, the soul stone, at St.-Mere-Abelle.
With this heavy gray stone Markwart could send his spirit across the miles,
could even contact associates though they were separated by half a continent.
He had used this stone to make contact with Brother Justice—no easy task
since Quintall was not proficient in use of the stones, and since his
single-minded training had given him a level of mental discipline that was hard
to penetrate.
Markwart
had used this stone to contact a friend in Amvoy, across the Masur Delaval from
Palmaris, and that friend had discovered the truth of Brother Justice's failed
quest.
How
precious these sacred stones were—to the monks of St.-Mere-Abelle, there
was no greater treasure—and it was more than Markwart could stand to know that
he had let some get away.
He
looked at the handful of stones now as if they were his children, then sat up
straighter, blinking quizzically. For he saw them now more clearly than ever
before, as if a great truth had been revealed to him. He saw the powers buried
within each stone, and knew he could reach them with a mere thought, hardly an
effort at all. And some of them seemed almost to blend together, as the old man
recognized new and more powerful combinations for various stones.
The
Father Abbot fell back and even cried out, tears of joy dripping from his
eyes. He was free of Avelyn's dark grip, he suddenly believed, for now he
understood, beyond doubt. And with his revelations had come a greater
knowledge, a deeper understanding. It was always a sharp thorn in Markwart's
side that Avelyn, this supposed heretic, had been the most powerful stone user
in the history of the Church. If the stones came from God, it followed that
their power was a blessing, yet how could that be so if Avelyn Desbris, the
thief, was so proficient with them?
The
demon dactyl had given Avelyn the power! The demon dactyl had perverted the
stones in Avelyn's hands, allowing him the insight to use them.
Markwart
clutched his stones tightly and moved back to his bed, thinking that God had
answered the dactyl by showing him equal—no, greater—insights. This time he
would find no sleep, too consumed with anticipation for the morning's fight.
Dalebert
Markwart, the Father Abbot, the highest-ranking member of the Abellican
Church, had it all exactly backward, a thought that pleased the spirit of the
demon dactyl immensely. How easily Bestesbulzibar had linked with this craven
old man, how easily it had perverted Markwart's assumed truths!
Nearly
all of St.-Mere-Abelle's more than seven hundred monks turned out on the
seawall before the dawn, preparing for the approach of the powrie fleet. With
two notable exceptions, Master Jojonah realized, for Brothers Youseff and
Dandelion were nowhere to be found. Markwart had put them safely away for what
he considered their more important task.
Most
of the monks manned the abbey's long parapets, but others moved to their
strategic positions in rooms below the level of the wall top. Two dozen
catapults were readied as the vast powrie fleet made its way in toward the
rocky cliff. Even more deadly, the older and more powerful monks, the masters
and immaculates, monks who had studied for ten years and more, prepared their
respective stones, and among them was the Father Abbot, with his new insights
and heightened power.
Markwart
kept most of the monks in position on the seaward side of the structure, though
he had to place more than a score of brothers on the opposite wall, watching
the many approaches for the expected land attack. Then all of St.-Mere-Abelle
hushed and waited as score after score of powrie vessels rounded the rocky spur
and moved in line with the great abbey, most resembling a nearly submerged
barrel, but others with flat, open decks set with catapults.
A
catapult let fly from one of the rooms just below the Father Abbot's position,
its pitch ball sailing high and far, but well short of the nearest vessel.
"Hold!"
Markwart yelled down angrily. "Would you show them our range, then?"
Master
Jojonah put a hand on the Father Abbot's shoulder. "They are
nervous," he offered as an excuse for the premature firing.
"They
are foolish!" the Father Abbot snapped back at him, pulling from his
gentle grasp. "Find the one who fired that catapult and replace him on the
line—and
bring him up to me."
Jojonah
started to protest, but quickly realized that to be a fool's course. If he
angered the Father Abbot any more—and he saw no way he could even speak
with the man without doing that—then Markwart's punishment of the young monk
would only be more severe. With one of his customary sighs, a helpless
expression that he thought he seemed to be making far too often these days, the
portly master moved off to find the errant artillerist, taking with him a
second-year student to replace the man.
More
and more powrie ships came into view, but those closest did not move into
catapult range, or stone magic range.
"They
await the ground assault," remarked Brother Francis Dellacourt, a
ninth-year monk known for his sharp tongue and severe discipline of the younger
students, attributes that had made him a favorite with Markwart.
"What
news from the western walls?" Markwart asked.
Francis
immediately motioned for two younger monks to run off for information.
"They will hit us harder from the ground at first," Francis then
offered to Markwart.
"The
reasoning that led you to such a conclusion?"
"The
sea cliff is a hundred feet, at least, and that at its shortest juncture,"
Francis reasoned. "Those powries in the boats will have little chance of
gaining our walls unless we are sorely taxed in the west. They will hit us hard
by ground, and then, with our numbers thinned on this wall, their fleet will
strike."
"What
do you know of powrie tactics?" Markwart said loudly, drawing all of those
nearby, including the returning Master Jojonah and the errant artillerist, into
the conversation. Markwart knew what Francis would say, for he, like all of the
older monks, had studied the records of previous powrie assaults, but he
thought that a dissertation by the efficient Francis would be a prudent
reminder.
"We
have few examples of a powrie dual strike," Francis admitted. "They
usually attack primarily from the sea, with incredible speed and ferocity. But
I suspect that St.-Mere-Abelle is too formidable for that, and they know it.
They will thin our line by attacking from the west, by ground, and then their
catapults will put their strong lines up over our wall."
"How
high will any climb with us standing defense at the top of those ropes?"
one monk asked impertinently. "We'll cut them down, or shoot arrows or
magics at the climbing powries."
Master
Jojonah started to respond, but Markwart, preferring to hear from Francis on
this matter, stopped him with an upraised hand, then motioned for the ninth-year
monk to proceed.
"Do
not underestimate them!" Francis fumed, and Jojonah noted that Markwart
cracked his first smile in many weeks. "Only months ago the powries struck
at Pireth Tulme, a fortress on a cliff no less high than our own. In this
manner they gained the courtyard before the majority of the garrison had even
arrived at the walls to offer defense. And as for those who were in place along
Pireth Tulme's seemingly defensible walls..."
Francis
let the thought hang. It was common knowledge that no survivors had been found
among Pireth Tulme's elite Coastpoint Guards, and also that those remains found
had been horribly mutilated.
"Do
not underestimate them!" Francis yelled again, turning as he spoke to
ensure that every monk in the area was paying attention.
Master
Jojonah watched Francis closely. He didn't like the man, not at all. Brother
Francis' ambition was obviously large, as was his ability to take every word
muttered by Father Abbot Markwart as though it had come straight from God.
Jojonah did not believe that piety was the guiding force behind Brother
Francis' devotion to Markwart, though, but rather, pragmatic ambition. Watching
the man reveling in the attention now only reinforced that belief.
The
two monks returned from the western wall, trotting, but with no apparent sense
of urgency. "Nothing," each reported. "No signs of any gathering
army."
"Several
villagers came in just minutes ago," one of them added, "reporting
that a large force of powries was spotted moving west of St.-Mere-Abelle
village, heading west."
Jojonah
and Markwart exchanged curious looks.
"A
ruse," Brother Francis warned. "Moving west, away from us, that we
might not be prepared for the sudden assault over land."
"Your
reasoning is sound," Master Jojonah offered. "But I wonder if we
might not turn their ruse, if that is what it is, back against them."
"Explain,"
said an intrigued Markwart.
"The
fleet might indeed be waiting for the ground assault," Jojonah said.
"And that assault might indeed be delayed so that we might lower our
guard. But our powrie friends in the harbor cannot see St.-Mere-Abelle's
western walls, nor the grounds beyond them."
"They
will hear the sounds of battle," another monk reasoned.
"Or
they will hear what they believe to be the sounds of battle," Master
Jojonah replied slyly.
"I
will see to it!" cried Brother Francis, running off even before the Father
Abbot gave his consent
Markwart
ordered every second man off the wall and out of sight.
Moments
later the commotion began, with cries of "Attack! Attack!" and the
swooshing sound of ballistae firing. Then a tremendous explosion shook the
ground and a fireball rose into the air, the magical blast of a ruby.
"Authentic,"
Master Jojonah said dryly. "But our exuberant Francis should conserve his
magical energy."
"He
has powries to convince," Markwart retorted sharply.
"Here
they come," came a call before Jojonah could reply, and sure enough the
powrie craft began gliding across the bay, right on schedule. The tumult
continued in the west, the cries, the ballistae firing, even another fireball
from excited Francis. The powries, spurred on by the sight and sound, came in
hard, their barrelboats bobbing.
Markwart
passed the word to let them in close, though more than one catapult let fly its
payload prematurely. But the ships came on fast and were soon in range, and
with the Father Abbot's eager blessing, the monastery's two dozen seaward
catapults began their barrage, throwing stones and pitch. One powrie catapult
barge went up in flames; a barrelboat got hit on its rounded side, the force of
the boulder rolling the craft right over in the water. Another barrelboat took
a hit squarely on its prow, the heavy stone driving the front of the craft
under the water, its stern reaching skyward, its pedal-driven propeller
spinning uselessly in the empty air. Soon many of the evil dwarves were in the
water, screaming, thrashing.
But
the cheering on the abbey's wall did not hold, for soon enough the lead powrie
ships were right below the Father Abbot's position, right at the base of the
seawall, and now their catapults went into action, launching dozens of
weighted, knotted ropes tipped with cunning, many-pronged grapnels. The hooked
instruments came down on targeted areas as thick as hail, sending the monks
scrambling. Several monks were caught by a hooked tip, then pulled in screaming
to the wall, the grapnel digging right through an arm or shoulder.
A
group of seven immaculates stood in a circle to Jojonah's right, chanting in
unison, joining their power, six with their hands locked, the seventh in their
center, holding forth a piece of graphite. A sheet of blue electricity crackled
over the bay, sparking off the metallic cranks of powrie catapults, laying low
the dozens of exposed powries on the barge decks.
But
the burst lasted only a split second, and dozens more powries rushed to take
the places of the fallen. Up the ropes they came, hanging under, climbing hand
over hand with tremendous speed.
Monks
attacked with conventional bows and with gemstones, loosing lightning bolts,
springing fire from their fingertips to burn the ropes, while others went at
the grapnels with heavy hammers or at the ropes with swords. Dozens of ropes
went down, sending powries diving into the bay, but scores more came flying up
as more craft crowded into the base of the cliff.
With
still no sign of any approaching ground force, all of the monks came to the
seawall, all of St.-Mere-Abelle's power focused on the thousand powrie vessels
that had swarmed into All Saints Bay. The air came alive with the tingling of
magical energy, with the stench of burning pitch, with the screams of freezing,
drowning powries. And with the screams of dying monks, for as soon as all the
ropes were up, the powrie catapult barges began hurling huge baskets of pinballs,
wooden balls an inch in diameter set with a multitude of metal, often
poison-tipped needles.
Despite
all the talk of Pireth Tulme, all the warnings of the older, more studied
monks, the defenders of St.-Mere-Abelle were indeed taken aback at the sheer
ferocity and boldness of the assault. And of the skill, for the powries were as
efficient and disciplined a fighting army as any in all the world. Not a monk,
not even stubborn Brother Francis, doubted for a moment that if the
enemy ground force had made its appearance then, St.-Mere-Abelle, the most
ancient and defensible bastion in all of Honce-the-Bear, would have fallen.
Even
without that ground force, Father Abbot Markwart appreciated the danger of the
situation.
"You!"
he called to the monk who had fired the first catapult shot. "Now is the
chance to redeem yourself!"
The
young brother, eager to regain the Father Abbot's favor, rushed to Markwart's
side and was presented with three stones: a malachite, a ruby, and a
serpentine.
"Do
not use the malachite until you descend near to the ship," the Father
Abbot explained hastily.
The
young monk's eyes went wide as he discerned the intent. The Father Abbot wanted
him to leap from the cliff, plummet to one particularly large tangle of powrie
ships, enact the levitational malachite and the fire-shield serpentine, and
then loose a fireball across the vessels.
"He'll
not get close," Jojonah started to protest, but Markwart turned on him
with such ferocity that the portly master abruptly backed away. Markwart was
wrong in sending this young monk, Jojonah maintained privately, for the
three-stone usage was more suited to an older and more experienced monk, an
immaculate at least, or even a master. Even if the young man managed the
difficult feat, the explosion would not be extreme, a puff of flame, perhaps,
and nothing to deter the powries.
"We
have no options," Markwart said to the young monk. "That group of
ships must be dealt with, and immediately, or our walls will be lost!"
Even
as he spoke, a pair of powries came over the wall to the side. The immaculates
fell over them at once, beating them down before they could get in defensive
posture and then cutting free the ropes in the area. But still, Markwart's
point had been clearly reinforced.
"They'll
not notice you coming, except to think you were thrown over by one of their
own," he explained. "By the time they realize the truth, they will be
burning and you will be ascending."
The
monk nodded, clutched the stones tightly and leaped up to the top of the wall.
With a look back, he jumped far and high, plummeting down the cliff face.
Markwart, Jojonah, and several others rushed to the wall to watch his descent,
and the Father Abbot cursed loudly when the malachite turned that plummet into
the gentle fall of a feather in a stiff breeze—with the monk still many yards
above the deck level.
"Fool!"
Markwart roared as the powries focused on the man, throwing spears and hammers,
raising their small crossbows. To the young monk's credit—or perhaps
because of his sudden terror, or perhaps because he simply did not possess the
magical knowledge and strength—he did not reverse direction and begin floating
back up the cliff, but continued down, down.
A
crossbow bolt dove into his arm; a stone tumbled from his hand.
"The
serpentine!" Jojonah cried.
The
young monk, clutching his arm, twitching and turning in a futile effort to
dodge the growing barrage, was obviously trying to float back up.
"No!"
Markwart yelled at him.
"He
has no shield against the fireball!" Jojonah yelled at the Father Abbot.
The
young monk jerked spasmodically, hit by a crossbow bolt, then another, men a
third, in rapid succession. His magical energy left him along with his life
force, and his limp body dropped the rest of the way, bouncing off a powrie
barge and into the dark waters of All Saints Bay.
"Fetch
me one of our peasant guests!" Markwart yelled at Brother Francis.
"He
was not strong enough," Jojonah said to the Father Abbot. "That was
no task for a mere novice. An immaculate might not complete such a feat!"
"I
would send you, and be glad to be rid of you," Markwart screamed in his
face, stunning him into silence. "But you are needed."
Brother
Francis returned with a young villager, a man of about twenty, looking
sheepish. "I can use a bow," the man said, trying to appear brave.
"I have hunted deer—"
"Take
this instead," Father Abbot Markwart instructed, handing him a ruby.
The
man's eyes widened at the sight and smooth feel of the sacred stone. "I
cannot..." he stammered, not understanding.
"But
I can," snarled Markwart, and he held forth another stone, his mighty
hematite, the soul stone.
The
man looked at him blankly; Brother Francis, understanding enough to know that
he should distract the peasant, smacked him hard across the face, knocking him
to the ground.
Master
Jojonah looked away.
Francis
closed on the man, meaning to strike him again.
"It
is done," the man announced, and Francis held back the blow and reverently
helped him to his feet.
"Possession,"
Jojonah spat distastefully. He could hardly believe that Markwart had done this
wicked thing, which was normally considered the absolute darkest side of the
hematite. By all edicts, possessing another's body was an act to be avoided—indeed, an act
that monks spirit-walking with hematite often guarded against by preparing
other protective stones. And when he thought about what he had just seen,
Jojonah could hardly believe that the possession, perhaps the most difficult of
any known task for the gemstones, had been completed so easily!
The
Father Abbot in the peasant's body walked calmly to the wall, glanced out over
the edge to locate the greatest tangle of powrie vessels, then, without a
moment's hesitation, calmly leaped over the side. No malachite this time, no
screaming, no fear. The Father Abbot focused on the ruby as he plunged the
hundred feet, bringing the stone's energy to a peak and loosing a tremendous,
concussive fireball just before he slammed the deck. His spirit deserted the
peasant body immediately, flying through the flames, away from the agony and
back to his own waiting form atop the seawall.
He
blinked his tired old eyes open, acclimating to his own body and fighting past
that instant of sheer terror when he had neared the powrie decks, when he
consumed his own borrowed form in magical fires. All the monks around him, with
the notable exception of Master Jojonah, were cheering wildly, many looking
over the wall at the burning mass of powrie vessels, uttering praises of
disbelief that anyone could ignite so tremendous a fireball.
"It
had to be done," Markwart said curtly to Jojonah.
The
master didn't blink.
"To
sacrifice one for the sake of others is the highest precept of our Order,"
Markwart reminded.
"To
sacrifice oneself," Master Jojonah corrected.
"Go
from this place, to the catapult crews," a disgusted Markwart ordered
dismissively.
Though
Jojonah realized that his stone skills were still needed up on the roof, he was
glad to comply. He glanced back at Markwart many times as he departed, for
while others were purely awestruck by the magical display, Jojonah, who had
known Markwart for more than forty years, was simply confused, and more than a
little suspicious.
There
was one entrance to St.-Mere-Abelle from the wharf area at the level of All
Saints Bay, but so great were the doors down there—oak wood, two
feet thick and reinforced with metal banding, backed by a portcullis with pegs
as thick as a man's thigh, and that backed by another falling wall, as thick
and strong as the outer doors—that no powries, not even the huge fomorian
giants, could have broken through them if they had spent a week at it.
That
was assuming, however, that the doors were closed.
If
they could have seen over the cliff well enough to spot the doors, neither
Father Abbot Markwart nor Master Jojonah would have been surprised to see those
great portals swing open in invitation to the groups of powries that had
managed to escape the blast and drag themselves onto the rocky shore. In fact,
both men had expected this very thing when Master De'Unnero had volunteered,
indeed insisted, that he be the one heading the contingent of twelve at the low
station guard post. That group had two ballistae, one on either side of the
great doors, but their firing range was severely limited by the narrow scope of
their shooting slits, and Markwart had known full well that De'Unnero would
never be satisfied with launching a few, usually ineffective bolts.
So
the young and fiery master had opened the doors, and now he stood exposed in
the corridor just inside, laughing hysterically, daring the powries to enter.
A
group of nearly a score of the bloody caps, battered already but never afraid,
did come roaring in, brandishing hammers and axes and cruel short swords.
As
the last of them passed under the portcullis, it fell with a resounding crash,
its vibrations reaching all through the abbey, all the way up to the seawall.
Startled
but not stopped, the bloody caps yelled all the louder and charged on. A dozen
crossbow bolts whipped out into their ranks, taking down a few but hardly
slowing the charge.
There
stood De'Unnero, alone, laughing, his honed muscles straining so tightly
against his skin that it seemed they might tear right through. Other monks,
principally Master Jojonah, had often voiced their belief that De'Unnero's
heart would simply explode, for the young master was too intense for the
wrappings of any human coil. He seemed to fit that image now, verily trembling
with inner energy. He held no weapon that the powries could see, only a single
stone, a tiger's paw, smooth brown and with black streaks.
Now
he brought forth the magic of that stone, and as the first powrie neared,
De'Unnero's arms were transformed, taking the shape of the mighty forelegs of a
tiger.
"Yach!"
the lead powrie cried, lifting its weapon defensively.
De'Unnero
was too quick for that, springing ahead like a hunting cat, slashing his right
arm down across the powrie's face, tearing away its features.
The
master seemed to go into a frenzy then, but in truth, he was in perfect
control, springing from side to side to prevent any powries from getting past
him, though a dozen other monks stood in the corridor to meet their charge. The
stone had stayed with his transformed paw, melding to the skin, and De'Unnero
fell deeper into its grasp now, and though his outward appearance changed no
more, his inner muscles became those of the cat.
A
swipe of his tiger arm sent one of the powries flying; with a flick of his leg
muscles, he darted to the side, avoiding a smash from a hammer. Then a second
muscular twitch brought him back in front of the attacking powrie before the
startled dwarf had even lifted its hammer.
The
claws raked viciously, and that powrie's face disappeared, too.
Those
powries behind were giving ground now, but De'Unnero's battle lust was far
from sated. His legs twitched, launching him fully twenty-five feet ahead,
landing in the midst of the dwarves. He became a whirlwind of flailing claws
and kicking feet. Powries were no minor enemy, but though they outnumbered this
creature nine to one, they wanted nothing to do with him. They scrambled and
rushed. Two went back for the portcullis, crying to their comrades who were
still outside, while several others staggered past the fighting De'Unnero,
stumbling down the corridor, where they were met by a second volley of crossbow
quarrels.
All
but one of the monks dropped their crossbows and drew weapons for close melee,
though a handful rushed forward to finish the dwarves with only their bare
hands.
Farther
down the corridor, De'Unnero held the last powrie standing before him by the
head, between his great paws. His claws had dug right through the powrie's
skull, and he whipped the creature back and forth now as easily as if it was a
down-filled child's doll. Then he threw it aside and started an advance on the
two at the portcullis.
Beyond
them, a powrie leveled a blowgun and let fly, scoring a hit on De'Unnero's
belly, just below his rib cage.
The
monk roared, a tiger's roar, and tore the dart free, along with a considerable
amount of flesh, continuing his determined advance. The powrie gunner popped
another dart into place; the two dwarves at the portcullis screamed and tried
to squeeze through.
Then
the inner sliding door fell, snapping the blowgun and squashing the two powries
flat.
De'Unnero
skidded to a stop as a spray of blood washed over him. He turned about and
roared again, a battle cry that became a call of frustration as he realized
that his soldiers had efficiently dealt with the remaining dwarves. The fight
was over.
The
fierce master came back fully to his human form, exhausted by the effort both
physical and magical. He felt the profound sting in his belly then, a burning,
washing sensation, and realized he had been poisoned. Most of that poison, a
paralyzing and painful concoction, had been defeated by the sheer energy of
the magical transformations, but enough remained to bring such a fit of trembling
to the monk that he was soon down on one knee.
His
soldiers crowded around him, concerned.
"Man
the ballistae!" he growled at them, and though De'Unnero was fully human
once more, his voice was as ferocious as the roar of the hunting tiger. The
younger monks obeyed, and by sheer determination Master De'Unnero soon joined
them, directing their shots.
With
the main tangle of powrie vessels burning and out of the fight, the watching
monks dispersed from that area, running to bolster the wall defenses wherever
necessary. Many powries gained the wall through that long and vicious morning,
but none found a lasting hold, and by midday, with still no sign of any
approaching ground force, the outcome was no longer in doubt. The powries
fought on, as powries always will, and more than fifty monks were slain, and
several times that number injured, but the powrie losses were staggering, with
more than half the thousand vessel fleet going to the bottom of All Saints Bay,
and the hundreds that escaped slipping out into deeper waters, manned by only
skeleton crews.
By
mid-afternoon Master Jojonah had joined with the other older monks proficient
in stone use in tending the many wounded, while younger brothers had already
organized burial detail for those beyond the help of the soul stones. The
battle had slipped into its last stage, the cleanup, as the chaos of fighting
died away. Soon the discipline of the brothers put the duties into order,
pragmatic and efficient. One thing did strike Master Jojonah as curious,
though. The Father Abbot, who had in his possession, Jojonah knew, the most
powerful soul stone in all St.-Mere-Abelle, walked among the wounded and
offered hopeful words, but seemed to be tending none. The concussive fireball,
and a couple of other lightning blasts that Markwart had screeched along the
wall top, were hours old now, and so Markwart's remarks that he had no magical
energy left made little sense.
The
portly master could only shrug helplessly and shake his head, then, when Master
De'Unnero arrived at the wall, his side torn open wide, though the fierce man
was hardly limping or showing any sign that he felt any pain at all. Still,
Markwart moved near and promptly sealed the wound with the soul stone. Jojonah
had known that the bond between these two was tight, as tight as the one
between the Father Abbot and Brother Francis.
He
went about his work quietly, digesting it all, filing it away until he could
find enough private time to properly reason it through.
"You
insist upon thrusting yourself in danger's way," Markwart scolded
De'Unnero as the gaping wound sealed under the influence of the hematite.
"A
man must find his enjoyment," the master replied with a mischievous grin.
"Enjoyment you continue to deny me."
Markwart
stepped back and looked harshly at him, understanding the complaint all too
well. "How goes the training?" he asked sharply.
"Youseff
shows promise," De'Unnero admitted. "He is cunning and will use any
weapon and any tactic to find victory."
"And
Brother Dandelion?"
"A
mighty bear, strong of arm but weak of mind," said De'Unnero. "He
will serve our purposes well, as long as Youseff guides his actions."
The
Father Abbot nodded, seeming pleased.
"I
could defeat them both together," De'Unnero asserted, stealing his
superior's smug look. "They will hold the title of Brothers Justice, yet I
could crush them both, and easily. And I could go and retrieve Avelyn and the
gemstones."
Markwart
had no practical argument against the claim. "You are a master, and have
other duties," he said.
"More
important than the hunt for Avelyn?"
"Equally
important," Markwart said with a tone of finality. "Youseff and
Dandelion will serve this purpose, if Master Marcalo De'Unnero properly trains
them."
De'Unnero's
face crinkled severely, his eyes narrowing, throwing imaginary daggers at the
Father Abbot. He did not like to be questioned, not at all.
Markwart
recognized the look, for he had seen it often. He knew, though, that De'Unnero
would not cross him, and given that, such intensity could be put to good use.
"Let
me go hunting," De'Unnero said plainly.
"You
train the hunters," Markwart shot back. "Trust me, you will find
rewards for your efforts." With that, the Father Abbot walked away.
"We
were valiant this day," Master De'Unnero proudly offered to Markwart and
the other masters at their summary meeting after vespers.
"But
also fortunate," Master Jojonah reminded them all. "For neither the
powrie ground force nor the goblin army that has been oft sighted in the region
made its appearance."
"More
than luck, I would reason," Francis piped in, though it was not the man's
place to speak at such a meeting. Francis wasn't even an immaculate yet, after
all, and was only at the meeting as an attendant of the Father Abbot. Still,
Markwart made no move to silence him, and the other masters afforded him the
floor. "This is uncharacteristic of our enemy," Francis went on.
"Every tale from the battle lines north of Palmaris indicate that our monstrous
foes fight with cohesion and guidance, and it is obvious from the success of
our ruse that those powrie ships were indeed waiting for the ground army to
engage."
"Where,
then, were—are—the
enemy, ground armies?" Markwart asked impatiently. "Will we awake on
the morrow to find that we are besieged once again?"
"The
fleet will not return," another master responded immediately. "And
if the monsters come at us from the ground, they will find our fortifications
even more formidable than those that protected us by sea."
Master
Jojonah happened to be looking at De'Unnero when these words were spoken, and
was disgusted to see the man's almost feral smile, a grin truly unbefitting a
master of the Abellican Order.
"Triple
the guard along the walls this night, land and sea," the Father Abbot
decided.
"Many
are weary from the fighting," said Master Engress, a gentle man and a
friend of Jojonah's.
"Then
use the peasants," Markwart snapped at him abruptly. "They have come
in to eat our food and hide behind the shelter of abbey walls and brother
flesh. Let them earn their keep at watch, this night and every night."
Engress
looked at Jojonah and at several other masters, but none dared question
Markwart's tone. "It will be done, Father Abbot," Master Engress said
humbly.
The
Father Abbot pushed his chair back forcefully, the legs screeching on the
wooden floor. He rose and waved his hand dismissively, then walked out of the
room, the meeting at its end.
By
Markwart's reasoning, all important business had been concluded. The man
wanted to be alone with his thoughts, and with his emotions, some of which were
troubling indeed. He had sent a man flying to his death this day, an act that
still required a bit of rationalization, and he was also conscious of the fact
that he had not been greatly involved in the healing process after the fight.
There had remained magical energy within him—he had known that even as he spoke
falsely to excuse himself—but he simply hadn't felt like helping out. He
had gone to one injured monk, a man sitting against the seawall, his arm badly
torn from a sliding powrie grapnel, but when he moved to heal the man with the
hematite, an action that required an intimate connection, he recoiled,
feeling... what?
Loathing?
Repulsion?
Markwart
had no practical answers, but he trusted in his instincts completely. There
was a perversion, a weakness, growing within the Order, he realized. Avelyn—always it was
that foul Avelyn!—had begun the rot, and now, it seemed, it was a more general
thing than even he had believed.
Yes,
that was it, the Father Abbot understood. They were growing weak and so full of
compassion that they could no longer recognize and properly deal with true
evil. Like Jojonah and his foolish sympathy for the peasant whose sacrifice had
saved so many lives.
But
not De'Unnero, Markwart thought, and he managed a smile. The man was strong,
and brilliant. Perhaps he should concede to the man's wishes and let him be
the one to hunt down Avelyn and the gemstones; with Marcalo De'Unnero set to
the task, success would almost be assured.
The
Father Abbot shook his head, reminding himself that he had other plans for the
master. De'Unnero would be moved high in line as his successor, the Father
Abbot silently vowed. As soon as he had seen De'Unnero's wounds, Markwart had
desired to heal them, as though the sacred soul stone had called to him to act,
had shown him the truth.
It
was all sorting out neatly for Father Abbot Markwart. He made a mental note to
properly eulogize the fireballing peasant, perhaps even to erect a statue in
the man's honor, and then he went to bed.
He
slept soundly.
Scouts
went out from St.-Mere-Abelle the next day, scouring the countryside and then
returning to report that no sign of monsters was to be found anywhere near the
abbey. Within a week the situation was made clear: the powrie invasion force
had gone back to their ships and departed—for where, no one knew. The goblin
army, and indeed there was a huge force in the region, had fractured, with
rogue bands running haphazard, sacking towns.
The
Kingsmen, Honce-the-Bear's army, were tracking down the rogue bands one at a
time and destroying them.
At
St.-Mere-Abelle, the implications of this seemingly good news went far deeper.
"We
must look to the source of our enemy's disarray," Father Abbot Markwart
told his senior monks. "To the Barbacan and this rumored explosion."
"You
believe that the demon dactyl has been destroyed," Master Jojonah
reasoned.
"I
believe that our enemy has been decapitated," Markwart replied. "But
we must know the truth of it."
"An
expedition," Master Engress stated plainly.
Brother
Francis was the first out of the room, eager to put together the plans for a
trip to the Barbacan, eager, as always, to please the Father Abbot.
"He's
in there," the old woman groaned. "I know he be! Oh, the poor
child."
"Might be that he's dead already," said another, a man of about thirty winters. "That would be the most merciful. Poor child."
A
group of a dozen villagers crouched on a bluff a quarter mile north of their
old home, Caer Tinella, watching the powries and the goblins. A pair of
fomorian giants had also been in the town earlier that day, but were out now,
probably hunting refugees.
"He
should not have gone down there, and I told him so," the old woman
asserted. "Too many, too many."
Off
to the side, Tomas Gingerwart gave a knowing smile. These people didn't
understand the lad named Roger. To them he was Roger Billingsbury, an orphan
boy who had been taken in by the town. When Roger's parents had both died, the
common thinking was to send him south to Palmaris, perhaps to the monks of St.
Precious. But the folk of Caer Tinella, truly a bonded community, decided to
keep Roger with them, with all of them helping him get through the trials of
grief and sickness.
For
Roger was a poor, skinny waif, so obviously frail. His physical development
had been stunted at the age of eleven, stolen by the same fever that killed his
parents, and his two sisters, as well.
That
was several years ago, but to these worried townsfolk, Roger, who looked much
the same, was still that little lost boy.
Tomas
knew better. The lad's name was no longer Billingsbury, but Lockless, Roger
Lockless, a tag given him for good reason indeed. There was nothing Roger
couldn't open, or slip through, or sneak around. Tomas reminded himself of that
often as he looked to Caer Tinella, for in truth, he was also a bit worried.
But only a bit.
"A
line o' them," the old woman cackled, pointing emphatically toward the
town. Her eyes were sharp, for indeed a group of goblins moved across the town
square, escorting a line of ragged-looking human prisoners—those people
of Caer Tinella and the neighboring community of Landsdown who had not been
quick enough or hidden deep enough in the woods. Now the monsters were using
the towns as encampments, and the captured humans as slaves.
All
of the refugees understood what grim fate would befall those captives when they
were no longer useful to the powries and goblins.
"You
should not be looking upon them," came a voice, and the group turned as
one to see the approach of a portly man, Belster O'Comely. "And we are all
too close to the towns, I fear. Would you have us all captured?" Despite
his best efforts, Belster, the jovial innkeeper who used to run the very
respectable Howling Sheila in Dundalis, could not manage too sharp an edge to
his voice. He had come south with the refugees from the three towns of the
Timberlands: Dundalis, Weedy Meadow, and End-o'-the-World. Belster's companions
from the northland were a far different group, though, quite unlike the more
recently displaced people of Caer Tinella and Landsdown, and those of the
handful of other smaller communities along the road south to the great port
city of Palmaris. Belster's group, trained by the mysterious ranger known as
Nightbird, were far from pitiful and far from afraid. They hid from the
goblins, to be sure, but when they found the terms favorable, they became the
hunters, with goblins, powries, even giants, their prey.
"We
will make a try for them, as I promised," Belster continued. "But not
so soon. Oh no. We'll be no good to our fellows dead! Now come along."
"Is
there nothing to be done?" the old woman said angrily.
"Pray,
dear lady," Belster replied in all sincerity. "Pray for them
all."
Tomas
Gingerwart nodded his agreement. And pray for the goblins, he silently added,
thinking that Roger must be having a grand time of it by now.
Belster
didn't miss the smirk, and moved to speak with Tomas alone.
"You
wish that I would do more," the portly innkeeper said quietly,
misinterpreting Tomas' look. "And so do I, my friend. But I have a hundred
and fifty under my care."
"Closer
to a hundred and eighty, counting those from Caer Tinella and about,"
Tomas corrected.
"And
only two score and ten fit for fighting, to guard them all with," Belster
remarked. "How might I risk my warriors on a raid against the town with so
many lives at stake?"
"I
do not doubt your wisdom, Master O'Comely," Tomas said sincerely.
"You vow to raid the town when the time is right, but I fear that you will
find no such time. The goblins are lax, but the powries not so. A cunning lot,
well trained for war. Their guard will not drop."
"Then
what am I to do?" asked a distressed Belster.
"Keep
to your duty," Tomas replied. "And that duty is to the hundred and
eighty, not to those already in powrie clutches."
Belster
eyed the man unblinkingly for a long while, and Tomas could see the pain in the
gentle man's eyes. The innkeeper did not want to let a single human slip
through his protective web.
"You
cannot save them all," Tomas said simply.
"But
I must try."
Tomas
was shaking his head before Belster finished. "Do not play the fool's
game," he scolded, and Belster realized for the first time that Tomas'
earlier smirk was not derisive, was not in response to his hesitance in going
into Caer Tinella. "If you attack openly," Tomas continued,
"then expect to be routed. And I fear that our powrie and goblin friends
would not be satisfied with that, but would expand their search of the forest
until all of us were hunted down and taken prisoner—or slain, in
the case of many, the older folk and children too young to be of any use."
"So
you agree with my decision to hold? Even to retreat our line?"
"Reluctantly,"
Tomas replied. "As reluctantly as do you. You are a man of conscience,
Belster O'Comely, and fortunate are we of Caer Tinella that you and yours have
come south."
Belster
took the compliment in stride, needing the support. He couldn't help another
glance in the direction of the occupied town, though, his heart breaking at the
thought of the torment those poor prisoners must now be experiencing.
Another
curious onlooker was watching the procession of slaves as the goblins led them
to the dark forest on the edge of Caer Tinella. Roger Lockless knew the
workings of the town better than any other. Ever since the invasion, he had
been in Caer Tinella nearly every night, moving from shadow to shadow,
listening to the goblins and powries lay their plans for the area, or
overhearing talk of the greater war being waged not so far to the south. More
than anything else, the crafty Roger Lockless knew his enemy, and knew where
they were vulnerable. When he left the town before dawn each day, his slight
frame was usually laden with goods for the refugees in the nearby woods. And so
careful was he in his stealing that the monsters rarely realized they were
being robbed.
His
work three nights previous remained his shining achievement to date. He had
stolen a pony, the boss powrie's favorite mount, and taken it in such a way as
to implicate a pair of goblin sentries, who, as Roger had previously discovered
through some fine spying, happened by coincidence to be feasting that very
night on a horse.
Both
were hanged in the town square the next morning—Roger watched that, too.
The
young man, barely more than a boy, knew that today was different. Today the
goblins meant to kill one of their prisoners; he had heard them talking about
it before dawn, which prompted him to stay around as the day brightened. The
goblins had caught Mrs. Kelso stuffing her mouth with an extra biscuit, and the
powrie boss, a thoroughly disagreeable fellow named Kos-kosio Begulne, ordered
her slain in the morning as an example to the others.
She
was out there, chopping at the trees with the rest of the poor prisoners,
oblivious to the fact that she had only hours left to live.
Roger
had witnessed much cruelty in the last few weeks, had seen several people
butchered for no better reason than the fact that a goblin or powrie didn't
like the way they looked. Always, the pragmatic young thief would shake his
head and look the other way. "Not my business," he often reminded
himself.
This
was different. Mrs. Kelso was a friend, a dear friend who had often fed him
when he was younger, an orphaned waif running the streets of Caer Tinella. He
had spent years sleeping in her barn, for though her husband had little use for
him and kept telling him to get away, gentle Mrs. Kelso usually ushered the man
aside, glancing back and winking at Roger, then nodding toward the barn.
She
was a good lady, and Roger found it hard this day to shake his head and say,
"Not my business."
But
what could he do? He was no fighter, and even if he were, there were a pair of
huge fomorians in or about Caer Tinella, more than a hundred goblins, half that
number of powries, and probably ten times that number of monsters running
around in the forest and the neighboring villages. He had hoped to get Mrs.
Kelso out of town before the dawn, but by the time he heard the grim plans for
her, the prisoners had already been roused, lined up, and placed under heavy
guard.
One
problem at a time, Roger repeatedly told himself. The prisoners were chained
to each other ankle-to-ankle, separated by five-foot lengths of chain, each
person chained to two others. For added security, the shackles on each prisoner
were not a matching pair and were finely made, with one chained to the shackle
on the leg of a slave to the right, the other chained to a slave on the left.
Roger estimated he would need nearly a full minute to get through both locks,
and that only if Mrs. Kelso and the two prisoners chained to her kept still and
cooperated.
A
minute was a long time with powrie crossbowmen nearby.
"Diversion,
diversion, diversion," the young thief muttered repeatedly, slipping from
shadow to shadow about the occupied town. "A call to arms? No no no. A
fire?"
Roger
paused, focusing his thoughts on a pair of goblins taking some rest on the piles
of last season's hay just inside Yosi Hoosier's barn. One of them had a pipe
stuck in its mouth and was blowing gigantic rings of noxious smoke.
"Oh,
but I love fire," Roger whispered. Off he went, silent and quick as a
hunting cat, taking a wide circuit of the barn, slipping into the structure—as he had so
often in the last few years— through a broken board far in the back. Soon he
was crouched behind the hay within a few feet of the oblivious goblins. He
waited patiently for nearly ten minutes, until the smoker tapped out his pipe
and began loading fresh weed.
Roger
was good at making fires—another of his many talents. He moved back so he wouldn't
be heard, then struck flint to steel over a few pieces of straw.
Then
he crept back and pushed the straw in carefully, in the general area where the
smoker had tapped out his pipe.
Then
he was gone, back out of the barn before the first wisps of smoke tickled the
noses of the goblin pair.
The
hay went up like a giant candle, and how the goblins howled!
"Attack!"
some yelled. "Enemies! Enemies!" cried others. But when they went to
investigate and saw their comrades batting wildly at the flames, including one
goblin with a lit pipe still stuck in its mouth, they changed their song.
Those
goblins out with the woodcutting prisoners did not go in to fight fire, but
their attention was diverted enough for Roger to easily scamper around the back
of the group, coming to a stop behind the large oak that Mrs. Kelso was
halfheartedly chopping. She let out a chirp when he peeked around, but he
quickly hushed her and those nearby.
"Hear
me quick," he whispered, crawling halfway around, his hands immediately
going to work on her shackles while he locked Mrs. Kelso's gaze with his own.
"Now stand still! They mean to kill you. I heard them."
"You
cannot take her out or they'll kill us all!" one man complained, his
voice loud enough to draw a growl and an order to "Work!" from the
goblin guards.
"You
must take us all, then," demanded another.
"That
I cannot do," Roger replied. "But they won't kill you, they won't
even blame you."
"But—" the
first man started, before Roger hushed him with a look.
"When
I get her free, I will put her shackles about that sapling," he explained.
"Give us a five-count to get away, then here is what you do..."
"Stupid
Grimy Snorts and that smelly pipe o' his," one of the goblin guards
remarked, sorting out the mess in the town proper. "Ugly Kos-kosio ain't
to be giving us extra food tonight."
The
other laughed. "Might that we'll be eating Grimy Snorts!"
"Demon!"
came a cry that sent the goblins spinning. They saw the prisoner line, tools
thrown down, the people struggling mightily, trying to run away.
"
'Ere now!" one of the goblins yelled, charging up to the nearest human and
laying her low with a shield rush. " 'Ere now!"
"Demon!"
yelled the other humans, precisely as Roger had instructed them. "Demon
dactyl!"
"He
turned her into a tree!" one woman shrieked. The goblin guards looked on
curiously, even scratched their heads, dumbstruck, for the two lines of
prisoners—and
there did seem to be two lines now—were stretched out to the length of the
chains, and were both anchored by a small but sturdy sapling.
"A
tree?" one goblin croaked.
"Blimey,"
said another.
All
the attention of the encampment shifted from the now dying fire in the barn to
the bustle at the forest's edge. Many goblins ran over, along with the powrie
host, led by their merciless leader, Kos-kosio Begulne.
"What'd
ye see?" the powrie demanded of the man who had been chained to Mrs.
Kelso's right and was now closest to the sapling.
"Demon,"
the man sputtered.
"Demon?"
Kos-kosio echoed skeptically. "And what'd the demon look like?"
"Big
and black," the man stammered. "Big winged shadow. I... I didn't stay
nearby to watch. He... it turned poor Mrs. Kelso into a tree!"
"Mrs.
Kelso?" Kos-kosio Begulne repeated a couple of times, until he remembered
the woman and the fate he had planned for her. Had Bestesbulzibar, the demon
dactyl, the lord of the dark army, returned? Was this a signal from the dactyl
that it was again with him, Kos-kosio, watching over his operation?
A
shudder coursed up the powrie's spine as he remembered the fate of a former
leader of this band, a goblin named Gothra. In a fit of its all-too-typical
rage, Bestesbulzibar had ripped the skin from the goblin while it remained
alive to watch and to feel. That was when Kos-kosio had been put in charge, and
the powrie had known from the beginning that this was a tentative command.
The
powrie studied the tree closely, trying to remember, without success, if the
sapling had been there all along. Had Bestesbulzibar really returned, or was
it a trick? the ever-suspicious powrie wondered.
"Search
all the area!" Kos-kosio ordered his minions, and when they started out
cautiously, eyes darting about, the powrie roared even louder, promising death
to any who did not hustle.
"And
yerself, human dog," Kos-kosio said to the man nearest the tree.
"Pick up yer stinking axe and cut Mrs. Kelso down!"
The
man's horrified expression was convincing enough to bring a smile to the ugly
powrie's square-chinned face.
Roger
realized he was taking a chance in coming back near the town, but with Mrs.
Kelso safely on her way to Tomas and the others, he simply couldn't resist the
sport of it all. He relaxed comfortably, his back against a tree, as two
stupid goblins wandered right below him. When that patrol had moved farther
along and no others were in the immediate area, he moved in even closer,
climbing into the same oak he had slithered around to get to Mrs. Kelso in the
first place.
Then
he watched contentedly. The humans were back to work— the two men
who had been flanking Mrs. Kelso now shackled together—and the powries had
returned to the town, leaving a handful of goblins to guard the humans, and
another dozen or so of the nervous wretches searching the woods.
Yes,
it was a perfectly wonderful situation, Roger mused, for never in his young
life had he found so much fun.
Graceful and strong, Nightbird slipped down from Symphony's side while the horse was in mid-gallop. The ranger hit the ground running, stringing Hawkwing as he went, while Pony, who had been sitting behind him on the horse, hopped forward, took up the reins and kept Symphony's run true and in control, for the muddy ground was treacherous. She expertly veered the horse to the left, around the base of a wide mound, while Elbryan went right.
Before
Pony and Symphony were halfway around, they spotted the trio of goblins they
had been chasing. Two were far ahead, running wildly for the cover of a copse
of trees, but the third had doubled back and was going around the mound the
other way. "Coming fast!" Pony yelled and bent low on Symphony,
angling the horse more sharply about the hillock.
Symphony
broke stride as the goblin came staggering back out from behind the mound,
clutching at the arrow lodged in its throat A second arrow hit it in the chest,
dropping it to the mud.
"They
made for the trees," Pony said to the ranger as he came running into
sight. "They will lay up in there," she reasoned.
The
ranger slowed and glanced at the copse, then, apparently agreeing, he went to
the dead goblin and began extracting his arrows. That done, he stood again and
scanned the landscape, a curious expression crossing his handsome face.
"We
can do a circuit of the copse," Pony reasoned. "Find the best way to
get in and strike at them."
Nightbird
seemed not to be listening.
"Elbryan?"
Still
the ranger kept looking around, his mouth open now, his face full of
wonderment.
"Elbryan?"
the woman said again, more insistent.
"I
know this place," he replied absently, his gaze darting from spot to spot.
"The
Moorlands?" Pony asked incredulously, her face scrunching with disgust as
she looked around at the desolate region. "How could you?"
"I
passed this very way on my road back to Dundalis," he explained.
"When I left the elves." He ran to a nearby birch tangle, bending low
as if he expected his long-ago campsite to still be under there.
"Yes," he said excitedly. "I slept here in this very place one
quiet night. The gnats were horrific," he added with a chuckle.
"The
goblins?" Pony asked, nodding in the direction of the distant copse.
"I
did find some goblins in here, but farther to the east, on the edges of the
Moorlands," Elbryan replied.
"I
mean those goblins," Pony said firmly, pointing ahead.
Elbryan
waved his hand dismissively. The goblins were not important to him at the
moment, not with that long-ago-traveled road coming clearer and clearer in his
mind. He scrambled to the side, past Pony and Symphony, and looked over the
splotchy brush and the rolling clay to the black silhouette of mountaintops
just visible far in the west, their outlines silver under the light of the descending
sun.
"Forget
the goblins," Elbryan said suddenly, grabbing Symphony's bridle and
leading horse and rider away, on a course that would bring them well to the
side of the copse of trees and more directly in line with the distant
mountains.
"Forget
them?" Pony echoed. "We chased that tribe twenty miles, into the
Moorlands and more than halfway through. I've got a thousand gnat bites
swelling on every part of my body, and the smell of this place will follow us
for a year to come! And you want me to just forget them?"
"They
are unimportant," Elbryan said without looking at her. "The last two
out of thirty. With their score-and-eight companions slain, I doubt they'll
head back toward End-o'-the-World for some time to come."
"Do
not underestimate goblin mischief," Pony replied.
"Forget
them," Elbryan said again.
Pony
lowered her head and growled softly. She could hardly believe that Elbryan was
leading her farther west, away from the Timberlands, even if he meant to
dismiss the goblin pair. But she trusted him, and if her guess was right, they
were closer to the western edge of the Moorlands than the eastern. The sooner
they got out of this wretched, bug-ridden place, the better she would like it.
They
went on for a short while, until the sun began to set over the distant
mountains, then Elbryan went about the task of setting up camp. They were still
in the Moorlands, still haunted by the buzzing insects, and, even more to
Pony's dislike, they were still too close to the copse of trees wherein the
goblins had disappeared. She repeatedly tried to point this out to her
companion, but he would hear none of it. "I must go to Oracle," he
announced.
Pony
followed his gaze to the base of a large tree, one root pulled up out of the
soft ground to create a small hollow underneath. "A fine place to be
sitting when the goblins come charging in," the woman replied sourly.
"There
were only two."
"You
doubt that they'll find friends in this wretched place?" Pony asked.
"We could set our camp with thoughts of a quiet night, only to find that
we are fighting half the entire goblin army before the dawn."
Elbryan
seemed to have run out of answers. He chewed his bottom lip for a bit, looking
to the nearby tree, its hollowed base inviting him to Oracle. He had to go to
Uncle Mather, he felt and soon, before the images of that long-lost trail faded
from his thoughts.
"Go
and do what you must," Pony said to him, recognizing the true dilemma
etched on his face. "But give me the cat's-eye. Symphony and I will scout
about for any signs of enemies."
Elbryan
was genuinely relieved as he took the circlet from his head and handed it to
the woman. It was a gift from Avelyn Desbris that he and Pony had been passing
back and forth as needed. He couldn't use it in Oracle anyway; it would defeat
the whole mood of the meditation, for the gemstone set in the front of the
circlet, a chrysoberyl, more commonly known as cat's-eye, would allow the
wearer of the circlet to see clearly in the darkest of nights, even in the
darkest of caves.
"You
owe me for my indulgence," Pony informed him as she placed the circlet
about her thick mop of blond hair. Her tone, and the sudden grin that lifted
the edges of her mouth, told the ranger what she might have in mind, a notion
reinforced when she hopped over to him a moment later and kissed him
passionately.
"Later,"
she said.
"When
we are not surrounded by goblins and insects," Elbryan agreed.
Pony
swung up onto Symphony's saddle. With a wink at Elbryan, she turned the horse
about and trotted away into the growing gloom—but with the cat's-eye securely
in place, the images before her remained distinct.
Elbryan
watched her go with the deepest affection and respect. This was a trying time
for the young ranger, a time when all his skills, physical and mental, were
being put to the absolute test every day. Every decision could prove tragic;
every move he made could give his enemies the advantage. How glad he was to
have Pony, so thoughtful, so skilled, so beautiful, at his side.
He
sighed when she passed out of sight, then turned to the business at hand: the
construction of a proper sight for Oracle and a meeting with Uncle Mather.
It
didn't take Pony long to discern that the goblins had not given up the chase,
and had in fact begun trailing her and Elbryan. And the tracks she found when
she circled back indicated that the goblin pair had indeed found some friends,
more goblins, perhaps as many as a dozen. Pony looked ahead, back toward her
camp, which was now no more than a mile away. She would be hard-pressed to ride
by the goblins and get to Elbryan in time, she realized.
"Oracle,"
she said, shaking her head and giving a great sigh. She bade Symphony to stay
put, then reached into her pouch for her malachite. She slipped her feet out of
the stirrups as she put her thoughts into the gem, summoning its power. Then
she began to rise, slowly, into the nighttime sky, hoping the darkness was complete
enough to keep her hidden from sharp goblin eyes.
She
had only gone up about twenty feet when she spotted the creatures, gathered
about a small, well-concealed fire in another copse of trees, barely a couple
hundred yards from her position. They hadn't settled for the night, she knew,
but were up and agitated, sketching in the dirt—probably approach routes or
searching routes—pushing each other and arguing.
Pony
didn't want to expend too much of her magical energy, so she gradually released
the malachite's levitational powers, drifting back down to land atop Symphony.
"Are you ready to have some fun?" she asked the horse, replacing the
malachite in her pouch and taking out two different stones.
Symphony
nickered softly and Pony patted his neck. She had never tried this particular
trick before, and especially not while taking a horse in with her, but she was
brimming with confidence. Avelyn had taught her well, and, given her newfound
insights into the gemstones—an understanding that went beyond anything she had ever
known—she believed with all her heart that she was ready.
She
started Symphony walking in the direction of the goblin camp, then took up a
serpentine and began gathering its magic. In her other hand she held both
bridle and a ruby, perhaps the most powerful stone in her possession.
With
the cat's-eye, Pony picked her path carefully, a trail that would take her and
Symphony in fast and hard. Barely twenty yards away, Symphony's hoofbeats
covered by the sounds of arguing goblins, the woman communicated her
intentions to the horse via the turquoise, then kicked the powerful stallion
into a dead gallop and let her own thoughts fall into the serpentine, bringing
up a glowing white shield about her and the horse, making it look as though she
and Symphony had fallen into a vat of a sticky, milky substance.
Pony
only had seconds to secure the shield about them both, to switch hands on the
bridle and bring the ruby up high, dropping the serpentine shield about the
ruby, then completing the protective bubble about her hand under the gemstone.
Goblins
howled and reached for their weapons, diving and rolling as horse and rider
thundered into their midst. One ugly brute had a spear up and ready to throw.
Pony
paid it no heed, could see nothing but the red swirls within the ruby, could
hear nothing but the wind in her ears and the simmering, mounting power of the
gemstone.
Symphony
ran straight and true, right to the goblins' fire, then skidded to an abrupt
halt and reared.
Goblins
shouted; some charged, some continued to scramble away.
Not
far enough away.
Pony
loosed the destructive power of the ruby, a tremendous, concussive fireball
that exploded out from her hand, engulfing goblin and tree alike in a sudden
blazing inferno.
Symphony
reared again and whinnied, pulling wildly. Pony held on and called comforting
words to the horse, though she doubted that Symphony could even hear her
through the tremendous roar of the blaze, or even sense her calming thoughts
with the sheer commotion of the conflagration. Pony could hardly see, smoke
rolling all about, but she urged Symphony forward, and so solid was her
serpentine shield that neither she nor the great horse felt any heat
whatsoever. They passed by one fallen goblin, the one who had raised its spear
to throw, and Pony looked on in disgust as the blackened creature, still
holding fast the charring spear, settled, its super-heated chest collapsing
with a crackle.
Soon
after, horse and rider came out of the copse, into the cooler night, and moved
away, an exhausted and coughing Pony dropping the protective shield.
"Oracle," she said again and sighed again, glancing back at the
blaze.
No
goblins would emerge from that catastrophe, she knew.
When
she got back to her camp, she found Elbryan standing on the edge, staring at
the continuing fire nearly a mile away.
"Your
doing," he stated more than asked.
"Somebody
had to see to the goblins," Pony replied, slipping down from the
still-agitated black horse. "And it should interest you to know that their
numbers had swelled."
Elbryan
gave her a disarming grin. "I had confidence that you could handle
whatever situation arose," he said.
"While
you played at Oracle?"
The
smile left the ranger's face and he shook his head slowly.
"No
play," he said gravely. "A search that might save all the
world."
"You
are being very mysterious this night," Pony remarked.
"If
you took a moment from your insults and considered the tales I told you about
my time away from Dundalis, you would begin to understand."
Pony
cocked her head and regarded the man, the ranger, the elven-trained ranger.
"Juraviel?"
she asked suddenly, breathlessly, referring to an elf she had once known,
friend and mentor to Elbryan.
"And
his kin," Elbryan said, nodding his chin toward the west. "I believe
that I have remembered the road back to Andur'Blough Inninness."
Andur'Blough
Inninness, Pony echoed in her mind. The "Forest of Cloud" wherein lay
Caer'alfar, home to the Touel'alfar, the slight, winged elves of Corona.
Elbryan had told her many tales of the enchanted place, but always answered her
pleas to go there with a frustrated reply that he could not recall the trail,
that the elves desired their privacy even from him, the one they named Nightbird,
a ranger trained in their home. If he was right now, if he could indeed find
the trail back to the elven home, then his words about the unimportance of a
couple of goblins suddenly rang with more conviction.
"We
shall set off in the morning," Elbryan promised into her eager expression.
"Before the dawn."
"Symphony
will be packed and waiting," Pony replied, her blue eyes twinkling with
excitement.
Elbryan
took her hand and led her to the small tent they shared. "Have you any
enchantments which will repel insects?" he asked on a whim.
Pony
considered the thought for a moment. "A fireball would give us a short
reprieve," she replied.
Elbryan
glanced back to the east, to the still-burning, thoroughly decimated copse,
then scrunched up his face and shook his head. He'd suffer the inconvenience of
a few thousand gnats.
No
goblins bothered them the rest of that night, nor the next day as they exited
the Moorlands through the western border. Both rode atop Symphony as soon as
the ground became more firm, and Elbryan pushed the horse at a swift pace.
Joined telepathically through the turquoise, the ranger understood that Symphony
wanted to run hard, had been born to run hard. And so they made their swift
way, setting camps for only short hours in the darkest part of the night, and,
on Elbryan's insistence, avoiding any goblins or giants or powries, or any
other distraction. His purpose was singular now, while the ever-elusive trail
to Andur'Blough Inninness remained clear in his thoughts, and Pony didn't
argue with the wisdom of trying to enlist the elves in their continuing
struggle.
And
there was an added benefit for the woman. With all the enchanting tales
Elbryan had told of his days training as a ranger, she dearly wanted to see the
elven forest.
She
used the reprieve from battle for another purpose, as well. "Are you ready
to begin your new career?" she asked one bright morning, Elbryan breaking
down the camp and grumbling that they had overslept and should have been on the
trail before the dawn.
The
ranger cocked his head curiously.
Pony
held aloft the pouch of gemstones, and gave them a definitive shake when
Elbryan's expression soured. "You have seen their power," she
protested.
"I
am a warrior, and no wizard," Elbryan replied. "And certainly no
monk!"
"And
I am not a warrior?" Pony asked slyly. "How many times have I put you
down to the ground?"
Elbryan
couldn't suppress a chuckle at that. When they were younger, children in
Dundalis before the goblins came, he and Pony had wrestled several times, with
Pony always emerging the victor. And once, after being caught by the hair by
Elbryan, the girl had even laid the boy out cold with a punch to the face. The
memories, even of the knockout, were the brightest of all for Elbryan, for then
had come the dark time, the first goblin invasion, and he and Pony had been
separated for so many years, each thinking the other dead.
Now
he was Nightbird, among the finest warriors in all the world, and she was a
wielder of magic, a wizard trained in the use of the sacred gemstones by Avelyn
Desbris, who had been perhaps the most powerful magic-wielder in all the world.
"You
must learn them," Pony insisted. "At least a bit."
"You
seem to do well with them on your own," Elbryan replied defiantly, though
he was privately a bit intrigued by the prospects of using the powerful
gemstones. "Would we not be weakened as a fighting team if some of the
stones were in my possession?"
"That
would depend on the situation," Pony answered. "If you get wounded, I
can use the soul stone to mend your injuries, but what if I get wounded? Who
will heal me? Or would you just leave me sitting against a tree to die?"
The
image conjured by that thought nearly buckled Elbryan's knees. He couldn't
believe that neither he nor Pony had thought of that possibility before—at least not
enough to do anything about it. All objections gone, he said, "We must be
on the trail." He held his hand up as Pony began her expected protest.
"But with every meal and every break, I will be tutored, particularly with
the soul stone," he explained. "All our waking hours will be filled,
then, with traveling and learning."
Pony
considered that for just a moment, and nodded her agreement with the
concession. Then, with a sudden wistful smile, she took a step closer to
Elbryan, hooked her finger in the top of his tunic and pursed her sensual lips.
"Every waking moment?" she asked coyly.
Elbryan
couldn't find the breath to reply. That was what he most loved about this
woman: her ability to keep him always off-balance, to surprise him and entice
him with the simplest statements, with movements subtly suggestive. Every time
he thought he was planted firmly in the ground, Pony found a way to make him
realize that the ground was as tentative as the shifting silt of the Moorlands.
They
were late for the trail, the ranger knew, and he knew, too, that they wouldn't
be going anywhere for a little while.
What
struck them most was the pure majesty of the mountains— there was
simply no other word for it. They walked along rocky trails, with Elbryan in
the lead, checking the trail and watching for tracks. Pony, walking behind,
held Symphony by the bridle, though with its telepathic connection to both
these humans, the horse would have followed anyway. Neither Elbryan nor Pony
spoke, for the sound of voices seemed out of place here, unless those voices
were raised in glorious song.
All
about them great mountains reached up their white caps of snow to touch the
sky. Clouds drifted by, sometimes above them, sometimes below them, and often
they walked right through the gray air. The wind blew constantly, but it only
dulled the sound even more, making this majestic place utterly silent, utterly
serene. So they walked and they looked, and were humbled by the sheer power and
glory of nature.
Elbryan
knew he was on the right trail, knew he was closing in on his intended
destination. This place, so powerful, so overwhelming, felt like
Andur'Blough Inninness.
The
trail forked, going up and to the left, down and to the right, around an
outcropping of stone. Elbryan started left and motioned for Pony to move on to
the right, figuring the paths would cross again soon enough. He was still
climbing, and still veering left, when he heard Pony cry out. Down he sprinted,
cutting over the rough ground between the paths, leaping atop any boulders in
his path and springing away, as surefooted as any mountain cat. How often
Nightbird had run along such terrain during his years of training with the
Touel'alfar!
He
slowed his pace when he spotted Pony standing calmly with Symphony by her side.
When he got up beside her and followed her gaze over the lip of a steep
descent, he understood.
There
was a valley below them, obviously, but it was hidden from view by a wall of
thick fog, an unbroken blanket of gray.
"It
cannot be natural," Pony reasoned. "No cloud as I have ever
seen."
"Andur'Blough
Inninness," Elbryan replied breathlessly, and when he finished his
statement, the corners of his mouth rose in a wide smile.
"The
Forest of Cloud," Pony added, the common translation of the elven words.
"There
is a cloud above it all the day, every day—" Elbryan started to explain.
"Not
a cheery place," the woman interrupted.
Elbryan
gave her a sidelong glance. "But it is," he replied. "When you
want it to be."
Now
it was Pony's turn to regard her companion curiously.
"I
cannot even begin to explain it," Elbryan stammered. "It seems so
gray from up here, but it's not like that underneath, not at all. The blanket
is illusionary, and yet it is not."
"What
is that supposed to mean?"
Elbryan
gave a great sigh and searched for a different approach. "It is gray down
there, and melancholy, beautifully so," he said. "But only if you
want it to be. For those who prefer a day in the sun, there is plenty to be
found."
"The
gray blanket looks solid," Pony remarked doubtfully.
"Appearances
are often far from the truth where the Touel'alfar are concerned."
Pony
couldn't miss the reverence with which Elbryan spoke of the elves, and having
met a couple of them, she could understand his respect—though she wasn't
so enamored of them, and in truth found them to be a bit arrogant and callous.
Still, looking at Elbryan now, she noticed that he was beaming, as obviously
delighted and charmed as she had ever seen him.
And
the source of that charm, she knew, was right below them. She stopped her
arguing then, taking the ranger at his word.
"It
was not until this very moment that I realized how much I miss my days in
Caer'alfar," Elbryan said quietly. "Or how much I miss Belli'mar
Juraviel, and even Tuntun, who made my life quite difficult in those
years."
Pony
nodded grimly at the mention of Tuntun, the gallant elf maiden who had given
her life in Aida saving Elbryan and her from one of the demon dactyl's
monstrous creations, the spirit of a man encased in magma.
Elbryan
chuckled, stealing the somber mood.
"What
is it?" Pony prompted.
"The
milk stones," the ranger replied.
Pony
looked at him curiously; he had told her quite a bit about his days with the
elves, but had only mentioned the milk stones in passing. Day after day, week
after week, month after month, young Elbryan had spent his mornings with the
stones. They were sponge-like, though harder and more solid. Each day they
would be placed in a bog, where they would soak up the liquid. It was Elbryan's
job to fish them out and carry them to a trough, where he would squeeze the
now-flavored water out of them, a concoction that the elves used to create a
sweet and potent wine.
"The
warmth of my meal would depend on how fast I could get those stones
milked," Elbryan went on. "I would gather a basket and run to the
trough, then return again and again until I had collected my quota. Meanwhile,
the elves would set out my meal, piping hot."
"But
you were not fast enough and had to eat it cold," Pony teased.
"At
first," Elbryan admitted in all seriousness. "But soon enough I could
complete my task fast enough to burn my tongue."
"And
so you ate many a hot meal."
Elbryan
shook his head and smiled wistfully. "No," he replied. "For
Tuntun was always there, setting traps, slowing me down. Sometimes I was the
trickier, and got the meal hot. Many times I wound up sitting in the brush, my
feet entangled by invisible elven cords, and often right in view of the meal,
watching the steam go off the soup." Elbryan could talk about it wistfully
now, could remember with the wisdom of hindsight, with the knowledge of the
great value of the often brutal lessons that the Touel'alfar had taught him.
How strong his arms had become from squeezing those stones! And how resilient
his spirit had become from dealing with Tuntun. He could laugh about it now,
but the treatment had brought him near to blows with the elf many times, and
had actually put him in a very real fight with her once—a fight that
he lost badly. Despite the rough treatment, the humiliation and the pain,
Elbryan had come to realize that Tuntun, in her heart, had only his best
interests in mind. She was not his mother, not his sibling, and, at that time,
not even his friend. She was his instructor, and her methods, however punishing,
had been undeniably effective. Elbryan had come to love the elf maiden.
And
now all that he had of Tuntun were his memories.
"Blood
of Mather," he said with a sneer.
"What?"
"That's
what she always used to call me," Elbryan explained. "And, at first, she
always edged it with heavy sarcasm. Blood of Mather."
"But
you soon proved to her that it was a true enough title," came a melodious
voice from within the shroud of fog, and not so far below the pair.
Elbryan
knew that voice; so did Pony. "Belli'mar!" they called together.
Belli'mar
Juraviel answered that call, emerging from the fog blanket, his gossamer wings
beating to help him navigate the steep angle of the mountainous slope. The
sheer beauty of the elf, his golden hair, his golden eyes, his angular features
and lithe form, gave both humans pause and added to the already majestic aura
of this place. Elbryan and Pony could almost hear music with every one of
Juraviel's short, hopping steps, with every beat of his nearly translucent
wings. His movements were a dance of harmony, of perfect balance, a compliment
to Nature itself.
"My
friends," the elf greeted them warmly, though there was also an edge to
his voice that rang unfamiliar to Elbryan. Juraviel had started with them on
the quest to Aida, as the sole representative of the elven race, but
sacrificed his place in the journey to serve as a guide for a band of haggard
refugees.
Elbryan
walked over and clasped hands with the elf, but the ranger's smile did not
hold. He would have to tell Juraviel of the fate of his friend, for the elves
had not known that Tuntun was following the band. The ranger glanced back to
his companion, his expression revealing his distress to Pony.
"You
know that the demon dactyl has been defeated?" Pony asked, to get things moving.
Juraviel
nodded. "Though the world remains a dangerous place," he answered.
"The dactyl has been thrown down, but the fiend's legacy lives on, in the
form of a monstrous army rampaging through the civilized lands of your human
kin."
"Perhaps
we should talk about these dark matters down in the valley," Elbryan put
in. "Hope is ever-present under the fair boughs of Caer'alfar." He
started moving down the slope, but Juraviel put out a hand to stop him, and the
elf's suddenly grim expression showed that there was no possibility of debate
on this subject.
"We
will speak here," the elf said quietly.
Elbryan
stood straight and studied his friend for a long moment, trying to decipher the
emotions behind the unexpected declaration. He saw pain there, and a bit of
anger, but not much else. Like all the elves, Juraviel's eyes possessed that
strange and paradoxical combination of innocence and wisdom, of youth and great
age. Elbryan would learn nothing more until Juraviel offered it openly.
"We
have killed many goblins and powries, even giants, on our passage back to the
south," the ranger remarked. "Yet it seems as if we have made little
progress against the hordes."
"The
defeat of the dactyl was no small thing," Juraviel offered, a hint of his
smile returning. " 'Twas Bestesbulzibar who bound the three races
together. Our ... your enemies are not so well organized now, and fight with
each other as much as they battle the humans."
Elbryan
hardly heard the rest of the sentence after the elf had shifted possession of
the enemies solely to Elbryan's people. The Touel'alfar had stepped out of the
fight, he realized then, and that was something the world could ill afford.
"What
of the refugees you escorted?" Pony asked.
"I
delivered them to Andur'Blough Inninness safely," Juraviel replied.
"Though we were accosted by the demon dactyl itself—a meeting in
which I never would have survived had not Lady Dasslerond personally come
forward from the elven home to stand beside me. We did get through to safety,
and those beleaguered people have been delivered back to the southland with
their kin, safe." Juraviel managed a
chuckle as he finished the thought. "Though they returned south lacking
quite a few of their more recent memories."
Elbryan
nodded, understanding that the elves could work a bit of their own magic,
including some to erase directions, as they had enacted that magic on him. Lady
Dasslerond meant to keep the location of her valley secret at any costs.
Perhaps that was why Juraviel was upset at his appearance here; perhaps, by
returning, he had violated some elven code.
"As
safe as any can be in these times," Pony remarked.
"Indeed,"
said the elf. "But safer now than before, due to the efforts of Elbryan
and Jilseponie, and to the sacrifices of Bradwarden the centaur and Avelyn
Desbris." He paused and took a deep breath, then looked Elbryan squarely
in the eye. "And of Tuntun of Caer'alfar," he finished.
"You
know?" the ranger asked.
Juraviel
nodded, his expression grave. "We are not numerous. My people and our
community are joined in many ways which humans cannot begin to understand. We
learned of Tuntun's death as Tuntun realized it. I trust that she died
valiantly."
"Saving
us both," Elbryan was quick to say. "And saving the quest. Were it
not for Tuntun, Pony and I would have perished before we ever reached the lair
of the dactyl."
Juraviel
nodded and seemed satisfied with that answer, a great peace washing over his
fair features. "Then Tuntun will live on in song forever," he said.
Elbryan
nodded his agreement with the sentiment, then closed his eyes and imagined the
elves, gathered in a field in the valley, under a starry sky, singing of
Tuntun.
"You
should tell me the details of her death," Juraviel said. "But
later," he added quickly, holding up his hand before Elbryan could begin.
"For now, I fear, the business is more pressing. Why have you come
here?"
The
bluntness of his question, the almost accusing tone, set Elbryan back on his
heels. Why had he come? Why wouldn't he, once he had remembered the way? It had
never occurred to Elbryan that he might not be welcomed in Andur'Blough Inninness,
a place he considered as much his home as any he had ever known.
"This
is not your place, Nightbird," Juraviel explained, trying to sound
friendly, sympathetic even, though the mere words he spoke could not help but
wound Elbryan. "And to bring her here without the permission of Lady
Dasslerond—"
"Permission?"
the ranger balked. "After all that we have shared? After all that I have
given to your people?"
"It
was we who gave to you," Juraviel promptly corrected.
Elbryan
paused and thought it over. Indeed, the Touel'alfar had given him much, had
raised him from a boy, had trained him as a ranger. But the generosity had been
reciprocal, the young ranger now realized, as he considered the relationship in
the sober tones of Juraviel's attitude. The elves had given him much, that was
true, but in return he had given to them the very course of his life. "Why
do you treat me so?" he asked bluntly. "I had thought we were
friends. Tuntun gave her life for me, for my quest, and did not the success of
that quest benefit the Touel'alfar as well as the humans?"
Juraviel's
stern expression, exaggerated by his angular features, softened somewhat.
"I
wield Tempest," Elbryan went on, drawing forth the shining blade, a weapon
forged of the secret silverel by the elves. "And Hawkwing," he added,
pulling the bow from his shoulder. Hawkwing was fashioned from the darkfern, a
plant the elves cultivated and which leached the silverel from the ground.
"Weapons of the Touel'alfar both," the ranger went on. "Your own
father crafted this bow for me, for the human friend and student of his son.
And Tempest I rightfully carry, having passed the challenge of my uncle
Mather's ghost—"
Juraviel
held up his hand to stop the speech. "Enough," he begged. "Your
words are true to me. All of them. But that does not change the details of this
moment. Why have you come, my friend, unbidden, to this place which must remain
secret?"
"I
came to find out if your people will lend aid to mine in this time of great
darkness," Elbryan replied.
A
great sadness washed over the face of Belli'mar Juraviel. "We have
suffered," he explained.
"As
have the humans," Elbryan replied. "Many more humans have died than
Touel'alfar, if all the elves of Andur'Blough Inninness had perished!"
"Not
many of my people have perished," Juraviel admitted. "But death is
only one measure of suffering. The demon dactyl came to our valley. Indeed,
Lady Dasslerond had to take the foul fiend there to defeat it when it came upon
me in my quest to rescue the refugees. The demon was sent away, but
Bestesbulzibar, curse his name; left a scar upon our land, a wound in the earth
itself that will never heal and that continues to expand despite all our
efforts."
Elbryan
looked to Pony, and her expression was grave. He did not need to explain the
implications.
"There
is no place in all the world for us save Andur'Blough Inninness," Juraviel
went on somberly. "And the rot has begun. Our time will pass, my friend,
and the Touel'alfar will be gone from this world, a children's fireside tale to
most, a memory for those descendants of the few, like Nightbird, who knew us
well."
"There
is always hope," Elbryan replied past the lump in his throat. "There
is always a way."
"And
so we shall seek one," Juraviel agreed. "But for now, our borders are
closed to any who is n'Touel'alfar. If I had not come out to you, if you
had descended into the mist that veils our home, it would have choked you and
left you dead on the mountainside."
Pony
gave a surprised gasp. "That cannot be," she said. "You would
not kill Nightbird."
Elbryan
knew better. The Touel'alfar lived by a different code than did humans, one
that few people could understand. To them, any who was not of their race, even
those few selected to be trained as rangers, was considered inferior. The
Touel'alfar could be among the greatest allies in all the world, would fight to
the death to save a friend, would risk everything, as Juraviel had done with
the refugees, out of compassion. But when threatened, the elves were unbending,
and it didn't surprise Elbryan in the least to learn that such a deadly trap
had been set up to keep strangers from their land in this time of peril.
"Am
I n'Touel'alfar?" the ranger asked boldly, looking Juraviel
right in the eye. He saw the pain there, a profound disappointment within his
elven friend.
"It
does not matter," Juraviel offered halfheartedly. "The mist
distinguishes only physical form. To it, you are human, and nothing more. To
it, you are indeed n'Touel'alfar."
Elbryan
wanted to press that point, wanted to hear how his friend felt about the
situation. This was not the time, he decided. "If there was any way in
which I might have asked permission to come, and to bring Pony, I would
have," he said sincerely. "I remembered the path, and so I came,
that is all."
Juraviel
nodded, satisfied, then managed a sudden and warm smile. "And I am glad
that you have," he said cheerily. "It is good to see you again, good
to know that you—and
you," he added, looking to Pony, "survived the ordeal at Aida."
"You
know of Avelyn and Bradwarden?"
Juraviel
nodded. "We have ways of gathering information," he said. "That
is how I knew that two too-curious humans were approaching the warded borders
of Andur'Blough Inninness. By all reports, only two forms, Nightbird and Pony,
left the blasted Barbacan."
"Alas
for Avelyn," Elbryan said somberly. "Alas for Bradwarden."
"A
good man was Avelyn Desbris," Juraviel agreed. "And all the forest
will mourn the passing of Bradwarden. Gentle was his song, and fierce his
spirit. Often I would sit and listen to his piping, a melody so fitting to the
forest."
Both
Elbryan and Pony nodded at that notion. When they were children in Dundalis, in
better, more innocent times, they had sometimes heard the melodious drift of
Bradwarden's piping, though at that time they had no idea who the piper might
be. The people of the two Timberland towns, Dundalis and Weedy Meadow—for
End-o'-the-World was not in existence then—called the unknown piper the Forest
Ghost and did not fear him, for they understood that no creature capable of
making such hauntingly beautiful music would pose any threat to them.
"But
enough of this," Juraviel said suddenly, pulling the small pack from his
back. "I have brought food—good food!—and Questel ni'Touel."
"Boggle,"
Elbryan translated, for Questel ni'Touel was the elvish wine made from
the water filtered through the milk stones. It was sometimes traded through
secret channels to humans under the name of boggle, an elvish joke signifying
both the bog from which the liquid originally came, and from the state of mind
it readily produced in the humans.
"Let
us go and set a camp," Juraviel offered. "Out of this wind and
sheltered from the chill of the approaching night. Then we might eat and talk
in a more comfortable manner."
The
two friends readily agreed, and both realized then that their previous
agitation had only been due to the search for the magical valley. Now that the
issue of Andur'Blough Inninness was decided, they could both relax, for
neither feared any goblin or powrie, or even giant-inspired trouble, this close
to the borders of the elven home.
When
they sat down to eat, Elbryan and Pony found that Juraviel wasn't exaggerating
in the least concerning the quality of the food, he had brought: berries, plump
and sweet, fruit fattened under the gentle boughs of Caer'alfar, and bread
flavored with just a touch of Questel ni'Touel. Juraviel hadn't brought
much with him, but it was immensely satisfying, and truly this was the finest
meal that either of the weary travelers had enjoyed for many, many months.
The
wine helped, too, taking the edge off the uncomfortable nature of their
meeting, allowing Elbryan and Pony, and the elf, as well, to put aside the
dangers of the continuing battle for just a while, to sit and relax and forget
that their world was full of goblins and powries and giants. They spoke of
times long past, of Elbryan's training in the elvish valley, of Pony's life in
Palmaris and her time serving in the army of Honce-the-Bear's King. They kept
their chatter lighthearted, mostly relating amusing anecdotes, and many of
Juraviel's tales concerned Tuntun.
"Yes,
I will find quite a bit of material for the song I plan for her," the elf
said quietly.
"A
rousing war song?" Elbryan asked. "Or a song for a gentle soul?"
The
notion of Tuntun being described as a gentle soul brought laughter bubbling to
Juraviel's lips. "Oh, Tuntun!" he cried dramatically, leaping to his
feet, throwing his arms heavenward and taking up an impromptu song:
Oh gentle elf, what poems hast thee written
To best describe thyself?
What lyrics spring from thy lips to Nightbird's
waiting ears?
But since you hold his head in the trough, 'tis
doubtful he can hear!
Pony
howled with laughter over that one, but Elbryan fixed a nasty stare over his
friend.
"What
troubles you, my friend?" Juraviel prompted.
"If
I remember correctly, it was not Tuntun, but Belli'mar Juraviel, who put my
head in the trough," the ranger replied grimly.
The
elf shrugged and smiled. "I will have to write another song, I fear,"
he said calmly.
Elbryan
couldn't maintain the facade, and he, too, erupted in laughter.
Their
boggle-enhanced mirth rolled on for several minutes, finally dying away to
quiet titters, the occasional chuckle. That was followed by simple, reflective
silence, all three silling, none moving to be the first to speak.
Finally
Juraviel walked back over and plopped down across the small fire from Elbryan.
"You should go to the south and east," he explained. "To the
towns halfway between Dundalis and Palmaris. There you are most needed, and
there you will do the most good."
"That
is the battle line?" Pony asked.
"One
of the battle lines," Juraviel replied. "There is greater fighting
raging in the far east, along the coast, and up north, in the cold land of
Alpinador, where mighty Andacanavar holds the elven-bestowed banner as ranger.
But I fear that Elbryan and Pony would be only minor players in those greater
battles, whereas you two might turn the tide in the more immediate area."
"The
area closer to the borders of Andur'Blough Inninness," Elbryan said slyly,
suspicious of the erf's motives.
"We
do not fear any attacks from goblins or powries," Juraviel was quick to
reply. "Our borders are safe from that enemy. It is the deeper evil, the
stain of the demon dactyl..." He paused, his voice trailing away, letting
the dark thought hang in the air.
"But
you two should go to those towns," he said at length. "Do for those
folk what you did for the people of Dundalis, Weedy Meadow, and
End-o'-the-World, and all the region might soon be freed of the legacy of the
demon dactyl."
Elbryan
looked to Pony, and both gave a nod to the elf. Elbryan studied his diminutive
friend closely then, seeking unspoken signals that would clue him in to the
importance of it all. He knew Juraviel well, and had a feeling that many things
were not as set in stone as the elf had indicated.
"You
two are formally betrothed?" Juraviel asked suddenly, catching Elbryan off
his guard.
Pony
and Elbryan looked to each other. "In our hearts," the ranger
explained.
"There
has not been time nor opportunity," Pony said, and then with a great sigh
she added, "We should have asked Avelyn to perform the ceremony. Could
any have been more fitting to such a task than he?"
"If
you are married in your hearts, then married you are," Juraviel decided.
"But there should be a ceremony, a formal declaration made openly, to
friend and to kin. It is more than a legality, and more than a celebration. It
is a declaration, openly made, of fidelity and undying love, a proclamation to
all the world that there is something higher than this corporeal form, and a
love deeper than simple lust."
"Someday,"
Elbryan promised, staring at Pony, the only woman he believed he could ever
love, and understanding every word Juraviel had just said.
"Two
ceremonies!" Juraviel decided. "One for your human companions, one
for the Touel'alfar."
"Why
would the Touel'alfar care?" Elbryan said, a hint of anger in his tone,
which surprised both his companions.
"Why
would we not?" Juraviel replied.
"Because
the Touel'alfar care only for the affairs of the Touel'alfar," Elbryan
reasoned.
Juraviel
started to protest, but saw where the trap was leading and only laughed
instead.
"You
do care," Elbryan said.
"Of
course," Juraviel admitted. "And glad I am, and glad are all the
elven folk of Caer'alfar, that Elbryan and Jilseponie survived the quest to
Aida and have found each other. To us, your love is a shining light in a dark
world."
"That
is how I knew," Elbryan said.
"Knew
what?" Juraviel and Pony asked together.
"That
I ... we," he corrected, indicating Pony, "are not n'Touel'alfar. Not
in the eyes of Belli'mar Juraviel."
The
elf gave a great, exaggerated sigh. "I admit it," he said. "I
surrender."
"And
that is how I know the other thing, as well," Elbryan said, grinning from
ear to ear.
"And
what is that?" Juraviel asked, his tone one of feigned disinterest.
"What else does the wise Nightbird know?"
"That
Belli'mar Juraviel intends to accompany us to the south and east," Elbryan
replied.
That
widened Juraviel's eyes. "I had not considered that!"
"Then
do," Elbryan instructed, "because we, all three, leave at first
light." He rolled back from the fire then, nestling into his bedroll.
"Time for us to sleep," he said to Pony. "And time for our
friend to go back to his valley, that he might tell his Lady Dasslerond that
he will be away for a while."
Pony,
weary from the road and the wine, and content with the meal, was more than
happy to fall back into her blankets.
Juraviel
said not a word and did not move for some time. Before him, both Elbryan and
Pony were soon breathing in the rhythms of a deep and contented sleep, and
behind him, Symphony nickered softly in the quiet night. Then the elf was gone,
slipping away silently into the darkness, running with his thoughts and running
to his lady.
Quiet
though he was, his departure woke Pony, whose sleep had become filled with
troubling dreams. She felt the weight of Elbryan's strong arm about her, felt
the warmth of his body curled against her. All the world should have been warm
and happy for her in that embrace.
But
it was not.
She
lay awake for a long while, and then Elbryan, too, as if sensing her anxiety,
awoke.
"What
troubles you?" he asked softly, nuzzling closer and kissing the nape of
her neck.
Pony
stiffened, and the ranger felt it. He pulled away and sat up, and she could see
his dark silhouette against the starry sky. "I was only trying to be
comforting," he apologized.
"I
know," she replied.
"Then
why are you angry?" he asked.
Pony
considered that for a long while. "I am not angry," she decided.
"I am only frightened."
Now
it was the ranger's turn to pause and reflect. He lay back down beside Pony,
shifting to his back and looking up at the stars. He had never known Pony to be
frightened—not
since the day their homes were sacked, at least—and he was certain now that her
fears were not based on any powries or giants, or even the demon dactyl. He
considered her tenseness when he had touched her. She was not angry with him,
he knew, but...
"You
were quiet when Juraviel spoke of marriage," he said.
"There
was little you had not already said," Pony replied, rolling over to face
Elbryan. "We share hearts, and are of like mind."
"But?"
Her
face clouded over.
"You
are afraid of becoming with child," Elbryan reasoned, and Pony's
expression shifted to one of wonderment.
"How
did you know?"
"You
just said that we were of like hearts," the ranger replied with a slight
chuckle.
Pony
sighed and draped her arm across Elbryan's chest, kissing him softly on the
cheek. "When we are together, I feel like all the world is
wonderful," she said. "I forget the loss at Dundalis, the loss of
Avelyn and Bradwarden, of Tuntun. The world does not seem so terrible and dark,
and all the monsters run away."
"But
if you were to become with child now, out here," Elbryan said, "then
those monsters would become all too real again."
"We
have a duty," Pony explained. "With the gift the Touel'alfar gave to
you, and the one Avelyn gave to me, we must be more to the folk than observers.
How could I fight on if I become pregnant? And what life would our child know
in these times?"
"How
could I fight on if you could not remain beside me?" Elbryan asked,
running his fingertips across her face.
"I
do not wish to refuse you," Pony said. "Ever."
"Then
I shan't ask," Elbryan replied sincerely. "But you told me that there
were times each month when it was not likely that we would conceive a
child."
"Not
likely?" Pony echoed skeptically. "What chance is acceptable?"
Elbryan
thought on that for just a moment. "None," he decided. "The
stakes are too high, the cost too great. We will make a pact, here and now. Let
us finish this business at hand, and when the world is put aright, we will turn
our attention to our own needs and our own family."
He
said it with such simplicity, and such optimism that this pact would be a
temporary thing, that the world would indeed be put aright, that a smile found
its way across Pony's troubled face. She snuggled closer then, wrapping herself
around Elbryan, knowing in her heart that he would be true to his pact and that
their love-making would wait until the time was right.
Both
of them slept soundly the rest of the night.
Juraviel
was back at the small camp when Pony awoke, to find their belongings already
packed and in place atop Symphony. The sun was up, though still low in the
eastern sky.
"We
should already be on the road," a sleepy-eyed Pony said through a yawn and
a stretch.
"I
gave you this one night of sleep," Juraviel replied, "for I doubt
you'll find another anytime soon."
Pony
looked to Elbryan, still sleeping contentedly. Long and restful sleep, like
other pleasures, would be a rarity now.
But
only for a short while, she reminded herself determinedly.
The
mountainous ring surrounding the Barbacan was fully twelve hundred miles from
the stone walls of St.-Mere-Abelle, and that as a bird might fly. By road, in
those places where a traveler would be fortunate enough to even find a road, the
distance was much closer to two thousand miles, a trek that would have taken a
conventional caravan twelve weeks to traverse—and that, only if the caravan
ran into no unforeseen problems and did not stop a single day for any respite.
In truth, any merchant planning such a journey would allow for three months of
travel, and would have carried enough gold to replace his horse team several
times. And in truth, in these dangerous times, with goblin and powrie forces
running wild even along the normally tame areas of Honce-the-Bear, no merchant,
not even the soldiers of the famous elite Allheart Brigade, would have made the
attempt.
But
the monks of St.-Mere-Abelle were not merchants or soldiers, and were
possessed of magics that could cut tremendous amounts of time from their
journey and keep them well-hidden from the eyes of potential enemies. And if it
so happened they were discovered by goblins or other monsters, those magics
would make them a formidable force indeed. The planning for such a journey from
the abbey had already been done, centuries before. The monks of St.-Mere-Abelle
were the original cartographers of Honce-the-Bear, and even of the Timberlands,
northern Behren, southern Alpinador, and a good deal of the western reaches of
the Wilderlands, as well. In those long past times, journey logs had been
turned into travel guides, detailing supplies needed, magic stones recommended,
and fastest routes. Those guides, in turn, were updated on a regular basis, and
so Brother Francis' biggest task that day after the repulsion of the powrie
attack was to find the proper guide tomes, and convert the recommended supply
figures to accommodate a party of twenty-five, the number of brothers that
Father Abbot Markwart had determined would make the journey.
After
vespers on only the second day, Brother Francis reported to the Father Abbot
and the masters that the lists were complete and the route confirmed. All that
needed to be done was rounding up the supplies—a task that Francis assured the
Father Abbot could be done in a matter of two hours—and the naming of the
journeying monks.
"I
will lead the team personally," the Father Abbot informed them, drawing
gasps from Francis and all the masters, except for Master Jojonah, who had
suspected that all along. Markwart was obsessed, Jojonah understood, and in
such a state, his decision-making was greatly flawed.
"But
Father Abbot," one of the other masters argued, "this is unprecedented.
You are the leader of St.-Mere-Abelle and all of the Abellican Church. To risk
your safety on such a perilous trek—"
"We
would risk less by sending the King himself!" another master protested.
Father
Abbot Markwart held up his hand, silencing the men. "I have thought this
through," he replied. "It is fitting that I go—the greatest
power of good sent to do battle with the greatest power of evil."
"But
surely not in your own body," offered Master Jojonah, who had also done
quite a bit of thinking on this very subject. "Might I suggest Brother
Francis as a suitable vessel for your inquiries as to the progress of the
troupe?"
Markwart
looked long and hard at Jojonah, the Father Abbot obviously caught off his
guard by the perfectly reasonable suggestion. With a telepathic connection
between the two bodies, facilitated by a soul stone, physical distance would
mean little. Father Abbot Markwart could make the trip, or could check in on
its progress personally—in spirit—without ever leaving the comfort of the abbey.
"You
would be honored at such a position, would you not, Brother Francis?"
Master Jojonah went on.
Brother
Francis' eyes shot daggers at the sly master. Of course he would not be
"honored" by such a position, something that he, and Jojonah,
understood well. Possession was a horrible thing indeed, and nothing to ever
be desired. Even worse, Francis knew that serving as a mere vessel for Markwart
would reduce his role significantly, should he be chosen to go along on the
journey. How could he be placed in any position of leadership, after all, if
there was the possibility that he would not even be there, if his spirit and
will were thrown out into empty limbo while Markwart used his body?
Brother
Francis looked from Master Jojonah to the Father Abbot, to the other seven
masters in attendance, all of them eyeing him expectantly. How could he refuse
such a proposal? His angry gaze fell back over Jojonah, the younger monk
staring unblinkingly at the master even as he mouthed, through gritted teeth,
"Of course it would be the highest honor that any brother could expect or
desire."
"Well
done, then," the victorious Jojonah said, clapping his hands. In one fell
swoop he had prevented Markwart from leading the caravan and had put the
too-ambitious Brother Francis in his place. It wasn't that Jojonah wanted to
protect Markwart from any perils; far from that. It was simply that he feared
the mischief Markwart might cause if the journey proved successful. More than a
few speculations placed Avelyn Desbris at the scene of devastation in the
north, and Jojonah feared that Markwart might cover whatever truth was to be
found there with calculated tales that fell more in line with his hatred of
Avelyn. If Markwart was in control of the caravan that reached the Barbacan,
then Markwart would determine what had happened there.
"I
do fear, though, that my work will have then been wasted," Brother Francis
added suddenly, even as Father Abbot Markwart started to speak.
All
eyes turned to the young brother.
"I
have planned the trip," Francis explained—improvising, Jojonah and
several others realized. "I am familiar with the course we must take and
the amounts of supplies that should be remaining at each stop. Also, I am
well-versed and, by all accounts, proficient with the stones, a necessary
ingredient if we are to meet the timetable of three weeks offered in the guide
tomes."
"Twelve
days," Father Abbot Markwart said, drawing looks from all, and a gasp of
disbelief from Brother Francis. "Our timetable will be twelve days,"
the Father Abbot clarified.
"But..."
Brother Francis started to respond, but if the old man's tone left little room
for debate, his glare left none, and the young monk wisely fell silent.
"And
Master Jojonah is correct, and his suggestion is accepted as the wiser
course," Markwart went on. "Thus I will not go, but will look in on
the expedition on a regular basis, through the willing eyes of Brother
Francis."
Jojonah
was pleased by that announcement; he had feared that stubborn Markwart would
hold out longer. He wasn't surprised that his recommendation of Francis as the
vessel had been accepted, though. The ambitious brother was one of the few in
St.-Mere-Abelle trusted by the old Father Abbot, who had grown increasingly
paranoid ever since Avelyn Desbris absconded with the gemstones.
"Since
I will not personally, or at least not physically, lead the quest,"
Markwart went on, "one of you masters must go." His gaze drifted
about the room, settling for a moment on eager De'Unnero before falling fully
over Jojonah.
The
portly old master returned that look with an incredulous expression. Surely
Markwart would not choose him, he prayed. He was among the oldest of the
masters of St.-Mere-Abelle, and was easily the least physically prepared for
any long and hard road.
But
Markwart did not back down from that gaze. "Master Jojonah, the senior
master of St.-Mere-Abelle, is the logical choice," he said aloud.
"With an immaculate to serve as his second, Brother Francis to serve as
his third, and twenty-two others working the wagons and the horse teams."
Jojonah
stared long and hard at the Father Abbot as Markwart and the other masters
began discussing which of the younger and stronger brothers would be best
suited for the road. Jojonah offered no input into the selection process, just
sat staring and thinking, and hating the man. Markwart had chosen him for no
practical reason, he knew. He was being punished by the old man for his
friendship and mentoring of Avelyn and for his continued arguments against so
many of Markwart's decisions on every issue, from the abbey's role in the
larger community to philosophical discussions about the true value of the
gemstones and the true meaning of their faith. Markwart had voiced his
displeasure with Jojonah on more than one occasion, had even once threatened a
College of Abbots gathering to discuss, as he had put it, "Jojonah's
increasingly heretical way of thinking."
Jojonah
had almost hoped for that meeting, for he was convinced that many of the other
abbots of the Abellican Church would see things his way. He saw the bluff for
what it was, for he knew that Markwart probably feared the same judgments. Over
the last few years, Markwart had purposefully lessened St.-Mere-Abelle's
contact with the other abbeys, and the last thing the old Father Abbot wanted
was a showdown with the rest of the Church over philosophical matters.
Despite
that, Master Jojonah had feared that Markwart would find a way to get back at
him, and so, it seemed, it had come to pass. Twelve hundred miles in twelve
days, with much of that time, no doubt, spent dodging disaster in the form of
powries, goblins, and giants. And then the troupe would spend weeks, perhaps
months, trying to decipher the riddles left behind in the inhospitable wasteland
of the Barbacan, tormented by a climate, according to the tomes, where water
might freeze even on a summer night, and surrounded by vast hosts of their
enemies, perhaps even including the demon dactyl itself. They did not know,
after all, whether the fiend had really been destroyed. It was all speculation.
Ambitious
Brother Francis desperately wanted to make this journey—though with
his own spirit inhabiting his own body—but for Master Jojonah, having passed
the mark of his sixth decade and with no further aspirations for power or for
glory, and certainly not for adventure, this was indeed a punishment, and quite
possibly a death sentence.
There
would be no debate, however. The twenty-two were selected quickly, based on
their strengths both magical and physical. Most were fifth- or sixth-year
students, men in the prime of their physical life, though a pair of immaculates,
a tenth-year and a twelfth-year student, had been included.
"And
your selection for your second?" the Father Abbot asked Jojonah.
The
master took his time considering his options. The obvious choice, from a purely
selfish point of view, would have been Brother Braumin Herde, a close friend
and often a confidant. But Jojonah had to consider the wider picture. If this
caravan met with disaster, a very real possibility, and both he and Braumin
Herde were killed, that would leave Markwart virtually unopposed. The other
masters, with the possible exception of Master Engress, were too entrenched in
their trappings of power and wealth to even argue with the Father Abbot, and
the other immaculates and even ninth-year students were too ambitious, too much
like Brother Francis.
Except
for one, Jojonah mused.
"Must
it be an immaculate? " he asked.
"I'll
not spare another master," Father Abbot Markwart was quick to reply. His
tone, full of surprise and with an edge of anger, revealed to Jojonah that he
had expected and hoped that Jojonah would select Braumin Herde.
"I
was thinking of one of Brother Francis' peers," Master Jojonah explained.
"Another
ninth-year student?" Markwart asked skeptically.
"But
we have selected two immaculates among the twenty-two," Master Engress
pointed out. "They may not take kindly to the fact that a ninth-year
student has already been appointed as the third in rank."
"Though
they will accept it, since said ninth-year student is serving as the vessel for
the Father Abbot," another of the masters quickly and reverently put in,
bowing his head in deference to Markwart.
Master
Jojonah resisted the urge to run over and punch the man.
"But
to give them a ninth-year student as a second, as well," Master Engress
continued, not to be argumentative, for that was not his nature, but only to
play a necessary dissenting voice here.
Markwart
looked at the master, who had stood up for the decision to name Francis as
third, and gave a slight nod, one that Jojonah was sure the old man wasn't
even aware of doing, which tipped Jojonah off to the coming decision.
"Who
did you plan to name?" Father Abbot Markwart asked.
Master
Jojonah shrugged noncommittally. It was a moot point, as far as his journey was
concerned, he realized, for Markwart had already made up his mind that no
ninth-year student would serve as second. The Father Abbot was merely fishing
now, he realized, trying to find out if there were any other potential
troublemakers among the underlings at St.-Mere-Abelle, any other conspirators in
Master Jojonah's little gang.
"I
only hoped that Brother Braumin Herde might accompany me," Jojonah
remarked offhandedly. "He is a friend, and one I consider a bit of a
protege."
The
Father Abbot's face screwed up with confusion, his smug expression disappearing.
"Then
what—"
one of the masters started to ask.
"Brother
Herde is no peer of mine," Brother Francis interrupted. "He is an
immaculate."
Jojonah
put on his best confused look. "Is he?"
Several
masters began speaking all at once, most voicing their fears that their portly
fellow might be going soft in more than the belly.
"You
wanted Herde?" Father Abbot Markwart said loudly, calming the din.
Jojonah
grinned and nodded sheepishly. "So he is a tenth-year student," the
master answered, feigning embarrassment. "The years do pass so quickly,
and they all seem to blend together."
The
nods and chuckles about the table told Jojonah that he had managed to wriggle
out of that tight spot. Still, he wasn't thrilled about the fact that both he
and Braumin Herde were going off together so far from St.-Mere-Abelle and so
near to mortal danger.
Brother
Braumin Herde was a handsome man with short black, curly hair and strong
features, including dark, penetrating eyes and a face that was always shadowed
by hair, no matter how often the man shaved it clean. He was not tall, but his
shoulders were broad and his posture straight, giving him a solid appearance.
He was into his early thirties, having spent more than a third of his life at
St.-Mere-Abelle, and since his first love was for his God, many of the women in
the area surely lamented that decision and devotion.
He
glanced both ways along the corridor in the upper level of the abbey, then
backed into the room, softly closing the door behind him. "I should be
going on this journey," he said in his rich and resonating voice, turning
to face Master Jojonah. "Through my years of work, I have earned a place
on the caravan to the Barbacan."
"A
place with me, or with Markwart?" Master Jojonah replied.
"You
were given the pick of a second, and that after the others, not including me,
had been selected," Braumin Herde was quick to reply. "And you chose
me, though I know that you meant to choose otherwise."
Jojonah
looked at him quizzically.
"I
heard the story. You could not have forgotten that I was an immaculate, since
you yourself presented me the scroll of honor," Braumin reasoned.
"You meant to choose Brother Viscenti."
Jojonah
rocked back on his heels, surprised that such detailed information concerning
the meeting had already spread. He studied Brother Braumin carefully, and had
never seen such pain and anger on the man's face. Braumin Herde was a forceful
and physically imposing man, all hair and muscle, and with a huge square jaw.
His broad chest angled down in a V to a narrow waist, for there was nothing
soft about him; it seemed as if he had been cut from stone, and there were few
in all of St.-Mere-Abelle who could match him in feats of sheer strength.
Master Jojonah knew him well, though, his inner being, his compassionate heart,
and understood that the man was not a fighter. For all his great strength,
Brother Braumin had never been anything exceptional in the martial training, a
fact that had so often frustrated Master De'Unnero, who saw such potential in
the man. To De'Unnero's dismay, Brother Braumin was a gentle soul, and Jojonah
was not worried that he might act out his anger now.
"You
would have been my first choice," the master answered honestly. "But
I had to consider the implications of naming you. The road to the Barbacan is
fraught with peril, and we have no idea what we might find when—if—we do get
there."
Braumin
gave a deep sigh and his shoulders slumped a bit. "I am not afraid,"
he replied.
"But
I am," said Jojonah. "What we two have come to believe must not die
with us on a road to the Wilderlands."
Braumin
Herde's disappointment could not hold against the logical reasoning and
Jojonah's clear concern. "We have to make certain that Brother Viscenti
and the others understand," he agreed.
Jojonah
nodded, and the two stood silent for a long while, each considering the
dangerous course they had taken. If Father Abbot Markwart came to know the
level of what was in their hearts, if he came to realize that these two above
all others in St.-Mere-Abelle saw his leadership as errant, and had even begun
to question the entire direction of the Abellican Church, then he would
likely, without hesitation, brand them as heretics and have them publicly
tortured to death—an act not without precedent in the often brutal history of
the Abellican Church.
"What
if it is Brother Avelyn?" Braumin Herde asked at length. "What if we
find him there alive?"
Master
Jojonah gave a helpless chuckle. "No doubt, our orders will be to bring
him back in chains," he replied. "The Father Abbot will not suffer
Avelyn to live, I fear, and will not rest easy until the gemstones Avelyn took
are returned to St.-Mere-Abelle."
"And
will we bring him back?"
Again
the helpless chuckle. "I do not know if we could restrain Brother Avelyn
if we wanted to," Jojonah replied. "You never had the pleasure of
seeing Brother Avelyn at work with the magic stones. If we find that it was
indeed he who caused the explosion in the north, if Avelyn destroyed the dactyl
and is still alive, then pity us if we try to wage battle against him."
"Twenty-five
monks?" Braumin Herde asked skeptically.
"Never
underestimate Brother Avelyn," came the curt reply. "But it would not
come to that, in any case," Jojonah was quick to add. "I pray that we
do find Brother Avelyn; oh, how I would love to see him again!"
"It
would force conflict," Braumin Herde reasoned. "If Brother Avelyn is
alive, then we must take a side, either with him or with the Father
Abbot."
Master
Jojonah closed his eyes, recognizing the truth of his young friend's words.
Jojonah and Herde, and, to a lesser extent, several others at St.-Mere-Abelle,
were not pleased by Markwart's leadership, but if they were to side with
Avelyn, who had been called a heretic openly by the Father Abbot, and who would
likely be formally branded as one in the College of Abbots that was to convene
later that year, they would find themselves against the whole of the Church.
Jojonah, believing in the righteousness of his position, didn't doubt that many
other monks—in
St.-Mere-Abelle, in St. Precious of Palmaris, and in all the other abbeys—
might join in his cause, but did he really want to split the Church? Did he
want to begin a war?
And
yet, if they did indeed find Brother Avelyn alive, how could Jojonah in good
conscience go against him, or even turn away from any others' actions against
him? Brother Avelyn was no heretic, Jojonah knew—in fact, was quite the
opposite. Avelyn's crime against the Father Abbot and against all the Church
was that he had held a mirror up to them, showing them the truth of their
actions when measured against the honest precepts of their faith. And the
brothers, Markwart most of all, had not liked the image in that mirror. Not at
all.
"I
believe that it was Brother Avelyn in the Barbacan," Jojonah said with confidence.
"Only he could have gone against the demon dactyl. But which survived, if
either, remains to be determined."
"We
have evidence that the dactyl is no more," Braumin Herde replied.
"The monster army has lost its direction and its cohesiveness. Powries and
goblins no longer closely ally, by all reports, and we have personally seen
their disarray in their attack on our walls."
"Then
perhaps the dactyl has been badly wounded, and we will go and finish the
task," Jojonah said.
"Or
perhaps the demon is destroyed, and we will find Brother Avelyn," Braumin
Herde said grimly.
"If
the dactyl is dead, and thus the business at the Barbacan finished, it is
likely that Brother Avelyn will be far gone from that cursed place."
"Let
us hope," said Braumin Herde. "We are not ready to go against the
Father Abbot yet."
That
last statement caught Jojonah off guard and gave him pause. He and Herde had
never discussed going against the Father Abbot at all. By the implications of
all their conversations, they would hold fast to their beliefs about the way
the Church should behave, and would funnel those beliefs to others through example
and voice in council. But never once had they discussed, or even intimated, any
formal plans to "go against" Markwart or the Church.
Braumin
Herde caught the nonverbal cues and sank back a bit, embarrassed by his forward
stance.
Jojonah
let the slip pass with yet another chuckle. He remembered when he was younger,
much younger, a firebrand like Herde, who thought he could change the world. The
wisdom, or perhaps just the weariness, of age had taught him better, though. It
was not the world Master Jojonah meant to change, not even the Church, but only
his own little corner of both places. He would let Markwart have his direction,
would let the Church follow the course that others decided. But he would remain
true to his own heart, and would follow a course of piety, dignity, and
poverty, as he pledged those decades ago when he had taken his vows at
St.-Mere-Abelle. He would spread the word of truth to those younger monks, like
Braumin Herde and Viscenti Marlboro, who wished to listen, but it was neither
his intent nor his desire to see the Abellican Church split apart.
That
was his fear.
And
so Master Jojonah, the gentle man, the true friend of Avelyn Desbris, hoped
that Avelyn was dead.
"We
will be leaving in the morning," Jojonah said. "Go to Brother
Viscenti and reinforce all that we three have discussed. Bid him to study well
and hard and hold fast to the truth. Bid him to always offer charity, to
believers and unbelievers alike, to tend the wounds of the body and the soul
for friend and for enemy. Bid him to speak out against injustice and excess,
but to temper his voice with compassion. The good will win out in the end, by
the truth of their words and not the swing of their sword, though that victory
may be centuries in the making."
Braumin
Herde considered the wisdom of those words for a time, then gave a respectful
bow and turned for the corridor.
"And
prepare yourself well for the road," Master Jojonah added before he opened
the door. "Brother Francis speaks for the Father Abbot, and do not doubt
the loyalty of the other twenty-two in our party. Rein in your temper, brother,
or we will find trouble before we ever leave the civilized lands."
Again
Braumin Herde bowed respectfully, and he nodded as he came up straight,
assuring his mentor that he would indeed heed the words.
Master
Jojonah didn't doubt that for a moment, for Herde, both firebrand and gentle
soul, was a disciplined man. He knew Brother Braumin would do the right thing,
and so would he, though Jojonah feared what the right thing might become
should they find Brother Avelyn Desbris alive and well on the road.
"You
know what I suspect, and what I expect," Father Abbot Markwart said
sharply.
"I
am a willing vessel, Father Abbot," Brother Francis said, lowering his
eyes. "You will find entrance to my body whenever you so desire."
"As
if you could stop me," the old abbot boasted. The words were hollow,
Markwart knew, for possession, even with his new understanding of the stones,
was a difficult thing, and even more so when the vessel was a man trained in
the magics. "But this is about more than that," he continued.
"Do you understand the true purpose of this journey?"
"To
discover if the dactyl was destroyed," the younger monk replied without
hesitation. "Or to see if ever there was a demon dactyl."
"Of
course there was," snapped an impatient Markwart. "But that is not
the issue. You are going to the Barbacan to determine the fate of the demon,
that is true, but you are going, more importantly, to determine the whereabouts
of Avelyn Desbris."
Brother
Francis' face screwed up with confusion. He knew the Church sought Avelyn, knew
it was suspected that Avelyn had been involved in the reputed explosion far to
the north, but he never imagined that the Father Abbot would place Avelyn's
whereabouts as more important than the fate of the demon dactyl.
"The
demon dactyl threatens the lives of thousands," the Father Abbot conceded.
"The suffering caused by the emergence of the beast is truly horrifying
and regrettable. But the demon dactyl has appeared before and will appear
again; the cycle of suffering is the fate of Man. Brother Avelyn's threat,
however, is more insidious, and potentially more long-lasting and more
devastating. His actions and his tempting heretical viewpoints threaten the
very foundations of our beloved Abellican Order."
Still
Francis appeared doubtful.
"From
those few reports of his actions on the run, it seems that Avelyn masks his
heresy with pretty words and seemingly charitable actions," Markwart went
on, raising his voice in frustration. "He disavows the importance of
ancient traditions without understanding the value of such traditions and,
indeed, the utter necessity of them if the Church is to survive."
"My
pardon, Father Abbot," Brother Francis said quietly, "but I had
thought that Avelyn was long on tradition—too long, some would say. I had
thought that his errors went the other way, that he was so devoted to outdated
rituals, he could not see the truth and the realities of the modern-day
Church."
Markwart
waved his bony hand and turned away, chewing his lip, trying to find some way
out of the logic trap. "True enough," he agreed, then turned back
fiercely, forcing Francis to back away a step. "In some matters, Avelyn
was so seemingly devoted as to appear inhuman. Do you know that he did not
even care, did not shed a single tear, when his own mother died?"
Francis'
eyes went wide.
"It
is true," Markwart went on. "He was so obsessed with his vows that
the passing of his own mother was to him an unimportant matter. But do not be
fooled into thinking that his actions were wrought of true spirituality. No,
no, they were the product of ambition, as he proved when he murdered Master
Siherton and absconded with the gemstones. Avelyn is dangerous to all the
Order, and he, not the dactyl, remains the first order of business."
Brother
Francis thought it over for a few moments, then nodded. "I understand,
Father Abbot."
"Do
you?" Markwart replied, in such a tone that Francis doubted himself.
"Do you understand what you are to do if you encounter Avelyn
Desbris?"
"We
are twenty-five strong—" Francis began.
"Do
not count on the support of twenty-five," Markwart warned.
That,
too, gave Brother Francis pause. "Still," he said hesitantly and at
length, "there are enough of us to take Avelyn and return him and the
gemstones to St.-Mere-Abelle."
"No."
The simple manner in which Markwart replied put Francis on his heels yet again.
"But—"
"If
you encounter Avelyn Desbris," Markwart explained grimly, "if you
even catch the slightest hint of his scent, you will return to me that which
was stolen, along with the news of wandering Avelyn's demise. You may bring me
back his head, if possible."
Brother
Francis squared his shoulders. He was not a gentle man, and probably would have
been ranked higher in his class except for several brawls he had been all too
willingly involved in. Still, he never expected such a command from the Father
Abbot of St.-Mere-Abelle. Francis was an ambitious and blindly loyal monk,
though, and never one to let conscience get in the way of following orders.
"I will not fail in this," he said. "Master Jojonah and I—"
"Beware
Jojonah," Markwart interrupted. "And Brother Braumin Herde, as well.
They serve as first and second for the journey to the Barbacan and in any
matter concerning the disposition of the demon dactyl. Where Avelyn Desbris is
concerned, if Avelyn Desbris is concerned, Brother Francis speaks for Father
Abbot, and the Father Abbot's word is unquestionable law."
Brother
Francis bowed deeply, and seeing the dismissive wave of Father Abbot's hand,
turned about and left the room, full of anticipation, full of possibilities.
The
night was deep about St.-Mere-Abelle as Brother Braumin made his way across the
upper levels of the ancient structure. Though his mission was vital—he had already
passed word to Brother Viscenti to await his arrival in his private chambers—he
took a circuitous route, moving through the long, long corridor that ran along
the abbey's seawall, overlooking All Saints Bay. With no torches burning along
the structure's outer walls, and none on the few docks far below, Braumin was
afforded the most spectacular view of the evening canopy, a million million
stars twinkling above the dark waters of the great Mirianic. He had been born
too late, he mused as he stared out one of the tall and narrow windows, for he
had missed the journey to Pimaninicuit, the equatorial island upon whose shores the monks of St.-Mere-Abelle
collected the sacred stones. Such journeys only occurred every six
generations, every 173 years.
Braumin
Herde wasn't even supposed to know the details of such things, for he was not
yet a master, but Jojonah had told him the story of the most recent journey, of
how Brothers Avelyn, Thagraine, Pellimar, and Quintall had traveled to the
island aboard a chartered ship, the Windrunner. It was the subsequent
destruction of the Windrunner by the monks as it sailed away from
St.-Mere-Abelle, its mission complete, that had set Brother Avelyn fully at
odds with the Abellican Church, Master Jojonah had told Braumin. Looking out
now, the young monk tried to imagine that scene, all the power, the ballistae
and catapults, the tremendous energies of the ring stones, loosed upon a single
sailing vessel. Braumin had witnessed St.-Mere-Abelle's fury against the powrie
invasion; he shuddered when he thought of that power brought to bear against a
single ship and her unsuspecting crew.
What
a fateful night that had been, the man mused. If Avelyn had not learned of the
destruction, might he have remained a loyal and dedicated servant of Father
Abbot Markwart? And if, as they suspected, Brother Avelyn had played no minor
role in the possibly momentous events in the northland, in the Timberlands and
all the way to the Barbacan, then what darkness would still hold the world fast
in its grip if Avelyn had indeed remained at the abbey?
Braumin
Herde sent his fingers through his tight-curled black hair. Everything had a
purpose, his mother had so often told him. Everything happened for a reason. In
the case of Brother Avelyn Desbris, those words rang true indeed.
He
pushed away from the window and went on his way, moving quietly but swiftly
along the corridor. Most of the monks were asleep now—it was
required of the younger monks, and recommended for the older, though ninth-
and tenth-year students could make their own curfew if they had important
matters to tend to, such as penning passages from ancient texts, or, Braumin
thought with a snicker, conspiring against the Father Abbot. Braumin, too,
wanted to get to his bed as quickly as possible; he would be up before the
dawn, and soon after that out on the road, a long and dangerous road.
He
nodded when he saw a line of dim light underneath the door of Viscenti
Marlboro's room. His knock was gentle; he didn't want to wake any in the nearby
rooms, nor did he want to draw any attention to his presence at this man's
door.
The
door opened; Braumin slipped inside.
Brother
Viscenti Marlboro, a skinny and short man with darting dark eyes and perpetual
stubble on his weathered face, was quick to close the door behind his friend.
Already
rubbing his hands together, Braumin noted. Brother Viscenti was perhaps the most
nervous person he had ever met. He was always rubbing his hands together, and
always ducking his head as if he expected someone to slap him.
"You
will both be gone, and both be dead," Viscenti said suddenly, sharply,
his squeaky voice seeming more fitting for a weasel or a squirrel than a man.
"Gone,
yes," Braumin conceded. "But for a month, two at the most."
"If
the Father Abbot has his way, you'll not return," Viscenti remarked, and
he ducked low and spun about, and put a finger to his own pursed lips, as if
speaking openly about Father Abbot Markwart would bring a host of guards
bursting through his door.
Braumin
Herde didn't even try to hide his amusement. "If the Father Abbot wanted
to move against us openly, he would have done so long before now," he
reasoned. "The hierarchy does not fear us."
"They
feared Avelyn," Viscenti pointed out.
"They
hated Avelyn because he stole the stones," Braumin corrected. "To
say nothing of his killing of Master Siherton. The Father Abbot despised
Avelyn because in taking the stones, Avelyn took Markwart's reputation, as
well. If Father Abbot Markwart passes from this world with those stones
unrecovered, then his time of leadership will be viewed by future Abellican
monks as a failure. That is what the man fears, and no revolution because of
Brother Avelyn."
Brother
Viscenti had heard it all before, of course, and he threw up his hands in
surrender and shuffled across the floor, taking a seat at his desk.
"But
I'll not diminish the danger to myself and to Master Jojonah," Braumin
Herde said to him, taking a seat on the edge of Viscenti's bed, a small and
unremarkable cot. "Nor, in that event, should we diminish the
responsibility that will fall upon your shoulders, my friend."
Viscenti's
look was one of sheer terror.
"You
have allies," Braumin Herde reminded him.
Viscenti
snorted. "A handful of first- and second-year novitiates?"
"Who
will grow to ninth- and tenth-year students," Braumin replied sternly.
"Who will achieve their status as immaculates even as you, if you are wise
enough, attain the rank of master."
"Under
the auspices of Father Abbot Markwart," Brother Viscenti came back
sarcastically, "who knows that I have befriended you and Master
Jojonah."
"The
Father Abbot does not determine rank," Brother Braumin replied. "Not
alone. Your ascension, at least to master, is a foregone conclusion as long as
you remain steadfast in your studies. If the Father Abbot went against that, he
would be inviting whispers from every abbey, and from many of the masters of
St.-Mere-Abelle. No, he cannot deny you a position."
"But
he decides upon assignment," Brother Viscenti argued. "He could send
me to St. Rontelmore in the hot sands of Entel, or even worse, he might assign
me as a chaplain to the Coastpoint Guards in lonely Pireth Dancard, in the
middle of the Gulf!"
Braumin
Herde did not blink, only shrugged as if such possibilities did not matter.
"And there you will hold fast to your beliefs," he explained quietly.
"There, you will keep our hopes for the Abellican Order alive in your
heart."
Brother
Viscenti wrung his hands again, got up and began pacing about the room. He had
to be satisfied with his friend's answer, he knew, for their fates were not
their own to decide. Not now. But still, it seemed to Viscenti as if the whole
world was suddenly moving too fast for him, as if events were sweeping him
along without a moment to consider his next move.
"What
do I do if you do not return?" he asked in all seriousness.
"You
keep the truth in your heart," Brother Braumin replied without hesitation.
"You continue to speak with those younger monks who share our tenets,
fight back in their minds against the pressures to conform that they will know
as they move higher in the Order. That is all that Master Jojonah has ever asked
of us; that is all that Brother Avelyn would ever ask of us."
Brother
Viscenti stopped his pacing and stared long and hard at Braumin Herde. The man
was right, he believed with all confidence, for he, like Brother Braumin
Herde, like Master Jojonah, and like several other younger monks, had Avelyn's
spirit within him.
"Piety,
dignity, poverty," Braumin Herde recited, his Abellican vows. When Brother
Viscenti looked at him and nodded, he added the one word that Master Jojonah,
in light of Avelyn's work, had secretly tagged on: "Charity."
There
was no fanfare, no general announcement, as the caravan of six wagons rolled
through the gates of St.-Mere-Abelle. Four of those wagons carried five monks
each, while another, full of supplies, held only the two drivers. The second in
line was also manned by two monks, and held Master Jojonah, the maps and the
logs.
The
three monks in the back of the fourth wagon, including Brother Braumin and
another immaculate, worked continually with gemstones, quartz mostly, though the
other immaculate also held a hematite. They used the quartz, a stone for
distance sight, to scout out all the area around the caravan, and if anything
looked the slightest bit suspicious, the immaculate would then use the hematite
to project his spirit into the area to better discern the situation. These
three were the eyes and ears of the caravan, the guides to keep the wagons away
from trouble, and if they failed, the monks would surely see battle, perhaps
long before they had even left the so-called civilized lands of Honce-the-Bear.
They
rode throughout the morning, traveling the northwestern road toward Amvoy, the
small port across the great Masur Delaval from Palmaris. Normally such a large
caravan would travel southwest, to Ursal and the bridges over the great river,
for there were no ferries large enough to get them across to Palmaris in one
trip. But the monks had their own methods; their line to the Barbacan would be
as near to straight as possible, and with the magic stones, quite a bit was possible.
The
horses, two for each wagon, were soon exhausted, some drawing breath so
forcefully that they seemed near to death, for each wore a bridle set with
magical turquoise that allowed the drivers to communicate with the animal, to
push the beast beyond its limits with mental intrusions. They took their first
break at noon, in a field off to the side of the road, an appointed rendezvous.
Half the monks went to work on wheels and undercarriages immediately,
tightening, straightening, while others prepared a quick meal, and the three
with the scouting stones sent their eyes out wide to make contact. The Church
was well-prepared for such undertakings as this journey, for all along the
roads of Honce-the-Bear were allies, pastors of small congregations, missionaries,
and the like. The previous day, several of St.-Mere-Abelle's masters, using the
maps and logs provided by Brother Francis, had used hematite to make contact
with these strategically placed allies, informing them of their duties.
Within
an hour of their noontime break a dozen fresh horses were brought to the field.
Master Jojonah recognized the friar leading the procession, a man who had gone
out into the world after a dozen years at St.-Mere-Abelle. Jojonah watched him
from the flaps of his wagon cover and did not go out to greet the man, for
familiarity would breed questions, he knew, questions it was neither this
friar's place to ask nor Jojonah's to answer.
To
the friar's credit, he stayed no longer than the couple of minutes it took him
and his five helpers to make the exchange.
Soon
the teams were yoked, the supplies repacked, and the caravan on its way,
running hard across the miles. In mid-afternoon they veered from the road,
turning more to the north, and soon thereafter, amazingly, the great Masur
Delaval was in sight, with more than seventy miles already behind them. To the
south lay Amvoy, and across the twenty miles of watery expanse, beyond their
sight, was the city of Palmaris, the second largest city in all of
Honce-the-Bear.
"Take
good meals and gather your strength," Master Jojonah instructed them all.
The monks understood; this would likely be the most difficult and taxing part
of their journey, at least until the Timberlands had been left behind.
An
hour passed, and though Brother Francis' detailed itinerary had only allowed
for that much of a respite, Master Jojonah made no indication that he meant to
get them going.
Brother
Francis came to him in his wagon. "It is time," the younger monk said
quietly, though firmly.
"Another
hour," Master Jojonah replied.
Brother
Francis shook his head and began to unroll a parchment. Jojonah stopped him.
"I
know what it says," the master assured.
"Then
you know—"
"I
know that if we get halfway across that water and any of us weaken, we will lose
a wagon, or all the wagons," Jojonah interrupted.
"The
amber is not so taxing," Brother Francis argued.
"Not
for one to walk across the water," Jojonah agreed. "But to carry such
a load?"
"There
are twenty-five of us."
"And
there will remain twenty-five of us when we exit onto the river's western
bank," Jojonah said sternly.
Brother
Francis gave a slight growl and spun on his heel, starting away.
"We
will travel long into the night," Jojonah said to him, "using
diamonds to light the way, and thus make up the time lost resting here."
"And
drawing attention to us with our beacons?" Francis asked sourly.
"Perhaps,"
Jojonah replied. "But that is less a risk, by my estimation, than is
crossing the Masur Delaval with weary brothers."
Brother
Francis narrowed his eyes and set his jaw, then turned about and left in a
huff, nearly running over Brother Braumin Herde, who was on his way up the few
stairs at the back of the wagon.
"We
are not on his schedule," Jojonah explained dryly as his friend entered.
"He
will report this to the Father Abbot, of course," Brother Braumin
reasoned.
"It
is as if Father Abbot Markwart were right here beside us," said Jojonah
with a great sigh. "The joy of it all."
His
frown melted into a smile, though, and then that turned into a laugh when
Braumin Herde gave a chuckle.
Outside
the wagon, Brother Francis heard it all.
An
hour later, with a proper landing found along the banks of the river, and the
sun riding low in the western sky, they were on the move again. Now Master
Jojonah, the most seasoned and most powerful with the magical stones, led the
way, with two first-year novitiates beside him and only a single driver up
front. Eighteen of the twenty-five monks, all except for the actual drivers and
one whose duties remained scouting with the quartz, were divided equally among
the six wagons, the three in each joining hands in a ring about a piece of
enchanted amber. They pooled their powers, sent their energy into the stone,
calling forth its magical properties. Amber was the stone used for walking on
water, and as each wagon rolled off the landing and onto the river, it did not
sink, horses' hooves and the bottom of the wheels making only slight depressions
on the liquid surface.
The
eighteen monks fell deep into their meditative trance; the drivers worked hard,
constantly angling their teams to compensate for the current. But this part of
the journey proved easy going. The ride was so very smooth, a gentle reprieve
on the wagons, on the horses, and on the monks.
Less
than two hours later Jojonah's driver, using diamonds to light the course
ahead, found a smooth and easy slope along the western bank and put his wagon
back on dry ground. He went back then to inform the master, and Jojonah came
out of his trance and moved outside for a good stretch and to watch the other
five wagons come ashore, one by one. To the south, a handful of miles in the
distance, the lights of Palmaris could be seen; to the north and west was only
the darkness of night.
"The
line will be tightened for our evening drive," Master Jojonah informed
them, "with no more than a single horse's length between the back of one
wagon and the noses of the team of the next. Go easy on the turquoise
intrusions and take your rest and your last meal in the seat. We will ride long
into the night, as long as the horses can take it, but at a comfortable pace. I
wish to put twenty more miles behind us before we set a proper camp."
He
dismissed the group then, except for Brother Francis. "When do we next
exchange horses?" he asked the young monk.
"Not
until late afternoon," Francis replied. "We may be taking a dozen
fresh ones in exchange for only six who will ever be able to pull a cart
again."
"As
it must be, so it shall be," Master Jojonah said, and headed back for his
wagon, truly regretting having to work the poor animals so hard.
He thought it curious to find powrie sentries on the outskirts of Caer Tinella this late at night. Usually the dwarves and goblins moved back into the town proper soon after sunset. While the goblins, in particular, did favor the cover of night for their misdeeds, with the town secured, they normally used this active period to play their gambling games, drinking and shoving each other until fights inevitably broke out among them.
That
was before Mrs. Kelso had supposedly been turned into a tree, though, an action
the monsters attributed to their god figure, the demon dactyl. So now they
apparently meant to be more vigilant, just in case the dactyl showed up to
personally scrutinize their work.
Roger
smiled; he was glad his little ruse had caused so much trouble for the
wretches. As for the guards, he wasn't overly concerned. He had come this way
to go into Caer Tinella, and so into Caer Tinella he would go, whatever the
powries might try to do to stop him. Oh yes, the guards would slow him down, he
realized, but not in any manner they had foreseen.
The
two powries stood calmly, one with its hands in its pockets, the other drawing
deeply on a long-stemmed pipe. Roger noted that their caps shone a crimson hue,
even in the dim light. These were seasoned veterans, he understood. Powries
were called "bloody caps" for their practice of dipping their berets,
hats fashioned of skin, often human, in the blood of their enemies. The berets
were treated with special oils that would allow them to retain the color of the
blood, with each new victim's essence brightening the hue. Thus, a powrie's
standing could often be determined by the color of its cap.
Roger
was repulsed by the sight and the implications of those shining berets, but he
was not deterred. If anything, the realization that this pair had dipped their
caps often only made him more determined. To his thinking, this little action
would avenge those killed, at least a little bit. A low fire burned between the
powries, and they had set three torches out a dozen feet in a semicircular pattern,
leaving open only the short path back to the nearby town. Roger slipped beyond
that semicircle, moving as silently as a cloud drifting across the path of the
moon. As he passed by the circle, the town was open to him, but he turned
about, moving in behind the dwarven pair, sliding down behind a hedgerow a few
feet away. He waited there a few moments, making sure the powries were off
their guard and that no others were in the immediate area. Then he slithered
around the edge of the bushes, belly-crawling for his prey.
"Could
use a draw myself," one of the dwarves remarked, and it pulled one hand
from its pocket, holding a pipe of its own.
Even
as the dwarf's hand came out, Roger's fingers slipped in.
"Weed
me up," the dwarf said, handing the pipe to its companion. The other
powrie took it and lifted a packet of pipe weed, while the first moved its hand
back to its pocket—even as Roger's hand came sliding out with a pair of gold
pieces, the strange, eight-sided coinage of the Weathered Isles.
Roger
smiled widely as the dwarf retrieved its pipe—with its other hand, thus
opening the second pocket.
"You
are sure?" Belster O'Comely asked for the tenth time.
"Saw
them myself," the man, Jansen Bridges, answered. "No more than an
hour ago."
"Big?"
"Could
eat a man with room left in their bellies for his wife," Jansen replied.
Belster
stood up from his tree-trunk seat and walked to the southern edge of the small
clearing that was serving as a base camp for the refugee band.
"How
many went to town?" Jansen asked.
"Just
Roger Lockless," Belster replied.
"He
goes in every night," Jansen said in a somewhat derisive tone. Jansen had
come from the north, with Belster's group, and had never been enamored of Roger
Lockless.
"Yeah,
and we all eat the better for it!" Belster retorted, turning about to
regard the man.
He
saw then that Jansen's tone was more wrought of frustration than of any anger
aimed at Roger, and so the gentle Belster let it pass.
"If
any can get by them, it's Roger Lockless," Belster continued, talking as
much to himself as to Jansen.
"So
we all hope," said Jansen. "But we cannot wait to find out. I say we
put another five miles between us and the dwarves, at least until we see how
dangerous these new additions might be."
Belster
considered the notion for a short while, then nodded his assent. "Go and
tell Tomas Gingerwart," he instructed. "If he agrees that it is
better we are on the road this very night, our group will be ready to
march."
Jansen
Bridges nodded and moved off across the clearing, leaving Belster to his
thoughts.
He
was growing tired of it all, Belster realized. Tired of hiding in the woods and
tired of powries. He had been a successful tavern-keeper in Palmaris, a town he
had called home since the tender age of five, relocating with his parents from
the southland near Ursal. For more than thirty years he had lived in that
prosperous city on the Masur Delaval, working first with his father, a builder,
and then on his own in a tavern business of his own making. Then his mother had
died, peacefully, and less than a year later, his father, and only then had
Belster learned of the debt his father left behind, a legacy that fell squarely
on the large shoulders of the man's only son.
Belster
had lost the tavern, and was still in debt to the point where he would either
have had to accept a decade of indenture to the creditors or go and rot for a
like period in a Palmaris jail.
He
had created his own third option instead, packing his few remaining belongings
and fleeing for the wild north, to the Timberlands and a place called Dundalis,
a new town being raised from the ruins of one destroyed by a goblin raid
several years earlier.
In
Dundalis, Belster O'Comely had found his home and his niche, opening a new
tavern, the Howling Sheila. There weren't many patrons—the
Timberlands were not heavily populated, and the only visitors who passed
through were the seasonal merchant caravans—but in the self-supporting
lifestyle of the wilderness town, the man didn't need much money.
But
then the goblins had come back, this time with hosts of powries and giants. And
so Belster became a fugitive again, and this time the stakes were much higher.
He
looked back to the dark forest, in the direction of Caer Tinella, though the
town was too far away, and beyond too many hills and trees, to be seen. The
outlaw band could not afford to lose Roger Lockless, Belster knew. The young
man had become a legend to the beleaguered refugees, their leader of sorts,
though he was rarely among them, and even more rarely ever spoke to any of
them. Since Roger's daring rescue of poor Mrs. Kelso, that status had even
increased, if possible. If Roger was caught and killed now, the blow to morale
would be heavy indeed.
"What
do you know?" came a question. Belster turned about to see Reston Meadows,
another of his fellow Dundalis refugees, standing behind him.
"Roger
is in town," Belster replied.
"So
Jansen told us," Reston replied grimly. "And he told us of the new
additions, too. Roger will have to live up to his reputation and more, I
fear."
"Has
Tomas spoken on the matter?"
Reston
nodded. "We will be on the move within the hour."
Belster
rubbed his thick jowls. "Take a pair of your best scouts and make for Caer
Tinella," he said. "Try to determine the fate of Roger
Lockless."
"You
think that three of us might get in to save him?" Reston asked
incredulously.
Belster
understood the sentiment; few in the camp wanted any encounters with Kos-kosio
Begulne and his tough powries. "I only asked you to learn of his fate, not
to determine it," the portly man explained. "If Roger was taken and
killed, we will have to concoct a more fitting tale of his absence."
Reston
cocked his head curiously.
"For
them," Belster finished, motioning his chin in the direction of the
encampment. "It did not break us when the Nightbird, Pony, and Avelyn went
off for the Barbacan, but how heavy might our hearts have been if they were
slain?"
Reston
understood. "They need Roger," he reasoned.
"They
need to believe that Roger is working for their freedom," Belster replied.
The
man nodded again and scampered off to find two appropriate scouting
companions, leaving Belster alone again, staring into the forest. Yes, Belster
O' Comely was tired of it all, particularly of the responsibility. He felt
like the father of a hundred and eighty children, and there was one risk-taker
in particular who kept his nerves tingling.
Belster
dearly hoped that one troublemaker would return safely.
His
booty secured, Roger began to slither away. As he crossed back into the brush,
though, he noticed a length of coiled rope, one used by the slaves to haul
logs. Roger couldn't resist. He looped the middle of the rope around a sturdy
tree trunk, then took both ends with him as he returned to the oblivious
pipe-smoking powries.
He
was back in the woods soon after. He decided that he would come back this way
on his departure and startle the pair. If, as was usually the case with
powries, they had not moved much in the meanwhile, they would find a bit of
trouble, and Roger would find a bit of fun, when they took up the howling chase
and the loops he had put about their feet tightened and they fell flat to the
ground.
He
might even be able to get back to them and snatch one of their precious caps
before they managed to extricate themselves.
Roger
filed the thoughts away for a later time; the town was in clear sight now,
quiet and dark. A couple of goblins milled about, but even the central
building, usually used for gambling, was quiet this night. Again Roger
considered his ruse about the dactyl and Mrs. Kelso. The monsters were on their
best behavior, fearing that their unforgiving master was about.
Given
that on-guard stance, Roger almost wished he had used a different explanation
concerning Mrs. Kelso's disappearance.
Too
late to worry about that now, the young man told himself, and into the town he
went. He would be careful this night; instead of his normal rounds, moving from
building to building, picking pockets—and often placing not-so-valuables in
the possession of other monsters, just to see if he might start a fight—he went
straight for the larders, thinking to get a good meal and to bring some food
back out to the folk hiding in the forest.
The
larder door was locked, its hoop handles wrapped in heavy chains and secured by
a heavy padlock.
Where
did they get that? Roger wondered, rubbing his chin and cheeks and glancing all
around. And why did they bother?
With
a bored sigh, Roger pulled a small pick out from behind his ear and slipped it
into the padlock's opening, bending low that he might better hear his work. A
couple of twists, a couple of clicks later, and the lock popped open. Roger
lifted it free and started to unwrap the chains, but paused and considered his
actions. He wasn't really hungry, now that he thought about it.
He
glanced all about, taking in the silence, trying to measure the level of
wariness in the town. Perhaps he could find a bit of sport this night. Then he
could return and gather some food for his friends.
He
took the lock and the chain, and left the door unopened.
Good
fortune was with him, he realized before he had gone two steps, when he heard
the low rumbling behind him. He skittered back to the door, bent low and put
his ear to the wood.
Growling
and snarling came from behind the door, and then, with sudden ferocity that
stood Roger up straight in the blink of an eye, a loud and angry bark.
The
young man sped away, slipping behind another building. He stashed the chains and
lock—they
were too noisy for flight—under a loose board along the alley, then went up to
the roof, climbing easily and silently.
A
powrie crossed the open ground to the larder door, cursing every step.
"Bah, what're ye howling about?" the dwarf grumbled in its
stone-against-stone voice. The powrie reached for the door, but stopped and
scratched its head, recognizing that something was missing.
"Drat,"
Roger muttered when he saw the powrie run off, back the way it had come.
Roger's normal tactics would have called for him to sit tight, but the hairs on
the back of his neck were prickling, his instincts telling him to get away, and
quickly. He went down the far side of the building, then sprinted away into the
darkness. Behind him, all through the town, torches went up, one after another,
the commotion mounting, cries of "Thief!" echoing through the night.
Roger
went from rooftop to rooftop, scrambled down one wall and up another, then over
a split-rail fence into a corral on the northwestern edge of town. Down low,
the young man picked his way among the cows, trying not to disturb them,
touching them only gently and whispering softly, urging them to keep quiet.
He,
would have gotten through without incident; the resting cows weren't overly
concerned with him.
Except
that not all of them were cows.
If
Roger hadn't been so concerned with waking powries and goblins, he would have
realized that this was Rosin Delaval's farm, and that Rosin had a bull, the
most mean-tempered animal in all of Caer Tinella. Rosin usually kept the bull
separate from the cows, for the bullying beast often hurt them and didn't make
it easy for him to go in and get any milk. But the powries did not separate the
animals, taking sport in the wounded cattle, and in the antics of their goblin
lessers whenever they sent the goblins in to get milk, or a cow for slaughter.
Roger,
looking over his shoulder more than ahead, and walking through a veritable maze
of cow bodies, gently nudged one beast aside, then pushed softly on another. He
noticed immediately that this animal seemed sturdier than the others, and less
willing to give ground.
Roger
started to push again, but froze in place, slowly turning his head around to
regard the animal.
The
bull, all two thousand pounds of it, was half asleep, and Roger, thinking that
to be a half too little, backed away slowly and quietly. He bumped into a cow,
and the animal moaned its complaint.
The
bull snorted, its huge, horned head swinging about.
Roger
darted away, cutting a path right behind the spinning bull, then turning back,
right behind it again. He entertained some brief, fantasy about getting the
thing so dizzy that it would just fall down. Brief indeed, for despite his
darting movements and strong foot speed, the bull was turning inside him, those
deadly horns gaining ground.
Roger
took the only course that seemed open: he leaped on the bull's back.
Rationally,
he knew he shouldn't be screaming, but he was anyway. The bull bucked and
snorted, hooves slamming the ground in absolute rage. It twisted and leaped,
ducked its head and cut a tight turn, nearly pitching Roger over its shoulder.
Somehow
he held on as the bull worked its way to the far end of the corral, with only
the dark forest beyond the fence. It was a good thing, too, Roger realized, for
back the other way, goblins and powries were all about, most yelling and
pointing toward the corral.
The
bull ran flat out for a short burst, then skidded to an abrupt stop, cutting
hard to the right, then back to the left. Again Roger held on for all his life,
even grabbing one of the bull's horns. On the second cut the bull overbalanced,
and quick-thinking Roger saw his chance. He pulled one leg up under him and
tugged with all his might on the horn, turning the bull's head even farther.
The
bull pitched over and Roger leaped away, hitting the ground in a stumble that
quickly turned into a dead run. He made the rail fence before the squirming
bull even managed to regain its footing, and was over in the blink of an eye.
The
bull trotted up to the fence; Roger, though he saw goblins running both ways
along the rail back by the town, paused long enough to boast, "I could
have broken your fat neck." He ended by snapping his fingers in the air
just in front of the bull's nose.
The
bull snorted and pawed the ground, then ducked its head.
Roger's
mouth fell open. "You cannot understand me," he protested.
The
point was moot; the bull charged the fence.
Roger
bolted for the woods. The bull thrashed and kicked, taking out rails, knocking
logs high into the air.
Then
it was free, bursting onto the small clearing just beyond the corral. Goblins
were closing in both directions by then, and suddenly the bull was on Roger's
side.
"Aiyeeee!"
one of the goblins squealed.
Considered a quick-thinker among its dim-witted friends, the goblin grabbed its
nearest companion and threw the poor fool right in the bull's path.
That
goblin was soon airborne, spinning two complete somersaults before landing
hard on the ground. It crawled away, trying not to groan, trying not to do
anything that would get the bull's attention, for the enraged beast was giving
chase to the rest of the fleeing goblins.
From
a tree not so far away, Roger watched with sincere amusement. His chuckles
turned into a sympathetic groan, though, when the bull gored one scrambling
goblin, the sharp horn stabbing into the back of the goblin's leg, then coming
right out through its kneecap. The bull snapped its head back, and over the
goblin went, screaming, falling flat out across the bull's huge neck. The bull
ran on, bucking wildly, the goblin flopping all about, until finally the horn
tore free of the knee and the goblin pitched away. The bull wasn't done with
it, though, and turned about, throwing sod, running down the goblin before it
could begin to crawl away.
Up
in the tree, Roger moved along the limb, out from the trunk, and leaped out to
the branch of another tree, making his way to the north, back toward the
encampment.
"Another
night," he promised himself, remembering the chain and padlock. He could
create more than a little mischief for the powries with those items, he mused.
So even though he hadn't gotten into the larders, and in spite of the encounter
with the bull, the ever-optimistic Roger considered the night a success, and it
was with a light heart and dancing feet that he came down from the trees and
began picking his trails back to the first two powries. He spotted them from a
distance, both sitting on the ground, trying to pull their ankles out of the
rope. The commotion in town had stirred them, and the rope had tripped them, it
seemed.
Roger
was sorry he had missed it. He took some satisfaction in the two pipes lying in
the dirt, and in the muttered curses of his victims. That only made his heart
skip lighter, a mischievous grin widening across his face as he made his way
into the deep forest.
But
then he heard the baying.
"What?"
the young man asked, pausing, studying the strange sound. He had no experience
with hunting dogs and didn't understand that they were calling out a trail,
his trail. He knew from the continuing sound, though, that they were getting
closer, and so he scrambled up a tall and wide oak set apart from any other
trees and peered back into the darkness.
Far
to the south he saw the glow of torches. "Stubborn," he muttered,
shaking his head, confident that the monsters would never find him in the dark
woods.
He
started back down the tree, but reversed his course almost immediately as
snarling sounds came up at him. From a low branch he could make out the four
forms. Roger had seen dogs before—Rosin Delaval kept a pair for working
his herd. But those dogs were small and friendly, always wagging their tails,
always happy to play with him, or anyone else, for that matter. These dogs
seemed to Roger to be a different species altogether. The tone of their barking
was not friendly, but threatening, and deep and resonating, the stuff of
nightmares. He couldn't make out much detail in the darkness, but realized from
the sound of the barking and the black silhouettes that these dogs were much
larger than Rosin's.
"Where
did they get those?" the young thief muttered, for indeed the dogs were a
new addition to Caer Tinella. He glanced around, looking for a way down the
tree, far enough to the side to get him away from the animals.
It
struck him almost immediately that to come down from that tree was to be eaten.
He had to trust his luck, and up he went to the highest branches of the oak,
hoping the dogs would lose sight of him, and lose interest in him.
He
didn't understand the training of these animals. The hounds stayed right at the
base of the tree, snuffling and scratching, and then baying. One kept jumping
high, scratching at the bark.
Roger
glanced anxiously to the south, to see the torches moving closer, closer,
following the commotion. He had to shut the dogs up, or find some way to get
away from this area.
He
didn't know where to begin. He carried only one weapon, a small knife, better
suited to picking locks than fighting, and even if he had a great sword with
him, the thought of facing those dogs appalled him. He scratched his head,
glancing all around. Why had he gone up this particular tree, so far from any
others?
Because
he hadn't understood his enemies.
"I
underestimated them," Roger scolded himself as powries entered the clearing
beneath the oak. In moments his tree was encircled by the dwarven brutes, a
smiling Kos-kosio Begulne among them. Roger heard the powrie leader's fellows
congratulating him on acquiring the dogs—Craggoth hounds, they called them.
Roger
understood then that he had been outsmarted.
"Come
on down, then," Kos-kosio Begulne bellowed up the tree. "Yeah, we see
ye, so come on down, or blimey, I'll burn the damned tree out from under ye!
And then I'll let me dogs eat up what's left of ye," he added slyly.
Roger
knew that the fierce Kos-kosio wasn't kidding, not at all. With a resigned
shrug, he slipped down to the lowest branches of the tree, in clear sight of
the powrie leader.
"Down!"
Kos-kosio Begulne demanded, the dwarf's voice suddenly stern and terrifying.
Roger
looked doubtfully at the frenzied dogs.
"Ye
like me Craggoth hounds?" the powrie asked. "We breed 'em on the
Julianthes just to catch rats like yerself." Kos-kosio Begulne motioned to
several others, and they quickly went to the dogs, looping choke chains and
hauling the animals aside—no small feat, given the dogs' level of excitement. Roger
got a good look at them then, in the torchlight, and saw, as he had suspected,
that these beasts hardly resembled Rosin's dogs. Their heads and chests were
huge, great muscled torsos, tall on thin legs, with coats of short brown and
black hair and eyes that blazed red in the forest night, as if with the flames
of hell. They seemed to be fully restrained by that point, but still, Roger
could hardly bring himself to move.
"Down!"
Kos-kosio Begulne said again. "Last time I'm asking."
Roger
dropped lightly to the ground right in front of the powrie leader. "Roger
Billingsbury at your service, good dwarf," he said with a bow.
"Roger
Lockless, they call 'im," another powrie piped in.
Roger
nodded and smiled, taking it as a compliment.
Kos-kosio
Begulne laid him low with a heavy punch.
Their
journey on the road had thus far been surprisingly uneventful. They had
encountered a band of goblins on the southern edge of the Moorlands, but
dispatched that group with typical efficiency—three shots from Juraviel's
bow, a lightning bolt from Pony, and Elbryan and Symphony running down those
couple that managed to scamper away from the main, doomed group. Searching the
area afterward, the ranger and the elf, both expert trackers, had found no
signs to indicate that any greater number of the monsters might be in the
immediate area, and so the fighting, for the present, was at its end.
Things
got even quieter when they left the always wild Moorlands far behind, crossing
into the kingdom of Honce-the-Bear, just south of the Timberlands. The
northwestern corner of Honce-the-Bear was not heavily populated, and there was
really only one path that could be considered a road, that covered the ground
between the Wilderlands and the main road connecting Palmaris and Weedy
Meadow. Apparently the goblins and powries hadn't found enough sport in the
immediate region, for there was no sign at all that any were about.
Soon,
though, the trio was farther south, in more populated regions, crossing fields
lined by planted hedgerows and stone walls, and with many roads to choose from.
And all of those roads showed many sets of tracks, powrie, goblin, and giant,
and the deep grooves of the wheels of laden carts and powrie war engines.
"Landsdown,"
explained Pony, pointing to a plume of smoke rising in the distance, just over
a short hill. She had been through this area only a couple of times, but from
even those short passages, knew it far better than either of her companions.
When the invading monstrous army had first come to the three towns of the
Timberlands, it was Pony who traveled south to warn the folk of Landsdown and
the neighboring community of impending danger.
"Occupied
by monsters," the ranger reasoned, for it seemed unlikely to him that
humans could still be in the towns, given the sheer number of enemy tracks
along the roads. And the smoke was not that of a sacked village, not the angry,
billowing blackness of buildings burning, but rather the simple gray plumes of
a hearth.
"And
likely we'll find the neighboring town in a similar position," Belli'mar
Juraviel reasoned. "It seems as if our enemies are well-entrenched and
mean to stay."
"Caer
Tinella," Pony remarked after some thought. "The next town in line is
Caer Tinella." She looked back to the north as she spoke, for the group
had veered from the one main road, the one between Palmaris and Weedy Meadow.
They were moving through the forest, and had come in from the west, below the
level of Caer Tinella, the northernmost organized township in Honce-the-Bear,
and thus the closest to the three towns of the Timberlands.
"And
beyond Caer Tinella?" Elbryan asked.
"The
road back home," Pony answered.
"We
should start in the north, then," the ranger reasoned. "We will swing
back around Caer Tinella and see what we might find, then come back to
Landsdown to take up the fight."
"You
will probably find a fight waiting for you right over that hill," Juraviel
remarked.
"Our
first order of business is to locate the refugees, if there are any in the
area," Elbryan replied, and it was not the first time he had expressed
those sentiments. He didn't say it aloud, but hoped he might find Belster
O'Comely and the other folk of Dundalis among any resistance bands operating in
this area.
The
ranger looked to Pony, saw a smile on her fair face, and knew that she
understood the reasoning behind the urgency in his voice, and knew, too, that
she was of like heart. It would be good to be among trusted allies again. At
Elbryan's bidding, Pony climbed up behind him on Symphony's broad back.
"The
town is right on the road?" Belli'mar Juraviel asked.
"Both
of them are," Pony replied. "Landsdown to the south and Caer Tinella
just a few miles to the north."
"But
we'll give Caer Tinella a wide berth to the west, going right around the
town," Elbryan explained. "It is possible that any resistance bands
would be encamped farther in the north, where the fields and roads are less,
and the forest is thicker."
"You
go west," Juraviel agreed, eyeing the north road. "I will go closer
to Caer Tinella to see if I can get a good measure of our enemy's
strength."
Elbryan,
fearing for his diminutive friend, started to protest, but bit the words back,
considering the stealthiness of the Touel'alfar. Belli'mar Juraviel could walk
right up behind the most alert deer and pat it twice on the rump before it ever
knew he was there.
Juraviel
wouldn't have listened to any arguments anyway, Elbryan knew from the sly
expression on his angular face, an observation confirmed when Juraviel shot
Elbryan and Pony a wink of a golden eye and added, "And our enemy's
weaknesses."
Then
the elf was gone, slipping away, a shadow among shadows.
"Ye
will tell me what I wants to know," Kos-kosio Begulne promised.
Roger
sat as straight as his tight bindings would allow and painted a disarming smile
on his face.
Kos-kosio
Begulne's head snapped forward, the powrie's bony forehead crushing Roger's
nose and knocking the man over backward.
Roger
sputtered and tried to roll away, but the cords held his arms fast behind the
chair back and he could get no leverage. A pair of powries were beside him
suddenly, roughly pulling him back up.
"Oh,
ye'll tell me," Kos-kosio Begulne declared. The powrie smiled evilly and
raised one gnarly hand, snapping its fingers.
The
sound jolted poor Roger's sensibilities; he could only groan as the door to the
small room opened and another powrie entered, leading on a short leash the
biggest, meanest dog Roger had ever seen. The dog strained in his direction
against the powrie's strong pull, baring its formidable teeth, growling and
snarling and snapping its powerful jaws.
"Craggoth
hounds eat lots," the grinning Kos-kosio Begulne said. "Now, boy, ye
got something to tell me?"
Roger
took several deep breaths, trying to steady himself, trying hard not to panic.
The powries wanted to know the location of the refugee encampment, something
Roger was determined he would not divulge, no matter what torture they exacted.
"Too
long," said Kos-kosio Begulne, snapping his fingers again. The powrie
dropped the leash and the Craggoth hound came on, leaping for Roger's throat.
Roger
threw himself over backward, but the dog only followed, its fangs scoring the
man's cheek, cracking at his jawline.
"Don't
ye let the beast kill him," Kos-kosio Begulne instructed the others.
"Just make him hurt real bad. He'll talk to us, don't ye doubt." With
other matters to attend to, the powrie leader left the room then, though he was
surely enjoying the spectacle.
For
poor Roger, all the world was blood and snapping jaws.
Belster
O'Comely eyed the approaching torches with the greatest fear he had known since
leaving Dundalis. According to the returned scouts, the powries had Roger, and
now the appearance of so large a monstrous force in the forest, moving
unerringly to the north, led the portly man to believe that Roger had been
forced to give them up. Maybe Jansen Bridges had been right in his disdain for
Roger's nightly antics.
There
was no way that nearly two hundred refugees, many very old and many very young,
would get away from such a force, Belster realized, and so he and his fellows
had only one apparent option: the able-bodied would go out and fight the
powries in the woods, occupy them with hit-and-run tactics until those who
could not fight could get far, far away.
Belster
wasn't thrilled with the prospects, and neither was Tomas or the other leaders
of the refugee band. Hitting at an organized and prepared group of monsters
would cost them greatly and probably spell the end of any real resistance in
the region. Belster suspected that any humans surviving this night would have
to move farther south and try the dangerous maneuver of slipping around the
monster lines to get into Palmaris. Many times over the last couple of weeks,
Belster and Tomas had considered just such an option, and each time had
dismissed it as too perilous. There simply wasn't yet enough pressure being
exerted on the monsters from the forces of Palmaris; the monster lines were too
thick and too well-entrenched.
Still,
the innkeeper had suspected all along that it would come to this, and in fact
had known that the primary mission for him and his fellow warriors was to get
the noncombatants far from the field of battle. The run to Palmaris would be
fraught with danger, but the summer wouldn't last forever, and many of the old
and young would not likely survive the cold nights of winter in the forest.
Belster
blew all those thoughts away with a profound and helpless sigh. He had to
concentrate on the business at hand, on directing the coming battle. His
archers had already gone out to both the east and west of the advancing
monstrous horde.
"The
eastern flank is ready to strike," Tomas Gingerwart said, moving near the
innkeeper.
"They
hit hard, and retreat fast," Belster explained.
"And
those in the west have to come in hard and fast as soon as the monsters make
their turn to the east," Tomas replied appropriately.
Belster
nodded. "And then comes our job, Tomas, the most critical of all. We must
assess the strength of our enemy at once, and determine if they are weak
enough, and disorganized enough, for a full assault. If so, then we send our
fighters straight in, and signal for east and west to close like the jaws of a
wolf."
"And
if not," Tomas interrupted, for he had heard all of this before,
"those in the west flee into the forest and those in the east come back in
hard at the rear of Kos-kosio Begulne's turning line."
"While
you and I and our fellows go to the others and begin the long circuit to the
south," Belster finished, his deflated tone showing he did not like that
prospect.
"You
would begin that at once?" Tomas asked, somewhat surprised. He had
thought that they would finish the night, however it was to be decided, in the
forest, and wait for the revealing daylight to lay their plans.
"If
we mean to go south—and if this force is on to us, then we have few options—it
would be better that we go while the monsters are preoccupied with our
archers," Belster decided.
"We
have to get word to them, then," Tomas replied. "When they finally
break ranks, they must know where to find us."
Belster
considered that for a moment, then shook his head, his expression grave.
"If in their fear they turn directly to the south, they will be chased,
and thus we will be chased," he reasoned. "They have already been
instructed to flee into the forest if the attack is routed. They will find
their way from there, wherever they choose to go." Those were indeed the
most difficult words Belster O'Comely had ever spoken. He knew the reasoning to
be correct, but still felt as if he was abandoning his comrades.
Tomas'
first reaction called for an immediate protest, but he sublimated it quickly,
seeing Belster's pained expression, and, because of that, taking the moment to
consider the wider situation. He found he had to agree with the decision, and
understood that no matter how difficult the situation might become for the
archers, it would be no less so for Belster's retreating group, for by all
reports they would have to cross miles and miles of land even thicker with
monsters.
Another
man came running toward them then, from the south. "The powries and
goblins have four giant allies," he reported. "They've just crossed
Arnesun's Creek."
Belster
closed his eyes and felt weary indeed. Four giants, any one of which could
probably wipe out half of his warriors. Even worse, giants could return the
arrow volleys by hurling huge stones or spears the size of tree trunks.
"Should
we change the plan?" Tomas asked.
Belster
knew it was too late. "No," he said gravely. "Send the eastern
flank into action. And may God be with them."
Tomas
nodded to the scout and the man ran off, passing the word. Barely ten minutes
later the forest to the south erupted with screams and roars, with the sound of
zipping arrows and the thunder of giant-hurled boulders.
"Powries,
goblins, and giants," Juraviel explained to Elbryan and Pony when he
caught up to them northwest of Caer Tinella. "A strong force, heading
north, with purpose, it would seem."
Elbryan
and Pony exchanged concerned looks; they could guess easily enough what that
purpose might be.
"Up
with us," Elbryan bade, lowering his hand to the elf.
"Three
on Symphony?" Juraviel asked doubtfully. "He is as fine a horse as
ever there was, I do not question, but three is too many."
"Then
run, my friend," Elbryan bade the elf. "Find where you might best fit
into the battle."
Juraviel
was gone in the blink of an eye, scampering through the forest.
"And
keep your head low!" Elbryan called after him.
"And
you, Nightbird!" came the already distant reply.
The
ranger turned to Pony, giving her that prebattle expression, a look of sheer
determination she had come to know so well. "Are you ready with the
stones?"
"Always,"
Pony answered grimly, marveling at the change in the man. In the span of a few
seconds he had gone from Elbryan to Nightbird. "You just remember all that
I taught you with the hematite."
The
ranger chuckled as he turned back and kicked his great stallion into a run.
Pony had a diamond out, calling forth its magics to light the way, and as they
rode she removed the cat's-eye circlet from around her head and set it on her
companion's. Then she let the diamond light die away. Nightbird would guide
Symphony, for with his telepathic connection to the horse through the magical
turquoise, it was almost as if the horse could see through his eyes. Even with
that guidance, though, the ranger found the trail difficult, with thick brush
and tightly packed trees, and paths that seemed to always lead him farther to
the west instead of directly north, and so it was Juraviel, cutting a
straighter course than the riders, for trees were hardly an obstacle to the
nimble elf, who actually got within hearing distance of the battle first. He
saw the monsters soon after, running hard left to right, to the east,
apparently in pursuit.
"Giants,"
the elf said grimly, spotting the huge forms. Even as he watched, one of the
behemoths launched a heavy stone through the tangle of trees, smashing
branches.
A
man came tumbling down hard from that tree. A host of goblins and the
stone-throwing giant made for him, while the other monsters continued their
chase.
Juraviel
glanced all around, hoping that Nightbird and Pony would come onto the scene.
Alone, what might he do against so powerful a force?
The
noble elf shook those thoughts away. Whatever he might do, he had to try; he
could not stand idly by and watch a man be murdered. Up a tree he went, running
along a solid branch.
The
fallen man was still alive, his head lolling, groans escaping his lips. On came
a goblin, spiked club in hand.
Juraviel's
first bowshot took the creature in the kidney.
"Blimey!"
the goblin howled. "I been stuck!"
Juraviel's
second arrow took it in the throat, and it fell over, gurgling, clasping
futilely at the mortal wound.
The
elf wasn't watching, though, after having seen the giant's tactics. Sure
enough, a heavy stone came slamming into the tree, where Juraviel had just been
standing.
The
elf, far to the side in another tree, giggled loudly—giants hated
that. "Oh, big and stupid is not the way!" Juraviel sang out,
emphasizing his point by shooting an arrow right into the giant's face.
Even
so perfect a shot had little physical effect, though, the behemoth waving the
tiny arrow away as if it were no more than a stinging insect. The emotional
toll, however, was more to Juraviel's liking. The giant roared and charged
blindly, smashing through trees, ordering the goblins to follow.
Soon
the elf was running, skipping lightly along high branches and stopping every so
often to hurl a taunt, or, when the opportunity presented itself, to shoot an
arrow, just to keep his pursuers on course. He doubted he would kill the giant,
or would even get enough of a clear shot to bring down a goblin, but he figured
that having the behemoth and half a dozen goblins chasing him far from the
field of battle was a solid contribution.
The
elf's keen ears picked up the sound of battle again soon after, but it was far
to the north now, or at least he and the pursuers were far to the south, closer
to Caer Tinella than the spot where the man had fallen.
Juraviel
meant to keep them running all night if need be, past Caer Tinella and all the
way to the south of Landsdown.
"Oh,
well done," Elbryan congratulated when he saw the second band of human
archers moving east, behind the monstrous force.
Pony
looked at him curiously.
"I
know this tactic," the ranger explained. "They hit side to side,
trying to confuse their enemies." A smile widened on the ranger's face.
"I
know it, too," Pony agreed, catching on. "And so does—"
"Belster
O'Comely," the ranger reasoned. "Let us hope."
"And
let us see where we might fit in," Pony added, kicking Symphony's flanks.
Off the great stallion surged, thundering along the path, closing ground to the
second wave of Belster's army. Elbryan took care to guide Symphony to the south
of the opposing forces—except for one monstrous group that, for some reason
Elbryan and Pony could only guess at, had gone charging off far to the south.
Pulling up behind the cover of a line of thick pines, the ranger slid down from
the horse and handed Pony the reins.
"Stay
safe," he whispered, reaching tip to touch the woman's hand. To his
surprise, Pony handed the small diamond over to him.
"I
cannot use it without drawing too much attention," she explained.
"But
if they get close—" Elbryan started to protest.
"Do
you remember the copse in the Moorlands?" Pony replied evenly. "They
were close then."
That
image of carnage quieted the ranger's concerns. If the monsters did get close
to Pony, pity them, not her.
"You
take the diamond and mark out targets for me," the woman explained.
"If you can use the hematite, you can also use the diamond. Seeking out
the magic of each stone is much the same process. Put a glow on a band of
powries, and then run clear."
Elbryan
grabbed her hand more tightly and pulled her down to the side, going up on
tiptoes that he could give her a kiss. "For luck," he said, and
started away.
"For
later," Pony replied slyly just as Elbryan moved out of sight. She
remembered their pact as soon as she had spoken the words, though, and gave a
frustrated sigh. This war was getting too long for her liking.
For
Elbryan's liking as well. With the cat's-eye, the ranger could see well in the
night. Still, when Pony's teasing reply drifted to his ears, he almost fell
over a log.
He
took a deep breath and put aside any images her comment had inspired, bringing
himself fully into the present, to the situation at hand. Then he was off and
running, using the sounds of fighting to guide his movements, to bring him
closer to the action. Adrenaline coursed through his veins; he fell into that
almost trancelike state, the warrior incarnate, the same perfect balance and
honed senses that he found in bi'nelle dasada, his morning sword-dance.
He
was Nightbird now, the elven-trained warrior. Even his step seemed to change,
to grow lighter, more agile.
Soon
he was close enough to view the movements of the combatants, both human and
monster. He had to keep reminding himself that they, unlike he with his
gemstone, could not see very far ahead, that the powries and goblins were
perfectly blind outside the tiny perimeter of their torchlight. And for those
not carrying torches, this night fighting in the dark forest was as much a
matter of feeling their way along as of seeing their enemies. The ranger
watched, measuring the situation, trying hard not to chuckle at the utter
ridiculousness of it all, as humans and powries often passed right by each
other, barely ten feet apart, without ever noticing.
The
ranger knew that it was time to find his place. He spotted a pair of goblins
huddled low at the base of a tree, peering to the west, the direction from
which the most recent assault had been launched. He saw the pair clearly, but
without any source of light, they did not see him. Silent and swift, Nightbird
put himself along a clear run to them, then inched closer, closer, and leaped
into their midst. Mighty Tempest flashed left, then right, then Nightbird
turned back to the left, driving his sword out straight with all his weight and
strength behind it, a sudden, explosive thrust that skewered the first.
He
tore the blade free and pivoted back the other way, to find the other goblin
down on its knees, clutching its belly, staggered from the first strike.
Tempest slashed across, powerful and sure, lopping off the creature's ugly
head.
Nightbird
ran on, cutting swiftly across open patches of grass, climbing into trees at
times to gain a better vantage of the unfolding scene around him. Always he
tried to remain cognizant of where Pony might be waiting and of what help the
woman might offer.
Seconds
seemed like long minutes to anxious Pony, sitting quiet on Symphony within the
sheltering boughs of the pine grove. Every so often she spotted or heard some
movement not so far away, but could not tell if it was human or powrie, or
perhaps even a deer frightened by the tumult of the battle.
All
the while, Pony rubbed her fingers about several chosen stones: graphite and
magnetite, the powerful ruby and protective serpentine and malachite.
"Hurry
along, Elbryan," she whispered, anxious to get into the fray, to launch
the first blows that she might be rid of this typical nervousness. That was how
battles—except,
of course, for unexpected fights—always started for her, with the churning
stomach and the beads of sweat, the tingling anticipation. One strike would rid
her of that edginess, she knew, when purpose and adrenaline would surge through
her body.
She
heard a commotion not far ahead and spotted a form, a huge silhouette. Pony
needed no diamond light to discern the identity of that massive creature. Up
came the graphite, the lightning stone, Pony holding it up at arm's length,
gathering its energies. She hesitated a bit longer, letting the power mount,
letting the giant and its handful of allies settle into position on a ridge
across a short depression of thin trees.
Still
she waited—she
doubted that her lightning stroke would kill many of the creatures, and
certainly it would not destroy the giant. If she loosed the magic, her position
would be given away and she would indeed be in the thick of the fight. Perhaps
a better opportunity would be presented to her.
But
then the giant roared and hurled a huge stone to the west, where a group of
humans was fast approaching, and the issue was settled. Goblins and powries
howled in glee, thinking they had ambushed and would quickly overrun this one
small band.
Then
came the stroke, a sudden, jarring, blinding burst of searing white energy.
Several goblins and a pair of powries went flying to the ground; the giant was
thrown back so forcefully that it uprooted a small tree as it stumbled.
And
most important of all, from Pony's perspective, the human band had been warned,
had seen the full extent of the enemies crouched in this area in one sudden,
brightening instant.
But
so, too, was Pony's position surrendered. Fires flickered to life in the small
vale between her and the monsters, lightning-clipped trees going up like
candles. The giant, more angry than hurt, came right back her way, reaching
into a huge sack to produce another boulder.
Pony
thought to loose another lightning blast, but graphite was a particularly
draining stone, and she knew that she would have to be more focused this time.
She fumbled with the stones; she saw the giant's arms go up high, and could
only pray that his throw would be off the mark.
Another
light appeared, bright and white, the glow of a diamond, backlighting the
giant and its allies. It lasted only a second or two, giving Pony a clearer
picture of the enemy and distracting the giant for just an instant.
All
the time Pony needed. Out came the magnetite, the lodestone. The woman focused
on the stone's magics, saw through its magnetic energy, seeking an attraction,
any attraction. She "saw" the powrie swords, the belt buckle of one
dwarf. The image of the giant in the diamond backlight came clear in her mind,
particularly its upraised arms, the great hands that held the boulder.
The
giant was wearing metal-banded gauntlets.
Pony
quickly focused the magnetite energy, blocked out all other metallic influences
except one giant gauntlet. She brought the power of the stone to an explosive
release and let it fly, many times the speed and power of one of Elbryan's
deadly bowshots.
The
giant dismissed the flash of light behind it and brought the boulder over its
head again, thinking to throw it in the direction of the unseen lightning
caster. But suddenly its right wrist exploded in searing pain and lost all
strength, and the boulder fell from its grasp, bouncing off one square shoulder
before tumbling harmlessly to the ground.
The
giant hardly felt the bruise on the shoulder, for its wrist and hand were
thoroughly shattered, what little remained of the metal gauntlet crushed in
against the behemoth's hand. Two fingers hung loose on flaps of skin; another
finger was altogether gone, just gone.
The
giant staggered back a couple of long strides, blinded by surprise and agony.
Another
lightning bolt slammed in then, driving the monster right over backward,
dropping it, groaning, to the ground. Hardly conscious, the behemoth did hear
the sounds of its few remaining comrades, all of them running away into the
dark night.
Pony
eased Symphony out of the pines and into the valley, picking her way through
the tangle. She drew out her sword as she rode, and found no opposition when
she came upon the squirming giant.
She
killed it quickly.
Confident
in Pony's abilities and judgment, Nightbird didn't stay around after he had
marked out the target with the diamond light. Back in the darkness again, the
ranger made his way farther north, cutting right across the monster and human
lines.
He
saw a group of men crawling through some ferns, and, on a low branch above them,
a pair of goblins holding cruel spears, both peering down at the fern bed,
trying to find an open shot.
Up
came Hawkwing, and a split second later one of the goblins dropped heavily from
the branch.
"Huh?"
its companion said, turning to where the other had been standing, trying to
figure out why it had jumped away.
The
ranger's second shot took it through the temple, and it, too, fell away, dead
before it hit the ground.
The
men in the ferns scrambled, not knowing what had dropped about them.
Nightbird
moved ahead quickly, closing the distance. One man came up, hearing his
approach, bow drawn and ready. "What?" he asked incredulously, and
then added in a whisper as the ranger rushed by him, "Nightbird."
"Follow
me," the ranger instructed. "The dark is no obstacle; I will guide
you."
"It
is Nightbird," another man insisted.
"Who?"
asked another.
"A
friend," the first explained quickly, and the small group, five men and
three women, set off after the ranger.
Soon
enough the ranger spotted yet another band of allies crouching in the dark, and
led his group that way. Suddenly his force was twenty strong, and he led them
out to find enemies. He understood the realities of night-fighting in the dark
forest, and the huge advantage the cat's-eye afforded him and his band. All
around the group the larger battle quickly deteriorated into pockets of
screaming and cursing frustration, with arrows launched blindly into the
darkness, or opponents inadvertently stumbling into each other, or even
comrades stumbling into one another, often lashing out before they paused long
enough to identify their allies. Somewhere far back in the distance there came
a cry, the grating voice of a powrie, followed by a tremendous explosion, and
Nightbird knew that another unfortunate enemy had stumbled upon Pony.
He
bit his lip and resisted the urge to rush back and check on his love. He had to
trust in her, had to remind himself repeatedly that she knew how to fight, day
or night, and that, in addition to her expertise with a sword, she carried
enough magical power to carry her through.
Another
battle erupted far in the opposite direction, a group of goblins stumbling
across the northern end of what remained of the human line. This time the
results were less clear-cut, with screams of outrage and agony, both human and
goblin, splitting the air. The fighting drew more combatants, spreading until
all the forest seemed thick with tumult, monsters and humans rushing this way
and that. The ranger set his band in a purely defensive posture, then moved out
to walk a perimeter. Any humans who ventured near were ushered in, the numbers
of the group soon rising to more than thirty. Whenever any enemies ventured
near, Nightbird circled about them, bringing up the diamond light so his
archers could take their sudden and deadly toll.
When
the immediate area finally appeared clear of monsters, Nightbird got his group
moving again, putting the men in a tight formation, that they could guide each
other by touch.
Torches
flared to life in several places deeper in the forest, screams issued from the
darkness in many others, and there were no clear lines of combat for the group
to engage. But those with the ranger held their calm, methodical way, moving
along in their tight and organized formation, the tireless Nightbird
continually circling about them, guiding them. More than once the ranger
spotted enemies moving in the brush, but he held his forces in quiet check, not
willing to reveal them. Not yet.
Soon
the sounds of fighting withered away, leaving the forest night as quiet as it
was dark. A torch flared to life in the distance; Nightbird understood it to be
powries, the cocky dwarves likely confident now that the battle had ended. He
moved to the nearest of his soldiers and bade the man to pass the word that the
time to strike was near.
Then
the ranger settled the group once more into a defensive posture and moved out
alone. No stranger to powrie tactics, he figured that those with the torch
would form the hub of their formation, with their forces encircling them like
the spokes of a wheel. The torchlight was still more than two hundred feet away
when the ranger encountered the tip of one of those spokes, a pair of goblins
crouched beside a tight grouping of small birch trees.
With
all his great skill, Nightbird slipped around and moved in behind the oblivious
pair. He thought to flash his diamond light, that his archers could mow the
goblins down, but decided against that tactic, preferring to make this one
strike decisive. He went in alone, inch by inch.
His
hand clamped over the mouth of the goblin to his left; his sword drove through
the lungs of the goblin to the right. He let Tempest fall free with the dead
goblin, and grabbed the remaining creature's hair with his now free right hand,
sliding his left down enough to cup the monster's chin. Before the goblin could
begin to cry out, the ranger drove both arms across his body, right to left,
left to right, then violently yanked them back the other way.
The
goblin hardly found the chance to squeal, and the only sound was the snapping
of its neck bone—it
might have been a footstep on a dry twig.
The
ranger retrieved Tempest and moved in deeper, nearer the hub, surveying the
enemy formation, which was exactly as he had suspected. Taking as accurate a
count as possible, he silently went back to his waiting force.
"There
are monsters about," he explained. "A trio of powries within that
torchlight."
"Then
show them to us and let us be done with this night," one eager warrior
piped in, and his words were echoed many times over.
"It
is a trap," the ranger explained, "with more powries and goblins
waiting in the darkness and a pair of giants lurking behind the trees."
"What
do we do?" one man asked, his tone very different now, more subdued.
The
ranger looked around at all his men, a wry smile widening on his face. They
thought they were outmatched—that much was obvious from their expressions. But
Nightbird, who had been fighting bands of monsters all the way from the
Barbacan, knew better. "We kill the giants first," he coolly
explained.
Belster
and Tomas watched and listened from a distant hilltop. The innkeeper rubbed his
hands repeatedly, nervously, trying to guess at what might be happening down
there. Should he retract his forces? Should he press the fight?
Could
he? The plans seemed so logical when they were made, so easily executed and, if
need be, retracted. But the truth of battle never worked out that way,
particularly in the dark and confusing night.
Beside
him, Tomas Gingerwart was fighting an equally difficult dilemma. He was a tough
man, battle hardened, but for all his hatred of the monsters, Tomas understood
that to engage them in drawn-out conflict was a fool's game.
But
he, too, could not get a clear picture of what might be happening. He heard
the occasional screams—more often a monster's voice than a man's—and saw the
flares of light. A couple of surprising flashes, brilliant and sudden, caught
his and Belster's attention more keenly, though, for they were not the fires
of torches. Belster recognized them well enough as an obvious stroke of lightning
magic.
The
problem was, neither Belster nor Tomas had any idea which side was tossing the
magic about. Their little band possessed no gemstones, and wouldn't have known
how to use them if they did, but likewise, powries, goblins, and giants had
never been known to wield such magic.
"We
must decide, and quickly," Tomas remarked, his voice edged with
frustration.
"Jansen
Bridges should return soon," Belster replied. "We must find out who
loosed that magic."
"We
haven't seen it in a long while," Tomas went on. "The point may be
moot, with the magic expended or the wielder dead."
"But
who?"
"Roger
Lockless, likely," Tomas replied. "Ever has he a trick to play."
Belster
wasn't so sure of that, though the notion that Roger had a bit of magic about
him was nothing new to the innkeeper. The legends of Roger might be
exaggerated, but his exploits were indeed amazing.
"Call
them back," Tomas decided then. "Light the signals and send runners
with the word. The battle is ended."
"But
Jansen—"
"We
haven't time to wait," Tomas interrupted firmly. "Call them
back."
Belster
shrugged, and couldn't rightly disagree, but before either he or Tomas could
give the retreat signal, a man came loping up the side of the hillock.
"Nightbird!"
he cried to the two. "Nightbird, and Avelyn Desbris!"
Belster
ran down to meet him. "Are you sure?"
"I
saw Nightbird myself," Jansen replied, huffing and puffing as he tried to
catch his breath. "It had to be him, for no other could move with such
grace. I saw him kill a goblin, oh, and beautifully, too. Sword left and
right." He waved his arm about, imitating the move as he spoke.
"Who
does he speak of?" Tomas asked, coming down to join them.
"The
ranger," Belster replied. "And Avelyn?" he asked of Jansen.
"Did you speak with Avelyn?"
"It
had to be him," Jansen replied. "The flash of lightning, scattering
powries, felling giants. They have returned to us!"
"You
assume much," pragmatic Tomas put in, then to Belster he added, "Are
we to hope that this man's observations ring true? If he is wrong—"
"Then
still it would seem as if we have found some allies, powerful allies,"
Belster replied. "But let us indeed light the torches. Let us regroup and
see how strong we have become." Belster eagerly led the way from the
hillock, silently hoping that his old comrades from Dundalis had indeed
returned to help in the cause.
*
* *
Their
expressions were mixed, some nodding eagerly, others hesitantly, and still
others glancing doubtfully to their fellows.
"The
torchlight marks the hub of the powrie defensive position," Nightbird
quickly explained. "The way is open to it if we are quiet enough and
clever enough. We must strike hard and sure, and be prepared for any attacks
that come in about us."
"The
hub?" one man echoed doubtfully.
"The
center of the powrie defensive ring," the ranger clarified. "A small
grouping in the middle of a wide perimeter."
"If
we attack there, right in the middle, then we will be surrounded," the
man replied, and several incredulous grunts of accord sprang up about him.
"If
we hit them strong enough at the center and kill the giants, the others,
particularly the goblins, will not dare to come in against us," the ranger
countered with confidence.
"The
torches are naught but bait," the man argued, raising his voice so that
the ranger and several others had to motion for him to be quiet.
"The
torches are indeed meant to bring in enemies," Nightbird conceded.
"But those enemies are supposed to be identified and engaged on the edge
of the ring. If we move without further delay, the path is open all the way to
the hub; our enemies will not expect so strong an attack."
The
man started to argue again, but those near him, their trust in the ranger
growing, hushed him before he could begin.
"Go
in quiet and in a line three abreast," Nightbird explained. "Then we
shall form a tight circle about the hub, and kill it before any reinforcements
can arrive."
Still,
many of the others exchanged doubtful glances.
"I
have been fighting powries for many months, and these are powrie tactics, to be
sure," Nightbird explained.
His
tone, full of absolute confidence, bolstered those nearest him, and they in
turn turned back to nod to the men behind.
The
group set off immediately, with Nightbird far in the lead. He went back to the
spot where he had slain the two goblins, and was relieved to find their bodies
as he had left them, and that no new tracks were about the area. The enemy
force was not numerous and the spokes of this defensive wheel were few, he
reasoned, for when he searched both left and right, using the light of the
powries' own torches as his guiding beacon, he saw no other monsters.
Nightbird
led his force straight in, then fanned them out, barely thirty feet from the
powries—and
the giants, he realized, for the behemoth pair was still in place, their lanky
forms pressed up tight against the back side of the oak tree, using its girth
to shadow them from the revealing light.
The
ranger picked his course quietly. He moved along his line, signaling for all to
be ready, and clutched the diamond tight in his fist. Far out to the left of
the powrie trio, he found a low, thick limb. He went onto it slowly, easing his
weight up so it would not rustle, then picked his careful path along the solid
wood, moving nearer, nearer, to the trunk.
Nearer
to the giants.
Nightbird
concentrated on the stone, building its energy, but not yet releasing it.
Building,
building—all
his hand was tingling from the stone's magic, begging release.
Nightbird
ran along the branch; the powries looked up at the sound.
And
then they, and the giants, looked away, blinded by the sudden burst of
radiance, a brilliant white light, brighter than the day itself.
Nightbird
rushed above the stunned powries and bore down on the nearest giant, its head
even with his own. He knew he wouldn't get many swings; he grabbed up Tempest
in both hands and came in running, jerking to a stop and transferring every
ounce of his momentum and strength into that one downward chop.
The
blade, trailing a line of white light hardly discernible in the brilliant
diamond glare, smashed down through the giant's forehead, cleaving bone and
tearing brains, and the behemoth, howling, grasped at its head and tumbled
backward.
The
other giant rushed in, only to be met by a hail of stinging arrows.
Nightbird
changed direction, scampering straight up the tree.
Powries
and goblins cried out and scrambled all about the area; the archers had to
shift their rain to nearer, closing targets.
The
remaining behemoth shrugged away the initial volley and grabbed hard on the
tree, thinking to tear it right from the ground, thinking to smash the ranger,
the miserable rat who had just inflicted a mortal wound on its brother. It
looked up, roaring in pain and outrage, and then went quiet, seeing the ranger
looking back at it, down the arrow set on his strange-looking bow.
Nightbird
had Hawkwing drawn all the way back. With corded muscles perfectly taut, arms
locked with the bow, legs locked about the branch and trunk, he had held the
pose until the giant was in position, directly below him, and the behemoth
glanced up at him.
Then
he released, the arrow burrowing into the monster's face, driving deep, deep,
disappearing.
The
giant's outstretched arms flailed wildly, helplessly, and then it slumped to
its knees, crumbling right beside its brother, dying even as its brother
continued to squirm in the dirt.
Nightbird
wasn't watching, was too busy climbing, realizing he was vulnerable at this low
position. Then, from a branch higher up he watched the fight and carefully
picked his shots, taking out those couple of monsters too well hidden, from
ground level, for his companions to spot them.
"To
hiding!" the ranger called, and a moment later he dropped the diamond
light, leaving the area black, save one fallen torch flickering in its death
throes on the ground.
Nightbird
closed his eyes, then opened them slowly, letting them adjust to the new
lighting, letting the cat's-eye take control once more. The monsters were far
from defeated, he realized immediately, for several groups had banded together
and were stubbornly coming in, mostly from the south. He had to make a
decision, and quickly. The element of surprise was gone, and the enemy still
badly outnumbered his meager force of thirty.
"Take
to the north," he called down, keeping his voice as low as possible.
"Stay together at all costs. I will rejoin you as soon as I can."
As
his soldiers slipped away through the brush, the ranger turned his attention
back to the south, to the many monstrous groups, thinking he would find some
way to deter them, perhaps to lead them on a long and roundabout chase back to
the south.
But
then he looked behind the monstrous lines, saw the blue-glowing form of a woman
on a horse.
"Run
on!" the ranger cried to the humans. "Run for all your life!"
And Nightbird began to climb, scampering wildly up the tree, and not in fear of
any powrie crossbow.
Trusting
in Symphony's superior senses to get her through the tangle, Pony urged the
horse ahead. She crossed by a pair of startled powries—who hooted and
gave chase—and strengthened her serpentine shield.
They
were all about her, rushing in, crying in savage glee.
And
then, in the blink of a powrie eye, they were all burning, and so were the
trees.
Using
the light to guide her way, Pony moved through the conflagration, straining to
keep the protective fire shield in place. She blinked in disbelief as she
neared a huge oak on the very edge of the fires, for coming down the far side,
dropping frantically from branch to branch, came Nightbird.
Pony
guided Symphony under the lowest branch, and the ranger dropped to the ground
right before her, immediately diving into a roll to smother a few errant
flames. He rolled to his feet and scrambled away. "You might have warned
me!" he scolded, wisps of smoke trailing from his leather tunic.
"The
night is warm," Pony remarked with a snicker. She took Symphony right by
him then, leaning to the side and offering him her hand. He grabbed on—falling into
the protective shield as soon as their fingers touched—scrambled up behind her,
and away they trotted, confident that no monsters were anywhere near in
pursuit.
"You
should be more careful about where you blow up," the ranger scolded.
"You
should be wiser about where you hide," Pony countered.
"There
are options other than the gemstones," the ranger argued.
"Then
teach me bi'nelle dasada," the woman said without hesitation.
The ranger let it go at that, knowing all too well that with Pony, he would never get the last word.
In a meadow a score of miles east of the town of Landsdown, the caravan from St.-Mere-Abelle made its last exchange of horses. Friar Pembleton, who brought the fresh animals, also brought news that was not welcomed by the leaders of the caravan.
"We
must go farther to the east, then," Brother Braumin Herde reasoned,
looking to the northwest, their intended course, as if he expected a host of
monsters to rush down upon them.
Brother
Francis eyed Braumin dangerously, the young and ambitious monk taking every
little change to his itinerary personally.
"Be
at ease, Brother Francis," Master Jojonah remarked, seeing the anxious man
chewing hard on his lip. "You have heard good Friar Pembleton. All the
lands between Landsdown and the Wilderlands are thick with our enemies."
"We
can hide from them," Brother Francis argued.
"At
what magical cost?" Master Jojonah asked. "And at what delay?"
Jojonah gave a sigh, and Francis growled and spun away. That settled, for the
moment at least, Jojonah turned back to Friar Pembleton, a large and round man
with a thick black beard and bushy eyebrows. "Pray tell us, good
Pembleton," he bade the man. "You know the region far better than
we."
"Where
are you going?" the friar asked.
"That
I cannot say," Master Jojonah replied. "You need know only that we
must get through the Timberlands, to the north."
The
friar rubbed a hand over his bushy chin. "There is a road that will lead
you to the north, though into and through the eastern sections of the
Timberlands, not the western reaches, as you had originally planned. It is a
good road, though little used."
"And
what word of powries and goblins up there?" Brother Braumin asked.
The
friar shrugged. "No word," he admitted. "It appears as though
the monsters came from the northwest, sweeping through the Timberlands past the
three towns of Dundalis, Weedy Meadow, and End-o'-the-World. From there they
have extended south, but, as far as I have heard, not to the east.
"It
seems a reasonable detour," the friar added hopefully, "for there is
little in the east that would give the monsters sport. No towns, and very few,
if any, homesteads."
A
younger monk joined the group then, bearing a satchel full of rolled
parchments, their ends sticking from the leather bag. Brother Francis moved
immediately to intercept, and yanked the satchel away.
"Thank
you, Brother Dellman," Master Jojonah said calmly to the young monk, and
he made a gentle motion for the startled young man to go back to the others.
Brother
Francis flipped through the various rolls, finally settling on one and pulling
it forth. He unrolled it gingerly, spreading it on a tree stump as Master
Jojonah, Brother Braumin, and Friar Pembleton huddled around him.
"Our
path was right through Weedy Meadow," Brother Francis remarked, tracing
the line on the map with his finger.
"Then
expect to be fighting every step of the way," Friar Pembleton answered
sincerely. "And Weedy Meadow, by all accounts, is now a powrie outpost.
Lots of giants up there, too."
"Where
is this more eastern road?" Master Jojonah asked.
The
friar moved in close to the map, studied it for just a moment, then ran his
finger to the east of their present position, and then north, cutting through
the narrower region of the eastern Timberlands and right into southern
Alpinador. "Of course, you can turn back to the west before you get
through the Timberlands, circling north of the three Timberland towns."
"What
terrain might we find?" Master Jojonah asked. "Have you ever been up
there?"
"Once,"
the friar replied. "When they first rebuilt Dundalis after the goblin raid—that was
several years ago, of course. It's all forest, settled on the hillsides, hence
the name of the region."
"All
forest, and thus not well-suited for wagon travel," Brother Braumin put
in.
"Not
so bad," the friar replied. "It's old forest, with great and dark
trees, but not much undergrowth. Except of course for the caribou moss; you
will encounter more than a bit of that."
"Caribou
moss?" All eyes turned to the questioner, Brother Francis, his fellow
monks surprised indeed that he did not recognize the name. Francis met
Jojonah's curious gaze head-on, the younger man again narrowing his eyes
threateningly. "No tomes told of it," he answered the master's
unspoken question.
"A
shrub, white and low to the ground," Friar Pembleton explained.
"Your horses should have no trouble pushing through, though it will grab
at your wheels. Other than that, the canopy is too dark for much undergrowth.
You will get through, no matter where you turn to the west."
"We
will get through along the original course," Brother Francis replied
sternly.
"I
beg your pardon, good brother," Friar Pembleton said with a gracious bow.
"I never said that you would not. I only warned you—"
"And
for that, we are truly grateful," Master Jojonah said to the man, though
he was looking directly at Francis as he spoke. "I ask you now, in good
faith, which road would you, who are more familiar with this terrain,
select?"
Pembleton
scratched his thick beard, mulling over the options. "I would go
east," he said. "And then north, right up into Alpinador. The land
is sparsely populated, but you'll find the barbarians living along the route to
be cordial enough, though probably of not much assistance."
Master
Jojonah nodded; Brother Francis started to protest.
"Will
you go and speak with the drivers now, that you might guide them to the
entrance of this eastern road?" Jojonah bade the friar. "We must be
back on the trail at once."
The
friar bowed again and walked away, glancing back several times.
"Father
Abbot—"
Brother Francis began.
"Is
not here," Master Jojonah promptly interrupted. "And if he were here,
he would agree with this new course. Sublimate your pride, brother. It is
unfitting to one of your training and station."
Brother
Francis started to argue, but the words were lost in a swirl of absolute rage
before they ever got out of his mouth. He quickly gathered up the parchment,
creasing it in many places with his rough handling—the first time
the others had seen him treat one of the maps in that manner—and stormed away.
"He
goes to contact Father Abbot," Brother Braumin reasoned.
Master
Jojonah chuckled at the thought, confident that his choice was the correct one
and that Francis was simply too blinded by his anger and wounded pride to see
past the inconvenience.
The
caravan was on its way soon after, moving onto the eastern road without
incident. Brother Francis did not emerge from the back of his wagon all that
day, though the monks riding with him were quick to get out and away from him.
He was pouting, by their accounts.
"In
some situations, Father Abbot Markwart can be counted on," Master Jojonah
whispered to Brother Braumin, offering a sly wink.
The
younger monk smiled widely, always thrilled to see the ambitious Francis put
in his proper place.
As
Friar Pembleton had told them, the road was easy and clear. Those monks
searching the area with the quartz reported no monstrous activity at all, just
the wild forest. Master Jojonah set the pace at steady and smooth. They
couldn't afford to drive these horses beyond their limits, for they expected no
replacements the rest of the way to the Barbacan and all the way back again,
until they met with Friar Pembleton in the very same field they had just left
behind, swapping these horses for the ones they had given into the man's care.
Of
course, that was assuming that Pembleton's little hamlet would survive over the
next few weeks, and given the reports of monsters just a score of miles away,
the monks could only pray that would be the case.
They
traveled late into the night, with Master Jojonah even daring to put up
substantial diamond light to guide their way. They camped right on the road,
circling the wagons for protection. Great care was given to the precious
horses, with hooves cleaned and shoes carefully inspected. The animals were
toweled down and brought to graze in a nearby meadow, and more guards were
posted about them than about the wagon ring.
The
going was easy again the next day, but their new track would be much longer,
and there was no way they could meet the timetable without pushing the horses.
Brother Francis ran up behind Master Jojonah's wagon and climbed in precisely
to make that point.
"And
if we drive them so hard that they cannot continue?" the master argued.
"There
is a way," Brother Francis said evenly.
Master
Jojonah knew what he was talking about: in the old tomes, Francis had stumbled
upon a formula, a combination of magic stones, that could steal the life force
from one animal and give it to another. Master Jojonah thought the process
truly barbaric, and had hoped they would find no cause to even discuss the
matter. Or at least, he had hoped he could keep the caravan on schedule, thus
giving him the ability to deny Francis, for he knew that the eager and
ambitious brother would surely want to try this new combination of magics, if
only to add a major footnote to his account of the journey. Now, facing the
reality of a longer road, the master glanced to Brother Braumin, who could only
shrug, for he, too, had no practical answers. Finally, Jojonah threw up his
hands in defeat. "See to it," he instructed Brother Francis.
The
monk nodded, couldn't hide his smile, and was gone.
Using
turquoise and hematite, the monks under Brother Francis' charge brought the
first few deer to the wagons within the hour. The unfortunate wild animals were
lashed beside the horses, and again the hematite and turquoise combination was
used upon them, this time to draw their very life force from them, transferring
their strength and energy to the horse teams.
The
deer were soon left behind in the road, two of them dead, the other three too
exhausted to even stand. Master Jojonah looked back at them with sincere
sympathy. He had to keep reminding himself of the urgency of the mission, of
the fact that many, many more animals and people would suffer greatly if the
answers were not found and the monsters not turned back.
Still,
the sight of the drained animals on the road saddened him greatly. The
Abellican Order should not be about such dark things as this, he thought.
More
deer were brought in, and even, at one point, a large bear, the creature posing
no threat, for it was overwhelmed by telepathic intrusions. Continually
refreshed by the stolen energy, the horses crossed more than sixty miles before
the sun was down, and again the caravan rolled on long into the night.
With
the abundance of wildlife and absence of monsters, neither Jojonah nor Francis
doubted they would be back on schedule within a couple of days, despite the
roundabout detour.
"Just
goblins!" one man declared, slamming his mug of ale down on the oaken
table so forcefully that the metal handle broke apart at its top brace, sending
the golden liquid flying about. The man was huge and powerful, with bulging
arms and chest, thick hair and beard. He hardly stood out in this gathering of
thirty adult men of Tol Hengor, hardy folk all, tall and strong from a life in
the harsh climate of southern Alpinador.
"A
hundred goblins, at the least," another man put in. "And with a giant
or two, do not doubt."
"And
them stupid little dwarf things," added another. "Ugly as an old
dog's arse, but tougher than stewed boot!"
"Bah!
But we'll smash them down, every one!" the first man promised, growling
with every word.
The
door to the town's mead hall opened then, and all eyes turned to see a man,
tall even by Alpinadoran standards, enter. He had seen more than sixty winters,
but stood as straight as any twenty-year-old, and there was nothing slack about
his muscles or his posture. About the town, about all of Alpinador, it was
often whispered that this one had been touched by "faerie magic," and
in a sense, that was true enough. His hair was flaxen and long, well below his
shoulders, and his face adorned with a well-trimmed golden beard, accentuating
his eyes, which remained as sparkling and blue as a clear northern sky. All
boasts ended at that moment, in deference to the great man.
"You
have seen them?" one man asked, a perfectly silly question in the minds of
all who knew this man, the ranger Andacanavar.
He
walked up to the long table and nodded, then pulled his tremendous claymore
over his shoulder and laid its bloodstained blade across the table.
"But
is there any sport remaining for us?" a man said with a burst of laughter,
which was joined by all in attendance.
All
except for one.
"Too
much sport," Andacanavar said grimly, and the room went silent.
"Just
goblins!" the man who had spilled his mead repeated determinedly.
"Goblins
and giants and powries," the ranger corrected.
"How
many giants?" came a call from the far end of the great table.
"There
were seven," the ranger replied, lifting his gleaming blade up before
their eyes. "Now there are five."
"Bah,
not so many," two men said in unison.
"Too
many," Andacanavar said again, more forcefully. "With their smaller
allies holding our warriors at bay, the five giants will destroy Tol
Hengor."
Nervous
glances met angry glares, the proud northlanders not knowing how to respond.
They held Andacanavar in the greatest respect—never before had he led them
astray. Over the last few months, with the invasion by sea and by land, all the
towns of Alpinador had been sorely pressed, and many overrun. Whenever tireless
Andacanavar was about, though, the odds were more even, and the Alpinadorans
had fared well.
"What
are we to do, then?" a bear of a man named Bruinhelde, the chieftain of
Tol Hengor, asked, leaning forward over the table to stare the ranger in the
eye. He motioned to a woman standing in waiting at the side of the tent, and
she took up a cloth and approached the great ranger.
"You
will take your people out to the west," Andacanavar explained, handing
his claymore to the woman, who reverently began to clean it.
"And
hide in the woods like women and children?" the ale-spiller roared,
leaping up from his seat. Having had too many drinks, he wobbled on unsteady
feet, and the man next to him promptly shoved him back down.
"I
will try to keep striking at the giants," the ranger explained. "If I
can defeat them, or lead them away, you and your warriors can strike back at
the rest and reclaim Tol Hengor."
"I
do not wish to leave my home," Bruinhelde replied, and then paused, and
all the room hushed. Bruinhelde was the leader, a title won in battle, and the
tribe would follow his words, whatever Andacanavar might suggest. "But I
trust in you, my friend." he added, and reached out and dropped his hand
on the ranger's shoulder. "Strike fast and strike hard. It would be better
if these filthy creatures did not set foot in Tol Hengor. And if they do, I wish
to have them out quickly. I do not enjoy weathering the open forest at my
age." He said the last with a wink, for he was more than fifteen years
Andacanavar's junior, and it was well-known that the nomadic ranger lived
almost exclusively in the deep forest.
The
ranger nodded to the chieftain, then to all gathered. He took the cloth from
the woman and finished wiping the giant blood from his blade, then lifted it
up, gleaming for all to see. It was an elvish blade, Icebreaker by name, the
largest item ever constructed of silverel. Icebreaker did not nick and did not
dull, and in Andacanavar's strong arms, it could cleave down small trees in a
single swipe. The ranger slid the blade back into its sheath over his shoulder,
nodded to Bruinhelde, and was gone.
Master
Jojonah and Braumin Herde stood on the edge of a high ridge, looking down upon
a small village of stone houses set in a wide and shallow vale. The sun was low
in the west, sending long shadows along the valley.
"We
have come farther than we believed," the brother reasoned.
"Alpinadoran,"
Master Jojonah agreed. "Either we have crossed through the Timberlands or
these barbarians have settled beyond their accepted southern border."
"The
former, I would guess," Brother Braumin replied. "Brother Baijuis,
skilled in use of the sextant, agrees."
"The
magic used on the wild animals is effective, however immoral," the master
said dryly.
Brother
Braumin glanced sidelong, studying his companion. He, too, had not been
thrilled by the life-draining of innocent wild animals, though it seemed he was
not nearly as distressed by it as Jojonah.
"Even
stubborn Francis agrees that we have made up the time lost by the detour,"
Master Jojonah went on. "Though he had little argument against us when
Father Abbot Markwart agreed with our choice of the eastern road."
"Brother
Francis rarely needs support, or even logic, when disagreeing," Braumin
remarked, drawing a concurring chuckle from his superior. "He is plotting
our new course now, and surprisingly, with the same fervor that he plotted our
original course."
"Not
so surprising," Master Jojonah replied, lowering his voice to a whisper
when he noticed the approach of two younger monks. "Brother Francis will
do anything to impress the Father Abbot."
Brother
Braumin snickered, but lost his smile when he turned to regard the newcomers,
their expressions grave.
"Pray
you forgive our intrusion, Master Jojonah," said one of them, Brother
Dellman. Both young monks began bowing repeatedly.
"Yes
yes," the master prompted impatiently, for it was obvious to Jojonah,
too, that something must be terribly wrong. "What is it?"
"A
group of monsters," Brother Dellman explained. "Moving from the west,
toward that village."
"Brother
Francis insists that we can easily avoid them," the other monk interjected.
"And so we can, but are we to let those villagers be slaughtered?"
Master
Jojonah turned to Braumin, who was shaking his head slowly, as if the very
movement pained him profoundly. "Father Abbot Markwart's instructions were
clear and uncompromising," the immaculate said uncomfortably. "We are
not to engage any, enemy or friend, at least until we have completed our task
at the Barbacan."
Jojonah
looked down at the village, at the plumes of gray smoke drifting lazily from
the chimneys. He imagined how dark that cloud might soon be, black smoke
billowing from burning houses; people, children, running about, screaming, in
terror and in pain.
And
then dying, horribly.
"What
is in your heart, Brother Dellman?" the master asked unexpectedly.
"I
am loyal to Father Abbot Markwart," the young monk replied without
hesitation, straightening his shoulders resolutely.
"I
did not ask how you would proceed were the decision yours," Master Jojonah
explained to him. "I only asked what was in your heart. What should the monks
of St.-Mere-Abelle do when they come upon a situation such as the one before
us?"
Dellman
started to answer in favor of fighting beside the folk of the village, but
stopped, confused. Then he started again, his reasoning moving in a different
direction, speaking of the larger goal, the greater good to all the world. But
then he stopped again, grunting in frustration.
"The
Abellican Order has a long tradition of defending those who cannot defend
themselves," the other young monk put in. "In our own region, we have
oft welcomed the townsfolk into the safety of our abbey in times of peril, be
it powrie invasion or impending storms."
"But
what of the greater good?" Master Jojonah asked, stopping the young monk
before he could gain too much momentum.
With
no answer forthcoming, Jojonah took a different tack. "How many people do
you estimate are down there?" he asked.
"Thirty,"
Brother Braumin replied. "Perhaps as many as fifty."
"And
are fifty lives worth the price of defeating our most important mission, a
risk that we surely assume if we intervene?"
Again
there was only silence, with the two younger monks glancing repeatedly at each
other, each wanting the other to seek out the proper answer.
"We
know Father Abbot Markwart's position on that," Brother Braumin remarked.
"Father
Abbot would insist that they are not worth the potential cost," Master
Jojonah said bluntly. "And he would make a strong case for his
point."
"And
we are loyal to Father Abbot Markwart," Brother Dellman said, as though
that simple fact ended the debate.
But
Master Jojonah wasn't going to let him off that easily, wasn't going to let
Dellman or any of the others hand off the responsibility of this decision; a
decision, he believed, that went to the very core of the Abellican Order, and
to the very heart of his dispute with Markwart. "We are loyal to the
tenets of the Church," he corrected. "Not to people."
"The
Father Abbot represents those tenets," Brother Dellman argued.
"So
we would hope," replied the master. He glanced at Braumin Herde again, and
the man was visibly anxious about the course of Jojonah's questioning.
"What
say you, Brother Braumin?" the master asked bluntly. "You have been
in the service of the Church for more than ten years; what do your studies of
the tenets of the Abellican Order tell you of our course now? By those tenets,
are fifty lives, or a hundred lives, worth the risk of the greater good?"
Braumin
straightened, honestly surprised that Master Jojonah had put him on the spot,
had called him out to reveal publicly what was in his heart. His thoughts
whirled back to the powrie battle at St.-Mere-Abelle, to the peasant Father
Abbot had possessed, then leaping the body to its death. That act was for the
greater good—
many powries were destroyed in the action—and yet it still left a lingering
foul taste in Braumin's mouth and a cold blackness in his heart.
"Are
they?" Jojonah pressed.
"They
are," Braumin answered sincerely. "One life is worth the risk. With
so important a quest before us, we should not go out of our way to seek those
in peril, but when God sees fit to present them before us, we have a sacred
obligation to intervene."
The
two younger monks gasped in unison, surprised by the words, but also somewhat
relieved—an
expression, particularly on the face of young Brother Dellman, that Master
Jojonah marked well.
"And
you two,", Jojonah asked of them, "what say you of our course?"
"I
would like to save the village," Brother Dellman replied. "Or at
least warn them of the impending invasion."
The
other monk nodded his agreement.
Jojonah
struck a pensive pose, weighing the risks. "Are there any other monsters
in the area?" he asked.
The
two young monks looked to each other curiously, then shrugged.
"And
how strong is this coming force?" Master Jojonah went on.
Again,
no answer.
"These
are questions we must have answered, and quickly," Master Jojonah
explained. "Else we must follow Father Abbot Markwart's decree and be on
our way, leaving the villagers to their grim fate. Go then," he bade them
both, shooing them away as if they were stray dogs. "Get you to those with
the quartz stones. Find me my answers, and be quick about it"
The
young monks bowed immediately, turned and sped away.
"You
take a great risk," Brother Braumin remarked as soon as the pair were
gone. "And more a risk for yourself than for our quest."
"What
risk to my soul if I let this pass?" Jojonah asked, a point that
temporarily stole Brother Braumin's argument.
"Still,"
the younger monk said at length, "if the Father Abbot—"
"The
Father Abbot is not here," Master Jojonah reminded him.
"But
he will be if Brother Francis discovers that you plan to intervene against
these monsters."
"I
will deal with Brother Francis," Master Jojonah assured him. "And
with the Father Abbot, if he does indeed find his way into Francis' body."
His tone showed that to be the end of the debate, and, despite his well-founded
fears, Braumin Herde was smiling as Jojonah determinedly walked ahead of him.
The master, his mentor, was taking a stand, Braumin understood. Sometimes, when
the heart called loudly enough, one just had to dig in his heels.
The
night was dark; a full moon had risen early, but had been blotted out by thick
and threatening storm clouds. A fitting night, given the monstrous force
approaching Tol Hengor. Nearly two hundred strong, the vicious band had already
overrun two villages, and had no reason to believe that this next one in line
would prove any more difficult. They came into the western end of the valley in
their customary semicircular battle formation, with goblins forming the frontal
shield perimeter, every other one carrying a torch, and the powries and giants
clustered in the middle, ready to support either flank or charge straight
ahead. Though they were walking between two ridges, along lower, less defensible
ground, they did not fear any ambush. The Alpinadoran humans were not bowmen,
typically, and even if the warriors of this village had perfected the art of
distance fighting, their number—reported by scouts at no more than three dozen—would not be
sufficient to cause too much distress. In addition the giants, who could take
many arrow hits, would respond to any flanking attack with a devastating
boulder barrage, turning the ambush back on the ambushers. No, the powrie
leaders knew, Alpinadoran humans were dangerous in close combat, fighting
hand-to-hand with their great strength, and not in hit-and-run tactics. And so
the monsters had chosen this head-on formation rather than risk breaking the
band into smaller, more scattered lines
by traveling over the rougher ground of the ridges.
Thus
it was with supreme confidence that the powries moved their combined force
through the wide vale, all of them itching for the taste of human blood, all of
the powries wanting to brighten the crimson stain of their berets.
They
couldn't comprehend the power that had come against them in the form of the
monks of St.-Mere-Abelle. A dozen lay in wait on either side of the vale,
Brother Francis leading those on the northern wall, Brother Braumin in command
of those in the south. Master Jojonah sat far in back of Braumin's group,
pressing a hematite, that most useful and versatile of stones, against his
heart. He was the first to fall into the magic, releasing his soul from its
corporeal bonds and drifting out into the night air.
His
first task was easy enough. He willed his invisible spirit along at great
speed, moving down to the west end of the valley, meeting the coming force,
scouting out its strength and formation. The spirit whisked back the way it
had come, first to the northern ridge and Brother Francis, then across the way
to Brother Braumin, relaying the information to both groups. Then, with a
thought, Master Jojonah was gone again, back to the approaching monsters.
Now
came the master's more difficult assignment: to infiltrate the monstrous force.
Invisible and silent, he glided past the front goblin line and into the central
group, going after a powrie body, but wisely reconsidering. Powries, so the
ancient tomes declared, were especially resistant to magic, and particularly to
any form of possession. They were tough and intelligent and strong of will.
Still,
Master Jojonah did not want to get into a goblin body. He could cause a bit of
mischief in one, of course, but nothing substantial, likely. Goblins were always
an unpredictable and traitorous type, so the powries and giants wouldn't even
be caught too much by surprise when one of them suddenly turned against the
group, and a frail goblin body wouldn't do much damage against the likes of a
tough powrie, let alone a giant.
That
left one option for Master Jojonah, who knew he was venturing into wholly
unexplored territory. He had never read of any possession of a giant, and knew
very little about the behemoths, except for their bad temperaments and
tremendous battle prowess.
His
spirit moved cautiously beside the handful of fomorians.
One
in particular, a huge specimen indeed, seemed to be in control of the group,
bullying the others and hurrying them along.
Jojonah
thought out the different tactics he might use in this attempt, which led him
to believe that one of the other behemoths might prove a better target. None of
the group, not even the apparent leader, seemed overly intelligent, but one
stood out at the other end of the spectrum, a big loping creature, wagging its
head and giggling at the sound made by its flapping lips.
Jojonah's
spirit slipped into the monster's subconscious.
Duh?
the giant's will asked.
Give
me your form! Jojonah telepathically
demanded.
Duh?
Your
body! the monk's will commanded. Give
it to me! Get out!
"No!"
the horrified giant roared aloud, and its will locked with Jojonah's,
instinctively trying to expel the monk.
Do
you know who I am? Jojonah explained,
trying to calm the behemoth before its companions could catch on that something
was suddenly very wrong. If you understood, fool, you would not deny me!
Duh?
I
am your god, Jojonah's spirit coaxed.
I am Bestesbulzibar, the demon dactyl, come to aid in the slaughter of the
humans. You are not honored that I chose your body as my vessel?
Duh?
the giant's spirit asked again, but
this time the tone of the telepathic inquisition was markedly different.
Get
out, Jojonah prompted, sensing the
weakness, or I will find another vessel and use it to utterly destroy you!
"Yes,
yes, my master," the giant blubbered aloud.
Silence!
Jojonah demanded.
"Yes,
yes, my master," the giant repeated in an even louder voice.
Jojonah,
partially entrenched now, could hear the world through the behemoth's ears,
could hear the sound of the other giants gathering about this one, asking
questions. He felt it as if it were his own shoulder when the giant leader
pushed the loud and confused behemoth.
The
targeted giant, convinced that this was indeed the demon dactyl, was trying
desperately to comply, though it had little idea how it might vacate its own
body. Jojonah knew he had to work fast, for possession, even upon a willing
vessel, was never an easy task. He fell deeper into the hematite, used its
magic to infiltrate every aspect, every synapse, of the giant's brain. The
giant's id instinctively recoiled and fought back, but without the giant's
conscious will backing it, it had little power.
Jojonah
felt the blow keenly when the biggest giant laid his new form low.
"Shut
yer mouth!" the big brute demanded.
"Duh,
yes, master," Jojonah responded. Truly, the heavy jowls and heavy limbs
proved an awkward experience for the monk as he tried to talk and pull himself
up from the ground.
The
big giant hit him again and he lowered his head submissively. "I be
quiet," he said softly.
That
seemed to mollify the leader for the time being, and the group moved along,
back into their place in the formation, oblivious to the fact that they had
picked up an extra spirit in the process.
The
dozen monks on each side of the valley stood in a line, hands joined, the
fourth and tenth of each group holding a graphite, and Brother Francis, in a
concession made by Jojonah to quiet the man's outrage, holding a small diamond.
Francis was the guide-post to both groups, the one who would select the time.
The monks had to strike hard and unerringly; any retaliation from the monsters
could cost them dearly.
Francis
let the front rim of the goblin semicircle pass below him. The key to victory,
they had all agreed, was to destroy the powries quickly and to hurt the giants
enough to steal their heart for the fight. With the leaders eliminated, the
reasoning went, the cowardly goblins would show little desire for any battle.
Francis
was the only one in his line with his eyes open, the rest falling into the
magic of the two graphites. He saw the goblins passing, some less than twenty
yards away, and he could make out the towering silhouettes of a handful of
giants. Francis took a deep breath and called forth the power of the diamond,
flashing a brief signal to waiting Brother Braumin across the way.
"Now,
brethren," Francis whispered. "It is time." And then Francis,
too, fell into the communal magic, transferring his energy through the line to
the graphites.
Brother
Braumin's words to his group were nearly identical.
A
split second later the first thundering bolt erupted from the hand of the
fourth monk in Francis' line, followed by a blast from across the way, and then
from the tenth in Francis' line, and then again from across the way. Back and
forth the lightning barrage went, each monk in sequence loosing his energy into
the combined pool of power of his respective line. Many of the younger monks
could not even use such stones on their own, but in their mental joining with
Francis and Braumin and the older students, their energy was tapped, each in
turn.
The
whole of the valley trembled with the thunderous report; each successive
searing flash revealed fewer monsters scrambling about.
In
the center of the enemy formation, powries scrambled and were thrown down
repeatedly, staggered and jolted. The giants, larger targets by far, took even
more hits, but their great forms withstood the assault much better, and four of
the five were still standing after the first complete volley, with only one
taken down—and
that one by a falling tree, not by a direct hit of magical lightning.
The
largest of the giant group, ignoring its trapped and screaming companion,
pointed up the northern slope and called for a boulder retaliation. Its intent
and its expression changed quickly, though, when the giant beside it lifted a
huge rock high into the air and then smashed it down upon its head.
Master
Jojonah felt the sudden protests of the possessed giant's true spirit. I
kill him and we be leader! he telepathically improvised, and that calmed
the stupid giant considerably. Still, for all the giant's efforts to remain in
the background and let what it believed to be the dactyl control its corporeal
form, it simply didn't know how to let go. Thus, the giant was giggling louder
than ever as Jojonah instructed the arms to hit the giant leader again and
again, finally beating the dazed creature to the ground.
The
two remaining giants howled and moved to restrain him.
Jojonah
tucked the boulder into his chest, then flung it out into the face of the
nearest attacker, staggering the giant. The other hit him with a flying tackle,
though, the pair squashing one of the few remaining powries as they tumbled to
the ground.
Hey,
the possessed giant's spirit
protested, and Jojonah sensed that the dim-witted creature was finally catching
on. Hey!
The
giant's will took up the struggle for dominance anew, attacking Jojonah. And
then the second lightning volley began.
Jojonah
forced the giant form to its feet and ran right in the path of the searing
lightning. Then, as he felt the burning energy blast against his chest, he
relinquished the battered body to its rightful owner and his spirit flew free,
hovering in the empty air to regard the scene.
The
largest giant, blood pouring from its head, somehow managed to stagger back to
its feet—only
to be hit by the next lightning bolt, and then another right after that. The
behemoth tumbled to the ground again, all strength and resilience gone, and
waited for death to take it.
The
lightning continued to roll in, each blast weaker than the previous, as the
monks expended their magical energy. But there would be no significant
retaliation, Master Jojonah recognized, for all that remained of the monstrous
force were less than half of the goblins, a dozen powries, and a single giant,
and all of those were too frightened, too battered, and too surprised to even
think of continuing the fight. Scattered torches marked their flight back to
the west, back out of the valley the way they had come in.
In
their retreat, the monsters made their way past one other silent observer, a
man who had thought to come in for quiet attacks at the rear of the formation.
Any who inadvertently ventured too close to the ranger found death at the end
of a huge sword. And when Andacanavar discovered that one of the giants
remained alive, he moved in on the limping behemoth, hitting it a series of
fierce blows that laid it low before it even realized that the man was there.
When
at last the valley fell silent, Brother Francis led his monks quietly across
the way to rejoin their peers. Then the whole of the group moved back from the
southern ridge, back to the wagons and Master Jojonah, where they quickly
formed up their train and started away, not wanting to be discovered by either
monster or Alpinadoran.
Andacanavar
watched it all with a mixture of hope and confusion.
"So it is true!" the portly man cried, seeing Elbryan and Pony as they walked into the encampment beside the returning archers.
"Belster,
my old friend," the ranger replied. "How good it is to see you faring
well."
"Well
indeed!" Belster declared. "Though we've been a bit short of rations
of late." He patted his ample belly as he spoke. "You will see to
that, I am sure."
Both
Pony and Elbryan chuckled at that remark—ever did Belster O'Comely have his
priorities in order!
"And
where is my other friend?" Belster asked. "The one whose appetite
rivals my own?"
A
cloud passed over Elbryan's face. He turned to Pony, who was even more
distressed.
"But
the reports from the forest spoke of great stone magic," Belster
protested. "Magic such as only the Mad Friar used to hurl. Do not tell me
that he died this very night! Oh, what tragedy!"
"Avelyn
has passed from this life," Elbryan replied somberly. "But not this
night. He died in Aida, when he destroyed the demon dactyl."
"But
the reports from the forest..." Belster stuttered, as though trying to use
logic against the ranger's words.
"The
reports of the fighting were correct, but spoke of Pony," Elbryan
explained, putting his arm across the woman's shoulders. "It was she who
put the stones to their powerful use." He turned to his love and lifted
his other hand to stroke her thick golden mane. "Avelyn taught her
well."
"So
it would seem," Belster remarked.
The
ranger pulled himself away from the woman and struck a determined pose, staring
back at Belster. "And Pony is ready to carry on the work where Avelyn
finished," he declared. "In the bowels of smoky Aida, Avelyn
destroyed the demon dactyl and turned the tide of this war, stealing the
binding force from our enemies. Now it lies before us to finish the task, to
rid our lands of these wicked creatures."
To
all those around, the ranger seemed to grow a bit taller as he spoke, and
Belster O'Comely smiled knowingly. This was the charm of Elbryan, the mystique
of Nightbird. Belster knew that the ranger would inspire them all to new
heights of battle, would guide them as one pointed and focused force, striking
hard at every weakness among their enemy's ranks. Despite the news about
Avelyn, despite his mounting fears about the missing Roger Lockless, it seemed
to Belster that the world got a bit brighter that night.
The
tallies of the victory proved impressive. The forest was littered with the
bodies of dead goblins and powries, and several giants. Six men had been
wounded, one gravely, and three others were missing and presumed dead. Those
who had carried in the worst of the wounded did not expect the man to live
through the night—indeed, they had only carried him back that he might say
his farewells to his family and be properly buried.
Pony
went to him with the hematite, working tirelessly hour after hour, willingly
sacrificing every ounce of her own energy.
"She
will save him," Belster announced to Elbryan a short time later, when he
and Tomas Gingerwart found the ranger as he tended to Symphony, wiping the
horse down and cleaning the hooves. "She will," the former innkeeper
repeated over and over, obviously trying to convince himself.
"Shamus
Tucker is a good man," Tomas added. "He does not deserve such a
fate."
All
the while he was speaking, Elbryan noted, Tomas looked directly at him, almost
accusingly. It seemed to Elbryan that Tomas considered Pony's work with the
wounded man to be some kind of a test.
"Pony
will do all that is possible," the ranger answered simply. "She is
strong with the stones, nearly as strong as was Avelyn, but she used most of
her energy in the battle, I fear, and has not much left to give to Shamus
Tucker. When I am done with Symphony, I will go to her to see if I can be of
any assistance."
"You
tend to the horse first?" There was no mistaking the open accusations in
Tomas Gingerwart's tone.
"I
do as Pony instructed me," the ranger replied calmly. "She wished to
start the healing process alone, for in that solitude she might find deeper
levels of concentration, and thus a more intimate bond with the wounded man. I
trust in her judgment, and so should you."
Tomas
cocked his head, regarding the man, and gave a slight and unconvincing nod.
A
nervous Belster cleared his throat and nudged his stubborn companion. "Do
not think us ungrateful—" he started to apologize to Elbryan.
The
ranger's laugh cut him short and he blustered with surprise. He looked to
Tomas, who was obviously angry, thinking he was being mocked.
"How
long have we lived like this?" Elbryan asked Belster. "How many
months have we spent in the forest, fighting and running?"
"Too
many," Belster replied.
"Indeed,"
said the ranger. "And in that time, I have come to understand much. I know
why you are mistrusting, Master Gingerwart," he said bluntly, turning from
Symphony to stand directly before the man. "Before Pony and I arrived,
you were one of the unquestioned leaders of this band."
"Do
you imply that I cannot see the greater good?" Tomas asked. "Do you
believe that I would place my own desire for power above—"
"I
speak the truth," Elbryan interrupted. "That is all."
Tomas
nearly choked on that proclamation.
"You
are fearful now, and so you should be," the ranger went on, turning back
to his horse. "Anytime one in your position of great responsibility senses
a change, even a change that appears to be for the good, he must be wary. The
stakes are too high."
Belster
hid his smile as he studied the change that came over Tomas. The ranger's
simple reasoning, honesty, and straightforward manner were truly disarming.
Tomas' agitation had passed its peak now, with the man visibly relaxing.
"But
understand," Elbryan went on, "that I, and Pony, are not your
enemies, nor even your rivals. We will help out where we may. Our goals, as are
your own, are to rid the land of the dactyl's evil minions, even as we helped
rid the world of the demon itself."
Tomas
nodded, seeming somewhat placated, if a bit confused.
"Will
the man live?" Belster asked.
"Pony
was hopeful," the ranger replied. "Her work with the hematite is
nothing short of miraculous."
"Let
us hope," Tomas added sincerely.
The
ranger finished tending to Symphony soon after, then sought out Pony and the
wounded man. He found them under the shelter of a lean-to, the man sleeping
comfortably, his breathing steady and strong. Pony was asleep, too, lying right
across the man, one hand still holding tight to the soul stone. Elbryan thought
to take the hematite and try to do some healing of his own on Shamus Tucker,
but changed his mind, reasoning that sleep might be the best cure of all.
The
ranger moved Pony slightly, trying to make her more comfortable, and then he
left them. He went back to Symphony, thinking to make his bed there, and to his
relief found Belli'mar Juraviel waiting for him.
"I
led the small group back to Caer Tinella," the elf explained, his voice
grim. "And there found a hundred powries, a like number of goblins, and
several more giants waiting to join in the chase."
"More
giants?" the ranger echoed incredulously, for it was not common for the
behemoths to gather in numbers above a handful. The sheer potential for
devastation of such a force stole Elbryan's breath. "Do you think they
mean to march on Palmaris?" he asked.
Juraviel
shook his head. "More likely they are using the towns as staging areas for
smaller excursions," he reasoned. "But we should keep careful watch
on Caer Tinella. The leader there is a powrie of apparently great renown; even
the giants bow before him, and in all the time I spent hiding in the shadows in
the town, I did not hear a single word of dissent against him, even when
reports began coming in of the disaster in the forest."
"We
haven't stung them so hard, then," the ranger remarked.
"We
have stung them," Juraviel replied, "and that may serve to only make
them more angry. We should watch the south and watch it well. The next force
coming to find your friends will be overwhelming, I am sure."
Elbryan
instinctively glanced to the south, as though expecting a horde of monsters to
be tearing through the trees.
"There
is another matter," Juraviel went on, "concerning a particular
prisoner the powries have taken."
"It
is my understanding that the powries have many prisoners in many towns,"
Elbryan replied.
"This
one may be different," Juraviel explained. "This one knows of your
friends in the forest; indeed, he is highly regarded among them, much as you
were among the people of Dundalis and the other towns of the Timberlands."
On
the edge of the clearing, sheltered by the thick boughs of a pine, Belster
O'Comely watched the ranger curiously. Beside him, Tomas was more animated, and
only the portly innkeeper's constant prodding prevented the man from getting
them both discovered.
Elbryan
was talking, to himself, it appeared, though Belster suspected he might know
the reason. The ranger was looking up into a tree, to an apparently empty
branch, and holding a conversation, though they could not come close to making
out the words.
"Your
friend's a bit of a loon?" Tomas whispered in Belster's ear.
Belster
shook his head resolutely. "All the world should be so crazy," he
replied.
Too
loudly.
Elbryan
turned and cocked his head, and Belster, knowing the game was up, led Tomas
from behind the pine. "Ah, Elbryan," the portly man said. "There
you are. We have been searching all about for you."
"Not
so hard to find," the ranger replied evenly, suspiciously. "I went to
Pony—your
friend is resting well and appears as though he will survive—and then back here
to Symphony."
"To
Symphony and ..." Belster prompted, nodding toward the tree.
The
ranger stood calm and did not answer. He wasn't sure how Tomas might react to
Juraviel, though Belster had seen the elf and several other Touel'alfar during
the time he fought with Elbryan in the north.
"Come
now," Belster went on, "I know Elbryan well, and would not expect him
to be standing alone and talking to himself."
You
should sit with me at Oracle, the ranger thought, and gave a slight chuckle.
"You've
brought a friend, unless I miss my guess," said Belster. "A friend
whose special talents bode well for me and my companions."
Elbryan
motioned for the two men to join him by the tree, and Belli'mar Juraviel,
picking up the cue, hopped from the branch, using his nearly translucent wings
to flutter down to a soft landing beside his ranger friend.
Tomas
Gingerwart nearly jumped out of his boots. "What in all the dark holes in
all the strange world is that?" he bellowed.
"That
is an elf," Belster calmly explained.
"Touel'alfar,"
Elbryan added.
"Belli'mar
Juraviel, at your service," the elf said, bowing low to Tomas.
The
big man only nodded stupidly, wagging his head, wagging his lips.
"Come
now," Belster said to him. "I told you of the elves that fought with
us at Dundalis. I told you of the catapult caravan, where Brother Avelyn nearly
blew himself up, and of the elves who stung our enemies from the trees."
"I...
I... I did not expect..." Tomas stuttered.
Elbryan
looked to Juraviel, who seemed almost bored by the typical reaction.
With
a loud sigh, Tomas managed to steady himself.
"Juraviel
has been to Caer Tinella—" Elbryan began to explain.
"I
would have asked him to do so if he had not," Belster interrupted
anxiously. "We fear for one of our own, Roger Lockless by name. He went
into town this very evening, shortly before the monsters came out after
us."
"Either
their march toward our position began as a search for him, or they have him, it
would seem," Tomas added.
"The
latter," Elbryan informed them. "Juraviel has seen your Roger
Lockless."
"Alive?"
both men asked together, their tone showing true concern.
"Very
much so," the elf replied. "Wounded, but not too badly. I could not
get close; the powries have him under tight and watchful guard."
"Roger
has been a thorn to them since they arrived," Tomas explained.
Belster
then recounted the many tales of Roger's adventures, the thievery, the mocking
jokes left behind, his common practice of having goblins take the blame for his
nighttime raids, and the freeing of Mrs. Kelso.
"You
will need to fill large shoes, Nightbird," Tomas Gingerwart said gravely,
"if you are to replace Roger Lockless."
"Replace
him?" the ranger balked. "You speak as if he is already dead."
"In
the clutches of Kos-kosio Begulne, he may as well be," Tomas replied.
Elbryan
glanced to Juraviel, the two exchanging wry smiles. "We shall see,"
the ranger said.
Belster
nearly hopped for joy, his hopes soaring.
Elbryan
was surprised to find Pony up and waiting for him when he arose the next
morning, the eastern sky just beginning to brighten with the hint of dawn.
"I
would have expected you to sleep the day away after your efforts with the
stones," the ranger said.
"I
would, were this not so important a day," Pony replied.
Elbryan
wore a puzzled expression, but only for a moment as he considered Pony's
stance, her sword belted at her hip. "You wish to learn the
sword-dance," he reasoned.
"As
you agreed," said Pony.
The
ranger's lack of enthusiasm showed clearly. "There are so many matters to
attend to," he explained. "Roger Lockless, an important figure to
these folk, is held prisoner in Caer Tinella, and we have to take a reckoning
of the band, to see who can fight and who cannot."
"So
you do not intend to do your own sword-dance this morning?" Pony asked,
and the ranger knew he was caught by her logic.
"Where
is Juraviel?"
"He
was gone when I awoke," Pony replied. "But is he not gone every
morning, after all?"
"To
his own sword-dance, likely," said the ranger. "And to scout the
area. Many of the Touel'alfar prefer this time of day, just before the
dawn."
"As
do I," said Pony. "A fine time for bi'nelle dasada."
Elbryan
could not hold out against her persistence. "Come along," he said.
"Let us find a place where we might begin."
He
led her through the dark forest and down into a small shallow where the ground
was flat and clear of any large brush.
"I
have seen you fight," he explained, "but I have never really found
the chance or the cause to examine your style. A few simple attack and defense
routines should suffice." He motioned for her to step out into the
clearing to give the demonstration.
Pony
eyed him curiously. "Should we remove our clothes?" she asked coyly.
Elbryan
blew a frustrated sigh. "You intend to keep teasing me?" he asked
helplessly.
"Teasing?"
Pony replied too innocently. "I have seen you at the sword-dance, and—"
"Are
we here to learn or to play?" the ranger said firmly.
"I
was not teasing," Pony retorted in a voice just as determined. "I
only mean to keep you interested as the weeks of this war drag on." She
stepped into the clearing then and drew out her sword, setting herself in a
low crouch.
But
then she was grabbed by the shoulder and turned about, to find Elbryan, his
expression perfectly serious, staring into her eyes.
"It
was not my choice to abstain," he said quietly, seriously. "Nor
yours. It was a decision made necessary by circumstance, and one I tolerate,
but do not enjoy. Not at all. You need not worry about keeping me interested,
my love. All my heart is yours, and yours alone." He bent to her and
kissed her softly, but didn't allow that to melt into something deeper and more
passionate.
"We
will find our time," Pony promised him as they broke the embrace. "A
time and place for me and for you, when we do not need to act for the
betterment of the whole world. A time when you can be Elbryan Wyndon, and not
Nightbird, and when our love can safely bring us children."
They
held the pose for a long while, staring at each other, both taking such great
pleasure and comfort in the other's mere presence. Finally the tip of the sun
came above the eastern rim and broke the trance.
"Show
me," the ranger bade her, stepping back.
Pony
fell back into her crouch, spent a long moment steadying herself, mentally
preparing herself, then went into a routine of attack and defense, her sword
whipping expertly through the air. She had spent years in the King's army
perfecting these maneuvers, and her swordplay now was nothing short of
spectacular.
But
it was typical, Elbryan knew, so indicative of the fighting style common
throughout the land, a style mimicked by goblins and powries. Pony's hips
turned repeatedly as she brought her weight behind each slashing cut, wading
forward and then scampering back in defense.
When
she finished, she turned, her face red from the effort, her smile wide with
pride.
Elbryan
walked up beside her, drawing out Tempest. "Strike that branch," he
bade her, indicating a low limb three feet away.
Pony
settled, then stepped ahead, one, two, sword going high and back, then rushing
forward.
She
stopped in mid-swing as Tempest stabbed past her, sticking deep into the
branch. She had taken a full step before Elbryan had even started the movement,
and yet he had beaten her to the mark easily.
"The
lunge," he explained, holding the pose, his body fully extended, right
arm out straight, left arm turned down behind his trailing shoulder. He
retreated suddenly, settling back into a defensive posture in a mere second.
"Your weaving and slashing maneuvers are excellent, but you must add the
hinge, that sudden, swift stab that no powrie, no opponent, can expect or
deflect;"
In
response, Pony assumed the ranger's stance, balancing herself perfectly, knees
out over her feet, legs angled perpendicular to each other. She stepped out
suddenly with her right leg, left arm dropping, right arm extending, mimicking
Elbryan's move almost perfectly.
The
ranger didn't even try to hide his surprise, or his approval. "You have
been studying me," he said.
"Forever,"
Pony answered, falling back to defensive posture.
"And
you almost got it right," Elbryan remarked, deflating her obvious pride.
"Almost?"
"Your
body led the way," the ranger explained. "And yet it is your sword
which should pull you forward."
Pony
looked down at her blade skeptically. "I do not understand."
"You
will," Elbryan said with a grin. "Now come along. Let us find a
better area where we might properly execute bi'nelle dasada."
They
found a proper clearing soon after, Elbryan going off to the side to prepare
himself, affording Pony some measure of modesty as she undressed. Then they
met on the field with their weapons, the ranger leading the dance, Pony
attuning herself to his every move.
For
a long while Elbryan watched her, gauging her fluidity and grace, marveling at
how easily she picked up the dance. Then he let himself fall into his own
meditative trance, his own routine, let the song of bi'nelle dasada flow
through his body.
For
a short while Pony tried to keep up, but soon she was only watching, awestruck
by the beauty, the interplay of muscle, the continually shifting but always
perfect balance.
When
he finished, he was covered in sweat, as was Pony, the gentle wind tickling
their skin. They stood regarding each other for a long while, and it seemed to
each of them as if they had just achieved a level of intimacy no less than
lovemaking.
Elbryan
reached up and tenderly stroked Pony's cheek. "Every morning," he
said. "But take care that Belli'mar Juraviel does not learn of this."
"You
fear his reaction?"
"I
do not know if he would approve," the ranger admitted. "This is among
the highest rituals of the Touel'alfar, and only they have the right to share
it."
"Juraviel
admitted that you were not n'Touel'alfar," Pony reminded him.
"And
I feel no guilt," the ranger replied, somewhat convincingly. "I will
teach you—I
only wish the decision to be kept mine alone."
"To
protect Juraviel," Pony reasoned.
"Go
and dress," Elbryan said with a smile. "The day will be long and
arduous, I fear."
Pony
walked back to the brush at the side of the field, satisfied with her morning's
work, though truly exhausted. For all these weeks she had desired to begin the
sword-dance, and now that she had completed her first experience with it, she
was surely not disappointed.
Somehow,
the sword-dance felt to her like the training she had received with the magical
stones, a gift, a growth, moving her to her potential, moving her closer to
God.
Once
again, Uncle Mather, I am amazed by the resilience of people pushed into a
desperate situation. As it was in Dundalis, I have found here a group willing
to fight and to die—men and women, young children even, and older folks who
should be spending their days telling stories of their long-past adventures. I
have seen some terrible suffering, and yet have heard little in the way of
complaint—other
than the sounds of stomachs rumbling for lack of food.
And
with the common suffering comes an altruism that is truly heartwarming and
inspiring. As it was with Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk, who gave their lives for
a battle that really wasn't for them to fight, as it was with gallant
Bradwarden, who certainly could have chosen a different path, it is now with
Belster and Tomas, Roger Lockless and all the others.
I
have my fears, though, mostly for an unintentional rivalry that may spring up
between myself and the leaders of this band. When I led the fighters in the
forest back to the refugee encampment after our great victory, I sensed true
tension with Tomas Gingerwart, who, until my arrival, acted as one of the leaders
of the forest band, perhaps the strongest voice of all. A calm conversation
quickly cured that potential ill, for Tomas has been seasoned by years and
experience. As soon as he was assured that he and I both fought for the same
goal—the
benefit of the people under his care—the rivalry was no more.
But
not so, I fear, with another of the band whom I have not yet even met, an
impetuous young fellow named Roger. By Belster's words, Roger is young and
proud, and has ever been insecure in his position among the refugees, even to
the point that he considered Belster and the folk from the northland as
potential rivals. What will he think when he meets Pony and me? How will he
react when he sees the respect afforded us, particularly from those who knew us
in the north, or from those who followed us in the battle in the forest?
In
truth, Uncle Mather, I think it ironic that these displaced folk think of me as
a hero. For when I see their faces, every one, the expressions of men and women
put to the test for perhaps the first time, I see the truest heroism.
Because
that is something that cannot be judged by the quality of training and the
quality of weapons, Uncle Mather. Simply because I was trained by the
Touel'alfar and carry with me weapons of great power, am I any more heroic than
the woman who throws herself between danger and her children, or the farmer who
trades plowshare for sword to defend his community? Am I more heroic because my
chances of winning the battle are greater?
I
think not, for heroism is measured in strength of heart, not strength of arm.
It is a marker of the conscious decisions, the selflessness, the willingness,
to sacrifice everything, in the knowledge that those who follow you will be
better off for your efforts. Heroism is the ultimate act of community, I think,
the sense of belonging to something bigger than one's own mortal coil. It is
rooted in faith: in God, or even in the mere belief that the whole of the
goodly folk is stronger when each individual part cares for the others.
It
is an incredible thing to me, this resilience, this inner strength, this human
spirit. And in admiring it, I realize that we cannot lose this war, that in the
end, even if that end be a thousand years hence, we will triumph. Because they
cannot kill us, Uncle Mather. They cannot kill the resilience. They cannot kill
the inner strength.
They
cannot kill the human spirit.
I
look into the faces of the men and women, the children, too young for such
trials, the aged, too old for such battle, and I know this to be true.
—elbryan wyndon
The terrain became more difficult by noon on the day after the fight in the valley. Master Jojonah tried to keep the spirits of his comrades high, reminding them of the good they had done, of the suffering they had prevented by intervening. But all of the monks were tired from their nighttime trials, particularly concerning the further use of magic, and, given the rough terrain, magic this day would have proven a great help.
One
thing that neither Jojonah nor Brother Francis would compromise on, though,
was the use of the quartz gemstones for scouting. Exhausted as they were, the
monks simply could not afford to let down their guard, not in this wild
region. Master Jojonah did end the ride early, before the sun had set, and
called for his brothers to sleep well and long, to gather their strength that
they might attack the road more vigorously the next day.
"We
would have had the strength to travel much later," Brother Francis
pointedly told the master, as usual, planting himself by Jojonah's side as if
keeping a wary eye on the older man, "had we not engaged in an affair that
was not our own."
"It
seems to me that you enjoyed the rout of the monstrous force as much as any,
brother," the Master responded. "How can you doubt the wisdom of our
actions?"
"I'll
not deny the pleasure I garner in destroying enemies of my God," Brother
Francis replied.
That
high-browed proclamation raised Jojonah's eyebrows.
"Yet,"
Brother Francis went on before the portly monk could reply, "I know what
Father Abbot Markwart dictated."
"And
that is all that matters?"
"Yes."
Master
Jojonah silently groaned over the brother's blind faith, a fault so prevalent
in the Abellican Order these days, a fault that he, too, had been guilty of for
so many years. Master Jojonah, like all the masters and immaculates of
St.-Mere-Abelle, had known that the ship hired to carry the brothers to the
isle of Pimaninicuit would never be allowed to leave the harbor at All Saints
Bay, and that all aboard her would be killed. Like all the others—all except for
Avelyn Desbris—Jojonah had accepted that grim outcome as the lesser of two
evils, for the monks simply could not have allowed any with such knowledge as
the location of Pimaninicuit to sail away. Similarly, Jojonah knew that Brother
Pellimar had been allowed to die of an infection from a wound he had suffered
on the voyage to that island—though hard work by the older monks with a soul
stone certainly could have saved him—because the man could not keep his mouth
shut concerning that all-important voyage. But again, at the time, Pellimar's
demise had seemed to Jojonah the lesser of two evils.
In
reflecting on his own decision, Master Jojonah could not fully blame the
zealous Brother Francis now. "We saved many families last night," he
reminded. "And for that, I cannot be sorry. Our mission has not been
compromised."
"Your
pardon, Master Jojonah," came a call from the side of the wagon.
Both
men turned to see a trio of younger monks, Brother Dellman among them,
cautiously approaching.
"I
have detected a presence in the area," Brother Dellman explained.
"Not a goblin, not a monster at all," the young monk quickly added,
seeing the sudden and frantic reaction. "A man, shadowing our every
move."
Master
Jojonah sat back, not too concerned, and more interested at that moment in
studying the young man who had delivered the news. Brother Dellman was going
out of his way to make himself quite useful of late, was working harder than
any other in the caravan. Jojonah liked the potential he saw there, in the
young man's eyes, in the idealistic attitude.
"A
man?" Brother Francis echoed, seeing that Master Jojonah was making no
move to reply. "Of the Church? Of Palmaris? Of the village?" he
snapped impatiently. Francis, too, had noticed Dellman's work of late, but he
wasn't sure of the young monk's motives. "Who is it, and where has he come
from?"
"Alpinadoran,
obviously," Brother Dellman replied. "A huge man, with long flaxen
hair."
"From
the village, no doubt," Brother Francis said with a huff aimed directly at
the master. "Perhaps you spoke too soon, Master Jojonah," he added
curtly.
"He
is a man," the older monk argued. "Just a man. Probably trying to
find out who we are and why we saved his village. We will send him away and
that will be the end of it."
"And
is he a precursor?" Brother Francis said. "A spy sent to unveil our
weaknesses? Never has Alpinador called itself an ally of the Abellican Church.
Need I remind you of the tragedy at Fuldebarrow?"
"You
need remind me of nothing," Master Jojonah replied sternly, but Brother
Francis' point was well-taken. Fuldebarrow was an Alpinadoran town, larger than
the one from the previous night, wherein the Church, the Abbey of St. Precious
of Palmaris, had tried to establish a mission. All had gone well for nearly a
year, but then, apparently, the Abellican missionaries had said or done
something to offend the Alpinadoran barbarians, probably some insult to the
god-figure of the northern people. None of the monks were ever found—physically at
least. St. Precious had turned to St.-Mere-Abelle for help in the
investigation, and using their magical talents, soul stones to locate the
spirits of the dead, the masters of the larger abbey discovered that the
missionaries had been brutally executed.
But
that incident was nearly a hundred years old, and sending missionaries into any
heathen territory was ever a dangerous course.
"Let
us be rid of this spy efficiently," Brother Francis said, rising to his
feet. "I will—"
"You
will do nothing," Master Jojonah interrupted.
Brother
Francis straightened as if slapped. "It is curious that I was not able to
contact Father Abbot Markwart before the fight at the village," he
remarked, the implications obvious, given his sly look Jojonah's way.
"Distance is supposed to be irrelevant where hematite is concerned."
"Perhaps
you are not as powerful with the stones as you believe," Master Jojonah
said dryly. Both men knew better, though. Both knew that Master Jojonah, who
possessed a small but effective sunstone, the stone of antimagic, had
interfered with Brother Francis' attempt to enlist the Father Abbot against the
notion that they would defend the Alpinadoran village from the monsters.
"What
are we to do with this troublesome shadow, then?" Francis demanded.
"What
indeed?" was all Master Jojonah could answer.
"He
knows of us, and thus he looms as a threat," Brother Francis pressed.
"If he is a spy, as I believe, then he will likely send a powerful force
against us, and letting him live now will not seem so merciful in light of the
dozens of men who will pay for our generosity with their lives." He
paused, and it seemed to Jojonah that he was almost pleased by that prospect,
as if he had just convinced himself that it would be better to let the man
live.
It
was a passing thought for Brother Francis, though. "Or even if he is not a
spy," the fiery monk went on, "he remains a threat. Suppose he is
captured by the powries. Do you doubt that he will divulge information about
us to the monsters in the false hope of mercy?"
Master
Jojonah looked to the three younger monks, all of them wearing startled
expressions at the increasingly heated exchange. "Perhaps it would be
better if you left us now," the master bade them. "And you, Brother
Dellman, well done. Back to the gems with you, the soul stone this time, that
you might watch our uninvited guest more closely."
"Uninvited
and unwanted," Brother Francis said under his breath as the three younger
monks moved away, passing Braumin Herde, who was coming to join Francis and
Jojonah.
"Do
not underestimate this Alpinadoran," Brother Braumin remarked as he
neared. "Were it not for the soul stone, we would never have known he was
shadowing our every move, though even as we speak he is less than fifty yards from
our encampment."
"Spies
are practiced at such tactics," Brother Francis remarked, drawing a sour
expression from both Jojonah and Braumin.
"What
do you believe?" Master Jojonah asked of Braumin.
"He
is from the village, I would guess," the immaculate replied, "though
I place less sinister value on that notion than does my brother."
"Our
mission is too vital for us to let down our guard," Francis argued.
"Indeed
it is," Master Jojonah agreed. He eyed Brother Braumin directly.
"Possess the man," he instructed. "Convince him that he should
be gone, or, if that should fail, use your power to walk his physical body far,
far from here. Let him regain his physical consciousness back in the deep
Timberlands, too exhausted to return anytime soon."
Brother
Braumin bowed and started away, not thrilled by the prospect of possession, but
relieved that Brother Francis did not get his way. He had not journeyed all
these miles to play a role in the murder of a human.
Brother
Braumin went to Dellman first, and bade the man to pass the word that all
activity with quartz should cease, and that Dellman should forgo his searching
with the soul stone— possession was tricky enough without the prospect of
another disembodied spirit floating about! Then Braumin went to his wagon and
prepared himself.
Andacanavar
crouched low in the brush, confident that he was too well concealed for any of
the nearby monks to locate him. Visually, at least, for the ranger had no
experience with magic, other than that of the Touel'alfar, and did not know the
potential of the ring stones.
But
Andacanavar was sensitive to his environment, extremely so, and he did indeed
sense the presence about him, an intangible presence, the feeling that he was
being watched.
How
strong that sensation became when Brother Braumin's spirit moved right up to
the ranger, when Brother Braumin's spirit tried to move right into the man!
Andacanavar
looked all about, eyes darting to every shadow, to every conceivable hiding
place. He knew he was not alone, and yet all of his physical senses showed him
nothing.
Nothing.
The
intrusion grew stronger; the ranger almost cried out, despite his better
judgment. That near outburst surprised him, and led him to the horrifying and
inescapable conclusion that some other will was forcing itself over him.
Andacanavar
had participated in the communal gatherings of the Touel'alfar, the joining of
the entire elven community into a single harmony. That had been a beautiful
thing, a mental sharing, a most intimate experience. But this...
Again
the ranger almost cried out; but he stopped himself, understanding that the
intruding will likely wanted him to yell out and surrender his position.
The
ranger searched inside himself, tried to find something tangible, something
identifiable. He recalled the communal elven song, a hundred voices joined as
one, a hundred spirits blended in harmony. But this...
This
was rape.
The
ranger fell low to the ground, growling softly, fighting back in the only
manner he understood. He put up a wall of sheer rage, a red barrier, denying
all action. Andacanavar was completely in control of his will, on every level.
He used the discipline of bi'nelle dasada, the sword-dance, used in his
years of training in Caer'alfar. And through that grim determination, that
sheer strength of will, the ranger identified his spiritual enemy, located the
intruding will. A picture formed in Andacanavar's mind, a map of his own
thought process, and he mentally placed an enemy marker whenever a trail on
that map was accessed.
The
enemy, the will of Brother Braumin, soon showed clear to the man, and then
suddenly he and the monk were on equal footing, an open battle of wills, with
the advantage of surprise no more. Brother Braumin, disciplined and trained in
the stones, fought well, but the ranger was the stronger by far, and the monk
was soon expelled, and soon in retreat.
Andacanavar
was truly frightened by this strange experience, this unknown magic, but, with
his typical courage, he would not let the opportunity pass. He felt a channel,
a pathway left by the departing spirit, and he sent his thoughts along it,
soaring free of his body.
Soon
he was in the monk encampment, and then in one of the wagons. There sat the
source of the intrusion, a man, a monk of about thirty winters, sitting
cross-legged, deep in meditation.
Without
hesitation, Andacanavar continued along the mental pathway, following the
spirit right back into the monk's body, resuming the battle. Now the
battleground was more difficult, a terrain far more familiar to his enemy, but
the ranger pressed on, focused his will. Only one thought slowed him, and that
only temporarily: if he dominated this body, would it leave his own open to
intrusion?
The
ranger had no way of knowing, and the hesitation almost ended his fight.
But
then, using the same determination that had sustained him through all these
years and all these trials of the unforgiving land of Alpinador, Andacanavar
pressed on tenfold, driving hard into the monk's mind, pushing the monk away
wherever he found him, pushing, pushing, stealing every pathway, every corner,
every hope and every fear.
*
* *
It
was not a good feeling, was too strange and too out of place, and, for the
noble ranger, was simply wrong. Despite any rationalization that he had been
protecting his very soul, or any that reminded him of his duty to his fellow
Alpinadorans, Andacanavar could not rid himself completely of the guilt.
Possessing another's body, whatever the reasons, assaulted the ranger's sense
of right and wrong profoundly.
But
he persevered, and took some comfort in the small and smooth gray stone he held
in his unfamiliar hand. This stone was the conduit, Andacanavar recognized, the
pathway between the spirits, and with it in his possession, both physical and
spiritual, he felt confident that the portal to his own corporeal body was
closed to any others. Acclimating himself to the new coil, he dragged himself
to the back of the wagon, peering out into the encampment, listening carefully
to any passing conversations. He remained there for some time, was greeted by
and returned the salutation of many other monks—and truly the ranger was glad
that the elves had bothered to teach him the language of Honce-the-Bear! Then,
gaining confidence, he dared to exit the wagon, walking openly in the midst of
the foreigners.
He
didn't have a difficult time in determining rank; in this group, it was
apparently based on age, and Andacanavar had always been good at determining a
man's years. Between these impressions and the respectful manner in which
others greeted him, he confirmed his belief that he was in the body of one of
high stature among the monks.
"Master
Jojonah wishes to speak to you," one young man offered and another later
confirmed, but of course Andacanavar had no way of knowing who this mysterious
Master Jojonah might be. So he continued to wander about the encampment,
gathering what information he could find. He soon realized that he was being
followed—not
by any corporeal being, but by the displaced spirit. Again and again the
disembodied spirit tried to get back in, and though Andacanavar repelled the
assaults, the ranger understood that he was growing weary and would not be
able to hold out for long.
He
spotted a much older man then, and guessed him to be the leader of the group,
perhaps the one the others had spoken of. Beside the man, wearing an angry
expression, was another monk of about the same age as the one he had possessed.
"Finished
already?" Master Jojonah asked, coming over to him.
"Yes,
Master Jojonah," Andacanavar answered respectfully, hoping that his tone,
and his guess about the man's identity, were correct.
"And
are we rid of the spy?" the other monk asked sharply.
Andacanavar
resisted the urge to punch the surly man in the face. He stared at the monk
long and hard, purposefully ignoring the question in the hope that the pair
would further elaborate.
"Brother
Braumin?" Master Jojonah prompted. "The Alpinadoran is gone?"
"What
would you have me do?" Andacanavar asked sternly, pointing his ire at the
younger of the two, for it seemed obvious to him that this man and the one he
had possessed were not on good terms.
"What
I would have you do is irrelevant," Brother Francis answered, casting a
telltale sidelong glance at Master Jojonah.
"Since
you have had no time to walk the Alpinadoran far away from here, I assume you
imparted a convincing suggestion that he should depart," Master Jojonah
said calmly.
"Perhaps
we should have invited him in," Andacanavar dared to respond. "He
knows the lay of the land, no doubt, and might have been able to better guide
us." The ranger eyed Brother Francis as he spoke, and recognized a budding
suspicion there, for the man wore an expression now of total surprise and even
of horror.
"I
considered that course," Master Jojonah admitted, defusing his hotheaded
companion's mounting rage. "But we must adhere to the Father Abbot's
decree."
Brother
Francis snorted.
"If
we brought him in, he would ask questions," Master Jojonah went on,
ignoring Francis so completely that Andacanavar recognized that the older monk
was quite used to this young monk's impertinence.
"Questions
we cannot afford to answer," Jojonah continued. "We will pass through
Alpinador quickly, and better not to involve any of the northmen in our quest.
Better not to open any old wounds between our Church and the barbarians."
Andacanavar
didn't press the issue, though he was indeed relieved to learn that this
powerful contingent was not in the northland for any reasons hostile to
Alpinador.
"Go
back and look over our scouting friend," Master Jojonah instructed,
"and see that your suggestion is being followed."
"I
will do it," Brother Francis interrupted.
The
ranger wisely held back his initial reaction, for that reply would have been
too sharp and insistent, even desperate. He had no desire to battle yet another
spirit this day. "I am capable of finishing the task assigned to me,
Master," he said to the man.
The
other monk's expression showed the ranger his slip; that title was reserved, he
realized now, for the older man alone. Brother Francis went from angry to
suspicious to incredulous, staring hard through narrowed eyes at the ranger in
the monk's body. Andacanavar tried to cover his miscue, turning quickly to the
older man, the true master, but he found Jojonah wearing a similar doubting
expression.
"Pray
give me the stone, brother," Master Jojonah said.
Andacanavar
hesitated, considering the implications. Could he get back to his own body
without that stone? Would the master use it to discover the truth of the ruse?
As
though it sensed the ranger's sudden hesitance, the disembodied spirit took
that opportunity to attack once more.
The
ranger knew it was time to leave.
Master
Jojonah and Brother Francis leaped forward to grab the body of faltering
Brother Braumin as his eyes flickered and his legs buckled. Brother Francis
went right for the hematite, pulling it free of the man's hand.
But
Andacanavar's spirit had no trouble locating the ranger's body, or in
reentering. He was up and moving almost immediately, though he wondered where
he might hide from probing spiritual eyes.
Back
in the camp, Brother Braumin steadied himself, then bent over, hands on knees,
gasping for his breath.
"What
happened?" Master Jojonah asked.
"How
did you fail against one who is not even trained—" Brother Francis started
to demand, but Jojonah cut him short with a glare.
"Strong,"
Brother Braumin remarked between gasps. "That one, that Alpinadoran, is
strong of will and quick of thought."
"You
would have to say that," Brother Francis said dryly.
"Go
out yourself with the soul stone," Brother Braumin snapped at him.
"It would do you well to find humility."
"Enough
of this!" Master Jojonah demanded. He lowered his voice as he noticed that
many others were gathering about. "What were you able to learn?" he
asked Braumin.
The
younger monk shrugged. "He learned from me, I fear, not the other way
around."
"Wonderful,"
remarked a sarcastic Francis.
"What
did he learn?" Master Jojonah demanded.
Again
Brother Braumin could only shrug.
"Ready
the teams," Master Jojonah instructed. "We must be far from this
place."
"I
will find the spy," Brother Francis offered.
"We
will search for him together," Master Jojonah corrected. "If this man
defeated Brother Braumin, hold no illusions that you are a match for him."
Brother
Francis fumed, trying to find some retort. He turned away, as if to depart.
"Shall
you join in the search?" Master Jojonah asked bluntly.
"I
am seeing no need for that," came a resonating voice, and all the monks
turned as one to see the giant Alpinadoran striding confidently into their
camp, crossing through the ring of wagons without so much as a sidelong glance
at those monks standing guard. "I am in no mood for any more of this
spiritual dueling this day. Let us speak openly and plainly, as men."
Master
Jojonah exchanged incredulous looks with Brother Francis, but when they turned
to Brother Braumin, the only one who had made any true contact with the ranger,
they found that he was not surprised. Nor did he look overly pleased.
"He
is a man of honor," Master Jojonah said with some confidence. "Would
you agree?"
Brother
Braumin was too preoccupied to reply. He had locked stares with the
Alpinadoran, the two sharing an almost primal hatred. They had battled
intimately, seen each other's soul bared in hatred. For Andacanavar, this man
had tried to violate him; for Brother Braumin, this man had proven himself the
stronger in a way so personal that it brought him shame.
So
they stood and stared at each other, and all the others around them, even
Brother Francis, let the moment linger, recognizing the need for it.
Then
Brother Braumin moved past his turmoil, reminding himself that the man, after
all, had only been defending himself. Gradually, the monk's visage softened and
he gave a slight nod. "My attempt to convince you seemed the safer
way," he apologized. "For you most of all."
"I'd
be finding a horde of giants less threatening than what you tried to do to
me," Andacanavar replied, but he, too, gave a nod, a forgiving gesture,
and turned his attention to Master Jojonah.
"My
name is Andacanavar," he said. "And my land is beneath your boots.
Many are my titles, but for your own purposes, you might be thinking of me as
the protector of Alpinador."
"A
haughty title," Brother Francis remarked.
The
ranger let the comment pass. He found it curious that though the other young
monk was the one who had tried to steal his body, he liked that man, and
certainly respected him, more than this one. "I am no spy," he began,
"for there is nothing sinister in my motives. I followed you from the
valley for I have seen your strength and cannot be letting you walk the land
free. Such power as you have shown could rain disaster on my people."
"We
are not enemies of Alpinador," Master Jojonah replied.
"So
I have learned," said Andacanavar. "And so I have come to you openly,
walking into your camp as a friend, perhaps an ally, with my weapon on my
back."
"We
have asked for no help," Brother Francis remarked in a stern tone, drawing
a glare from Master Jojonah.
"I
am Master Jojonah," the older monk quickly interjected, wanting to shut up
the troublesome Francis, "of St.-Mere-Abelle."
"Your
home is known to me," the ranger said. "A great fortress, by all the
tales."
"The
tales do not lie," Brother Francis said grimly. "And each of us here
is well-versed in the arts martial."
"As
you say," the ranger conceded, again turning his focus to Master Jojonah,
who seemed by far the more reasonable man. "You know I came among you,
using his body," he explained. "And in so doing, I learned that you
mean to pass right through my land. I might be helping you on that matter. None
knows the way better than Andacanavar."
"Andacanavar
the humble?" Brother Francis remarked. "Do you name that as one of
your titles?"
"You
know that you are offering insults a bit too freely," the ranger replied.
"Perhaps you should be careful, else those lips get ripped off."
Too
proud to stand for such a threat, Brother Francis steeled his gaze and took a
bold stride forward.
The
ranger exploded into motion, too quickly for any of the monks to even cry out.
He pulled a small axe from his belt, then lurched to the side so he could throw
it in an underhand motion.
The
axe spun end over end, flying right between the legs of startled Brother
Francis, then soared on, embedding itself deep into the sideboard of a wagon
some twenty feet behind Francis.
The
stunned monk, all the monks, turned about to regard the throw, then turned back
to Andacanavar, every one of them wearing an expression of greater respect.
"I
might have thrown it a bit higher," the ranger said with a wink. "And
then your voice'd be sounding a bit higher."
Brother
Francis did well to prevent himself from trembling, both from rage and fear.
His face was white, though, revealing his true emotions.
"Move
back, Brother Francis," Master Jojonah scolded in no uncertain terms.
Francis
looked at the older man, matched Andacanavar's sly grin with an angry stare.
Then he did move back in place, feigning a frustrated rage, though in truth—and everyone
knew it—he was glad that Master Jojonah had intervened.
"You
see, I have also had a bit of training in what you call the arts martial,"
the ranger explained. "But I am hoping to keep my skills for powries and
giants and the like. Your Church and my people have not been friends—and I am
seeing no reason to change that now—but if your enemies are the powries, then
name Andacanavar among your allies. If you want my help, then know I will get
you through my land along the safest and swiftest path. If you do not want my
help, then say it now and I leave you." He gave Brother Braumin a sly
look, and chuckled as he finished, "And know that I can walk myself far,
far away, and am in need of no help from the lot of you."
The
young monk blushed deeply.
Master
Jojonah looked to his two companions and, predictably, found two different
silent messages coming back to him. He turned to the huge stranger, knowing
that ultimately this was his own decision to make. "I am not at liberty to
tell you our destination," he explained.
"Who's
asking?" replied a grinning Andacanavar. "You are going north and
west, and intending to leave my land. If you're planning to hold that course, I
can show you the swiftest and easiest way."
"And
if we do not mean to hold that course?" Brother Francis interjected. He
glared at Master Jojonah as he spoke, making clear his position concerning the
stranger.
"Oh,
but you do," the ranger replied, holding firm his grin. "You are
heading for the Barbacan, for Mount Aida, by my guess."
Supremely
disciplined, none of the three monks standing before the ranger offered any
hint concerning his blunt assumption, but the openmouthed expressions worn by
many of the younger monks surely confirmed Andacanavar's suspicions.
"That
is only your guess?" Master Jojonah asked calmly, figuring the man must
have heard as much while in Brother Braumin's body. Andacanavar had just
become a more dangerous person, the old monk realized, and lamented, for he
feared that he might have to let Brother Francis have his way and kill this
noble man. "And just a guess?"
"My
reasoning," Andacanavar clarified. "If you are meaning to strike at
the backs of the monsters that are attacking your homeland, then you are too
far to the north and east. You should have gone back to the west before you
ever set foot in Alpinador. But you would not have made such a mistake, not
with your magics as guide. And so you are heading for the Barbacan, it seems
plain to me. You want to know about the explosion there, about the great cloud
of gray smoke that covered the land for more than a week and even put some of
its ash on my homeland."
Jojonah's
fears fast shifted to curiosity. "Then there truly was an explosion?"
he asked bluntly, despite his fears of giving away too much information.
Beside
him, Brother Francis nearly choked.
"Oh,
but the biggest explosion the world has known since I have been in it!"
the ranger confirmed. "Shook the ground under my feet, though I was
standing hundreds of miles away. And a mountain of clouds rolled up, debris
from a whole mountain blown into the sky."
Master
Jojonah digested the confirmation, then found himself in a truly terrible
dilemma. Father Abbot Markwart's edicts on this matter were clear enough, but
Jojonah knew in his heart that this man was no enemy, and might indeed prove to
be of great assistance. The master looked around at his entire entourage—for all the
monks were gathered about by that time—finally settling his gaze on Brother
Francis, who, of course, would likely prove the most troublesome.
"I
have seen into his heart," Brother Braumin put in after a long,
uncomfortable silence.
"Too
much so for my own liking," the ranger remarked dryly.
"And
for my own," the monk replied, managing a weak smile. He turned back to
Jojonah and, putting aside his inner turmoil with the man, a conflict he knew
to be illogical, said, "Let him lead us through Alpinador."
"He
knows too much!" Brother Francis argued.
"More
than we know!" Brother Braumin shot back.
"The
Father Abbot—"
Brother Francis began in threatening tones.
"The
Father Abbot could not have foreseen this," Brother Braumin was quick to
interrupt. "A good man is Andacanavar, a powerful ally, and one who knows
the way. A way we could easily lose in this jagged terrain," he added,
speaking loudly so all could hear. "One errant turn in a mountain pass
could defeat us, or cost us a week of backtracking."
Brother
Francis started to respond, but Master Jojonah held up his hand, indicating he
had heard enough. The monk, feeling very old indeed, rubbed his hands over his
face, then looked at his two companions, then at the ranger. "Dine with
us, Andacanavar of Alpinador," he bade the man. "I'll not confirm our
destination, but will tell you that we must indeed be out of your land to the
north and west, and as soon as is possible."
"A
week of hard driving," the ranger said.
Master
Jojonah nodded, though he knew that with their magic they could cut that time
by more than half.
By
noon of the next day, Master Jojonah no longer held any doubts about the wisdom
of letting Andacanavar lead the caravan. The road remained rough, for western
Alpinador was an unforgiving place, a land of ice-broken stones and jagged
mountains, but the ranger knew his way well, knew every trail and every
obstacle. The monks, after their long rest, eased the trails with magic, lightening
wagons with levitational malachite, clearing debris from the road with strokes
of lightning, and of course they continued to bring in the wild animals.
It
took Andacanavar a while to catch on to this subtle trick. At first he wondered
what trickery the monks were using to hunt the game, but when the caravan left
a pair of deer behind them on the trail, both animals nearly dead from
exhaustion, the ranger was truly perplexed—and far from happy. He went back to
the deer and examined them.
"What
do you call this?" he asked of Brother Braumin when the monk, on Jojonah's
instructions, joined the curious ranger on the trail.
"We
use the energy of the wild animals," the monk explained honestly.
"Like food for our horses."
"And
then you leave them to die?" the ranger asked.
Brother
Braumin shrugged helplessly. "What are we to do?"
The
ranger gave a great sigh, trying hard to sublimate his anger. He pulled a large
and thick knife from a sheath on the back of his belt and methodically and
efficiently killed both deer, then knelt in the dirt and offered a prayer for
their spirits.
"Take
that one," he instructed Brother Braumin, while he lifted the larger
animal by the hooves and slung it over his shoulder.
The
two caught up to the wagons soon after, Andacanavar dropping his carcass right
in front of Jojonah's team. The master called for a halt and went out to the
man.
"You
take their life energy and leave them to die?" the ranger accused.
"An
unpleasant necessity," Master Jojonah admitted.
"Not
so necessary," the ranger came back. "If you have to kill them, then
use them, all of them, else you are insulting the animal."
"We
are hardly huntsmen," Master Jojonah replied. He gave a sidelong glance as
Brother Francis moved up to join them.
"I
will show you how to skin and dress them," Andacanavar offered.
"We
have no time for that!" Brother Francis protested.
Master
Jojonah bit his lip, not knowing how to proceed. He wanted to berate Francis—they could not
afford to lose this very valuable guide—but feared that the damage was already
done.
"Either
you find the time to do it or you kill no more of my animals," the ranger
replied.
"These
are your animals?" asked a doubtful Brother Francis.
"You
are on my land, that much I told you," the ranger replied. "And so I
am claiming guardianship on the animals." He turned to face Jojonah
squarely. "Now, I'll not stop you from hunting; I have done as much
myself. But if you are to take the animal, you cannot let it waste to death on
the road. That's an insult, and cruel by any measure of decency."
"Lectured
on cruelty by a barbarian," Brother Francis remarked with a snort.
"If
you need the lesson, take it where you find it," Andacanavar replied
without missing a beat.
"We
need no food, or skins," Master Jojonah said calmly. "But the energy
is vital to our team. If these horses cannot get us to our destination and back
again, then we are stranded."
"And
is it necessary for you to take so much from each animal that it hasn't enough
left to live?" the ranger asked.
"How
are we to know when to stop?"
"Suppose
I can show your men that?"
Master
Jojonah smiled widely. He had never liked this killing of innocent animals.
"My friend, Andacanavar," he said, "if you could instruct us on
how we might complete our most vital mission without leaving a single animal on
the trail dead behind us, I would be forever grateful."
"So
would more than a few deer," the ranger replied. "And as for these
you have already killed, know that you will be eating well tonight, and you
will find a use for the skins when you get more to the north, for even in high
summer the night wind blows a bit chill up there."
Andacanavar
then showed the monks how to skin and dress the deer carcasses. A short while
later the caravan was on the move again, and several more deer were brought in.
The ranger monitored each animal carefully as the monks transferred the
energy, and as soon as he saw the creature going into distress, he called a
halt to the process, and then the animal, weary but very much alive, was
allowed to wander back into the forest.
Only
Brother Francis showed any signs of dissent, and it seemed to Master Jojonah
and Brother Braumin that even pouting Francis was a bit relieved to be rid of
the unpleasant practice.
"A
fine trick if you do it right," Andacanavar said to Master Jojonah as they
rode along. "But finer it would be if you brought in a moose or two. That
would get your horses running!"
"A
moose?"
"Big
deer," the ranger explained with a wry smile.
"We
have brought in some big—" Master Jojonah stared to say, but Andacanavar cut
him short.
"Bigger,"
he said, and hopped down from the wagon and ran off into the brush.
"He
is an active old man," Brother Braumin remarked.
The
ranger returned to the wagons nearly an hour later. "You tell your
spirit-walking friends to go and look down that way," he said, indicating
a shallow dell west of the trail. "Tell them to look for something big and
dark, with a rack of antlers twice as wide as a man is tall."
Both
Jojonah and Braumin gave doubtful looks.
"Just
you tell them," Andacanavar insisted. "Then you will see if I am
lying."
A
short while later, when a huge bull moose wandered onto the trail under the
control of the soul stones, both monks offered silent apologies for their
doubts.
And
how the horses ran when they left the tired moose by the side of the road!
By
day they rode, long and hard, and by night all of the monks gathered about
their fires, listening to the ranger's tales of the north. Andacanavar's jovial
manner and spirited stories won them all over, even Brother Francis, who did
not even bother to carry through with his threat to contact the Father Abbot to
lodge a complaint.
And
so it was on the fourth day of their travels together, when the ranger
announced that he would leave as they set their camp, that a pall came over the
caravan.
"Bah,
you should not be so despairing," Andacanavar told them. "I will show
you a road to the Barba—" He stopped and caught himself, giving a wry grin.
"If that is where you are going, I mean," he added slyly.
"I
cannot confirm," Master Jojonah put in, and he, too, was grinning. He had
full confidence in Andacanavar now, had seen the man's heart and knew it to be
akin to his beliefs. Of course the man knew where the monks were heading—where else
would someone go this far into the Wilderlands?
"A
road straight and sure," the ranger went on, "and, if you are not
finding any powries or giants blocking the way, you will get there, and soon
enough."
"By
my maps, our destination is many, many miles from Alpinador's western border,"
Brother Francis remarked, his tone toward the ranger more respectful now.
"We have a long road ahead of us, I fear."
Andacanavar
held out his hand, and Brother Francis turned over the parchment, a map of the
immediate region. The ranger lifted an eyebrow as he considered it, for it was
quite detailed and fairly accurate.
"Your
maps are telling you true," Andacanavar agreed. "But we put
Alpinador's western border behind us before we set camp the night before the
last. So take heart, my friends, for you are almost there—not that I
would be taking heart if I was heading into the place where the demon is said
to roost!" He bit the tip of one finger then, and with his blood drew
another line on the map, the road to the Barbacan, ending it with an X to mark
their present location.
He
handed the map back to Francis, and with that, and a final bow, Andacanavar
left them, running into the underbrush, laughing all the while.
"Were
it not for his stature, I'd think him an elf," Brother Braumin remarked.
"If there were such a creature as an elf."
Andacanavar's
last words concerning their present position came as a relief to offset the
monks' sadness at losing their most excellent guide. They ate their evening
meal—wonderful
venison again—said evening prayers and slept well, then were on the road again,
anxiously, before the next dawn.
The
land remained rugged—less mountainous, but more heavily forested. Still, using
the blood line on the map as a guide, the monks soon came upon a wide and clear
road, not just a narrow trail. All wagons stopped there, with the caravan's
leaders going out to investigate.
"This
swath was cut by the monstrous army on their march to the south," Master
Jojonah reasoned.
"Then
backtracking it should get us right to the source of the monstrous army,"
said Brother Braumin.
"A
dangerous course," remarked Brother Francis, looking all about. "We
are in the open."
"But
a swift course, no doubt," Brother Braumin replied.
Master
Jojonah thought about it for only a short while, considering most of all that
Andacanavar had put them on this trail. "Have the spirit scouts out far
and wide," he instructed. "Both our wagons and our horses could use
the reprieve of a smooth road."
Brother
Francis put every quartz and hematite to use, sending monks out far and wide
for fear that they were riding right into an enemy encampment.
Two
days later they had still not encountered a single monster, though they had put
a hundred miles and more behind them. Now before them they saw the towering
mountains that ringed the Barbacan, and all the monks feared they would have a
terrible time indeed in getting the wagons through those barriers.
But
the road continued on, to the base of the mountains, and right up into the
mountains, climbing through a wide pass. Setting a camp in that place was more
than a bit disturbing, but again no monsters came forward to challenge them,
and those monks with the quartz stones discovered that there weren't many wild
creatures about, either. The land seemed strangely dead, and eerily silent. By
mid-morning of the next day the end of the mountains was in sight, with only a
single ridge blocking their view beyond. Master Jojonah called for a halt, then
motioned for Brothers Braumin and Francis to accompany him.
"We
should go in spiritually," Brother Francis noted.
It
was a good suggestion, a prudent suggestion, but Master Jojonah shook his head
anyway. He had a feeling that what lay ahead was incredibly important, and he
felt that it should be viewed physically, both body and soul. He motioned the
pair to his side, asked the other immaculates to join them, and started the
climb.
The
younger monks followed the group, not so far behind.
When
Master Jojonah crossed the last barrier, coming to a point where he could view
the wide valley that was the heart of the Barbacan, his spirits both sagged
and soared. The monks filtered away from each other, hardly noticing each
other's movements, stunned by the scene, for the devastation looming before
them was total. Where once had stood a forest, there was now a field of gray
ash littered with charred logs. All the valley was gray and barren, and the
air hung thick with the reek of sulfur. It seemed to them all a preview of the
end of the world, or a premature glimpse of the place their Church defined as
hell. Most shaken of all were the younger monks as they, too, came over the
ridge, several crying out in despair.
But
when that initial despair passed into a grim acceptance, other, more positive,
thoughts found their way into every mind. Could anything have survived this
blast? Perhaps their suspicions, their hopes, of a "beheaded"
monstrous army were true, for if, as believed, the demon dactyl had called the
Barbacan its home, if the demon dactyl had been here at the time of the
explosion, then the demon dactyl was surely gone.
Even
Brother Francis was too stunned to speak for a long, long time. Gradually he
made his way back to Master Jojonah's side.
"Can
we take this scene of devastation as proof enough that the demon dactyl is
destroyed?" the master asked.
Francis
looked down into the ash-filled bowl. It wasn't hard to discern the source of
the explosion: a flat-topped mountain standing alone in the middle of the ash
field, a thin line of smoke still wisping from its top. "I do not believe
this to be a natural occurrence," Francis said.
"There
have been volcanoes before," Master Jojonah countered.
"But
at this critical time?" Brother Francis asked doubtfully. "Dare we
hope that a volcano erupted at the precise moment we most needed its help, and
at the precise location of the enemy leader?"
"You
doubt divine intervention?" Master Jojonah asked. He sounded serious,
though he, too, held great doubts. There were fanatics in the Order who seemed
to expect God's thumb to slip down from the heavens and squash the opponents of
the Church at every turn; Jojonah had heard one young monk standing at the seawall
of St.-Mere-Abelle during the powrie invasion invoking God repeatedly,
literally calling out for that punishing thumb. Master Jojonah also believed in
the power of God, but he thought of it as an analogy for the power of good. He
believed that good would win out in the end of every great struggle, because,
by its very nature, good was a stronger force than evil. He suspected that
Francis held similar feelings on the subject, for, despite his other shortcomings,
the man was a thinker, a bit of an intellectual, who always edged his faith
with logic.
Francis
eyed him slyly now. "God was on our side," he said. "In our
hearts and in the strength that guided our weapons, and surely in the magic
that crushed our enemies. But this ..." he said, opening his arms
dramatically as he scanned the devastated valley. "This may have been the
work of God, but it was precipitated by the hand of a godly man, or was the result
of the demon dactyl's overextending its call to the earth magic."
"Likely
the latter," Master Jojonah replied, though he hoped differently, hoped
that Brother Avelyn had played a part in this.
Brother
Braumin, coming to join the pair, heard the last few comments and now stared
long and hard at Brother Francis, surprised by the man's reaction. He turned
his perplexed expression to Master Jojonah, and his superior only smiled and
nodded, for he was not quite as surprised. At that moment Master Jojonah discovered
Brother Francis' redeeming qualities and found that there might indeed be
something about the man that he liked. He paused for a bit to silently wonder
if Brother Francis might be steered in a new direction.
"Whatever
happened here came from that mountain," Brother Francis reasoned.
"Mount Aida, by name."
The
other two looked at him curiously.
"That
is what the Alpinadoran named it," Brother Francis explained. "And
indeed, that name corresponds to many old maps that I studied. Aida, the lone mountain
within the ring, the lair of the demon."
"It
will not be easy to get to it," Brother Braumin remarked.
"Could
we have expected differently?" Brother Francis asked with a laugh.
Again
the two others only looked to each other and shrugged. It seemed to them as if
this explosion might have rid the world of the dactyl demon, and might have rid
Brother Francis of a few internal demons, as well.
They
let it go at that, though, taking Francis' good mood as a blessing. They could
only hope it would endure.
The
journey across the ash field was not as difficult as they had feared, for
though the gray stuff had settled thick in many places, it had been blown clear
in many others. As they neared the mountain, the lead driver made a horrible
discovery.
His
cry brought the monks running, to find several bodies encased in ash, lying
along the side of the twisting trail.
"Powries,"
Brother Braumin explained, going over to examine them. "And a
goblin."
"And
that one is ... was, a giant," said another monk, pointing ahead on the
trail to a huge leg protruding from a berm of ash.
"So
our enemies were here," Master Jojonah noted.
"Were,"
Brother Francis emphasized.
They
went on to the very base of the mountain and ringed the wagons there. Master
Jojonah instructed half of them to set the camp, the other half to begin a
thorough search of the area, looking particularly for any way in, or up, the
mountain. With torches and a single diamond in hand, a group of monks entered
one winding cave that very night, snaking their way into Aida. They returned in
less than an hour with news that the tunnel led to a dead end, the way blocked
by a solid wall of stone.
"No
doubt it traveled farther before the explosion," Brother Dellman told
Master Jojonah.
"Let
us hope that not all of the tunnels have so collapsed," Jojonah replied,
trying to sound hopeful. In looking at blasted Aida, though, the monk had to
temper his optimism.
Brother
Dellman led his troupe into a second tunnel, and when that one again abruptly
ended, the young monk, undaunted, headed into a third.
"He
has promise," Brother Braumin remarked to Jojonah as Dellman started off
that third time.
"He
has heart," Master Jojonah agreed.
"And
faith," said the other. "Great faith, else he would not attack his
tasks with such determination."
"Is
there any more determined than Brother Francis?" Master Jojonah reminded.
Both
men looked over to Francis, who was busy marking some parchments, detailing the
nuances of the Barbacan.
"Brother
Francis, too, has faith," Brother Braumin decided. "He just follows
it down errant paths. But perhaps he will find a truer way; it seems as though
his time with the honorable Alpinadoran did him well."
Master
Jojonah offered no reply, just sat staring at Francis. It did indeed seem as if
some of Andacanavar's jovial spirit had rubbed off on the man, but Jojonah
wasn't counting Francis as a convert just yet.
"Where
do we search next if we find no tunnels open into the mountain's heart?"
Brother Braumin asked. "And if the flat top yields no valuable information?"
"Then
we search with the hematite," the master replied.
"I
had thought we would do that first."
Master
Jojonah nodded, expecting as much, for he, too, had thought that the initial
search of Aida would be more easily accomplished if the monks used the soul
stones. He had changed his mind and their course, considering Brother Braumin's
experience with Andacanavar. Jojonah couldn't be certain that the demon
dactyl's spirit wasn't lingering about this place, and if the unmagical
Alpinadoran could use such a spiritual connection to find his way into their
midst, what might the demon dactyl do?
"Let
us use our wits and our bodies," the old monk replied to Braumin. "If
they do not suffice, then we will utilize the soul stones."
The
younger man, trusting fully in Master Jojonah, was satisfied with that.
"When will Brother Francis make contact with Father Abbot?" he asked.
"I
bade him to wait until the morning," Master Jojonah explained. "I do
not think it prudent to open channels to one's spirit in this forsaken
place."
That
explained much to Brother Braumin, particularly concerning Francis' fine mood,
and he let the matter drop. He put a hand on Jojonah's large shoulder, then
walked off, for there was much work to be done.
After
three hours the monks at camp began to grow nervous about Brother Dellman and
the missing party. After four, Master Jojonah considered it might be time to
put the hematites to use. He was about to give in and do just that when the
monks scouting just west of the camp shouted that they saw torchlight.
Master
Jojonah saw it soon after, a single monk exiting the tunnel in the foothills of
Aida, moving with all speed back to the camp.
"Brother
Dellman," Braumin explained to Jojonah as the man came closer, running
full speed down the slope, nearly losing his balance and pitching headlong more
than once.
"Gather
together, and ready for enemies!" Master Jojonah called.
The
monks went into a practiced drill, handing off the appropriate stones to the
appropriate wielders. Others strapped on weapons, or went to secure the
horses.
Brother
Dellman stumbled into camp, gasping, trying to catch his breath.
"Where
are the others?" Master Jojonah asked him immediately.
"Still...
inside," Dellman replied.
"Alive?"
The
young monk straightened and tilted his head back, gulping air, calming himself.
When he looked back at Jojonah, the master's fears lessened considerably.
"Alive, yes," he said calmly. "No danger in there, unless the
rubble shifts again."
"Then
why are you out here?" Jojonah asked. "And why are you so
agitated?"
"We
found something ... someone," Brother Dellman replied. "A man, or
half a man, and half horse."
"A
centaur?" asked Brother Braumin.
Brother
Dellman shrugged, never having heard the term before.
"A
centaur wears the body of a man, torso, shoulders, arms and head," Brother
Francis explained. "But from the waist down it wears the coil of a horse,
four legs and all."
"A
centaur," Brother Dellman agreed. "He was in the cave when the
mountain fell in on him. Tons and tons of stone."
"You
dug him out?" asked Master Jojonah.
"We
know not where to begin," Brother Dellman replied.
"Poor
creature," Brother Braumin remarked.
"Then
leave him to his grave," Brother Francis said callously, seeming quite
like the old Francis again. Neither Braumin nor Jojonah missed that fact, and
they offered each other a resigned shrug.
"But
Brother Francis," Brother Dellman protested, "he is not dead!"
"But
you said—"
Master Jojonah started to reason.
"Tons,"
Brother Dellman finished for him. "Oh, he should be dead. He should!
Nothing could have survived that crush. And surely, he looks as if he should be
dead, all withered and broken. Yet the creature lives. He opened his eyes and
begged me to kill him!"
The
three older monks stood openmouthed, while the younger men about them whispered
excitedly.
"And
did you?" Master Jojonah asked at length.
"I
could not," Brother Dellman replied, seeming horrified at the very
thought. "His pain must be great, I do not doubt, but I could not end his
life."
"God
does not give us more than we can bear," Brother Francis recited.
Master
Jojonah gave him a sour, sidelong glance. At times that old line sounded like
nothing more than an excuse Church leaders used on common folk, the peasants
wallowing in poverty while those same leaders lived in luxury.
But
that was an argument for another day, Jojonah realized, and so he made no
comment on it. "You did well, and right," he said to Dellman.
"The others remained with this centaur?"
"Bradwarden,"
Brother Dellman replied.
"What?"
"Bradwarden,"
the monk repeated. "That is his—the centaur's— name. I left the others
with him, offering what meager comfort they might."
"Let
us go and see what we might do," Master Jojonah said. To Brother Braumin,
he instructed, "Gather all stones, except duplicates, and take them with
us. Brother Francis," he called loudly, so that all about heard clearly,
"you will hold the defense of the wagons."
Now
it was Francis' turn to wear the sour look, but Master Jojonah wasn't paying
him any heed, the old monk already motioning Brother Dellman back the way he
had come, back to see this Bradwarden creature, this somehow immortal being.
The
path was not long, and Dellman set a swift pace, so that Jojonah was huffing
and puffing by the time they came in sight of the other torches. Jojonah walked
by the younger monks reverently, to kneel before the twisted, emaciated body.
"You
should be dead," Master Jojonah said matter-of-factly, doing well to hide
his horror and his revulsion. Only the creature's human torso and the front
half of its equine part was exposed, with the rest of it buried, squashed,
under a huge slab of rock that climbed right up out of the low corridor and
into the collapsed mountain. The creature was bent weirdly, back in on itself,
with its eyes facing the very stone that had crushed its lower half. Where once
Bradwarden's arms had bulged with strong muscles, they were slack now,
withered, as though the centaur's body Was consuming itself for lack of food.
Master Jojonah moved very close and crouched as low as his portly form would
allow, studying and sympathizing.
"Oh,
but be sure that I'm feeling like I am dead," Bradwarden replied, his
agony reflected clearly in his normally resonant but now shaky voice. "Or
at least, heading that way. Ye canno' know me pain." He managed to turn
his head about then, to glance upon the newcomer, and he tilted his head
curiously at the sight, eyeing Jojonah closely, then gave a pained chuckle.
"What
do you see?" the master asked him.
"Do
ye have a son, then?" Bradwarden asked.
Master
Jojonah looked back over his shoulder to Brother Braumin, who held his hands
out helplessly. Why this creature, at this time and in this predicament, would
ever ask such a question was beyond his understanding.
"No,"
Master Jojonah answered simply. "Nor a daughter. My heart was given to
God, and to no woman."
The
centaur gave a chuckle. "Ah, but what ye've missed," Bradwarden said
with a sly wink.
"Why
should you ask that?" Master Jojonah inquired, for he wondered suddenly if
it might be more than coincidence.
"Ye
remind me o' one I knew," Bradwarden replied, his tone revealing fond
memories for the old friend.
"A
monk?" Jojonah pressed, more urgently now.
"A
mad friar, by his own admission," the centaur replied. "A bit too
friendly with the drink, but a good man he was—or is, if he found a way out of
this cursed place."
"And
did you know his name?" asked Master Jojonah.
"Me
own brother, he was," the centaur went on, talking more to himself than to
the others, and seeming as if he were in some distant place, delirious,
perhaps. "By deed, if not by blood."
"His
name?" Brother Braumin prompted loudly, moving close and bending near
Bradwarden's face.
"Avelyn,"
the centaur calmly replied. "Avelyn Desbris. A most excellent human."
"He
must be saved at all cost," came a voice behind them. All the monks turned
about to see Brother Francis, a diamond glowing brightly in his palm, standing
at the back of their line.
"You
were instructed to command the defense of the encampment," Master Jojonah
said to the man.
"I
take no orders from Master Jojonah," came the reply, and Jojonah realized
then that Father Abbot Markwart had taken Francis' body and come among them.
"We must extricate him from this place," he continued, looking to the
huge slab.
"Ye're
not big enough to lift a mountain," Bradwarden said dryly. "As I
wasn't big enough to hold it up while me friends ran off."
"Your
friend Avelyn?" Markwart asked impatiently.
"Me
other friends," the centaur replied. "I'm not for knowing—" He
stopped and grimaced, for his movement in turning about to face the men had
caused the rock to shift slightly. "No, ye're not for lifting this,"
he groaned.
"We
shall see," said the Father Abbot. "Why are you still alive?"
"Not
for knowing."
"Unless
you are no mortal creature," Markwart went on, his tone sly and accusing.
He moved past the others to crouch beside Master Jojonah.
"An
interesting thought," Bradwarden replied. "Always was told I was a
bit headstrong. Might be that I just refused to die."
Markwart
was not amused.
"Now
me daddy, he died," the centaur recounted. "And me mum, as well, a
score and more years ago. She took a hit o' the lightning—now that's an
odd way to die! So, no, I'd be guessing that I'm not immortal."
"Unless
an immortal spirit has found its way into your body," Markwart pressed,
"Are
not all spirits immortal?" Master Jojonah dared to interrupt.
Markwart's
glare ended that discussion before it could begin. "Some spirits," he
said evenly, looking at Bradwarden, but offering the words as much to Jojonah,
"can transcend physicality, can keep a body animated, though it should be
dead and still."
"Only
spirit in me is me own, and a bit o' the boggle," the centaur assured him
with a strained smile and a wink. "And a bit more o' the boggle might be
easing me pain, if ye got any."
Markwart's
expression didn't change in the least.
"I'm
not for knowing why I'm not dead," Bradwarden explained seriously.
"Thought I was, when the rock bent me legs and slid down. And suren that
me groaning stomach spent a week and more o' tellin' me to die."
Father
Abbot Markwart was hardly listening then. He had slipped another stone into his
hand, a small but effective garnet, a stone used to detect the subtle
emanations of magic, and he was using it now to survey the trapped creature. He
found his answer almost immediately.
"You
have magic about you," he announced to Bradwarden.
"That,
or luck," said Master Jojonah.
"Bad
luck," the centaur remarked.
"Magic,"
the Father Abbot said again, forcefully. "About your right arm."
It
took quite an effort for Bradwarden to turn his head enough so he could view
his upper right arm. "Oh, by the damned dactyl and all its sisters,"
he grumbled when he saw the red armband, the piece of cloth that Elbryan had
tied about him. "And the ranger thought to be doing me a favor. Two months
o' suffering, two months o' hunger, and the damned thing won't let me
die!"
"What
is it?" Master Jojonah asked.
"Elven
healing cloth," Bradwarden replied. "Seems the damned thing is fixing
me wounds as fast as the damned mountain's giving them to me! And even the lack
o' food and drink won't take me!"
"Elven?"
Brother Braumin gasped, reflecting the feelings of all in attendance.
Bradwarden deciphered their expressions and was surprised to find that they
were surprised.
"Don't
ye be telling me that ye're not for believing in elves?" he said.
"Nor centaurs, I'm guessing? And how about powries, or maybe a giant or
two?"
"Enough,"
Father Abbot Markwart bade him. "Your point is well-taken. But we have
never encountered an elf, nor a centaur, until this time."
"Then
yer world's become a better place," Bradwarden said, offering another
wink, though it ended in a pained grimace.
Markwart
rose then and motioned for the others to follow him away from the centaur.
"It will be no easy task in getting him out of there," he said once
they were out of the range of Bradwarden's hearing.
"Impossible,
I'd say," remarked Brother Braumin.
"We
can levitate the stone using malachite," Master Jojonah reasoned.
"Though I fear that all of our strength combined may not be enough to
budge such an obstacle."
"I
fear more that when we do lift the stone, the pressure will be relieved so that
the centaur's lifeblood will pour from him too fast for his elven armband, and
our efforts, to compensate," the Father Abbot pointed out.
"But
still, we must try," said Brother Braumin.
"Of
course," Markwart agreed. "He is too valuable a prisoner, too great a
source of information—not only for what happened here, but for the fate of
Brother Avelyn—for us to let him die."
"I
was thinking more of compassion for his predicament," Braumin dared to
add.
"I
know you were," Markwart replied without hesitation. "You will learn
better."
The
Father Abbot stormed away then, motioning for the others to follow. Brother
Braumin and Master Jojonah exchanged sour looks, but had little choice in the
matter.
On
orders from Markwart, who was tiring from the possession and needed a reprieve,
they did not make the attempt until late the next day, when they were all
rested and mentally prepared. Markwart came back into the body of Brother
Francis then, and led the procession, clutching a malachite and a hematite.
In
position, all the monks of the caravan, except for Master Jojonah, who also
held a hematite, joined in communion within the depths of the soul stone, then
channeled their combined energy into the malachite, and when that energy had
reached its apex, Father Abbot Markwart released it, aiming it at the slab over
Bradwarden.
Master
Jojonah only then realized the great risk that Markwart had taken—for the monks
of the caravan and not for his own body, which was safely back at
St.-Mere-Abelle. As the stone slab groaned under the sudden release of
pressure, many smaller stones and clouds
of dust fell down into the corridor, and Jojonah feared that all the tunnel
might collapse. They should have taken a few days to shore it up, he realized,
but that lack of preparedness only emphasized for him the sheer desperation of
the Father Abbot to find Avelyn Desbris.
The
monks pressed on and the slab shifted again. Bradwarden cried out and went into
convulsions, and Jojonah was fast to him, hooking his arms under the broad
shoulders of the centaur and pulling with all his might.
He
found, to his horror, that he couldn't budge the huge centaur. Even in his
emaciated state, Bradwarden weighed well over four hundred pounds. Into the
hematite went Jojonah, not to attack the centaur's wounds, as they had planned,
but to intercept the thoughts of the other monks, pleading with them to lend
some of their energy to the centaur's form that he might drag the huge
creature free.
It
got tricky then, and Jojonah feared that the slab would tumble back down, but
Markwart, so incredibly powerful with the stones now, led the monks in the
effort, shifting some of the levitational forces onto the centaur.
Jojonah
pulled him free, then fell back into the hematite, going at the centaur's
wounds with fervor. He was hardly conscious of the movement as Markwart and the
others grabbed both him and Bradwarden and dragged them on their way, rushing
out of the unstable tunnel.
And
then Master Jojonah was no longer alone in his efforts to save the creature, as
Markwart's spirit, and Brother Braumin's and several others, joined him,
attacking Bradwarden's every wound.
More
than five hours later Master Jojonah lay on the ground just outside Aida,
thoroughly exhausted, with Brother Braumin beside him. There they slept, and
only woke up late the next morning, to find Brother Francis—and it was
indeed Francis— standing over them.
"Where
is the centaur?" Master Jojonah asked.
"Resting,
and more comfortable than we might have hoped," Brother Francis replied.
"We fed him—tentatively
at first, but then he ate pounds of meat, half our store of venison, and drank
gallons of water. Strong indeed must be the magic of that armband, for already
he seems more solid."
Master
Jojonah nodded, sincerely relieved.
"And
we have found a way up the mountain," Brother Francis added.
"Is
there still a need?"
"You
will be interested in what we have there discovered among the ashes,"
Brother Francis said sternly.
Master
Jojonah held his next question, instead pausing to take a measure of the man.
Whatever progress Francis might have made seemed to have been erased now—probably by
the visit of Father Abbot Markwart. The man's expression was cold again; the
laughter in his eyes was no more. All business.
"I
need to rest, I fear," Master Jojonah said at length. "I will talk to
Bradwarden this day; we can climb Aida tomorrow."
"No
time," Brother Francis replied. "And none are to speak to the centaur
until we return to St.-Mere-Abelle."
Master
Jojonah didn't even need to ask where that order had come from. And he came to
understand more clearly Brother Francis' shift of mood. When they had first
viewed the blasted Barbacan, Francis had proclaimed that the devastation was
either the work of a godly man or an overextension of the demon dactyl's magic.
Now it seemed clear that Brother Avelyn had indeed been involved, and Master
Jojonah did not doubt for a second that the Father Abbot had made it clear to
Francis that Brother Avelyn was no godly man.
"We
go up the mountain this day," Brother Francis went on. "If you cannot
make it, then Brother Braumin will go in your stead. When that duty is
finished, we are back on the road."
"It
will be dark before you get back down," Brother Braumin said.
"We
will ride day and night until we are returned to St.-Mere-Abelle," Brother
Francis answered.
The
course seemed quite silly to Master Jojonah. The answers were here, of course,
or perhaps nearby. To go all the way back to St.-Mere-Abelle made no sense—unless he
factored in Father Abbot Markwart's profound distrust of him. The discovery of
an eyewitness had changed everything, and Markwart wasn't about to let him take
control of this very delicate situation. Jojonah looked to Braumin then, both
men wondering if the time had come to make a stand against the Father Abbot,
against the Church itself.
Master
Jojonah shook his head slightly. They could not win.
He
was not surprised, but was surely pained, when he returned to the wagons to
find Bradwarden in chains. Still, the centaur's renewed vigor surprised him
and gave him hope.
"Ye
might at least let them give me me pipes," the centaur begged.
Master
Jojonah followed Bradwarden's longing gaze to a set of dusty bagpipes lying on
the seat of a nearby wagon. He started to say something, but Brother Francis
cut him short.
"He
will have food, and he will have healing, and nothing more," the monk
explained. "And as soon as he seems fully recovered, the armband will be
taken."
"Ah,
but Avelyn was a far better man than the lot o' ye put together,"
Bradwarden remarked, and he closed his eyes and began humming a quiet tune,
pausing once to offer a sly look and mutter, "Thieves."
Master
Jojonah, eyeing Brother Francis all the while, walked over and took up the
bagpipes, then handed them to the centaur.
Bradwarden
returned a respectful look and a nod, then took to playing, hauntingly
beautiful music that had all the monks, except stubborn Francis, listening
intently.
Master
Jojonah somehow found the strength to accompany Francis and six others up Aida
that afternoon. The top of the mountain was now a wide black bowl, but the ash
and molten stone had hardened enough for the monks to walk across it without
much difficulty.
Brother
Francis led them directly to the spot: a petrified arm sticking from the black
ground, fingers clutched as though they had held something.
Master
Jojonah bent low and examined the arm and hand. He knew them! Somehow, he knew
who this was, somehow he felt the goodness of this place, an aura of peace and
godly strength.
"Brother
Avelyn," he gasped.
Behind
him the others, except for Francis, nearly fell over.
"That
is our guess," Brother Francis replied. "It would seem that Avelyn
was in league with the dactyl, and was destroyed when the demon was
destroyed."
The
obvious falsehood overwhelmed Master Jojonah. He rose and spun on Brother
Francis powerfully, and nearly struck the man.
But
Jojonah held his blow. Father Abbot Markwart would persist with a campaign of
lies against Avelyn, he realized, for if it was discovered that Avelyn had
given his life in destroying the dactyl, as Jojonah knew to be true, then
Markwart's many claims and position in the Church might be in jeopardy. That
was why, Jojonah realized, conversations with the centaur were to be limited
until the creature was safely back at St.-Mere-Abelle, under Markwart's
control.
Master
Jojonah forced himself to calm down. This fight was only beginning; now was not
the time to wage the battle openly.
"What
do you think he was holding?" Brother Francis asked.
Jojonah
looked back to the arm and shrugged.
"There
is little magic about this man," Brother Francis explained. "A
couple of stones, perhaps—we will know that when we exhume the body—but not enough
strength to account for the hoard that Avelyn stole."
Exhume
the body. The notion screamed out at
Jojonah as simply wrong. This place should be marked as a holy shrine, a place
of renewing faith and finding character. He wanted to scream out at Francis,
to punch the man in the mouth for even uttering such a blasphemous thought. But
again he reminded himself that this was not the time to wage the battle, not
that way.
"The
stone about the arm is solid," he reasoned. "Blasting it will prove
no easy task."
"We
have graphite," Brother Francis reminded him.
"And
if there is a crevice or chasm beneath the body, such violent intrusion will
likely drop all the stones away from us forever."
A
panicked expression crossed Brother Francis' face. "Then what do you
suggest?" he asked sharply.
"Search
with the hematite and the garnet," Master Jojonah replied. "It should
be no difficult task in determining if there are any stones about this man, and
what they might be. Put a brilliant diamond light into the crack about the arm,
then let your spirit enter that place."
Brother
Francis, not recognizing the larger reasons Father Abbot Markwart might have
for destroying this potential shrine, thought about it for a few moments, then
agreed.
He
also agreed to let Master Jojonah spiritually accompany him into the crevice,
since the Father Abbot was too weary to return to his body anytime soon, and
Jojonah was the only one who could identify Brother Avelyn; Francis had only
seen the man a couple of times, for Avelyn had deserted the abbey shortly after
Francis had entered it.
Soon
after, the identity was confirmed, along with the knowledge that only one
stone, a sunstone, was anywhere near the man, though Master Jojonah sensed the
residual magical emanations of another stone, the giant amethyst. The master
said nothing of the amethyst to Francis, and had no trouble convincing the
younger monk that a simple sunstone, which were already in abundance at
St.-Mere-Abelle, was not worth the trouble, risk, and lost time of exhuming the
body.
With
Francis leading, they left Avelyn then.
Master
Jojonah was the last to turn to go, pausing at the sight, reflecting on his
own faith and remembering the young monk who had inadvertently taught him so
very much.
When
they got back to camp, Jojonah pressed a diamond into Brother Braumin's hand,
whispered directions to him, and bade him go and see the sacred place. "I
will delay Brother Francis long enough for you to return," he promised.
Brother
Braumin, not quite understanding, but recognizing from Jojonah's tone the
importance of the journey, nodded and turned to go.
"And
Brother Braumin," the master said, turning the man about. "Take
Brother Dellman with you. He, too, should see this man, and this place."
Brother
Francis was in a foul mood indeed when he learned they would be delayed in
leaving, for a wagon had somehow broken a wheel.
Still,
they were on the move before the dawn. The centaur, seeming fit again—though Francis
hadn't yet dared to remove the armband—and playing his pipes, trotted behind
Brother Francis' wagon, chained to the frame and with several monks keeping
close guard on him.
Neither
Brother Braumin, Master Jojonah, nor Brother Dellman spoke a word that night
and all the next day, their voices stolen by an image they would carry for the
rest of their lives, and by a barrage of profound reflections on their purpose
and their faith.
Wincing in agony, Roger bit hard on the piece of wood he had stuck between his teeth. He had torn a sleeve from his shirt, tied it tight about his leg, just below the knee, and knotted it about a second piece of wood. Now he turned that wood, tightening the tourniquet.
He
nearly swooned more than once, flitting in and out of consciousness. If he
passed out now, he would surely bleed to death, he reminded himself, for the
bite of the Craggoth hound was deep, the blood spurting.
Finally,
mercifully, the blood flow stemmed, and Roger, cold and clammy, sweating
profusely, slumped back against the earthen wall of his cell. He knew this
place well, a root cellar close to the town center, and knew there was only one
way in or out: a trapdoor at the top of a rickety wooden ladder. Roger stared
at it now, lines of meager daylight streaming through. The late afternoon sun,
he realized, and he thought that he should try to make his break when the light
was gone, under cover of night.
He
recognized immediately the foolishness of that notion. He wasn't going anywhere
this night, could hardly find the strength to pull himself away from the wall.
Chuckling at the futility of it all, he slumped down to the floor, and then he
slept all the night through, and would have remained asleep for many, many more
hours if the door to his jail had not banged open and the dawn's light poured
in.
Roger
groaned and tried to straighten himself.
A
powrie appeared on the ladder, followed by another, Kos-kosio Begulne himself.
The dwarf in front went right to Roger and pulled him up to his feet, slamming
him hard against the wall.
Roger
teetered, but managed to hold his balance, realizing that if he fell over, the
dwarf would just hoist him up again, probably even more roughly.
"Who
uses the magic?" Kos-kosio Begulne asked, coming up to Roger, grabbing him
by the front of his torn and bloody shirt and pulling him low, so his face was
barely an inch from the leathery, wrinkled, imposing visage of the dwarf, close
enough that Kos-kosio's foul breath was hot in Roger's face.
"Magic?"
Roger replied.
"Get
the hounds!" Kos-kosio Begulne cried.
Roger
groaned again at the sound of barking.
"Who
uses the magic?" the powrie leader demanded. "How many, and how many
stones?"
"Stones?"
Roger echoed. "I know of no stones, nor of any magic."
Another
bark came from above.
"I
promise," Roger added, his tone frantic. "I could just lie and give
you a name, any name, and you would not know if I spoke truly until, or unless,
you found that person. But I do not know of any magic. None!"
Kos-kosio
Begulne held Roger close a bit longer, the dwarf growling low—and Roger
feared that the fierce powrie would bite his nose off. But then Kos-kosio
shoved him back hard against the wall and spun toward the stairs, convinced by
the simple logic of Roger's defense. "Ye tie him up!" the leader
barked at the other powrie. "Strangle knot. We wants to make our guest
comfortable."
Roger
wasn't quite sure what Kos-kosio Begulne had in mind, but the other powrie's
grin, wide with evil glee, was not promising. The dwarf produced a thin,
rough-edged rope and advanced on him.
Roger
slumped to the floor. The dwarf kicked him over onto his belly, then yanked his
arms roughly behind his back.
"Nah,
put the damned hounds away," Kos-kosio Begulne commanded yet another
powrie who had come to the top of the root cellar's ladder, leading a Craggoth
hound on a short leash. "He's just a weak human, and won't be living
through much more pain." Kos-kosio looked back from his perch on the lower
rungs, meeting Roger's glare. "I'm wanting to find a bit more fun with this
one before I let him die."
"Lucky
me," Roger muttered under his breath, and that only got him an even harder
tug from the dwarf with the rope.
The
"strangle knot," as Kos-kosio Begulne had called it, proved to be a
devilish twist of the rope. Roger's arms were bound tightly behind his back,
bent at the elbow so his hands nearly touched the back of his neck. The nasty
cord then looped over both his shoulders and down the front of his body,
wrapping painfully underneath his groin and then up his back once more,
finally looping about Roger's throat. So expertly was he tied, and so tightly,
that the slightest shift of his arms not only sent waves of pain into his
groin, but cut off his air supply, as well.
"Well,
human lock-picker, let's be seeing if ye can get yer way outta this." The
powrie laughed, set a torch in a wall sconce, lit it, and went to the top of
the ladder, calling out to some comrades. "Kos-kosio's not wanting this
one to get away!"
"Double
lock?" one of the dwarves up above asked.
"Double
lock," the powrie on the stairs confirmed. "And then sit the damned
hound on it! And ye get one to come and take me seat before the sun's too low.
I'm not wanting to miss me supper sitting with this smelly human."
"Quit
yer bitching," the other dwarf replied, and closed the heavy trapdoor with
a resounding bang. Roger listened carefully as chains and locks were set in
place on the door. He studied the powrie coming down the stairs.
One
mistake, the young man silently
berated Kos-kosio Begulne. You let this one keep a weapon.
The
powrie made straight for Roger. "You just lie still," the dwarf
instructed, and then, to accentuate the point, the nasty creature kicked Roger
hard in the ribs.
Roger
squirmed—and
that only choked him all the more.
Laughing,
the dwarf moved across the way and sat down under the burning torch. The wicked
creature took off its crimson beret, twirling it about with one finger, letting
Roger see it clearly, as if to promise him that his blood, too, would soon
enhance the hue. Then the powrie put its gnarly hands behind its head and
leaned against the wall, closing its eyes.
Roger
spent a long, long while getting his bearings. He fought away the nausea and
the pain, then tried to figure a way to get out of the ropes. That would be the
easy part, he decided, because even if he got free, even if he then took the
dwarf's weapon and killed the creature, where might he go? The cellar bulkhead
was locked and chained, and he didn't have to be reminded of what lay in wait
atop it.
Truly,
the task before him seemed daunting, but Roger forced himself to calm and to
concentrate, trying to break things down one step at a time.
Sometime
in late afternoon the powries changed guards. The new one gave Roger a bit of
food and a drink—nearly
drowning him in the process—and then took a seat in much the same place as the
previous sentry.
Within
an hour this one, too, was snoring contentedly.
Determined
not to spend another night as Kos-kosio Begulne's guest, Roger decided that the
time to act was upon him. One small step at a time, he reminded himself as he
braced his shoulder against the hard wall. He had to angle himself just right,
so his weight and not his strength would do most of the work. With a glance at
his powrie jailor to make sure the creature was sleeping soundly, Roger closed
his eyes and mustered his nerve.
Then
he dove against the wall, suddenly, powerfully, hitting with the front of his
shoulder, the jolt driving his arm back. Roger's muscles and weight worked in a
coordinated manner then, driving him ahead.
He
heard a loud pop as his shoulder dislocated, and waves of pain rolled through
his body, nearly laying him low. He fought them away, though, and with his arm
thus contorted, the rope was loosened enough for him to slip it over the
shoulder.
In
a matter of seconds he was lying on the floor, free of the rope, gasping for
breath. Then, after a moment's respite, he went back to work, jamming his
shoulder the other way, popping it back in place—a useful little trick the thief
had perfected over the years. Again he spent a moment letting the waves of pain
subside, and then gathered up the rope and moved to the sleeping powrie.
"Hey,"
the dwarf protested a few minutes later, opening its sleepy eyes to see Roger
standing before it, the dwarf's short sword in hand. "And what're ye
meaning to do with that?" the powrie asked, climbing to its feet and
drawing a dagger from its boot. Both the dwarf and Roger understood that even
thus armed, the man was no match for the battle-seasoned powrie.
Roger
hopped backward on his good leg, falling against the far wall; the powrie
growled and charged, raising its dagger before it.
As
that arm came up, the dwarf realized that a rope was looped about its wrist, a
short leash fastened to a root sticking from the earthen wall near to where the
dwarf had been sitting.
"What?"
the powrie said, even as the loop tightened and held, pulling the dwarf's arm
low, right between its legs, flipping the dwarf over to land heavily on its
back.
Roger
came off the wall even as the dwarf began its somersault, sliding in beside the
prone creature.
"What?"
the dwarf bellowed again, just before the pommel of its short sword smashed
down on its hard head. The powrie thrashed, trying to pull its arm free, trying
to grab at Roger with its other hand.
Roger
pounded away with the pommel again and again, until finally the stubborn dwarf
lay still. The man nearly fell away from the pain then, and the exertion,
flitting in and out of consciousness.
"Not
much time," Roger reminded himself stubbornly, dragging himself to his
feet.
The
powrie stirred; Roger slammed it again, and then once more.
"Not
much time," he said again, more insistently, shaking his head at the sheer
resilience of the hardy dwarf.
Now
things got more complicated; Roger played through the entire scenario, trying
to figure every obstacle and every item he would need to overcome them. He took
the dagger from the dwarf's hand and the belt from around its waist, and reset
the rope to better secure the creature. Then he moved to the ladder, trying to
get a measure of the bulkhead's strength. At the center of that trapdoor, on
the inside, was a support beam, a strong log. Roger went at this first, or
rather, at the wood above it, scraping a hollow area wide enough to loop the
rope over the beam. Then he began an expert assault on the boards, whittling
at their supports on either end. At one point he heard the growl of the wary
Craggoth hound, and had to pause for a long while before the vicious dog would
quiet down.
One
scratch at a time, one broken splinter, one loosened peg. Again Roger had to
stop, this time because his leg was throbbing so badly he could not remain on
the ladder. And then again he had to wait, for the powrie was coming back to
consciousness and needed to be clunked on the head one more time. Stubbornly
Roger went back to work, and finally the boards to either side of the central
support were loosened.
The
moment was upon him; he hoped he wouldn't faint away from the pain at a
critical juncture.
He
went back to the dwarf and gathered more tools, then spent a long moment
replaying the expected scenario. He checked his gear one final time—the short
sword and the dagger, the post from the dwarf's belt buckle, the leather laces
from the dwarf's boots, and finally, one
of those smelly boots—and then took a deep steadying breath and moved back to the
ladder. He pressed slightly on each of the loosened bulkhead boards, trying to
get a better feel of where the hound might be. Of course, if there was more
than one dog, or if there were any powries in the immediate area up above, the
game would end quickly, and likely, painfully, Roger realized, but he decided
he had to take the chance. In his mind, he had nothing to lose, for Kos-kosio
Begulne would never let him go, and Roger held no illusions about his
captivity: as soon as the powrie leader decided he was no longer useful, he
would be tortured to death.
He
had already looped the rope over the beam from right to left, but then,
realizing that the hound was more to the left, he reversed the direction. Down
the ladder Roger went, positioning the dazed powrie at the base and to the
left-hand side.
Back
up on the ladder, in place below the trapdoor, Roger rubbed his hands
anxiously, reminding himself over and over that his timing had to be perfect.
Using splinters from the worked boards, he set the noose in place just under
the right-hand board. Then he took up the boot in one hand and put his other
hand firmly against the right board, up through the noose.
A
final deep breath and Roger pushed hard, partially dislodging the board, enough
so he woke the hound fully and offered it an opening through which it could
attack.
And
attack it did, jaws snapping right for the boot that Roger pushed up into its
face. As soon as the dog latched on, Roger, holding the other end of the boot
in both hands, jumped from the ladder, drawing the stubborn hound in through
the opening, in through the noose.
The
snare worked perfectly, tightening about the hound as it came falling through,
hooking about the dog's neck and under one paw about the shoulder. Down they
went, Roger in a tumble—a painful tumble!—and the hound dropping to the end of the
rope length. The sudden jerk lifted the powrie at the rope's other end to its
knees and left the hound dangling, one of its back feet just brushing the
floor.
The
Craggoth hound bit hard on the boot, shaking its head violently side to side,
seemingly oblivious to the fact that it was hanging. Roger was there in a split
second, taking the opportunity to loop the leather shoelace about the
creature's closed jaws, wrapping it tightly many times and then tying it off.
"Bark
now," he taunted, then flicked his finger against the hound's nose. With a
last quick check on the powrie, and one more slug to the head for good measure,
Roger struggled back up the ladder.
All
was quiet outside, but considering the pain in his leg, Roger didn't think he
would have much luck trying to slip through the narrow opening he had broken in
the trapdoor. He did get his hands out, though, enough to feel along the chains
to the two padlocks. Always pleased by his own cleverness, smiling Roger took
the narrow post of the powrie's buckle in hand and went to work.
Nightbird
waited for the signal whistle, then moved quickly and quietly up to the tree in
which his small friend was perched. From this vantage point they could see most
of Caer Tinella, and Juraviel's estimate of the number of monsters within that
town seemed conservative to the ranger.
"Do
you have any idea where they would hold him?" he asked.
"I
said that I heard them speak of him, not that I actually saw him," the elf
replied. "He could be in any building, or more likely, considering the
events of last night, he could be dead."
Nightbird
wanted to argue, but held his tongue, for he found that he could not logically
disagree with Juraviel. An entire day had passed—he and the elf couldn't risk
coming into Caer Tinella in broad daylight—giving Kos-kosio Begulne plenty of
time to sort out the details of the disaster in the forest and to lay the blame
for it at the feet of his valuable prisoner.
"We
should have come right in," Juraviel went on. "As soon as the fight
was over, with still two or three hours of darkness before us."
"Pony
had to tend the wounded," the ranger replied.
"She
is not here anyway," the elf reminded. Nightbird had hoped she would
accompany them, but Pony was still exhausted from the overuse of magic. After
their sword-dance that morning, she had slept through most of the day, and
would likely sleep well again that night.
"But
this is," the ranger answered, holding up the hematite. "Roger
Lockless might need it."
"More
likely, Roger Lockless needs burying," the elf said dryly.
The
ranger didn't appreciate the sarcasm, but again he said nothing, except to
motion ahead and tell Juraviel to lead on.
The
elf was gone in an instant, and a few seconds later another whistle moved the
ranger even closer. They held their next position for some time, as a large
group of powries and giants filtered out of the town, heading more to the west
than the north.
"The
fewer left in town, the better our chances," Juraviel remarked, keeping
his voice to a tiny whisper now that they were so close.
The
ranger nodded and motioned for Juraviel to move along. The next hop put them at
the railing of a corral; the next after that put them right beside a barn on
the northeastern edge of town. Now they moved together, both holding bows. They
froze when they heard voices within the barn, some goblins complaining about
work and one grumbling about a broken chain.
"He
could be in there," Juraviel said softly.
The
ranger didn't think that a reputedly wise powrie leader would be foolish enough
to put so valuable a prisoner on the outskirts of the town, but he wanted to
leave an open path out of Caer Tinella anyway, and so he gave a little tug on
his bowstring and nodded toward the barn.
Juraviel
led the way around the side, coming up on the front corner. They passed a pair
of doors at the level of the ranger's head, used for throwing hay bales out to
the cows, but there were no handles on the outside and so they paid the portal
no heed—none,
at least, until the two doors swung out, one slamming Nightbird about the
shoulders, forcing him to fall back, the other swinging right above Juraviel's
head. The poor goblin who had swung the doors didn't realize that a human was
blocking one from opening all the way, didn't even realize that anybody was
outside, until Juraviel, ducking and turning under the swinging door, lifted
his bow and put an arrow right between the creature's eyes. The elf skipped
right in, fluttering up with his wings. He grabbed the fast-dying goblin by the
front of its ragged tunic and propped it in place.
Nightbird
groaned and grumbled, finally getting around the awkward door, only to see
Juraviel patting a finger frantically against pursed lips and pointing inside.
The
ranger kept his calm and moved to the edge of the opening, peering around. He
saw one other goblin, working with a block and tackle and a chain. There may
have been others, for the inside of the barn was too cluttered by stalls and
bales, a wagon and many other items, for the ranger to be sure. Leaning
Hawkwing against the wall, he drew out Tempest and eased beside the goblin,
then up to the tier inside the window. Silent as a hunting cat, the ranger made
his careful way right behind the goblin working the block and tackle.
"Do
you need help?" he asked.
The
goblin spun, eyes-wide.
Tempest
cut it down.
But
there was indeed another goblin in the barn, and it came racing out of a nearby
stall, trying to run right past the ranger. It jerked and stumbled as an arrow
hit it, then staggered again, nearly going to its knees and slowing enough for
Nightbird to catch up. The strong ranger grabbed the thing about the head,
clamping his hand over its mouth, and pulled it down to the ground.
"Where
is the prisoner?" he whispered in its ear.
The
goblin squirmed and tried to scream out, but Nightbird grabbed it all the
tighter, jerked its head back and forth. Then Juraviel was beside them, the elf
holding his bow up beside the goblin's head, his arrow creasing the creature's
temple. The goblin calmed considerably.
"If
you yell out, you die," the ranger promised, and he eased his hand away.
"It
hurts us! It hurts us!" the goblin moaned pitifully, and the two friends
could hardly blame it, for it carried one of Juraviel's arrows in its shoulder,
another in its thigh. Still, the ranger pressed his hand over the creature's
mouth once more.
"The
prisoner," he prompted, easing his hand away. "Where is the
prisoner?"
"Kos-kosio
Begulne have many prisoners," the goblin countered.
"The
new prisoner," the ranger clarified. "The one Kos-kosio Begulne hates
most of all."
"Nasty
arrow from nasty elf!"
"Tell
me," the ranger growled, "or my friend will put another arrow into
you!"
"In
the ground," the goblin squeaked. "In a hole in the ground."
"Buried?"
the ranger asked anxiously. "Did Kos-kosio Begulne kill him?"
"Not
buried," the goblin replied. "Not dead yet. In a room in a
hole."
The
ranger looked to Juraviel. "To store food," the ranger explained,
figuring out the riddle. "We did as much in Dundalis when I was a
boy."
"A
root cellar," the elf agreed, and both of them turned back to the
prisoner.
"Where
is this hole?" Nightbird asked, giving the goblin a shake.
The
goblin shook its head; the ranger tightened his grip. "You will tell—"
Nightbird started to say, but Juraviel, glancing out a small window beside the
barn's front door, the one facing the town proper, interrupted him.
"Time
is short," the elf explained. "The powries are astir."
"Last
chance," Nightbird said to the goblin. "Where is the hole?"
But
the goblin feared Kos-kosio Begulne more than it feared anything these two
could do to it. It squirmed and started to cry out, and when the ranger clamped
his hand over its mouth, it promptly bit him, struggling wildly to get away. It
could not break free of the ranger's strong hold, though, so it tried to bite
again, and started to cry out, however muffled the call might be.
A
well-aimed thrust of Juraviel's dagger-sized sword ended that; the creature
slumped to the floor and died.
"And
how are we to find Roger Lockless now?" Nightbird asked.
"The
goblin would not have told us more, even if it knew more," the elf
replied. "It knew that I would kill it as soon as the information was
divulged."
The
ranger looked at his companion curiously. "And if we had promised its life
in exchange?" he asked.
"Then
we would have been lying," Juraviel replied evenly. "Speak not to me
of mercy where goblins are concerned, Nightbird. I'll not suffer a goblin to
live. Nor should you, who lived through the massacre of Dundalis, and through
all the horrors since then."
Nightbird
looked down at the dead goblin. Juraviel was right about the wicked race, of
course, though as soon as they had taken the goblin prisoner and demanded
information, it somehow seemed to change things. Goblins were horrid things,
evil and merciless. They lived to destroy, and would attack humans on sight—any humans,
including... especially, children—as long as they believed they could win the
fight. The ranger had never felt guilty about killing them, but if he had given
this one his word that if it offered the information it would not be killed...
It
was a perplexing thought, but one that would have to wait for another time, the
ranger realized when he moved over to glance out the window beside the door.
Juraviel hadn't been lying; a large group of powries and other monsters was
moving through the town, heading generally north. The ranger got the distinct
impression they were searching for someone.
"What
are you doing?" he asked the elf when he turned about to see Juraviel
scampering about the barn, retrieving torches and their sconces.
Juraviel
didn't bother to answer. Using rope, he secured the sconces to a board, then
put the board across a beam in line with the front window, laying the torches
in loosely over a thick blanket of hay.
"A
diversion for the way out," the ranger reasoned.
"If
indeed we come this way," the elf added.
Nightbird
only nodded and did not press the point, trusting in his friend. In a few
moments they set out, going through the same hay window that had brought them
into the barn, carefully closing the doors behind them. They crept to the front
edge of the building and peered around. Many enemies were about, mostly
powries, and most of these were carrying blazing torches.
"Not
the most promising of situations," the ranger offered, but he did see a
way to get closer to the town center. Now, using the cat's-eye, he led the way,
moving to the side of another building, then cutting through a narrow alley
between it and another. Around the next corner, they came upon a powrie.
Tempest
slashed down, angling in from the shoulder, cutting deep into the side of the
creature's neck; Juraviel's sword stabbed in under the bottom rib, slanting
upward to steal the creature's breath. Still, despite the coordinated and
perfect attacks, the dwarf gave a stifled cry as it died.
The
two companions exchanged nervous glances at the sound. "Move along, and
quickly," the elf bade his friend.
Stepping
fast, the ranger was looking down more than up, searching for some bulkhead
that would indicate a root cellar, while Juraviel skittered off to the side,
trying to keep track of any nearby monsters. That was why the normally alert
Nightbird was surprised indeed when he heard a voice above him.
"Looking
for something?" it casually asked.
Up
went the ranger's eyes, up went his sword, but he halted the swing abruptly
when he realized that it was no powrie, no goblin or giant talking, but a
human, a skinny and short man reclining on the narrow ledge above a back door.
The ranger quickly scanned the form, noting the wound on his leg, the scab and
bruises on his face and on the one arm that was exposed. And yet, despite his
obvious pain and the precarious, at best, perch, the man held himself easily,
comfortably, with an air of confidence and ease. There could be only two
answers to this riddle, and it seemed unlikely to the ranger that any human was
in league with the powries.
"Roger
Lockless, I presume," Nightbird said quietly.
"I
see that my reputation has spread wide indeed," the man replied.
"We
must be on the move," a nervous Juraviel remarked, coming out of the
shadows. One look at the elf, and Roger, eyes going wide and mouth dropping
open, overbalanced and tumbled from the ledge. He would have hit the ground
hard, but the ranger was there below him, catching him and easing him to his
feet.
"What
is that?" Roger gasped.
"Answers
will wait," the ranger replied sternly.
"We
must be quick," Juraviel explained. "The monsters tighten their
perimeter about us. They are searching door-to-door."
"They
would not have caught me," Roger said with all confidence.
"Many
powries," said the elf, "with torches to light the night as if it
were day."
"They
would not have caught me," Roger said again.
"They
have giants to look on rooftops," Juraviel added.
"They
would not have caught me," the unshakable thief repeated a third time,
snapping his fingers in the air.
A
baying split the night air.
"And
they have dogs," the ranger remarked.
"Oh,
that," said Roger, deflating fast. "Get me away from this cursed
place!"
The
three started back down the alley, but it became obvious that Roger could not
move quickly, could hardly support himself. Nightbird was right beside him,
hooking the man's arm across his strong shoulder for support.
"Find
me a walking stick," Roger begged.
The
ranger shook his head, realizing that a walking stick wouldn't help much. He
ducked low suddenly, pulling Roger's arm farther across his shoulders and
hoisting him across his back.
"Lead
on," the ranger bade Juraviel. "And with all speed."
The
elf skittered to a corner, peered around it, then ran off almost at once,
sprinting to the next building, and then the next in line. They heard a shout,
the resonating voice of a giant, and though they couldn't be certain that the
monster was even calling out about them, Juraviel, and then the ranger right
behind him, broke into a dead run. The elf fitted an arrow to his bowstring as
he went, and when they neared the barn, he slowed, took aim, and let fly, the
arrow diving through the window beside the door, nocking hard into the loose
board Juraviel had put in place and dropping the burning torches into the bed
of hay. Before the three had even gone past the front corner of the barn, the
light inside increased dramatically. Before they were out the other side,
running along the fence of the corral, the flames burst through the front
window and were licking through cracks in the roof.
They
passed the corral and were soon into the woods, the ranger in front now and
running with all speed, despite the man slung over his shoulder. They could
hear the wild commotion back in Caer Tinella, powries, goblins, and giants
running all about and calling out orders, most screaming for water, others for
a chase of the escaping human. And then they heard, more pointedly, the
howling of several hounds closing on their trail.
"Run
in, straight to the others," Juraviel instructed. "I will rid us of
the troublesome dogs."
"Not
so easy a task," Roger gasped as he bounced about.
"Not
for one who has no wings," the elf replied with a wink, though Roger's
balance was too precarious for him to notice.
Juraviel
doubled back then, and the ranger ran on, disappearing into the forest night. The
elf waited a moment, gauging the flight of his friend and the sound of the
approaching dogs. He picked a tall and wide oak, the ground around it
relatively free of brush. He scampered all about its base, making the scent
thick, then used his wings to lift him to the lowest branch, carefully rubbing
his smell on the bark all the way up. Then he ascended again to a new perch,
and then again higher, and was halfway up when the leading hound reached the
tree's base. It sniffed and whimpered, then stood up with its forepaws on the
trunk and howled excitedly.
Juraviel
called down to it, taunting it, and then for good measure put an arrow into the
ground right beside the hound.
More
hounds arrived, sniffing and circling, taking up the call.
Up
higher went the elf, to the very top of the tree, to branches that hardly
supported even his lithe form. He paused a moment to revel in the view, all the
dark treetops spread far and wide before him. And then, secure that these
hounds would remain howling at the scented tree, Juraviel let his wings carry
him to a tree farther on, a long flight for an elf. Still, as soon as he found
his perch, Juraviel knew he couldn't stop and rest, and so he flew off again to
the next tree in line, and so on, until the calls of the hounds were far behind
him. He came down then, needing to give his wings a rest, and scampered away on
light feet through the forest night.
Later
on, from the edges of the human camp, Juraviel saw that Elbryan and Roger had
arrived safely. Many others were gathered about the pair, despite the late
hour, listening to the tale of the rescue—or of the escape, to hear Roger tell
it. Satisfied about a mission well done, Juraviel moved deeper into the forest,
to the thick and soft boughs of a pine tree, and settled down for the night.
He
was surprised when he awoke, before the dawn, to find that both Elbryan and
Pony were already awake and gone from the camp.
The
elf gave a smile, thinking that they needed some time alone with each other, a
respite for lovers.
He
wasn't far from the truth, for Elbryan and Pony were indeed intimate that
morning—but
not in the way Juraviel imagined. They were out in a secret clearing,
performing bi'nelle dasada.
That
morning, and every morning thereafter, and each time they danced, Pony followed
Nightbird's movements a bit longer. It would be years before she could find his
level of perfection, if ever, she knew, but she took heart, for each day
brought improvement— each day her lunge went a bit faster and a bit farther,
her aim a bit more sure.
As
the days passed, the ranger noted a change in the dance, subtle but definite.
At first he worried that taking Pony under his guidance was perverting this
very special gift of the Touel'alfar, but then he realized that the shift, far
from undesirable, was a wonderful thing. For each day, he and his companion
grew a bit more in tune with each other, each sensing the other's movements,
learning to supplement and compliment every routine with the proper support.
Indeed
their dance was beautiful, a sharing of heart and soul and, mostly, of trust.
This
cannot be! It makes no sense whatsoever, Abbot Dobrinion Calislas of St. Precious Abbey in Palmaris kept telling
himself, trying to convince himself through logic, despite the very real reports
from reliable monks, that Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart, the leader of the
Abellican Church, was waiting for him in the chapel of his abbey.
"Markwart
is too old to be traveling to Palmaris," Abbot Dobrinion said aloud,
though no one was nearby to hear. He fumbled with his robes as he stumbled down
the circular stairs from his private quarters. "And surely he would have
given notice of his visit long in advance. Such men do not move helter-skelter
about the countryside!
"And
such men should not come unannounced!" Dobrinion added. He was no fan of
Father Abbot Markwart; the two had been at odds for several years concerning
the canonization process of one of St. Precious' former monks. Though it was
the second oldest abbey in all the order, behind St.-Mere-Abelle, St. Precious
boasted of no saints from its order, a tragic oversight that Abbot Dobrinion
was working hard to correct—and one that Father Abbot Markwart had opposed from the
very moment Brother Allabarnet's name had been entered.
Dobrinion's
voice rose as he finished the frantic thought, the abbot opening the heavy door
of the chapel at the same time. His round cheeks flushed, for he feared that
the man standing before him, Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart, had heard him.
And
it was indeed Markwart, Abbot Dobrinion knew without doubt. He had met the man
on more than a dozen occasions, and though he had not seen Markwart in more
than a decade, he recognized him now. He glanced around at Markwart's
entourage, trying to make some sense of it all. Only three other monks were in
the chapel, and one of them was of St. Precious. The other two, both young, one
slender and nervous, the other barrel-chested and obviously strong, stood near
the Father Abbot in similar poses, their arms crossed in front of them, one
hand clasping the other wrist. A defensive position, Dobrinion noted, and it
seemed to him that these two were more like bodyguards than escorts. On
previous occasions when the Father Abbot had traveled, whether it was Markwart
or any of his predecessors, the entourage was huge, no less than fifty monks,
and a fair number of them masters, or even abbots. These two were neither,
Dobrinion knew, for they were hardly old enough to even have attained half the
years of an immaculate.
"Father
Abbot," he said solemnly, dipping a respectful bow.
"My
greetings, Abbot Dobrinion," Father Abbot Markwart replied in his nasal
voice. "Forgive my intrusion into your excellent abbey."
"Indeed,"
was all that the sputtering, flustered abbot could reply.
"It
was necessary," Markwart went on. "In these times... well, you
understand that we must often improvise with an enemy army marching about our
lands."
"Indeed,"
Dobrinion said again, and he wanted to pinch himself, thinking that he sounded
incredibly stupid.
"I
am to be met here by a caravan," the Father Abbot explained, "which I
diverted on its return to St.-Mere-Abelle, for there is little time."
A
caravan from St.-Mere-Abelle this far out? Dobrinion thought. And I knew
nothing about it!
"Master
Jojonah leads it," Father Abbot Markwart said. "You remember
Jojonah; you and he went through your training together."
"He
was two or three years my junior, I believe," Abbot Dobrinion replied. He
had met Jojonah subsequently at Church gatherings, and had once spent a night
drinking heavily with the man, and with a hawkish master by the name of
Siherton.
"Are
any other masters with this caravan?" he asked. "Siherton,
perhaps?"
"Master
Siherton is dead," Father Abbot Markwart said evenly. "He was
murdered."
"Powries?"
Dobrinion dared to ask, though it seemed from Markwart's tone that the man did
not want to elaborate.
"No,"
Father Abbot said curtly. "But enough of that unpleasant situation; it was
a long time ago. Jojonah is the only master on the caravan, though he has a
trio of immaculates beside him. They are twenty-five strong, and have with them
a most extraordinary prisoner. What I require from you is privacy, for myself,
for my fellows of St.-Mere-Abelle, and most of all, for the prisoner."
"I
will do all that I can—" Abbot Dobrinion began to respond.
"I
am sure that you will," Markwart cut him off. "Have one of your
trusted lessers instruct these two—" He indicated the young monks
flanking him. "—concerning our accommodations. We will not likely be here
for long. No more than a week, I should guess." His face grew very serious
and he advanced on Dobrinion, speaking in low, even threatening, tones. "I
will have your assurances that there will be no interference," he said.
Abbot
Dobrinion rocked back on his heels, studying the old man, surprised by all of
this. For St.-Mere-Abelle to even be operating in this region without
Dobrinion's knowledge and approval was contrary to Church etiquette. What was
this mysterious mission all about, and why hadn't he been informed? And what
of this prisoner? With hematite, the Father Abbot surely could have contacted
him sooner!
Abbot
Dobrinion did well to sublimate his anger. This was the Father Abbot, after
all, and Honce-the-Bear was embroiled in a desperate war. "We will do as
we are instructed," he assured his superior, bowing his head respectfully.
"St. Precious is yours to command."
"I
will take your quarters for the duration of my stay," Father Abbot
Markwart said. "My lessers will help you to move your necessary items to
other accommodations."
Dobrinion
felt as though he had been slapped in the face. He had been the abbot of St.
Precious for three decades, and that was no small position. St. Precious was
the third largest abbey in the Abellican Church, behind St.-Mere-Abelle and
St. Honce of Ursal. And because Palmaris was on the edge of the true civilized
lands, there was perhaps no abbey more influential to its congregation. For the
thirty years of his rule, Abbot Dobrinion had been pretty much left alone—St.-Mere-Abelle
was too concerned with the Ring Stones and with general Church doctrine, and
St. Honce too embroiled in politics with the King. Thus, Abbot Dobrinion's only
rival for power in all the wide northern reaches of Honce-the-Bear was Baron
Rochefort Bildeborough of Palmaris, and that man, like his predecessor, in
addition to being a close friend to Dobrinion, was quiet and unassuming.
Rochefort Bildeborough was a man easily appeased as long as his personal
luxuries were secured. Even in the matter
of this war that had come to Palmaris, he had turned over defense of the city
to the captain of the city guard, instructing that man to report to Abbot
Dobrinion, while he kept himself secure in his palace-fortress, Chasewind
Manor.
Thus
Abbot Dobrinion was not used to being talked to in such superior tones. But
again, he remembered his place in the Abellican hierarchy, a pyramid that
placed the Father Abbot at its pinnacle. "As you say," he replied
humbly, bowing one last time and starting away.
"And
perhaps we will have time to discuss the matter of Brother Allabarnet,"
the Father Abbot said just before Abbot Dobrinion crossed out of the room.
Dobrinion
stopped, realizing that he had just been thrown a morsel, a teasing carrot
dependent upon his cooperation. His initial thought was to throw that carrot
back at the Father Abbot, but he quickly pushed that notion away. Abbot
Dobrinion was an old man, and though he was not as old as Markwart, he feared
that Markwart would outlive him. By his own estimation, all that he had left to
accomplish in his life was to see Brother Allabarnet, a monk of St. Precious,
sainted, and that feat would not be easy, perhaps not even possible, without
the help of Father Abbot Markwart.
"St.
Precious?" Brother Braumin's incredulous tone echoed the emotions of
Master Jojonah when Brother Francis announced the new destination.
"The
Father Abbot does not wish to lose any time in speaking with the centaur,"
Brother Francis went on. "He will meet us in Palmaris. In fact, he was on
his way to that place when he contacted me, and I suspect that he is already
settled in St. Precious."
"Are
you certain of this?" Master Jojonah asked calmly. "Was it truly
Father Abbot Markwart who told you of this change?"
"You
imply that others might somehow get into my mind?" the younger monk
retorted.
"I
recognize that we have been to the lair of the demon," Master Jojonah
explained, again taking pains so that his voice was not accusing. If Father
Abbot Markwart had indeed come to Brother Francis with new orders, then Jojonah
and all the others had no practical choice but to go along.
"It
was the Father Abbot," Brother Francis said firmly. "Would it appease
you if I contacted him again? Perhaps I could loan him my body that he tell you
personally."
"Enough,
brother," Master Jojonah said, waving his hand in surrender. "I do
not question your judgment; I only thought it prudent to make certain."
"I
am certain."
"So
you have said," Master Jojonah replied. "And so our destination
shall be St. Precious. Have you determined our course?"
"I
have others working with the maps even now," Brother Francis replied.
"It is not too far, and once we have crossed the Timberlands, we should
find a fairly easy road."
"A
road choked with monsters," Brother Braumin put in dryly. "The
reports from this area have spoken of abundant fighting."
"We
will move too quickly and quietly for them to ever engage us," Brother
Francis said.
Master
Jojonah only nodded. If the Father Abbot wanted them in Palmaris, then to
Palmaris they would go, whatever the obstacles. For Jojonah, though, the
greatest obstacle of all would likely find them at the end of the trail, in the
person of Dalebert Markwart.
With
typical efficiency, Brother Francis completed the plotting and the caravan
adjusted its course, wheels humming. They were past the Timberland towns in a
couple of days, and though they did indeed find monsters along the way, the
creatures never knew of their passage, or realized it too late to possibly
catch up to the speeding procession.
"A
caravan of monks," Roger Lockless explained. The young man was feeling
well again, for Pony had used the hematite extensively on his dog bites and
other wounds. He had hardly thanked the woman, though, had just grunted and
walked away after their two-hour session. Neither Pony nor Elbryan had seen
Roger in the four days since that occasion, until now. "I know monks, and
am certain!"
Elbryan
and Pony exchanged grim looks, both suspecting that Brother Avelyn might have
something to do with this, that these monks might be in search of the stones
the companions now held.
"Moving
swiftly, so swiftly," Roger went on, sincerely awed. "I doubt that
Kos-kosio Begulne even knew they were in the area—or, if the powrie did learn of
their passing, they were too far gone by that point for him to do anything
about it. They must be halfway to Palmaris by now."
Elbryan
started to question that, for Roger had only seen this caravan a couple of
hours before. The ranger held the thought quiet, though, for he knew that,
whether the estimate of the speed was accurate or not, Roger believed what he
was saying.
"A
pity that we did not learn of this sooner," Belster O'Comely put in.
"What aid might these men of God have given us? What comfort? At the very
least, they might have taken our most infirm with them to the safer lands in
the south."
"You
would not even have learned of them at all had I not been so vigilant,"
Roger replied angrily, defensively, taking Belster's comment as an insult to
his scouting prowess. "How come the great Nightbird knew nothing about
them? Or the woman who proclaims to be a great wizardess?"
"Enough,
Roger," Elbryan bade him. "Belster was lamenting the reality, not
placing blame. It is indeed a pity that we could not enlist the aid of such
powerful allies, for if they were moving as swiftly as you say—and I do not
doubt that they were," he added quickly, seeing Roger's expression go
sour, "then they are likely strong with magic." The ranger was only
half serious, though, for while he would have liked to facilitate the passage
of their infirm members to Palmaris, he wasn't so sure that these monks would
have proven themselves allies—at least not for him and Pony.
"They
were moving even faster than you believe," Roger replied. "I cannot
describe their true speed. Their horses' legs were but a blur; one rider at the
back of the wagon moved so fast that to my eyes he seemed to be a blend of
horse and man."
That
perked up the ears of all the folk of the Dundalis region, all the folk who
knew of the Forest Ghost, who had fought beside Bradwarden and taken comfort in
his hauntingly beautiful piping. Elbryan and Pony deflated their brightening
expressions, though, shaking their heads at the thought. They had seen the end
of Bradwarden, so they both believed.
"You
are certain that the caravan kept moving?" the ranger asked Roger.
"Halfway
to Palmaris by now," the man replied.
"Then
they are no concern of ours," Elbryan reasoned, though silently he vowed
to keep an eye out for the monks. If this caravan had come to the north
searching for Avelyn and the stones, and if they had garnered some answers
through the use of magic, he and Pony might already be considered outlaws.
*
* *
The
caravan arrived at St. Precious with no fanfare, no recognition; Abbot
Dobrinion wasn't even there to greet them. That was Father Abbot Markwart's
pleasure, along with his pair of bodyguards, quietly meeting the brothers from
St.-Mere-Abelle at the abbey's back gate.
Master
Jojonah wasn't surprised by Markwart's choice of traveling companions,
Brothers Youseff and Dandelion, the two monks in training to replace the late
Brother Quintall as Brother Justice. Of all the lesser students in
St.-Mere-Abelle, Jojonah had come to like these two the least. Brother Youseff,
a third-year student, was from Youmaneff, Avelyn's hometown, but there the
similarity ended. He was a small and slender man, a vicious fighter who found
every advantage in the training arena, no matter how deceptive and unpleasant.
His companion, Brother Dandelion, who had only been at the monastery for two
years, was physically the opposite of the small man, a huge bear with arms the
size of a meaty thigh. Brother Dandelion often had to be restrained in the
sparring matches, for once he gained an advantage, he continued to press it to
the point of injuring his opponent. In the days of sanity at the monastery,
such action might have led to dismissal, but in these dark times, the Father
Abbot only chuckled at the man's enthusiasm. Markwart had many times dismissed
Jojonah's complaints about Brother Dandelion, assuring Jojonah they would find
a fitting place for the savage man.
Brother
Jojonah often wondered how Dandelion, or Youseff, for that matter, had even
passed the grueling process of elimination to get into the monastery. Every
class was whittled down from one or two thousand to twenty-five, and it seemed
obvious to Jojonah that there had to be many among those other hundreds more
fitting in temperament, intelligence, and piety.
But
both these young monks had been sponsored by the Father Abbot himself.
"The son of a dear friend," Markwart had said of Dandelion. Master
Jojonah knew better. Brother Dandelion had been brought in for his unparalleled
physical prowess and for no other reason. He was Markwart's replacement for
Quintall, one of the personal bodyguards surrounding the Father Abbot.
As
for Youseff, Markwart had explained that Youmaneff, with the loss of Avelyn,
was not represented at all in St.-Mere-Abelle, an oversight that had to be
corrected if the abbey meant to retain tight control over the small town.
Master
Jojonah could only shake his head and sigh; it was all moving beyond his
control.
The
caravan was put up in the courtyard, with all the monks shown to their
quarters, conveniently separated from the brothers of St. Precious. Master
Jojonah found himself in a quiet room in a far corner of the great structure,
removed from all the others of his troupe, particularly Brother Braumin, who
was all the way to the other side of the abbey. The closest to Jojonah was Francis—to keep an eye
on him, the master knew.
Still,
that very night, Jojonah managed to slip away, meeting quietly with Brother
Braumin on the triforium, a decorated ledge twenty feet above the floor of the
abbey's great chapel.
"I
suspect he is in the lower dungeons," Master Jojonah explained, running
his hands over the details of a statue of Brother Allabarnet, whom the monks
here called Brother Appleseed. Jojonah could feel the love that had gone into
this artwork, and that, he subconsciously understood, was the true work of God.
"In
chains, no doubt," agreed Brother Braumin. "A great sin rests on the
shoulders of the Father Abbot if his treatment of the heroic centaur is
ill."
Master
Jojonah quieted the man with a waving hand. They could not afford to be caught
speaking against the Father Abbot, no matter how great their ire.
"Have
you inquired?" Brother Braumin asked.
"The
Father Abbot tells me little now," Jojonah replied. "He knows where
lies my heart, though my actions do not overtly oppose him. I am scheduled to
meet with him in the morning, at first light."
"To
speak of Bradwarden?"
Jojonah
shook his head. "I doubt that subject will be breached," he
explained. "We are to talk of my departure, I believe, for the Father
Abbot has hinted that I will move on ahead of the caravan."
Brother
Braumin caught the note of dread in Master Jojonah's voice, and his thoughts
went immediately to Markwart's dangerous lackeys. Might the Father Abbot have
Jojonah killed on the road? The thought assaulted Braumin's sensibilities,
seeming so utterly ridiculous. But try as he might, he could not dismiss it.
Nor did he speak it aloud, for it was obvious to him that Jojonah was aware of
the situation.
"What
do you wish of me?" asked Brother Braumin.
Master
Jojonah chuckled and held up his hands in defeat. "Stay the course, my
friend," he replied. "Keep true in your heart. There seems little
else before us. I do not agree with the direction of our Order, but the Father
Abbot does not stand alone. Indeed, those who follow the present course far
outnumber those of us who believe the Church has strayed."
"Our
numbers will grow," Brother Braumin said determinedly, and in light of the
vision he had found at the top of blasted Mount Aida, he truly believed the
words. That sight, Avelyn's arm and hand protruding from the blasted rock, had
tied together all the words for Braumin, all the stories of Avelyn and the
hints that the current Church was off course. In viewing Avelyn's grave, he
knew the direction of his life, and that direction would likely bring him into
great conflict with the leaders of the Church—a fight Brother Braumin was
ready to wage. He squared his shoulders determinedly as he finished with all
confidence, "For our course is the most godly."
Master
Jojonah would not disagree with the simple logic of that statement. In the end,
good and truth would prevail—he had to believe that, for it was the most basic tenet of
his faith. How many centuries might it take to turn the Abellican Church back
to its proper course, though, and how much suffering would the present course
facilitate?
"Keep
true in your heart," he said again to Braumin. "Quietly spread the
word, not against the Father Abbot or any others, but in favor of Avelyn and
those of like heart and generous spirit."
"With
the centaur as prisoner, it may go beyond that," Brother Braumin reasoned.
"The Father Abbot might force our hand, to stand against him openly or to
forever remain silent."
"There
are degrees of silence, brother," Master Jojonah replied. "To your room
now, and fear not for me. I am at peace."
Brother
Braumin spent a long while staring at this dear man, his mentor, then he bowed
low, even moved to Jojonah's hand and kissed it, then turned and left.
Master
Jojonah spent another hour and more up on that quiet triforium, looking at the
statues of saints past, and at the newest construction, the likeness of
Brother Allabarnet of St. Precious, who more than a century before had walked
the wide land planting apple trees, that settlers might find abundance. The
canonization process for Allabarnet was sponsored by Abbot Dobrinion, who
dearly wanted to see it through before he died.
Master
Jojonah knew well the tales of kindly Allabarnet, and thought the man truly
deserving. But given the current conditions of the Church, those stories of
generosity and sacrifice would probably work against him.
Master
Jojonah's fears about Bradwarden's condition were all too true, for the centaur
had been brought to the lower catacombs of St. Precious, and there, in the dark
and damp, was shackled to the wall. Still dazed from his brutal experiences in
the collapsed mountain, and thoroughly exhausted from the run south, during
which the monks had enacted magic spells upon him to make him run faster,
Bradwarden was in little condition to resist physically.
And
mentally; Bradwarden was caught exhausted and off his guard when Father Abbot
Markwart, hematite in hand, came to him that very first night.
Without
a word to Bradwarden, the Father Abbot fell into the power of the soul stone,
released his mind from its physical bonds and invaded the thoughts of the
centaur.
Bradwarden's
eyes went wide when he felt this most personal of intrusions. He struggled
against the chains, but they would not yield. He fought back mentally—or at least he
tried to, for he had no idea where to even begin.
Markwart,
this wretched old human, was there in his mind, probing his memories.
"Tell
me of Avelyn," the Father Abbot prompted aloud, and though Bradwarden had
no intention of offering any answers, the mere mention of Avelyn conjured
images of the man, of the trip to Aida, of Pony and Elbryan, of Belli'mar
Juraviel and Tuntun, of Symphony, and of all the others who had fought the
monsters about Dundalis.
Only
gradually did Bradwarden begin to temper and control his thoughts, and by that
time the Father Abbot had learned so very much. Avelyn was dead and the stones
gone, but these other two, this Elbryan and Pony, had left the devastation of
Aida, or at least had left the tunnel wherein the centaur had been trapped,
very much alive. Markwart focused on these two as the inquisition continued,
and discovered that they were both from a small Timberland town called
Dundalis, but had both lived the bulk of their years outside of Dundalis.
Pony,
Jilseponie Ault, had lived in Palmaris.
"Ye're
a wretch!" Bradwarden fumed when at long last the mental connection was
broken.
"You
might have offered the information an easier way," the Father Abbot
replied.
"To
yerself ?" the centaur balked. "Ah, but Avelyn was right about ye,
about all o' yer stinkin' Church, now wasn't he?"
"Where
did this woman, Jilseponie, live when she was in Palmaris?"
"Ye're
calling yerselves men o' God, but no good God'd approve of yer works,"
Bradwarden went on. "Ye took from me, ye thievin' wretch, and for that
I'll see that ye pay."
"And
what of these diminutive creatures?" Father Abbot Markwart calmly asked.
"Touel'alfar?"
Bradwarden
spat at him.
Markwart
lifted another stone, a graphite, and slammed the bedraggled centaur against
the stone wall with a burst of electricity. "There are easy ways, and
there are difficult ways," the Father Abbot said calmly. "I will take
whatever path you open for me."
He
started for the low, open archway that led to the main area of the catacombs.
"You will speak with me again," he threatened. Both Markwart and
Bradwarden understood the limitations of that threat. The centaur was strong of
will and would not be caught by surprise again, and Markwart would find no easy
task in getting into his mind.
But
Bradwarden feared that he might have already surrendered too much information
about his friends.
"You
cannot begin to comprehend the importance of this!" the Father Abbot
roared at Abbot Dobrinion the next morning, the two men alone in Dobrinion's
study—though
it was the Father Abbot who was sitting at Dobrinion's large oak desk.
"Palmaris
is a large city," Abbot Dobrinion said calmly, trying to appease the man.
Markwart hadn't told him much, just that he needed information on a young
woman, perhaps twenty years of age, who went by the name of Pony, or
Jilseponie. "I know of no one named Pony—except for one stableboy who
earned that as a nickname."
"Jilseponie,
then?"
Abbot
Dobrinion shrugged helplessly.
"She
came from the north," Father Abbot Markwart pressed, though he hadn't
wanted to reveal even this much to the potentially dangerous Dobrinion.
"An orphan."
That
hit a chord with the Abbot. "And can you tell me what she looks
like?" he asked, trying hard not to let on that he might know something.
Markwart
described the woman, for Bradwarden had unintentionally offered him a very
clear picture of her, the thick golden hair, the blue eyes, the thick lips.
"What
is it?" Markwart demanded, seeing the recognition flash across Dobrinion's
chubby face.
"Nothing,
perhaps," the abbot admitted. "There was a girl— Jill, she was
called—who came from the north, orphaned in a goblin raid. But that was perhaps
a decade ago, perhaps more."
"What
happened to her?"
"I
married her to Master Connor Bildeborough, nephew of the Baron of
Palmaris," Abbot Dobrinion explained. "But it did not consummate and
the girl was declared an outlaw for her refusal. She was indentured to the
Kingsmen," Dobrinion declared, thinking that might be the end of it, and
hoping it would be, for he was not pleased at all by the Father Abbot's
actions, nor by the man's desperate and secretive attitude.
The
Father Abbot turned away and rubbed a hand across his pointy chin, only then
noticing that he had not shaved in many, many days. The woman had been in the army—that, too, fit
with the centaur's recollections.
The
pieces were falling into place.
Markwart,
and not Dobrinion, remained in the abbot's study after their discussion had
ended. The next in line to see him was Brother Francis, and the Father Abbot's
orders to the monk were simple and to the point: keep everyone, even Abbot
Dobrinion, away from the centaur, and keep Bradwarden exhausted. They would
meet later that day in the dungeon, to continue the interrogation.
When
Francis left, Master Jojonah entered. "We must discuss your treatment of
the centaur," he said without even formally greeting his superior.
Father
Abbot Markwart snorted. "The centaur is none of your concern," he
replied casually.
"It
would seem that Bradwarden is a hero," Master Jojonah dared to say.
"He, along with Avelyn Desbris, saw to the destruction of the
dactyl."
"You
have it wrong," the Father Abbot retorted, working hard to keep the anger
from his voice. "Avelyn went to the dactyl, that much is true, and
Bradwarden and these other two, Elbryan and Pony, accompanied him. But they did
not go there to do battle, but rather to form an alliance."
"So
the destroyed mountain would indicate," Master Jojonah said sarcastically.
Again
Markwart snorted. "They overstepped the bounds of magic and of
reason," he declared. "They reached into that crystal amethyst which
Avelyn stole from St.-Mere-Abelle, and with it, combined with the hellish
powers of the demon dactyl, they destroyed themselves."
Master
Jojonah saw the lie for what it was. He knew Avelyn, perhaps better than anyone
else at St.-Mere-Abelle, and knew that Avelyn would never have gone over to the
side of evil. How he might convey that message over the ranting of the Father
Abbot, he did not know.
"I
have a mission for you," Markwart said.
"You
hinted that I would return to St.-Mere-Abelle ahead of the rest," Master
Jojonah replied bluntly.
Markwart
was shaking his head before the man finished. "You will leave ahead of
us," he explained. "But I doubt that you will see St.-Mere-Abelle before
us. No, your course is south, to St. Honce in Ursal."
Master
Jojonah was too surprised to even respond.
"You
are to meet with Abbot Je'howith to discuss the canonization of Allabarnet of
St. Precious," the Father Abbot explained.
Master
Jojonah's expression was purely incredulous. Father Abbot Markwart had been the
primary opponent of the process; were it not for his protests, Allabarnet would
already be named a saint! Why the reversal? the master pondered, and it seemed
to him that Markwart was trying to strengthen his ties with Dobrinion, and also
to conveniently get him out of the way.
"In
these trying times, a new saint might be just what the Church needs to
reinvigorate the masses," the Father Abbot went on.
Master
Jojonah wanted to ask how any such process could be nearly as important as the
very real issues before them, including the continuing war. He wanted to ask
why a lesser monk couldn't carry this message to Ursal. He wanted to ask why
Markwart was reversing himself on this issue.
But
all of those questions ran into the same solid wall, Jojonah realized. Father
Abbot Markwart was following his own agenda, one bent on retrieving the stones
Avelyn had stolen and discrediting the renegade monk at any costs. As he
looked at the man now, it seemed to him that Markwart was spiraling down, down,
into depths of blackness, that every word the Father Abbot spoke carried him
further from the path of God.
"I
will go and pack my belongings," Master Jojonah said.
"Already
done," Father Abbot Markwart replied as the man turned to leave.
"They await you at the abbey's back door."
"Then
I will go and speak with—"
"You
will go straightaway to the back door," the Father Abbot said calmly.
"All the arrangements have been made, all the supplies secured."
"Magic
stones?"
"My
friend," Markwart said, standing and moving around the side of the desk,
"you will be traveling through civilized lands. You will need no magical
assistance."
Master
Jojonah felt as though he was at a pivotal moment in his life. To go all the
way to Ursal without any magical assistance, and on a mission that could become
so very complicated, given the sheer paperwork of the canonization process,
could keep him out of St.-Mere-Abelle, where he felt that he was desperately
needed, for a year and more. Yet his only recourse would be to challenge
Markwart here and now, perhaps to make it a public display, calling the man out
concerning his beliefs, demanding proof that Brother Avelyn Desbris had gone to
Aida to work with the dactyl demon.
His
allies would be few indeed, Master Jojonah realized. Brother Braumin would
stand behind him, perhaps even young Dellman. But what of Abbot Dobrinion, and
thus the hundred and fifty monks of St. Precious?
No,
Markwart had beaten him to that, Jojonah understood. He was leaving to discuss
a situation near and dear to the heart of St. Precious, the sainthood of one of
their own. Dobrinion wouldn't go against Markwart, not now.
Master
Jojonah spent a long time staring at this wrinkled old man, his onetime mentor
who had become his nemesis. But he had no answers and no recourse—or perhaps, he
feared, it was just a lack of courage. How old he felt at that moment, how
beyond his days of action!
He
went to the back door of the abbey, then walked, for Markwart had not even
secured donkey or cart, down the roads of Palmaris, exiting by the southern
gate.
Late in the afternoon of his tenth day with the refugee band, Elbryan sought out Oracle for the first time in more than a week. The passing of the monkish caravan had unnerved him, but so had a new detail that was presented that very morning: Roger Lockless walking back into the refugee camp at the head of fifteen former prisoners of Kos-kosio Begulne. The young man, learning in his scouting that the prisoners had been moved from Caer Tinella to Landsdown, took the opportunity to slip into the less defended town and bring the men out.
Still,
despite the powrie leader's error in moving the prisoners to the weaker
community, disaster had almost found Roger in the woods, for another Craggoth
hound remained with the prisoners and was hot on his trail, and only the
arrival of Juraviel had allowed Roger and the fleeing prisoners to get away
into safety.
That
was a detail Roger was quick to omit when he described the events of the
previous night to an excited and thrilled gathering of refugees.
The
ranger saw a new problem here, a deeper and potentially more devastating
problem, and so he went to his uncle Mather to sort things out.
It
is as I feared, Uncle Mather, he
began when the image appeared to him in the mirror in the near dark gloom. The
rivalry with Roger Lockless heads toward disaster. Just this morning he came
into the camp at the head of fifteen people, prisoners of the powries whom he
had freed the previous night. Of course we all rejoiced at their appearance,
but in speaking with them afterward, I came to understand just how great a
chance Roger had taken, with his life and with theirs, in going after them. For
though we all desire to relieve the powries of their every prisoner, there
seemed to be no pressing need for such a desperate act at this time. The
prisoners were safe enough, by all indications, for the moment at least, and we
might have formulated a wider-reaching plan that would have facilitated not
only their escape, but the downfall of Kos-kosio Begulne and his evil
brethren, as well.
But
I understand what drove Roger into the town last night, and so does Pony. By
his erroneous thinking, he has lost his rank among his people. Where they used
to look to him, he sees them looking to me.
The
ranger paused and contemplated that meeting when Roger had first returned. He
considered the man's bluster, the way Roger puffed out his chest when he spoke,
the way he looked, particularly at Pony, when he recounted his daring efforts.
"Pony," Elbryan said with a great sigh.
He
looked back to the mirror, to the perceived ghostly image within its edges. Pony,
he repeated. Roger has taken a fancy to her. Or perhaps he merely views
her responses as the greatest indicator of his worth. Pony is my partner, as
all know well, and if he can win her approval, then perhaps he believes they
all will rank him above me.
With
the realization of Roger's "crush" on Pony, the ranger saw just how
dangerous the situation might soon become. Roger, with his obvious talents,
could be an incredibly valuable addition to their group, but with his
immaturity, he might bring disaster upon them all.
"He
and I will fight," Elbryan said quietly, aloud. "I fear it will come
to that."
The
ranger left the room soon after, to see that night had come in, the fires of
the encampment burning brightly not far away. He approached at once, and was
accosted by loud voices before he drew near.
"We
should strike at them," Tomas Gingerwart, full of fire, argued. "And
hard! Drive them from our lands and back to their dark mountain holes."
Elbryan
came into the ring of firelight to see most heads nodding agreement with Tomas'
assessment. He noted Pony, sitting to the side of Tomas, a distressed look on
her face.
All
the talk paused then, in deference to the ranger, all eyes turning his way, as
if awaiting his judgment. As soon as Elbryan and Tomas locked stares, they both
understood that they would be on opposite sides of the debate.
"They
are without prisoners," Tomas said. "The time to strike is upon
us."
Elbryan
paused for a long while, truly sympathizing with the man, remembering his own
feelings, that desperate need for revenge when his home of Dundalis had been
burned to the ground. "I understand—" he started to say.
"Then
put the warriors in line," Tomas growled back at him, a response echoed
many times over throughout the group.
"Yet
I fear that you underestimate the strength of our enemies," the ranger
went on calmly. "How many of us, of our friends, will die in such a
raid?"
"Worth
it," cried one man, "if Caer Tinella is freed!"
"And
Landsdown!" cried another, a woman from that more southern settlement.
"And
if they are not?" the ranger calmly asked. "If, as I fear, we are
repelled, slaughtered on the field?"
"What
then for those who cannot fight?" Pony added, and that simple logic, that
reminder of the larger responsibility, defeated many retorts.
Still,
the argument went on and on, and ended out of exhaustion and not agreement.
Elbryan and his side could claim a minor victory, though, for no battle plans
were yet being drawn. They were all excited now, the ranger realized, about the
arrival of three new powerful allies, the victory in the forest fight, the safe
return of Roger Lockless, and Roger's subsequent stealing of the rest of
Kos-kosio's prisoners. Now, in the security of these new developments, the
folk dared to think of reclaiming their homes and punishing the murderous
thieves who had come to Caer Tinella and Landsdown. Hopefully, as things
settled down once more, logic would replace emotion.
Pony
understood and agreed with the rationale, and so she was quite surprised later
on, when she and Elbryan met with Juraviel in a pine grove some distance to the
south of the encampment, and the ranger announced, "The time to strike
hard at our enemy is upon us."
"You
just argued against such a course," the woman retorted.
"Our
enemies are wounded and disorganized," Elbryan went on, "and a
furious attack upon them now might send them running."
"Might,"
Juraviel echoed grimly. "And it might cost us many of our warriors."
"Our
entire existence is a risk," the ranger replied.
"Perhaps
we should consider sending those too infirm to fight to the south, to Palmaris,
before we plan an attack on Caer Tinella and Landsdown," the elf reasoned.
"We might even find allies in the southern cities."
"We
have allies in the southern cities," said Elbryan. "But they are
concerned for their own borders, and rightly so. No, if we can hit Kos-kosio
Begulne hard now and drive him from the towns—"
"That
we might hold them?" the elf put in sarcastically, for the mere thought of
their ragtag band holding a defensible position was ludicrous.
Elbryan
put his head down and sighed deeply. He knew that Juraviel was playing a vital
advocate role here, more to help him see through his formulating ideas and work
out the finer points than to discourage him, but talking to the Touel'alfar and
their pragmatic, if stilted, way of looking at the world was always a bit
discouraging to one who saw the world through human eyes. Juraviel didn't
understand the level of frustration in Tomas and the others, didn't understand
how dangerous that frustration might soon become.
"If
we drive Kos-kosio Begulne and his powries from the two towns," the ranger
began slowly, deliberately, "it is possible, even likely, that many of
their allies will desert the dangerous powries, perhaps even abandon the war
altogether. Neither goblins nor giants have any love for powries—they hate the
dwarves at least as much as they hate humans—and it is only the strength of the
powrie leader, I believe, that is now binding them into a singular force. And
even though giants and goblins have been known to ally in the past, there has
never been a great fondness between them, by any reports. Giants have been said
to eat goblins on occasion. So let us discredit this powrie leader, this
binding force, and see what may transpire."
Now
it was Juraviel's turn to sigh. "Always are you looking for the greatest
possible advantage," he said quietly, his tone edged with resignation.
"Always pushing yourself and those around you to the very limits."
A
wounded Elbryan looked at the elf curiously, surprised that Juraviel would
criticize him so.
"Of
course," the elf went on, perking up and a sly smile widening on his
angular face, "that is exactly what the Touel'alfar taught you to
do!"
"We
are agreed, then?" Elbryan asked anxiously.
"I
did not say that," Juraviel replied.
Elbryan
gave a frustrated growl. "If we do not hit at them, if we do not take
advantage of our advantage—and it will prove a fleeting thing, I believe—then we will
likely find ourselves in exactly the same desperate situation we just wriggled
our way out of. Kos-kosio Begulne will regroup and reinforce and come back at
us, forcing another fight in the forest, and sooner or later one of those
battles will turn against us. The powrie leader is outraged, no doubt, by the
defeat in the forest and the loss of his prisoners."
"He
might even suspect that Nightbird has come to the region," Pony added,
drawing curious looks from the elf and the ranger.
"I
remember the name, and so do you, if you pause long enough to think about
it," Pony explained. "Kos-kosio Begulne remembers us from
Dundalis."
Juraviel
nodded, recalling the ambush the monsters had once set for Nightbird,
destroying a pine vale that the ranger dearly loved to draw him out of the
forest. That ambush had been turned back against the monsters, though, like
every tack they took against the ranger and his cunning and powerful friends.
"It
is even possible that the monkish caravan which Roger spoke of was running from
something," Elbryan went on.
"We
could use our temporary advantage to slip around the towns and flee to the
south," Juraviel reasoned. He did not miss the look, almost one of alarm,
that passed between Pony and Elbryan at that notion.
"What
else?" the elf asked bluntly.
"Anything
that would make the monks, with their powerful magic, flee so, must be a
considerable force," Pony put in, but she was far from convincing to the
perceptive elf.
"Still
more rationale that we should simply flee to the south, as did the monks,"
Juraviel pressed. He noted again the look between his companions. "What
else?" he asked again. "There is something more to the passage of
the monks. I know you too well, Nightbird."
Elbryan
laughed in concession to that point. "Pony and I cannot remain in the
area," he admitted. "Nor would we dare to go south."
"Brother
Avelyn's stones," Juraviel said.
"It
might be that the monks Roger spoke of were looking for us," said Pony.
"Or at least looking for the stones that I hold in my possession. When
Brother Justice was searching for Avelyn, he used this stone," she
explained, fishing a red garnet out of her pouch and holding it up for Juraviel
to see. "This stone detects the use of magic, thus Avelyn's conjuring
powers led Brother Justice right to him."
"And
you feel that your use of magic has put the monks on your trail," Juraviel
reasoned.
Pony
nodded. "It is possible, and too important for us to take any
chances."
"The
last act of Brother Avelyn's life was to entrust us with the sacred
stones," Elbryan put in determinedly. "We will not fail him in
this."
"Then
perhaps the three of us should be on our way now," Juraviel said.
"Are these stones, then, more important than the refugees we now
lead?"
Elbryan
looked to Pony, but she had no answers for him. "In the measure of
history, they may well be," the ranger said.
A
noise from the brush, a gurgling, angry sound, brought all three on their guard.
Juraviel moved fast, lifting his bow as he disappeared into the flora, then
returning a moment later, a furious Roger Lockless beside him.
"You
are naming rocks as more important than the people you pretend to lead!"
the young man fumed. As he spoke he moved farther from Juraviel, obviously not
comfortable near the diminutive creature.
"You
need not fear him," Pony remarked dryly, thinking it ridiculous that Roger
would act so skittish around one of the two who had rescued him from Kos-kosio
Begulne's cruel grasp. She recognized that the young man's hesitance to embrace
Juraviel was wrought of more than fear. "Belli'mar Juraviel, indeed all
the Touel'alfar, are allies."
"So
I've come to understand your meaning of the word," Roger snapped at her.
Pony
started to respond, but Elbryan stepped in front of her. "As I was
explaining," he said evenly, staring hard at the young man, "these
stones are as vital—"
"More
vital, you said," Roger interrupted.
"Do
not underestimate their importance!" Elbryan yelled right back in his
face. The ranger noted Juraviel's disapproving expression then and calmed
himself down. "The stones represent much more than even the great power
stored within them," Elbryan went on, his voice controlled and even.
"They may well be more important than my life, or Pony's, or yours, or
the lives of all the people of our band."
"Those
are your foolish thoughts—" Roger started to yell back, but Elbryan cut him
short with an upraised hand, a movement so quick and so forceful that the end
of the young man's sentence came out as a startled gurgle.
"However,"
the ranger went on calmly, "having said all of that, and truly believing
it, I cannot leave this situation as I have found it. I must get these people
to the safety of the southland, or at least make certain that the road there is
clear ahead of them."
"You
name yourself as leader," Roger accused.
"Thus
you wish to strike, and strike hard, against Kos-kosio Begulne," Juraviel
reasoned, ignoring the petty turn of Roger's argument. "If we hit them
hard in the two towns and scatter them to the forest, the whole of this band
can flee south in relative safety, without Nightbird guiding them."
"For
there, Nightbird would not be wise to go," said Pony. "And yet,"
she added, looking squarely at her lover, "you just argued against that
very course."
"I
did," Elbryan agreed. "And I still do argue against a fight that will
send all of the warriors, even the majority of them, against the towns."
Pony
started to ask what he might be talking about, but then she caught on. Elbryan
had just gone into Caer Tinella to rescue Roger, and so now he was thinking of
going back, with just his most powerful friends about him, and tilting the
balance of power.
Juraviel,
also catching on, nodded. "I will go into Caer Tinella this night and
gather information," he agreed.
"I
can go," said Roger.
"Juraviel
is better suited to the task," Elbryan was quick to respond.
"Have
you forgotten that I was in Caer Tinella just two nights ago?" Roger
protested. "That I returned with the prisoners?"
The
other three watched him closely, noting how he emphasized that personal
pronoun.
"If
the prisoners were still in there, you could not even think of attacking the
town!" Roger finished.
Elbryan
nodded, conceding the point. Roger's action had indeed set the stage for this
possible strike. But still, especially after speaking with the freed prisoners
and hearing of their desperate run through the dark forest, Elbryan remained
convinced that Belli'mar Juraviel was better suited for the task. Juraviel had
told him that one hound, at least, might still be alive, and if that creature
had come forth on the trail, none of them, not Roger nor the prisoners, would
have likely returned. "Juraviel is the choice," the ranger said
calmly.
Pony
noted the young man's expression and realized that Elbryan had just further
compromised Roger's standing and hurt his inflated pride.
"Can
you fly from treetop to treetop when the hounds sniff your trail?" Elbryan
asked bluntly before Roger could begin to protest.
Roger
chewed his bottom lip; both Elbryan and Pony thought he would strike out at the
ranger. He only stamped his foot, though, and turned to leave.
"Stop!"
Pony cried, surprising all three. She was coming to understand Roger, and while
she did not dislike him, she recognized that he was young and too full of
pride and self-importance for his own good.
Roger
spun about, eyes wide and blazing with anger.
Pony
took out a gemstone, carefully concealing it in her hand so he could not see it
clearly, and walked up before him. "What you have overheard is
private," she explained.
"Now
you deign to order me?" Roger asked incredulously. "Are you my queen,
then? Should I kneel?"
"You
should be wise enough, even at your age and with your lack of experience, to
recognize friend from enemy," Pony scolded. She wanted to go on, laying
bare to Roger his shortcomings concerning their relationship, but she realized
that such lessons must be truly learned, and not explained, to be fully appreciated.
"Yet I see that you cannot, that for some reason you have decided that we
are not your friends. So be it."
The
woman reached into another pouch, and Roger backed off a step. Not far enough,
though, for Pony's hand came out and up fast, and with a yellow-hued weed she
marked an X on Roger's forehead. Then she lifted her hand with the gem before
him and spoke a series of phrases that sounded very much like some ancient
incantation.
"What
have you done to me?" Roger demanded, nearly falling over as he continued
his retreat.
"I
have done nothing to you unless you betray us," Pony replied calmly.
Roger's
face screwed up with confusion. "I owe you nothing," he said.
"As
I owe you nothing," Pony replied sternly. "Thus I have just evened
our relationship once again. In your eavesdropping, you heard things which do
not concern you, and as such, it is your responsibility to forget them."
Roger
had no answer, other than to shake his head.
"Or
to remain silent on the issue, at the very least," Pony went on.
"However, if you cannot, you will find a most unpleasant
consequence."
"What
are you talking about?" Roger asked, and when Pony smiled wickedly, the
young man looked past her to speak to Elbryan. "What has she done to
me?" he demanded.
Elbryan
honestly didn't know, and so his shrug was sincere.
"Tell
me!" Roger yelled in Pony's face.
Elbryan
closed his eyes as Roger started to reach up for Pony, fully expecting that his
love would knock the foolish little man out cold. Roger, though, did not carry
through with the movement, and simply stood before Pony, fists clenched in
frustration.
"I
have put a curse on you," Pony said quietly. "But a curse with a
contingency."
"What
do you mean?" he asked, his angry tone showing a hint of fear.
"I
mean that as long as you do the right thing and remain silent about that which
you should not know, nothing ill will befall you," the woman calmly
explained. Her expression changed abruptly, grew dark and ominous, and she
closed the distance between herself and Roger and rose up tall and terrible on
her toes, towering over the small man. "Betray us," she warned in a
voice so grave that it raised the hairs on the back of Elbryan's neck, and sent
shivers through Roger's body, "and the magic I have put on you will melt
the brains in your head so that they will flow out of your ears."
Roger's
eyes widened. He knew little of magic, but those displays he had seen were
certainly impressive enough for him to believe that the woman was capable of
carrying out her threat. He stumbled backward, nearly fell over, turned and ran
away.
"Pony!"
Elbryan scolded. "How could you do such—"
"I
did nothing except mark his forehead with dandelion," the woman replied.
"I've done as much to your chin in the buttercup game we played as
children."
"Then—" Elbryan
stopped and chuckled, somewhat surprised by his companion.
"Was
that really necessary?" Belli'mar Juraviel asked dryly.
Pony's
expression was dead serious as she nodded in response. "He would have
betrayed us to the others," she explained. "And I do not wish it to
become public knowledge that we two are outlaws in the eyes of the Abellican
Church."
"And
is our secret so terrible?" Elbryan put in. "I learned long ago to
trust these people."
"Like
Tol Yuganick?" Pony retorted, referring to a man who had betrayed her and
Elbryan and all the folk of Dundalis before the journey to Aida.
Elbryan
had no answer to that, but Pony, recognizing that her cynicism had stung her
lover, continued. "I, too, trust Belster and Tomas and all the
others," she admitted. "But Roger would have told the story in a way
to bolster himself, and that, I fear, might have put us in an unfavorable
light. Who knows what tales might then be spun when the folk are safely in
Palmaris?"
Elbryan,
who was also beginning to understand Roger Lockless, couldn't disagree with
that.
"You
did well," Juraviel decided. "The time is too critical for us to take
such a chance. Young Roger may have had difficulty recognizing the right
course, but I think that you painted for him a fairly clear signpost."
Elbryan
snorted. "And here I was for all my life believing that morality was
somehow tied to conscience."
"And
so it is," Pony replied.
"Ideally,"
Juraviel added. "But do not underestimate the power of fear. Your own
Church has used the threat of an afterlife in fiery brimstone to keep its
congregation in line for more than a thousand years."
"Not
my Church," Elbryan replied. "Not the Church that Avelyn
espoused."
"No,
the Church that pursued the renegade monk, as much to silence his radical
ideals as to retrieve the gemstones, do not doubt," Juraviel replied
without hesitation.
Elbryan
looked to Pony, to find her nodding her assent with the elf's every word. He
gave a chuckle, unable to argue the point. "The Church that pursues Pony
and me," he remarked.
"The
monks that came through were heading south—and quickly, so Roger said," Pony
put in. "I have used the garnet, but can detect no magic in the area, so I
assume that Roger's guess about their speed was correct."
"I
hope that they continued right past Palmaris," Elbryan added.
"But
in any case, our time here is limited. I hope to make the most of it."
"Caer
Tinella and Landsdown," Belli'mar Juraviel said.
Elbryan's
face was dead serious, even grim, as he nodded and gave his reply. "We
will meet with you back here at dusk, perhaps to attack before the next
dawn."
"As
you wish, my friend," the elf said. "I am off to scout out the towns,
then. Prepare the attack—and do reconcile, a bit at least, with Roger Lockless. He
has done great things for these people, to hear Belster O'Comely speak, and I
would guess that he has great things ahead of him, if he does not let his pride
hinder him."
"We
will take care of Roger," Pony answered.
"Paint
the signpost clearly," Juraviel said with a laugh and a snap of his
fingers, and then he was gone, disappearing into the underbrush so completely
that Pony blinked and rubbed her eyes, wondering if they had deceived her.
Elbryan, though, more accustomed to the Touel'alfar, and more knowledgeable in
the ways of the forest, was not surprised.
"It
is him," Kos-kosio Begulne insisted. "I'm knowin' 'is ways, the
bastard!"
Maiyer
Dek pondered the words for a long time, as he always did when speaking of
anything even remotely important. The huge fomorian was quite impressive for
one of his race, both physically and mentally. Though not as sharp-witted as
his powrie peer, not even as wise as Gothra, who had ruled the goblins, Maiyer
Dek understood his shortcomings and so took his time, examining everything
slowly and deliberately.
The
giant's silence did little for the anxious Kos-kosio Begulne's already foul
mood. The powrie paced the floor of the great barn, picking his nose with one
hand, the other slapping repeatedly against his hip.
"There
might be other humans like Nightbird," the giant offered.
Kos-kosio
Begulne snorted at the notion. "If that's so, then we'd've been kicked all
the way back to Aida by this time!"
"One
other, then," the giant replied.
"I'm
hopin' not," the powrie answered. "And I'm thinkin' not. This one be
him. I can smell the bastard. It's Nightbird come a'calling, don't ye doubt. So
are ye to give me yer prisoners, or aren't ye?"
Again
Maiyer Dek went into a long, drawn-out consideration.
He
and the other three giants who had accompanied him had just returned from the
southland, where they had waged a huge battle against the Kingsmen, just to the
west of Palmaris. Many giants had died in the fight, and many more humans, and
Maiyer Dek and his surviving cohorts had taken a host of men prisoner.
"Traveling foodstuffs," the giant leader called them, and indeed, ten
of the two-score men they had taken were eaten by the time the cruel fomorians
got to Caer Tinella. Now Kos-kosio Begulne wanted the remaining thirty as bait
for the Nightbird, and in truth, Maiyer Dek wasn't overly fond of human flesh.
But still, the giant remembered vividly the disastrous battle in the pine vale
the last time he and his fellow leaders had baited this man called Nightbird.
Did Kos-kosio Begulne really want to bring him in?
"Ye
got to give 'em to me," Kos-kosio Begulne said suddenly. "We got to
settle with Nightbird now, afore half the force leaves us. Already the
goblins're rumbling about going home, and me own folks long for the Weathered
Isles."
"So
go, all of us," replied the giant, who had never been too keen on coming
south to Honce-the-Bear in the first place. Before the dactyl had awakened,
Maiyer Dek had enjoyed a comfortable existence in the mountains north of the
Barbacan, with a tribe of fourscore giants—including twenty females for his
whims—and plenty of goblins about for good hunting and better eating.
"Not
yet," the powrie retorted sharply. "Not until the damned Nightbird's
paid for our troubles."
"You
never even liked Ulg Tik'narn," the giant said without even his customary
pause.
"Not
the point!" Kos-kosio Begulne shot back, "He was a powrie leader, and
a good one! Nightbird killed 'im, so I'm meaning to kill Nightbird."
"Then
we go?"
"Then
we go," the powrie agreed. "And once we're past the human lands, me
and me folk'll not protect the goblin scum from yer belly."
That
was all Maiyer Dek needed to hear.
By
the time Juraviel returned from the towns, Elbryan and Pony had the folk in
full agreement with delaying the attack—a difficult proposition given the
success of the fight in the woods and the return of Roger and the other
prisoners. All of the folk were eager to be done with this adventure, to be
sitting in a comfortable common room
exaggerating their fireside tales, and if going through Caer Tinella and
Landsdown meant they might soon be in the safety of Palmaris, then they were
more than ready for the fight.
Pony
was still with them, working out details should the attack on Caer Tinella or
Landsdown commence, when Elbryan returned to the pine grove.
As
soon as the ranger saw Juraviel come down from the tree, he knew something was
wrong.
"They
have fortified," the ranger reasoned.
"Indeed,"
Juraviel answered with a nod of his head. "There are three new scout
towers about the edge of the town, north, southwest, and southeast, and an
impromptu barricade has been erected about the whole of the place, a barrier of
barrels, torn walls, anything they could find. It seems solid enough, standing
near to the height of a man, but not too thick."
"Enough
to slow down a charge," the ranger said.
"Perhaps
a bit," Juraviel admitted, though he was not too concerned or impressed
with the fortification. "Still, with the new ally that has arrived, I
doubt that they feel the need to fortify."
"Another
group of powries?" Elbryan asked.
"Giants,"
Juraviel replied. "Including the biggest and ugliest of those big and ugly
brutes I have ever seen. Maiyer Dek, he is called, and even the powries, even
Kos-kosio Begulne himself, gives him great respect. His armor is special, I
fear, perhaps even magical, for it seems almost to have an inner fire."
Elbryan
nodded; he had battled with giants similarly outfitted— and he
remembered the name of Maiyer Dek from the Timberlands. The armor was earth
magic, forged by the demon dactyl for its elite soldiers.
"We
cannot allow these people to go against Caer Tinella," the elf went on.
"We might skirt the town in the dark of night, or we might hit at
Landsdown, whose garrison does not seem as formidable. But to send these
people, untrained warriors all, against giants, particularly this new
monstrosity, would be folly. Even your own plans to do battle pose a great
risk."
Elbryan
had no argument against the simple logic. He had fought enough giants to
understand the possibility for complete catastrophe. "If we flee around
the towns, they will likely catch our trail," he reasoned. "We would
never get all the way to Palmaris ahead of them."
"A
wider berth, then?" the elf asked, but he suspected that the ranger
wouldn't be easy to convince.
"We
can send them," Elbryan replied tentatively.
"But
you still wish to go to the town and wage your fight," Juraviel reasoned.
"If
this giant, Maiyer Dek, is as powerful and as revered as you indicate, perhaps
he and I should speak," the ranger explained.
"Speak?"
Juraviel echoed doubtfully.
"With
weapons," Elbryan clarified. "How great a blow do you suppose it will
prove to our enemies if Maiyer Dek and Kos-kosio Begulne are both slain?"
"Great
indeed," the elf admitted. "I do not know what holds the giants and
goblins together with each other and even more so with the powries, if not the
strong leadership of those two. But still, think wisely, my friend. It will be
no easy task to even get to the giant and powrie leaders, and even if you can,
even if you somehow find a way to fight them without their minions swarming
over you, you may find yourself overmatched. Turn your own question about: What
will the refugees do without Nightbird to lead them?"
"They
did well enough without Nightbird to lead them until very recently," the
ranger reminded. "And they will have Juraviel."
"Whose
business this is not!"
"Who
chose to come to the aid of the humans," Elbryan replied with a wry grin.
"Who
chose to follow his protege, Nightbird, to make sure the young man did not act
foolishly," the elf corrected, smiling widely; and Elbryan knew from that
smile that he had Juraviel on his side. "I have too many years invested in
your training—and
you carry an elven sword and a bow made by my own father—to let you get
yourself killed."
"Some
call it foolish, others daring," the ranger said.
"Or
perhaps they are one and the same," Juraviel put in.
Elbryan
clapped the elf on the shoulder, and both were still laughing when Pony moved
through the pine grove to join them.
"The
news from the towns is good, then?" she reasoned.
"No,"
both Elbryan and Juraviel said in unison.
Pony
rocked back on her heels, caught by surprise, given their jovial attitudes.
"We
were just discussing the folly of your Elbryan's intentions," Juraviel
explained. "To walk into the middle of an enemy encampment and slay both
their leaders, though one is a powrie, as tough and stubborn a creature as ever
lived, and the other a huge and mighty giant."
"And
you find this amusing?" Pony asked Elbryan.
"Of
course."
The
woman nodded, and sincerely wondered if the stress of their existence was
finally getting to her companion.
"I'll
not walk right in," the ranger corrected, staring hard at the elf. "I
will sneak, of course, quiet as a shadow, uninvited as death."
"And
dead as a piece of wood," Juraviel finished, and both started laughing
again.
Pony,
who understood that there was a measure of truth beneath their levity, was not
amused. "Enough foolishness," she scolded. "You have a hundred
warriors pacing anxiously, wondering if they will die this night, awaiting your
decree."
"And
my decree—which
I will insist upon-—is that they stand down," Elbryan said, his tone
serious.
"I
am not certain they will listen," Pony admitted, for in the time the
ranger had been away, the talk had again reached a fever pitch, in favor of
driving the monsters far away.
"We
cannot attack the towns," the ranger explained, "for the powries have
found more giant allies, including one attired in the earth magic armor of the
dactyl."
Pony
sighed deeply and hoped that the folk would listen. She remembered that armor
from the fight at the Barbacan, and knew that any of the refugees who came
against this new ally would fall quickly. She looked to Elbryan and recognized
the dangerous expression on his face.
"We
need only explain that they must wait another day or two for the fight, until
we can discern the power of our new enemies," Elbryan reasoned.
"But
you still plan to go in, and fight, this very night," Pony stated.
"I
wish to find a way to destroy this giant, and Kos-kosio Begulne," Elbryan
admitted. "It would be a great blow to our enemies, and might cause
enough confusion for us to scatter the remaining monsters and get these people
to Palmaris."
"Then
let us discern how we might accomplish this task," Pony said calmly,
moving before Juraviel and bending low. She took up a stick, handed it to the
elf, and cleared away the pine needles from the ground before her. "A map,
to start," she instructed.
Juraviel
looked to Elbryan, both surprised that Pony, usually more conservative than the
ranger, had so easily agreed, given the new monsters in town. And Juraviel
wondered, too, if this turn of events had changed Elbryan's thinking. Did he
still mean to include his love on so dangerous a mission?
The
ranger nodded, his expression grim, in answer to that unspoken question. He
and Pony had been through too much together for him to even think of excluding
her from this important fight. While he had intended to keep Juraviel out of it—an elf's
diminutive weapons were not much use against a giant, after all—he had planned
all along to execute the attack with Pony beside him.
The
daylight was fast fading by that time, so Pony took out her diamond and brought
forth a minor globe of light. In a short while Juraviel had the town of Caer
Tinella mapped out.
"I
cannot be certain where Kos-kosio Begulne will be," the elf explained.
"But there are only three buildings high enough to hold a giant." He
tapped each in turn on the map. "Barns," he explained. "And this
one is the most likely for the giant leader." His pointer settled on the
marker for a large structure near the center of town.
"They
had no organized defense, as far as I could tell," the elf went on.
"Other than the barricades and a few posted sentries."
"Powries
are usually prepared," Pony said. "More likely, their defenses are
well-concealed."
"But
this group has had little trouble of late," Juraviel replied.
"Except
for the fight in the forest," said Elbryan.
"And
the theft of prisoners," Pony added.
"But
no real attacks against the town," the elf explained. "And I doubt
they'll expect one, with the fomorian giants so visible to any who think to
attack."
"But
with Roger, who has shown his ability to get into town at will, gone from their
grasp, the ring about the leaders, particularly Kos-kosio Begulne, might be
tight," Pony reasoned.
"And
that is precisely where I intend to go," Elbryan added.
"No
easy task," Juraviel said.
"It
never is," the ranger replied.
"But
you intend to go anyway," the elf remarked.
Elbryan
looked to Pony. "This very night," he explained. "I will seek
out Belster and Tomas Gingerwart first and tell them of our plans, and of what
they should do, depending on whether Pony and I succeed or not."
"And
my role?" the elf asked.
"You
will serve as my liaison to Belster," Elbryan explained.
"You
will learn quickly the outcome of the fight, no doubt, and the sooner Belster
is informed, the better he will be able to react."
Juraviel
spent a long while staring hard at Elbryan, at the man who had earned the title
of Nightbird from the Touel'alfar. The elf felt that doubting Tuntun was with
him then, admitting wholeheartedly that she had been wrong in her initial
assessment of Elbryan Wyndon, the "blood of Mather," as she had so
often sarcastically referred to him. Tuntun had never thought that Elbryan
would make the grade as a ranger, had thought him stupid and uncoordinated.
She had learned differently, though, so much so that she willingly gave her
life to save the young man—and elves were not often altruistic toward humans! And if
she were here now, Juraviel knew, to witness the calm determination and sincere
sense of duty with which Elbryan was approaching this incredibly dangerous
fight, she might well call him "blood of Mather" once again, but this
time with sincere affection.
"Your
role in this battle will be with the stones alone," Elbryan said to Pony
as they made their slow way toward Caer Tinella. Belster and Tomas had agreed
that the battle should be delayed while more information was gathered, but did
not know that the ranger meant to wage it on his own.
Pony
eyed him skeptically. "I have been training hard," she replied.
"And
well."
"But
you do not trust me to fight with sword?"
Elbryan
was shaking his head before she finished. "You are between fighting
styles," he explained. "Your head tells you the next proper move, but
your body is still trained in the other style. Will you lunge or slash? And in
the moment it takes you to decide, an enemy weapon will find you."
Pony
bit her lip, trying to find some logical response. She could do the sword-dance
quite well now, but that was in slower motion than she would find in a real
fight. At the end of every session, when Elbryan speeded up the process, she
could not keep up, caught, as he had said, between her thoughts and her muscle
memory.
"Soon
enough," Elbryan promised her. "Until then, you remain most effective
with the stones alone."
Pony
didn't argue.
The
pair came upon Juraviel on a hillock overlooking Caer Tinella from the
northeast, the high vantage point affording them a view of all the town. It
appeared remarkably as Juraviel had described it, the new barricades wrapping
all the central structures, but all three found their gazes locked to a huge
bonfire burning in the southeastern corner, all the way to the other side.
"I
will investigate it," the elf volunteered.
Elbryan
nodded and looked to Pony. "Find them with the soul stone," he said
to her, and then to Juraviel added, "If Kos-kosio Begulne and Maiyer Dek
are in the barn, then that is where Pony and I will go. You watch our progress
into the town, then return here to gather Symphony, for I suspect that I'll
leave the horse behind. And then you need only wait and watch."
"You
wait," Juraviel corrected, his tone showing that he did not intend to be
dissuaded. "There is nothing ordinary about that bonfire; you would do
well to let me discern its meaning before you go into the town."
"We
may only get one chance at these two," Pony said to Elbryan, nodding her
agreement with Juraviel's assessment. "Let us make certain that the time
is right."
"Be
quick, then," anxious Elbryan said to them both.
Before
Juraviel could respond, the quiet of night was stolen by a call from the town.
"Another
to the flames!" came the thunderous roar, a giant's voice. "Are you
watching, Nightbird? Do you see the men dying because of you?"
All
three peered into the distance, focusing on the flames. They saw the
silhouettes of three forms, two powries and a man, they seemed, and watched in
horror as the man was thrown onto the burning pyre.
His
agonized screams rent the air.
Elbryan
let out an angry growl, reached around and pulled Pony down from the horse and
in the same fluid movement had his bow in hand.
"No,
ranger!" Juraviel said to him. "That is exactly what they want!"
"What
they think they want," the ranger retorted. "Lead me with your
arrows, straight for the wall!" He drove his heels hard into Symphony's
sides and the great stallion leaped away, thundering down the hillock, charging
for the town. Juraviel sped off in pursuit, half running, half flying, and
Pony changed gemstones, putting her hematite away.
Nightbird
came out of the cover of the trees in full gallop, crossing the small field
before the impromptu wall, Hawkwing up and ready. His first arrow took an
unsuspecting goblin in the side of the head, throwing the creature right over.
His second got another goblin in the chest just as it lifted its arm to throw a
spear.
But
his element of surprise was gone, and now the wall teemed with enemies, goblins
and powries. Roaring, too angry and too desperate to consider a different
course, the ranger bent low over Symphony's neck, spurring the great horse on.
Then
both horse and rider stumbled, Symphony nearly going down as a blast of
lightning thundered right beside them, smashing into the barricade, splintering
wood, throwing goblins and powries all about.
The
ranger and his steed recovered quickly, with little momentum lost. Back in
full stride, churning the turf, the powerful stallion leaped the six-foot
barrier, soaring over the dead and stunned monsters, hitting the ground in a
dead run. Arrows buzzed past the ranger as he cut the horse in a tight turn,
charging between two buildings. He cut another fast corner, seeing still more
enemies rising before him. Down an alley, he broke out into the town square,
but turned on his heel again, for the place was swarming with powries, and sped
down yet another alleyway.
As
he neared one low roof, Nightbird slung Hawkwing over his shoulder, drew out
Tempest, and climbed to a standing position, legs far apart and bent for
balance. Through the turquoise stone set in the horse's chest, he communicated
with Symphony, bidding the horse to keep a steady run and move in close to the
building on their right-hand side.
A
goblin was just rising as Nightbird came in. Tempest's slash nearly decapitated
it, and the ranger was quick to withdraw the sword, yanking it free, then
stabbing back out, nailing a second goblin under the chin.
Nightbird
dropped back to a sitting position, slid Tempest between thigh and saddle and
readied his bow once more, firing as he rode. A powrie leaped out in his path,
another on the roof to the left. Nightbird focused on the higher target,
driving an arrow into its chest even as it launched a spear his way. Symphony
took care of the powrie on the ground, running the dwarf down, nearly stumbling,
but holding strong.
Nightbird
managed to get his bow across to partially deflect the well-aimed spear, and
that defensive movement surely saved his life, though the spear struck home
anyway, a grazing hit across the shoulder. It hooked his shirt as the fabric
tore away, and with a growl Nightbird reached around and pulled it free,
thinking to drop it.
He
tucked it under his arm instead, lancelike, as he bore down on an open doorway,
a powrie charging out to meet him. Up came the powrie's shield, but not quick
enough, and the spear tip glided over the top, catching the screaming dwarf
right in the mouth, bashing in its teeth, then sinking deeper, right out the
back of the head and into the wood of the doorjamb.
Nightbird
let go of the weapon and had not even the time to look back and regard his
work.
The
powrie, stuck in a standing position, twitched repeatedly as it died.
Nightbird
cut a fast corner, then another, angling for the northeastern edge of town.
Around yet another bend, he found himself in trouble, for there, blocking the
path before him, stood a pair of giants, behemoths no single arrow would fell
and that Symphony could not hope to run down.
By
the time Juraviel got to the battered barricade, it was clear of monsters, for
those few that had survived the ranger's charge and Pony's blast were scattered
to the streets of Caer Tinella, chasing Symphony's swift and elusive run. A
flutter of his wings sent Juraviel over the wall, to the roof of one of the
buildings it connected at this juncture. Across the way stood a goblin,
leaping up and down and shouting directions to its comrades on the ground as it
spotted the rushing rider.
Juraviel
crept up to within five paces, bow in hand. He went down to one knee to better
angle the shot, and his arrow caught the goblin right under the base of its
skull, driving upward. The creature flipped from the edge of the roof and
landed hard on its back, quite dead, in the street.
A
movement from behind sent the elf in a spin, another arrow ready to fly. He
held the shot, and luckily so, for the form scrambling over the edge of the
roof was not that of a goblin or powrie, but of a man, slight of build and
climbing nimbly.
"What
are you doing here?" the elf whispered as Roger came up to crouch beside
him.
"A
question I could also be asking you," the young man answered. His gaze
focused on the line of prisoners. "There must be thirty of them," he
said, and he started at once for the southeastern corner of the roof.
Juraviel
let him go and did not follow. The more angles from which they struck out at
the monsters, the more confusion they would likely cause, and that confusion
might be the only thing that would allow foolish Nightbird to get out of this
place alive!
Fluttering
wings brought the elf silently to another rooftop, farther into the town and
more to the north, and from there he found many opportunities. Off went his
arrows, one, two, three, hitting powrie and giant, and yet another powrie on
the other side, killing none—though his last arrow had hurt the dwarf badly—but bringing
screams of outrage and taking the focus, for these nearby groups at least, off
his friend. Monsters closed on the building from every direction.
Juraviel
went straight up, into the darkness of night, angling his flight slightly so he
landed on yet another building. Then he ran to the far edge of that roof, put
an arrow into an unsuspecting goblin for good measure, then fluttered off to
yet another building, the large central barn.
In
his wake he left monsters screaming and howling, and no longer believing that
the ranger had come into the town alone.
Symphony's
hooves sent dirt flying wide as the horse angled hard, the ranger trying to
pass the giants on the right side. The closest behemoth raised its club, but
the ranger was quicker, sliding Tempest back in hand and slashing across,
catching the giant's uplifted arm right below the elbow.
The
giant roared in pain and could not finish the attack, and so Nightbird and his
horse rushed past and seemed to break clear.
But
then yet another giant stepped out to block the path, and the trail was
narrower up ahead, giving the ranger nowhere to run. He dropped Tempest across
his lap and went back to Hawkwing, fitting an arrow and leveling the bow in
the blink of an eye.
He
would only get one shot.
He
had to be perfect.
The
arrow, fired from barely fifteen feet away, got the giant right in the eye, and
how it howled! It clutched at its face and spun halfway about, shrieking and
screaming.
"Run
on!" Nightbird commanded the horse. Out flashed Tempest; the ranger
tightened his legs about the powerful stallion, and Symphony, understanding
Nightbird's commands, understanding the desperation of the situation, willingly
obliged and never slowed, hitting the behemoth in full gallop.
The
ranger got a strike in at the same moment, his sword slashing hard at the side
of the tumbling giant's neck. Down the brute went, and Symphony, stunned, held
his balance, Nightbird tugging hard to turn the horse about as the other two
came in.
"Keep
this one out of the fight," the ranger bade Symphony, and then he tossed
his sword to the ground and took up his bow, diving into a roll from the
horse's back, fitting an arrow as he went and letting fly as he came rolling
around back to his feet. The missile drove deep into a giant shoulder, but the
behemoth seemed hardly to notice it.
The
ranger conjured images of the poor prisoners on the other side of the town, men
being roasted alive on the powrie bonfires, and from those scenes he drew rage,
and from his rage he drew strength. He reached out for Tempest, and the magical
blade, hearing his silent call, flew to his hand and flared with inner power.
Nightbird, too focused to even notice the spectacle of his sword, charged straight
ahead.
His
attack surprised the giants, enough for the ranger to slide in on one knee,
ducking beneath the sidelong swipe of one brute. Out flashed his sword,
smacking off the behemoth's kneecap, and as the creature instinctively lifted
its leg to grab at the wound, the ranger ran forward, right under the upraised
heavy boot, diving past the other leg, out of reach of the second behemoth as
it came around the first for a swing.
Nightbird
pivoted and struck once and then again, scoring two stabbing hits on the
giant's buttocks. The brute spun and swung wildly, holding its club in one
hand, its free hand alternately holding its arrow-stuck shoulder, its slashed
knee, its stabbed butt.
The
club came nowhere near to hitting the nimble ranger. He dropped into a
squatting position, letting it soar over his head, then came up hard, chasing
the hand, striking out and hitting again, right on the giant's wrist.
The
behemoth howled; the club went flying free.
But
the move had put Nightbird in a sorry position with the second giant, and he
could not completely avoid the brute's swinging club. It clipped him on the
shoulder and sent him flying, tumbling right over in the air, coming down
headfirst and tumbling again, and then again after that as he hit the ground in
a desperate attempt to absorb some of the shock.
He
came around in a roll, studying his foe. Truly this was the ugliest giant he
had ever seen, with one lip torn away and a garish tattoo of a goblin ripped in
half covering its forehead. One ear was also missing and the other sported a
large gold earcap. Grinning wickedly, the brute looked to its stung companion,
nodding as the behemoth indicated that it was still ready for the fight. The
ugly brute slowly stalked in.
Even
for the elven-trained ranger, two giants were more than a match.
But
at least it would remain only two, Nightbird noted, glancing at Symphony. The
giant on the ground was trying to rise, but the horse reared repeatedly over
its head, front hooves pounding away.
The
giant, blind in one eye, reached out desperately, then tried to rise again as
Symphony spun about.
The
horse was only lining the brute up for a kick, though, and the giant wasn't
halfway to standing when Symphony lashed out with both rear legs, connecting
solidly on the giant's face and laying it out straight.
Then
the horse came right over the head again, front legs tapping a steady beat.
Nightbird
didn't see the last move, too concerned with scrambling away from the closest
giant's sudden rain of blows, overhand chops that could not be ducked. The
ground shook with each tremendous impact.
The
other giant retrieved its club, but seemed in no hurry to join its companion.
Still,
Nightbird heard the pursuit closing from all around and knew he was running out
of time.
Pony
had not been idle. After her lightning blast rocked the barricade, clearing
the way for Elbryan and then Juraviel—and then, though she hadn't known it,
for Roger Lockless—the woman ran down the slope, angling to the north. She
tried to keep track of the ranger's movements within the town, following the
sound of shouting monsters and the ringing silverel as Tempest did its work,
and she was fairly certain that her love was also making his way around the
northern edge.
Pony's
run became a series of short bursts, moving from cover to cover, looking back
toward the town, trying to gain some information. She saw the heads of two
giants, saw one lurch suddenly and cry out in pain, and knew that Nightbird had
come upon them.
When
a third giant's head and shoulders appeared, towering above the low buildings,
Pony realized that her love was in, serious trouble.
The
woman fumbled about in her pouch of stones, trying to find one that might help.
The ruby was no good, for she hadn't the time to go to Elbryan's side. She
might use the graphite to skim a lightning bolt off the rooftops, but that,
she feared, might also sting her love, especially if he was in close battle.
"Malachite,"
the woman decided, pulling forth the green, ringed stone. She would levitate
one of the brutes, float him up high into the air, and make the odds a bit more
even.
As
she pulled out the stone, though, she saw another, the lodestone, and thought
it even more clever.
Pony
lifted her hand and took aim, focusing her vision through the magic of the gem,
seeking out a metallic target at which she could launch her missile.
But
there seemed to be nothing; the giants wore no armor and were wielding wooden
clubs!
Pony
growled and looked deeper, and still found nothing. She was about to change
back to the malachite—her heart soared when she saw another giant go down—when at
last she found a slight pull coming from the side of the remaining giant's
head, from the area near its ear.
Nightbird
leaped ahead and to the side, avoiding yet another downward smash. Out flashed
Tempest, a sudden lunge, but the giant was already turning its huge body,
moving limbs and torso safely out of reach.
This
one was skilled, the ranger realized. He gave a nervous glance to the side, to
see the other giant watching.
Then
he and the ugly brute went through a second round of attack and counter, again
with no decisive winner, though this time Nightbird did score a minor hit.
Still, the giant only howled—with laughter and not with pain—and its companion seemed
even more bolstered and ready to join.
"Argh,
get ye in here!" the ugly behemoth bellowed, but the words ended abruptly
as the giant's head suddenly snapped to the side. The monster's head came back
up straight, but its eyes were no longer seeing the ranger, were suddenly
veiled in darkness. Without a movement to brace its fall, the giant dropped
face first into the dirt.
The
earcap was missing, Nightbird noted. No, not missing, but pushed in, driven
right through the giant's skull and into its brain!
Not
missing a beat, the ranger spun on the last giant and roared in victory, and
the fomorian fell all over itself, burying a powrie that came around the corner
as it tried to get away.
The
ranger understood this mystery quite clearly. He said a little thank-you to
Pony, whom he knew to be the source, then split the giant's skull in half with
Tempest and pulled the magnetite from the gore.
"Symphony!"
he cried, and ran to retrieve his bow.
The
great horse whinnied and spun, pausing only to launch another double kick into
the prone giant's face. Symphony came by Nightbird in a canter and the ranger
leaped up and pulled himself into his saddle, sliding Tempest under his thigh
and putting Hawkwing to the ready in one fluid movement.
He
shot the powrie the giant had trampled as it stubbornly tried to regain its
footing, then ran over the unfortunate dwarf with Symphony for good measure,
breaking into the clear behind it, then turning fast down another alley, and
the chase was on once more.
Unlike
the ranger, Roger Lockless was doing all he could to avoid drawing attention to
himself. The nimble thief worked his way carefully from rooftop to rooftop when
the buildings were close enough, or down the side of one structure and up the
side of another when they were not. Twice he found himself unintentionally on
the same roof as an enemy, but both times he kept calm and as quiet as a shadow
and moved along without being noticed, for that enemy, be it goblin or powrie,
was inevitably distracted by the tumult of the ranger's passing.
The
bonfire guided Roger, leading him unerringly across Caer Tinella until he was
perched on a roof no more than twenty feet from the ragged prisoners, a score
and a half of them, sitting on the ground, in deep despair, chained together at
the ankles. Many monsters were about, and two in particular, a huge giant, the
largest Roger had ever seen, and a nervous Kos-kosio Begulne, caught his
attention—and,
it seemed, caught the attention of all the other monsters in the area.
"Doomed
we are!" the powrie wailed. "Nightbird's come and all the world's a
cursed place!"
The
giant shook its huge head and calmly bade the powrie to be quiet. "Are you
not the one who wanted to bring him in?"
"Ye're
not knowing!" the powrie snapped back. "Ye wasn't there, in the
middle o' the fight, when he killed us in the valley."
"I
wish he had," the giant said dryly. That gave Roger pause. A giant with
wit? The mere thought of it sent a shudder down his spine; a giant's only
weakness was often between its ears.
With
a shrug, the young man slipped down the back side of the building, shadowed
from the light of the fire, then tiptoed into the line of human prisoners,
slipping to a seat right between a pair of very surprised and very beleaguered
men. They did well to keep quiet, and Roger, lockpick in hand, went right to
work on the shackles.
"Doomed,
says I!" the powrie wailed. "Both of us!"
"You're
half right," the giant said quietly. With a sudden move, Maiyer Dek lifted
Kos-kosio into the air and tossed the thrashing powrie onto the burning pyre.
The dwarf wailed and scrambled out of the flames, but they stubbornly followed,
grabbing at clothes, at hair, eating flesh; even the magical bracers the dwarf
had taken from fallen Ulg Tik'narn could not save Kos-kosio Begulne from a
horrible death.
All
the monstrous gathering was in tumult then, some screaming for the death of
the prisoners, others—powries all—for a revolt against the giant.
And
in the middle of it all Roger Lockless calmly went about his work, shifting
down the line, one man at a time, opening shackles and bidding the men to stay
calm until all were free.
"Hear
me!" Maiyer Dek roared, and it was impossible for any within a hundred
yards to not hear the booming, resonant voice. "This is only one human,
one puny human. A hundred pieces of King's gold and ten prisoners to the one
that brings me the head of Nightbird!"
That
put the monsters in line, had them leaping and crying out excitedly, had many
of them running off to find the fighting.
For
just a split second Roger Lockless entertained the thought of those monsters
catching and killing Elbryan. With a low growl the young man quickly berated
himself for even thinking such things, and silently thanked the ranger for
again allowing him the distraction he needed to finish his work here. And
while he opened the next shackle, Roger Lockless prayed for Elbryan's safe
escape.
"I
am with you, Nightbird," came a most-welcome voice above the ranger as he
turned tight about a building, monsters in close pursuit. He heard the twang of
an elvish bow, and then the flutter of wings, and a moment later Belli'mar
Juraviel was on Symphony behind him, bow in hand.
"You
shoot those in front, I will cover flanks and rear," the elf offered,
letting fly another arrow even as he made the statement. His bolt hit the mark,
scoring solidly on a giant's face, but the behemoth only roared and brushed
the insignificant hit away. "Though I fear I'll run out of arrows in an
attempt to kill even one giant!" Juraviel added.
It
didn't matter too much, anyway, for none of the monsters behind would get near
the fast-running Symphony. Head down, nostrils puffing, the stallion tore up
the ground, and the ranger, telepathically linked to the horse through the
turquoise, did not need his hands to guide him. Those monsters who came out in
front, or at an angle where they might intercept, met with the thunder of
Nightbird's magnificent bow and the pounding of Symphony's hooves, and the
companions ran on, soon turning into the lane that ran the extent of Caer
Tinella's western side, just inside the barricade.
Symphony,
and the ranger wholeheartedly agreed, skidded to an abrupt stop.
"We
cannot get to them," Juraviel said, looking past the ranger to the
bonfire, and to the dozens of monsters swarming all about the path ahead of
them.
Nightbird
growled and moved to kick the horse's flanks.
"No!"
Juraviel scolded. "Your run was magnificent and brave, but to go on is
purely foolish. And what hope will be left those men if they see Nightbird cut
down before them? Over the wall with us, I say! It is the only way!"
Nightbird
studied the scene before him, heard the monsters closing from behind and from
the east. He could not disagree, and so he grabbed the reins hard and jerked
the horse's head to the west, toward the barricade and the open night beyond.
Out
in that darkness, only a few feet from the wall, Pony stood perplexed,
desperately trying to find some way to improvise. She didn't know exactly where
the ranger was, though she was fairly sure he had come to this edge of town,
and didn't have the time to use the quartz or the hematite to try and find out.
Thus, she could not risk a bolt of lightning or any other substantial magical
attack.
But
this?
In
her hand she held a diamond, the source of light and of warmth. There was a
delicate balance in this gemstone's magic, Pony understood, for within its
depths light and dark were not absolutes, but were, rather, gradations of each
other. Thus a diamond could bring forth a brilliant shine or a quiet glow. But
what might happen, Pony wondered, if she tilted the balance in the other
direction?
"This
is a wonderful time for experiments," she whispered sarcastically, but
even as she finished the thought, she was falling into the magic of the stone,
finding that balance, picturing it as a circular plate perched atop the tip of
a knitting needle. If she turned the closest edge of that plate up, she would
bring forth light.
She
turned it down instead.
The
great fire dimmed; all the torches seemed to flicker and lessen, until they
were no more than tiny pinpricks of light. At first Nightbird thought a gust of
wind must have swept through—just over his head, he guessed, since he had felt no
breeze. It made no sense, though, for what wind might so easily defeat so large
a fire as the burning pyre?
Then
it was dark, just dark, and Symphony, heading still for the western wall,
hesitated, unable to see the barricade to make the leap.
"Jilseponie
with the stones," Juraviel reasoned, though the elf feared differently,
feared that this darkness might be the trademark of the demon dactyl. Juraviel
had met the beast once before, soon after he had left the ranger's expedition
to take some refugees to the safety of Andur'Blough Inninness, and on that
occasion the dactyl had been surrounded by a cloud of darkness. Not quite like
this one, though; the blackness of the dactyl was more a wave of despair over
the heart than a lack of light to the eyes.
"They
are blinded," Nightbird replied, noting the frantic movements of the
monsters along the lane. They could no longer see him, he realized, could no
longer see the ground at their feet or the walls before them.
"As
am I," Juraviel was quick to answer, and that gave the ranger pause. He
had thought, or hoped, that Pony had indeed enacted some enchantment to blind
his enemies, but why, then, was Juraviel affected, and why was he still able to
see?
"The
cat's-eye," he reasoned, feeling the gem-set circlet about his head. That
had to be the answer, but whatever the case, Nightbird was not going to let
this turn of fate go to waste. He communicated with his horse, bade Symphony to
turn back down the lane, back toward the fire and the prisoners, and then he
guided the stallion with the turquoise, as he had so often done before, letting
Symphony "see" through his eyes.
"Hold
on tightly," Nightbird bade the elf, and Juraviel was willing to comply,
since he could not put his bow to use anyway.
Down
the path they charged, Nightbird working hard to keep Symphony veering around
scrambling goblins and powries, and to keep far away from the two giants that
were feeling about one of the buildings. They came out of the enchanted area of
darkness suddenly, without warning, right before the bonfire. Most of the
monstrous host was behind them, but gigantic Maiyer Dek was not, the behemoth
standing near the fire, waving a huge sword easily in one hand.
Nightbird
managed to look past the giant, to see Roger among the far end of the prisoner
line, working furiously on some shackles.
"I
have waited too long for this," the giant said quietly.
"As
have I," the ranger answered grimly, needing the bravado to hold this
one's attention, and the gazes of all those nearby.
"As
have I!" came a cry behind the ranger, and Juraviel leaned out to the side
and let fly an arrow for Maiyer Dek's face.
The
giant lurched, but in truth he didn't even have to, for though Juraviel's bolt
headed straight in, it swerved at the last instant, flying harmlessly to the
side.
"Impossible,"
the elf remarked.
Nightbird
groaned softly; he understood, had seen this before. When he had fought Ulg
Tik'narn in the woods, for some reason that he could not understand, his arrows
and his blows could not strike the powrie.
Apparently
Maiyer Dek was similarly armored. And even if the giant was naked, and without
a weapon other than its hands, this one would prove a challenge, Nightbird knew
without doubt.
"Come
along, Nightbird!" the giant roared, and it threw back its head and
bellowed with mocking laughter.
That
mirth ended abruptly, though, as Maiyer Dek's comrades started shouting with alarm
as all the remaining prisoners, and Roger as well, leaped up and scattered,
some pausing to tackle nearby enemies and grab their weapons, others just
running full out or climbing the closest barrier.
"What
trick is this?" the huge giant roared, glancing all about. "Forget
them!" he howled, pointing at the ranger. "Forget them all, but this
one! This is the Nightbird! I will have his head!"
Nightbird
kicked Symphony into a run—not for Maiyer Dek, for the ranger did not think it wise to
tangle with that one at this time, but in a circuitous route of the area,
trampling monsters, slashing with Tempest, while Juraviel's bow went to work
once more. The situation now demanded confusion, and the two riders and their
magnificent stallion answered that call perfectly.
Nightbird
winced as he saw one man chopped down by a powrie hammer, then another squashed
by a giant club. But many more were running free, many more were over the wall
and scrambling into the cover of the forest. On the top of the wall directly
across the fire, Nightbird spotted Roger. The man smiled and offered a salute,
and then he was gone.
Back
down the lane the darkness enchantment went away. Nightbird spun Symphony about
and charged that way, scattering the confused closest monsters. Then he turned
the horse sharply to the east, back into the heart of the town, trying to draw
attention to himself and take some of the danger from the fleeing prisoners.
Around
and around they went, Symphony always seeming to be one stride ahead of the
pursuit—which
included an outraged Maiyer Dek. Juraviel began to sing a taunting song,
accenting each verse with a well-aimed bowshot.
After
several minutes, Symphony puffing hard and the monstrous ring tightening about
them, the ranger wisely decided that the game was up. He angled the horse for
the nearest barricade, the eastern wall, and over they went, into the night.
Nightbird thought to go out to the east and south, then swing back to the
refugee encampment after a long while. He would have to trust Roger and Pony
to get the prisoners away.
His
plans changed, though, when he saw the huge form of Maiyer Dek stepping over
the southern wall and then running off into the woods.
Perhaps
he would get his fight with the giant after all.
"We
must keep them guessing," Juraviel reasoned, lifting off Symphony's back
to fly to a nearby branch.
"You
keep them confused," Nightbird replied. "I have urgent business to
the south."
"The
giant?" Juraviel asked incredulously. "He has an enchantment about
him!"
"I
have seen this magic before," Nightbird answered. "And I know how to
defeat it. He wishes a fight with me, and so he shall have it!"
Juraviel
offered no argument as the ranger kicked Symphony into a run.
The
pursuit was not organized, was just a mob of scrambling monsters, turning about
in circles as often as they moved in any one direction. Many soon gave up the
chase altogether, not sure of whom they were supposed to be chasing, and not
wanting to get caught out alone against the Nightbird.
Stubborn
Maiyer Dek did not turn back, though, just pressed on, calling for the ranger
to come out and face him squarely.
Following
those calls, Nightbird had little trouble in gaining ground on the giant, and
he was pleased to discover that the rest of the monstrous pursuit was nowhere
to be seen, that the giant leader, in its rage, had struck out alone. The
ranger wondered if he should first seek out Pony. "Sunstone," he
muttered, remembering how Avelyn had brought down the magical defenses of
Kos-kosio Begulne, and recalling, too, that he and Pony had not retrieved any
such magic from Avelyn's cache, that the sunstone had been lost in the
destruction of Aida.
The
ranger looked to his sword, to the gemstone set in the pommel, which was truly
a magically constructed mixture of several types of stones, sunstone among
them.
Up
ahead the huge fomorian came into view, breaking through the last line of brush
and pine trees onto a meadow.
"Work
for me, Tempest," the ranger whispered, and he brought Symphony around the
area, stepping out of the trees on the opposite end of the field when the
giant was halfway across.
Maiyer
Dek stopped in his tracks, surprised that the man dared to meet him so openly.
"You
came out here after me," the ranger explained calmly. "And so you
have found me. Let us be done with it."
"Done
with yourself!" came the thunderous retort. Maiyer Dek glanced all around
suspiciously.
"I
am alone," the ranger assured him. "At least, as far as I know. You
were trying to follow me, but I followed you." He passed along some telepathic
instruction to Symphony then, bidding the horse to be ready to come to his side
should the sunstone fail. Then he slipped down from the saddle, Tempest in
hand, and started a slow and steady walk toward the fomorian.
Maiyer
Dek's grin widened with each passing step. The giant suspected there would be
trouble back in the town—he had thrown the powrie leader into the bonfire, after
all—but wouldn't they all, giants, goblins, and even the stubborn powries, bow
down to him when he walked in with Nightbird's head! And, to Maiyer Dek's
thinking, there was no way he could possibly lose. He wore the spiked bracers,
the gift of the demon dactyl, and with their magic, no weapon could strike him.
So
the giant's surprise was complete, then, when Nightbird rushed across the last
fifteen feet, fell into a balanced skip and lunged fast, stabbing him hard in
the belly, the glowing Tempest tearing through clothes and leather girdle and
slipping nearly half its blade length into Maiyer Dek's abdomen.
Nightbird
pulled the blade right out and slashed across, smacking Maiyer Dek across the
kneecap. Then, as the giant's leg went predictably wide, the ranger darted
right between the treelike limbs, falling into a headlong roll as Maiyer Dek's
huge sword swished harmlessly behind him.
He
came up in a half turn, legs tucked under him, and leaped back at the giant as
it started to turn about, scoring yet another hit, this one deep into the
giant's hamstring. Then he ran out the back side of the behemoth, into the
clear again, spinning on his heel to face Maiyer Dek squarely.
The
giant was clearly confused and in pain, one huge hand holding tight to its
spilling guts.
"You
believed that your demon armor would defeat my attacks," the ranger said.
"And so the gift of Bestesbulzibar worked against you, Maiyer Dek, for my
magic, the magic of the goodly God, is stronger by far!"
In
response, Maiyer Dek roared and charged.
Nightbird
leaped straight ahead, sword up as if he meant to block the attack. He could
not hope to stop the sheer power of Maiyer Dek's sword strike, and he knew it,
and so at the last moment he leaped out to the side, then charged in behind
the swish of the sword, stabbing again at the giant's wounded abdomen.
Maiyer
Dek brought the great pommel of his sword in tight fast enough to partially
defeat the attack, and then, in a fluid movement, snapped that sword arm out
wide, pommel clipping a dodging Nightbird on his already bruised shoulder and
sending him into a roll.
The
ranger came up in perfect balance, but truly his right shoulder throbbed from
the heavy hit, and Maiyer Dek, recognizing a slight advantage here, was quick
in pursuit, but this time with his sword at the ready, and not swinging wildly.
The
giant put out a lazy swing, testing the ranger's defenses. Tempest banged hard
against the huge blade, once and then again, forcing it wide.
"You
move your skinny blade well," the giant remarked.
"Except
when it is embedded in your belly," the ranger replied.
Predictably,
Maiyer Dek came on ferociously, sword slashing across at just the right height
to take the ranger's head from his shoulders.
But
Nightbird was no longer standing, had dropped to his knees, then came up as the
blade flashed overhead. Left, right, left went Tempest, then in a
straight-ahead thrust, once and again, and then a third time, angled up for the
abdomen once more.
Down
went the ranger in a desperate dive, the giant reversing its swing for a sudden
backhand, and this time with the blade so low that Nightbird had to fall flat
on the ground.
Maiyer
Dek rushed ahead, lifted his massive booted foot and stamped down, thinking to
grind Nightbird into the dirt.
The
ranger went over in a roll, then again as the giant continued to stamp at him.
Then a third time, and when he came over, he put one leg under him. As Maiyer
Dek lifted his foot and turned it yet again, the ranger sprang up, bracing
Tempest, pommel in both hands, against his breast, driving it hard into the
bottom of Maiyer Dek's foot before it began its downward momentum.
The
blade gored through the leather as if it were paper and drove upward, into
flesh and bone. Maiyer Dek tried to pull away, but the ranger stayed with him,
driving on.
All
the ground shook when Maiyer Dek fell over backward, hitting with a tremendous
jolt. The giant felt the ranger then, leaping atop his thigh, running up his
torso. He tried to reach out with his empty hand, but Tempest slashed away,
taking one finger at the knuckle and gashing the others.
Nightbird
sprang to the giant's massive chest, then leaped ahead, landing right above the
behemoth's shoulder, slashing hard with Tempest at the side of Maiyer Dek's
neck. Then he leaped again, into a backward roll, came up to his feet and ran
up above the prone giant, narrowly avoiding the great sword as Maiyer Dek
rolled about.
Nightbird
was twenty feet away when the giant staggered to its feet. The ranger noted the
blood pouring freely down the side of Maiyer Dek's neck, and knew that the
outcome was decided.
"Ah,
but you'll pay for this, little rat!" Maiyer Dek spouted. "I'll cut
you in half! I'll—" The giant stopped and put its torn hand up to its
neck, then brought the hand out in front of its face, staring incredulously at
the complete bloodstain. Stunned, Maiyer Dek looked back to the ranger, to see
him mounting Symphony, his sword in its sheath.
"You
are dead, Maiyer Dek," Nightbird declared. "The only thing that could
save you is the magic of the goodly God, and He, I fear, will show little mercy
to one who has committed so many terrible crimes."
Nightbird
turned his horse and rode away.
Maiyer
Dek moved to follow, but stopped, again lifting his hand, and then, when he
discerned that the blood was verily spouting from his neck, he grabbed at the
wound tightly, trying to stem the flow, then ran off for Caer Tinella.
He
felt the cold creeping into his body before he ever got off the field, felt the
touch of death and saw the darkness growing before his eyes.
"Oh, but by yer pardon, master sir," the woman stammered. "I'm just not knowing what ye're wanting from poor old Pettibwa."
Father
Abbot Markwart eyed the woman suspiciously, knowing that she was not as
dim-witted as she was pretending. It made sense, of course, for she was
obviously frightened. She, her husband Graevis, and their son Grady, had been
pulled from Fellowship Way, their small inn down in the poorer section of
Palmaris.
The
Father Abbot made a mental note to speak with Brothers Youseff and Dandelion
concerning their rough tactics. Using brute force and threats instead of subtle
coercion, they had put the three on their guard, and now garnering any
information might prove more difficult indeed. In fact, had he not arrived on
the scene to oversee the arrest, Markwart feared that his two overly rough
lackeys might have seriously injured the three, might even have killed the son,
Grady.
"Be
at ease, Madame Chilichunk," Markwart said with a phony grin. "We are
searching for one of our own, that is all, and we have reason to believe that
he might be in the company of your daughter."
"Cat?"
the woman asked suddenly, eagerly, and Markwart knew that he had hit a chord,
though he had no idea of who this "Cat" might be.
"Your
daughter," he said again. "The one you adopted, who was orphaned in
the Timberlands."
"Cat,"
Pettibwa said earnestly. "Cat-the-Stray, that's what we called her, ye
know."
"I
do not know the name," the Father Abbot admitted.
"Jilly,
then," the woman clarified. "That's her real name, part of it anyway.
Oh, but I'd love to be seein' me Jilly again!"
Jilly.
Markwart rolled the name over in his
thoughts. Jilly ... Jilseponie... Pony. Yes, he decided. It fit nicely.
"If
you help us," he said pleasantly, "you may indeed see her again. We
have every reason to believe that she is alive and well."
"And
in the Kingsmen," the woman added.
Markwart
hid his frustration well. If Pettibwa and her family knew no more than that old
news, they wouldn't be of much help.
"But
as I telled yer fellow priest, I'm not knowing where they sent me girl,"
Pettibwa went on.
"Fellow
priest?" Father Abbot echoed. Had Brother Justice interrogated this woman
already? he wondered, and hoped, for if that was the case, then Quintall must
have also discovered the connection between Avelyn and the Chilichunks.
"A monk, you mean? Of St. Precious, perhaps?"
"No,
I'm knowin' most of them from St. Precious—me Jilly was married by Abbot
Dobrinion himself, ye know," Pettibwa offered proudly. "No, this one
was wearing the darker brown robes, like yer own, and his accent was o' the
eastlands. St.-Mere-Abelle, ye said ye were from, and I'd be guessin' that he
was from the same place."
Father
Abbot Markwart was pondering how he might properly identify this man—as Quintall,
he suspected—without giving anything away, when boisterous Pettibwa rambled
on.
"Oh,
and a great big fat man, he was indeed!" she said. "Ye must be
feedin' them well at yer St.-Mere-Abelle, though yerself could be using a bit
o' fattening, if ye don't mind me telling ye so!"
For
a moment Father Abbot Markwart was confused, for there wasn't an ounce of fat
on the well-honed muscles of the first Brother Justice. But then, suddenly, he
understood, and he could hardly contain his excitement. "Brother
Avelyn?" he said breathlessly. "Brother Avelyn Desbris of
St.-Mere-Abelle came to speak with you?"
"Avelyn,"
Pettibwa echoed, letting the name roll off her tongue. "Yessir, that's
sounding right. Brother Avelyn come a'askin' about me Jilly."
"And
she was with you?"
"Oh
no, but she was long into the army by then," Pettibwa explained.
"But he wasn't looking to find her; he was asking about where she came
from, and how she came to live with me and Graevis. Oh, a nice and cheerful
fellow he was, too!"
"And
did you tell him?"
"Oh,
but for sure," Pettibwa said. "I'm not one to be angering the
Church!"
"Keep
that thought close to your heart," the Father Abbot said dryly. It was all
beginning to fit together, and quite nicely, he realized. Avelyn had met this
woman, Pony or Jilly, outside of Pireth Tulme after the powrie invasion, and
had traveled with her right through Palmaris and to the north, where they had
then met the centaur. The woman had survived the explosion at Aida, Markwart
believed, and so had this other mysterious fellow, Nightbird, whom Bradwarden
had unintentionally described, and they now had the gemstones.
Finding
them would not be easy, obviously, but perhaps Markwart could find a way to
bring Pony and Nightbird to him...
"I
could make ye a fine fattening stew," Pettibwa was saying when the Father
Abbot tuned back to the conversation. Of course she was preoccupied with such
things, Markwart mused, considering her plump form.
"I
may just ask you to do that," he replied. "But not now."
"Oh
no, couldn't be," Pettibwa agreed. "But ye come by the Way tonight,
or whenever ye're getting the chance, and I'll feed ye well."
"I
am afraid that you will not be returning to the Way this day," Markwart
explained, rising from his seat behind Abbot Dobrinion's huge desk and
motioning to Brother Dandelion, who was standing in the shadows at the side of
the large room. "Or anytime soon."
"But—"
"You
said that you did not want to anger the Church," Markwart interrupted.
"I hold you to that, Madame Pettibwa Chilichunk. Our business is most
urgent—more
so than the health of your pitiful inn."
"Pitiful?"
Pettibwa echoed, growing concerned and angry.
"Brother
Dandelion will accompany—"
"I'm
not thinking so!" the woman snapped. "I'm no enemy of the Church,
Father Abbot, but I've got me life and me family."
Father
Abbot Markwart didn't bother to reply, had grown quite bored with the woman,
actually, and quite frustrated, since she really had only confirmed what he
already knew. He motioned again to Brother Dandelion and the man stepped up to
Pettibwa's side and took her thick elbow in his hand.
"Ah,
but ye just be lettin' me go!" she yelled at him, tugging away.
Dandelion
looked to Markwart, who nodded. Then he grabbed the woman again, more
forcefully. Pettibwa tried to pull away, but the big man's grip was like iron.
"Understand,
Madame Chilichunk," Father Abbot Markwart explained in a deadly serious
voice, and moved his wrinkled old face right near the woman, "you will go
with Brother Dandelion, whatever tactics he must use."
"And
ye're callin' yerself a godly man?" Pettibwa replied, but her anger was
gone, replaced by simple fear. She tried to pull away once more, and Brother
Dandelion tightened his fingers and popped her hard on the forehead, stunning
her. Then the monk cupped his hand over Pettibwa's, bending her fingers under
his grasp, and pressed in, forcing the fingers back on their knuckles.
Waves
of pain washed over the woman, stealing the strength from her legs. Brother
Dandelion hooked his free arm under her shoulder and easily held her up against
his side, keeping the pressure on her fingers every step of the way.
Markwart
just went back to the desk, unconcerned with her pain.
As
the pair left the room, Abbot Dobrinion entered, looking none too pleased.
"This
is how you treat my congregation?" he demanded of Markwart.
"This
is how the Church deals with those who will not cooperate," the Father
Abbot coolly replied.
"Will
not?" Dobrinion echoed doubtfully. "Or cannot? The Chilichunk family
are an honest and decent lot, by every report. If they could help in your
search—"
"In
my search?" Father Abbot roared in reply, leaping to his feet and
slamming the desk. "You believe that this is my search alone? Can you not
understand the implications of all this?"
Abbot
Dobrinion patted his hand in the air as Markwart fumed on, trying to calm the
old man. That condescending action only fueled the Father Abbot's ire, though.
"We
have found Avelyn the heretic," Markwart growled. "Yes, we found him,
dead as he deserved in the devastation of Mount Aida. Perhaps his ally, the
fiend dactyl, turned against him, or perhaps he merely overestimated his own
worth and power; pride was ever one of his many faults!"
Abbot
Dobrinion could hardly reply, so stunned was he by the information, and by the
sheer outrage in Father Abbot's voice as he relayed it.
"And
that woman," Markwart went on, pointing a skinny finger at the door
Pettibwa and Dandelion had exited, "and her wretched family, may hold
answers for us concerning the whereabouts of our stones. Our stones! God-given
to St.-Mere-Abelle, and stolen by the thief and murderer Avelyn Desbris, curse
his evil name! And such a cache, Abbot Dobrinion! If those stones fall into the
hands of enemies of the Church, then we shall know war on an even greater
scale, do not doubt!"
Dobrinion
suspected that Father Abbot might be exaggerating there. He had already spoken
to Master Jojonah concerning the stones, and Jojonah wasn't nearly as worried
about them as was Markwart. But Dobrinion, too, was an old man whose time in
this world was fast passing, and he understood the importance of reputation
and legacy. That was why he was so desperate to see Brother Allabarnet
canonized while he presided over St. Precious, and why he was able to accept
Markwart's need to retrieve the stones.
He
would have said as much, if he had been given the chance, but the Father Abbot
was on a roll then, spouting Church doctrine, telling of Master Siherton, so
good a man, murdered by Avelyn, and ranting about how the Chilichunks might be
the only clue in getting to this treasonous woman and the cache of gemstones.
"Do
not underestimate my desire for this," Markwart finished, lowering his
voice to a threatening tone. "If you hinder me in any way, I will repay
you a thousand times over."
Dobrinion's
face screwed up with incredulity; he was not accustomed to being threatened by
one of his own Order.
"As
you know, Master Jojonah is already on his way to St. Honce to further Brother
Allabarnet's canonization," Father Abbot Markwart said calmly. "I can
recall him in an instant, and kill this process altogether."
Dobrinion
set his feet firmly in place and squared his shoulders. By his estimation, the
old Father Abbot had just crossed a very tangible line! "You are the
leader of the Abellican Church," Dobrinion conceded, "and thus hold
great power. But the canonization process is greater still, and an issue for
all the abbots, not just the Father Abbot of St.-Mere-Abelle."
Markwart
was laughing before the man even finished. "But the stories I could tell
of Brother Allabarnet," he said with a wicked chuckle.
"Long-forgotten tales unearthed from the catacombs of St.-Mere-Abelle. The
journal of the man's passage through the eastlands, a journey filled with tales
of debauchery and womanizing, of excessive drinking and even one case of petty
theft."
"Impossible!"
Dobrinion cried.
"Quite
possible," Markwart replied grimly without hesitation. "To fabricate
and to make them look authentic."
"The
lie will not stand the test of time," Dobrinion countered. "Similar
lies were told of St. Gwendolyn of the Sea, yet they did not defeat the
canonization process!"
"They
delayed it for nearly two hundred years," Markwart not so gently reminded.
"No, perhaps the lies will not stand the test of time, but neither, my
friend, will your old bones."
Dobrinion
slumped where he stood, feeling as though he had been physically beaten.
"I
intend to gather my information," Markwart said evenly. "By whatever
means necessary. As of this moment, Graevis, Pettibwa, and Grady Chilichunk
are to be held under suspicion of treason against the Church and God. And
perhaps I will speak with this Connor Bildeborough, as well, to see if he is a
part of the conspiracy."
Dobrinion
started to respond, but decided to hold the thoughts to himself. Connor
Bildeborough was the favored nephew, treated practically as son and heir, of
the Baron of Palmaris, a man of no small means and influence. But Father Abbot
Markwart could find that out for himself, Dobrinion decided. The old wretch
might just make a very powerful enemy in the process.
"As
you wish, Father Abbot" was all the abbot of St. Precious replied, and he
gave a curt bow, turned on his heel and left the room.
Markwart
gave a derisive snort when the door closed behind Dobrinion, thinking he had
put the man in his place.
Dainsey
Aucomb was not the brightest light in the sky, the dashing young man knew, but
she was observant enough. And besides, Connor Bildeborough was often able to
use her dim wits to his advantage. The Baron's nephew had come to the Way that
night, as he often did—though, in truth, the relationship between Connor and Pettibwa
Chilichunk had been more than a little strained since the annulment of Connor's
marriage to Jill. Still, Grady Chilichunk was more than pleased to call the
nobleman a friend, and even Graevis couldn't really blame the man for the
failure of the marriage; Jill had refused him his marital rights, after all.
And
so Connor continued to frequent Fellowship Way, for though a man of his station
was welcomed at the most exclusive taverns in Palmaris, in those places Connor
was just another nobleman. Among the common rabble in Fellowship Way, he felt
important, superior in every way.
He
was surprised, as were many other regular patrons, to find the tavern closed
that night. The only light showing through the windows came from two of the
guest rooms on the second floor, from the kitchen and from a small room in the
back of the building, the room that had been Jill's but now belonged to
Dainsey.
Connor
called to her softly as he knocked lightly on the door. "Do come and
answer, Dainsey," he bade her.
No
answer.
"Dainsey
Aucomb," Connor said more loudly. "There are many patrons growing
restless in the street. We cannot abide that, now can we?"
"Dainsey's
not here," came the woman's voice, poorly disguised.
Connor
rocked back on his heels, surprised by the note of fear he detected in that
voice. What was going on here?
"Dainsey,
it is Connor... Master Bildeborough, nephew of the Baron," he said more
forcefully. "I know that you are behind the door, hearing my every word,
and I demand that you speak with me!"
No
answer came back, other than a slight whimpering.
Connor
grew more agitated, more frightened. Something very strange had happened,
perhaps something terrible. "Dainsey!"
"Oh,
go away, I beg ye, Mr. Bildeborough," the woman pleaded. "I ain't
done nothing wrong, and I'm not for knowing what crimes the mister and missus
committed to so anger the Church. No sins on me own door, and me bed's been
slept in by none but meself—well, except for yerself, and just those two... three
times."
Connor
tried hard to digest all of that. Crimes against the Church? The Chilichunks?
"Impossible," he said aloud, then lifted his hand to bang hard on the
door. He stopped himself, though, and reconsidered his course. Dainsey was
frightened, and apparently with good cause. If he frightened her more, he
doubted he would be able to get any information out of her.
"Dainsey,"
he said softly, comfortingly. "You know me, and know that I am a friend of
the Chilichunks."
"The
missus isn't speaking so highly of ye," Dainsey replied bluntly.
"And
you know that story," Connor said, fighting hard to hold his calm tone.
"And know, too, that I do not blame Pettibwa for being mad at me. Yet I
still come to the Way, still consider the place as a home. I am no enemy of the
Chilichunks, Dainsey, nor of you."
"So
ye're saying."
"Consider
that I could be in there if I so chose," Connor said bluntly. "I
could have half the garrison with me, and that door would offer you little
protection."
"Dainsey's
not here," came the reply. "I'm her sister, and know nothing about
what ye're saying."
Connor
groaned and banged his forehead against the door. "Very well, then,"
he said a moment later. "I am leaving, and you should be, as well, before
those monks now coming down the road arrive." Staying in place right
outside the door, Connor lifted his feet alternately, clunking his boots
against the wood, more softly with each step so that it sounded as though he
was walking away. Predictably, the door cracked open a few seconds later, and
the young man was quick to stick his foot into the opening, bracing his
shoulder against the wood and pushing hard.
Dainsey
was a spirited lass, and strong from carrying heavy trays, and she gave him a
good fight, but finally he forced himself into the room, quickly shutting the
door behind him.
"Oh,
but I'll scream!" the frightened woman warned, backing away, taking up a
frying pan as she passed it sitting on her night table, spilling the drippy
eggs down her side in the process. "Ye keep yerself back!" she
warned, waving the pan.
"Dainsey,
what is wrong with you?" Connor asked, advancing a step and then quickly
retreating and holding up his hands unthreateningly as the pan started
swinging. "Where are the Chilichunks? You must tell me."
"Ye're
already knowing!" the woman accused. "Suren that yer uncle's part of
it all!"
"Part
of all what?" Connor demanded.
"Part
of the arrest!" Dainsey cried, tears streaming down her soft cheeks.
"Arrest?"
Connor echoed. "They were arrested? By town guards?"
"No,"
Dainsey explained. "By them monks."
Connor
could hardly speak, so amazed was he by this information.
"Arrested?" he asked again. "You are sure of that? They were not
just escorted to St. Precious on some minor business?"
"Master
Grady, he tried to argue," Dainsey said. "Said he was a friend o'
yerself and all, but that only made them laugh, and when Master Grady moved to
draw his sword, one o' them monks, a skinny fellow, but so fast, got him good
and hard, knocked him right to the floor. And then the old one come rushing in,
and he was in a fit—"
"Abbot
Dobrinion?"
"No,
older than him by a cow's life," Dainsey said. "Old and skinny and
wrinkled, but wearing robes like Dobrinion, only more decorated. Oh, pretty
things, those robes was, even on the old and wrinkled man, even with that ugly
look he kept on his face—"
"Dainsey,"
Connor said suddenly and firmly, trying to get her back on track.
"He,
the old one, he yelled good at that skinny fellow, but then he just looked at
Master Grady and telled him that if he did a stupid thing like that again, both
his arms'd be torn off," Dainsey went on. "And I believed him, too,
and so did Master Grady! Went all white in the face, trembling all over."
Connor
shuffled over and sat on the bed, thoroughly stunned and trying to sort it all
out. He had been in the Way that night a couple of years before when an
enormously fat monk, a man of St.-Mere-Abelle, he had heard, and not of St.
Precious, had arrived and spoken with Pettibwa. That meeting had seemed calm
enough, though the man had spoken of Jill, which somewhat upset the normally
jovial woman. Still, on that occasion, the monk had been gentle enough and
gracious enough.
"Did
they say why they had come?" Connor asked her. "Did they mention what
crimes the Chilichunks were being accused of? You must tell me, I beg."
"They
asked about the mister and missus's daughter, that's all," Dainsey
replied. "They said I was her at first, and then two young ones moved to
grab me. But the old one, he said that it wasn't me, and the mister and missus
both said so, too."
Connor
put his chin in his hand, trying hard, and futilely, to digest it all. Jill?
They were looking for Jill? But why?
"Then
they said the mister and missus must be hiding her, and so they went through
the whole place, makin' a mess o' everything," Dainsey went on. "And
then they took 'em, all three."
Connor
Bildeborough was not without resources. His network of friends and confidants
included people from the palace to the abbey to House Battlebrow, the most
notorious brothel—and thus, one of the most powerful houses—in all the city.
It was time for him to put that network into action, he realized, time for him
to get some answers.
If
the Church had come so forcefully for the Chilichunks on a matter concerning
Jill, then Connor, too, might find himself under suspicion. These were, after
all, dangerous times, and Connor, who had lived all of his thirty years in the
presence of the ruling class, understood well how serious the games of intrigue
could become.
"You
stay here, Dainsey," he decided. "And keep that door closed, and do
not even offer an answer to anyone's call, except for mine."
"But
how'm I to be sure that it's yerself come a'calling?"
"We'll
have a secret word," Connor said mysteriously, and he saw that get
Dainsey's attention. Her face brightened at the thought, the frying pan went
back on the night table and she plopped down on the bed right beside him.
"Ooh,
but that's so exciting," she said happily. "What word, then?"
Connor
thought it over for just a moment. "Bymegod," he said with a wicked
smile that brought a fierce blush to Dainsey's cheeks. "You will remember
that one, will you not?"
Dainsey
giggled and blushed even more. She had heard that phrase before, had been known
to say it repeatedly at certain times when she and Connor were alone in her room.
Connor
gave her a little tickle under the chin, then rose and went to the door.
"Speak to no one else," he instructed as he left. "And if the
Chilichunks return—"
"Oh,
but I'll let them in!" Dainsey cut in.
"Yes,
do," Connor said dryly. "And then tell Grady to find me. Can you
remember to do that?"
Dainsey
nodded eagerly.
"Bymegod,"
Connor said with a wink as he departed.
Dainsey
sat on the bed giggling for a long while.
"You
believe this to be a game?" Markwart screamed, sticking his face right up
to poor Grady Chilichunk, the old man's bloodshot eyes boring into Grady's.
Grady
was chained to the wall by the wrists, with the shackles up high so that he had
to stand on his tiptoes the whole time. And it was hot down there in the cellar
of St. Precious, with a fire pit and bellows set up in the low-ceilinged, tight
room.
"I
never even liked her," the prisoner sputtered in reply, sweat and spittle
flying out with every word. "I asked for no sister!"
"Then
tell me where she is!" Markwart roared.
"If
I knew, I would," Grady protested, his voice more controlled, though
hardly calm. "You must believe me!"
Father
Abbot Markwart turned to the two monks who had accompanied him to the
dungeons, Brothers Francis and Dandelion, the huge and vicious younger monk wearing
a hooded cloak, an appropriate garment for this dark occasion.
"Do
you believe him?" Markwart asked Francis.
"He
seems sincere," Brother Francis answered honestly. His perspective was
biased, he knew, because he simply didn't want to see any more of this
interrogation, truly the most brutal questioning he had ever witnessed. He did
believe Grady, and hoped that Markwart would, as well.
Grady's
face brightened just a bit, a hint of a smile turning up the corners of his
mouth.
"Seems?"
Markwart pressed, sounding incredulous. "My dear Brother Francis, on a
matter as important as this, do you believe that the appearance of truth is
enough?"
"Of
course not, Father Abbot," Brother Francis replied with a resigned sigh.
Father
Abbot Markwart turned on Grady. "Where is she?" he asked calmly.
The
man whined as he searched for an answer that he could not know.
Markwart
nodded to the hooded Dandelion. "We must be certain," he said, and
then he walked away, Brother Francis in tow.
Brother
Dandelion was right before Grady in an instant, his huge fist slamming hard
into the man's exposed ribs. "Please," Grady stammered, and then he
was hit again, and again, and again, until his words came out as undecipherable
groans.
"And
when you are finished," Father Abbot Markwart said to Dandelion, "do
go to an upstairs hearth and take a poker, then lay it in the fire of this room
for a bit. We must test this one's sincerity, after all, and teach him a lesson
of obedience to the Church."
"No!"
Grady started to protest, but his breath was blasted away by another heavy
punch.
Markwart
left the room without looking back. Brother Francis did pause before following,
staring back at the spectacle. Grady Chilichunk wasn't the only one in this
room being taught a lesson.
Another
punch brought a pitiful groan, and Francis rushed away, skittering to catch up
to Markwart.
"You
would not really use a heated poker on the poor fool?" he asked.
Markwart's
look stole the blood from his face. "I will do whatever I deem
necessary," he said calmly. "Come along, the old man down the hall is
near to breaking, I believe. Perhaps we can invade his thoughts once again with
the soul stone." Markwart paused, studying the expression on the younger
monk's face, recognizing doubts etched there.
"Whenever
the business gets unpleasant, all you need do is think of the greater
good," he quietly instructed.
"But
if they are telling the truth..." Francis dared to argue.
"A
pity, then," Markwart admitted. "But not so much a pity as the
consequences if they are lying and we do not probe deeper. The greater truth,
Brother Francis. The greater good."
Still,
Francis was having a hard time reconciling his heart with the spectacle. He
said no more about it, though, but produced the soul stone and dutifully
followed his superior to the next cell in line.
More
than an hour later, a painful hour for Grady and Graevis, Francis and Markwart
exited the heavy door leading to the narrow stone stairway to the abbey's
chapel. They found Abbot Dobrinion waiting for them on the top step.
"I
demand to know what you are doing down there," the abbot fumed.
"These are my subjects, and loyal to the Church."
"Loyal?"
Markwart spat at him. "They harbor fugitives."
"If
they knew—"
"They
do know!" Markwart yelled in his face. "And they will tell me, do not
doubt!"
The
sheer intensity, the sheer wildness, of his tone sent Dobrinion back a couple
of steps. He stood staring at Markwart for a long while, trying to get a
reading of the man, trying to find out just how far this all had gone.
"Father Abbot," he said quietly at length, once he was back in
control of his own bubbling anger, "I do not doubt the importance of your
quest, but I'll not stand idly by while you—"
"While
I begin the canonization process for our dear Allabarnet of St. Precious?"
Markwart finished.
Again
Dobrinion paused, his thoughts whirling. No, he decided, he could not let
Father Abbot use that as leverage against him, not in a matter as important as
this. "Brother Allabarnet is deserving—" he started to protest.
"As
if that matters," Markwart spat. "How many hundreds are deserving,
Abbot Dobrinion? And yet only those chosen few ever even get nominated."
Dobrinion
shook his head in defiance to every word. "No more," he said.
"No more. Choose your course concerning Brother Allabarnet based on the
work and life of Brother Allabarnet, not on whether or not the present abbot of
St. Precious agrees with your campaign of terror! These are good people, good
in heart and in deed."
"What
do you know of it?" Markwart exploded. "When enemies of the Church
bring St. Precious down around you, or the rot within the Church brings you
down inside the walls you thought sacred, or when goblins freely roam the
streets of Palmaris, will Abbot Dobrinion then wish he had let Father Abbot
Markwart conduct the matters with a just, but iron, hand? Do you even begin to
understand the implications of the cache of stolen stones? Do you even begin to
understand the power they might bring to our foes?" The Father Abbot shook
his head and waved disgustedly at the man.
"I
grow weary of trying to educate you, foolish Abbot Dobrinion," he said.
"Let me warn you instead. This matter is too important for your meddling.
Your actions will not go unnoticed."
Abbot
Dobrinion squared his shoulders and eyed the old man directly. Truly, some of
Markwart's claims of the potential calamity had shaken a bit of his confidence,
but still, his heart told him that this inquisition of the Chilichunks, and of
the centaur, could not be a righteous thing. He had no arguments that would stand
against Markwart at that time, though. The hierarchy of the Abellican Church
did not allow him, as a mere abbot, to seriously question the authority of the
Father Abbot, even within the walls of his own abbey. He gave a curt bow, then
turned and walked far, far away.
"Who
is Dobrinion's second at St. Precious?" Father Abbot Markwart asked
Brother Francis as soon as the other man was gone.
"In
line for the position of abbot?" Francis reasoned, and then, when Markwart
confirmed that to be what he had in mind, Francis shook his head and shrugged.
"No one of any consequence, certainly," he explained. "There is
not even a master now in service at St. Precious."
Markwart's
face screwed up with curiosity.
"They
had two masters," Brother Francis explained. "One was killed on the
battlefield to the north; the other died of the red fever just a few months
ago."
"An
interesting void," Father Abbot Markwart remarked.
"In
truth, there is no one in St. Precious ready for such a succession,"
Brother Francis went on.
Father
Abbot smiled wickedly at the thought. He had a master at St.-Mere-Abelle who
might be ready for such a position, a man whose hand was no less iron than his
own.
"Impeaching
him of his title will thus prove all the more difficult," Brother Francis
reasoned, thinking he saw where Markwart's thoughts were leading him.
"What?"
Markwart asked incredulously, as though the idea never crossed his mind.
"The
College will never strip Abbot Dobrinion of his abbey, given that there is no
logical successor at St. Precious," Brother Francis reasoned.
"There
are plenty of masters at St.-Mere-Abelle ready to assume the role of
abbot," Father Abbot Markwart replied. "And at St. Honce."
"But
history tells us clearly that the College would not strip an abbey of its abbot
without another within the abbey ready to assume the title," Brother
Francis argued. "The Twelfth College of St. Argraine was faced with just
that prospect, concerning an abbot whose crimes were clearly more egregious
than Abbot Dobrinion's."
"Yes
yes, I do not doubt your understanding of the matter," Father Abbot
Markwart interrupted, somewhat impatiently. He looked in the direction in which
Abbot Dobrinion had departed, still showing that smile. "A pity," he
muttered.
Then
he started away, but, as in the dungeon, Brother Francis paused before
following, surprised, when he considered it more closely, that Father Abbot
Markwart would even entertain such thoughts. The impeachment of an abbot was no
light matter, most decidedly not! It had only been attempted a half-dozen times
in the thousand-year history of the Church, and two of those were prompted by
the fact that the abbot in question had been proven guilty of serious crimes,
one a series of rapes, including the assault on the female abbess of St. Gwendolyn,
and the other a murder. Furthermore, the other four impeachment attempts had
been in the very early days of the Abellican Order, when the position of abbot
was often for sale or an appointment made as a matter of political gain.
Brother
Francis gave a deep sigh to steady his nerves and dutifully followed his
superior once more, reminding himself that the Church, indeed all the kingdom,
was at war, after all, and that these were indeed desperate times.
Brother
Braumin Herde was not in good spirits. He knew what was going on in the
dungeons of the abbey, though he wasn't allowed anywhere near the lower
levels. And even worse, he knew he was now alone in his stance, should he
choose to take one against the Father Abbot. Master Jojonah was long gone,
taken from him as his old mentor had warned might happen. Father Abbot Markwart
knew his enemies and had the upper hand, a position he had no intention of
relinquishing.
So
Brother Braumin, avoiding monks of his own abbey for fear that they would run
to Markwart to report any discussion, spent his hours among the brothers of St.
Precious. They were a more jovial bunch than the serious students of
St.-Mere-Abelle, he discovered, despite the fact that they had been hearing the
sounds of battle not too far to the north for many weeks now. Still, on the
whole, St. Precious was a brighter place. Perhaps it was the weather, Brother
Braumin thought, for Palmaris was normally much more sunny than All Saints Bay,
or perhaps it was the fact that St. Precious was built more aboveground than
the larger St.-Mere-Abelle, with more windows and breezy balconies. Or maybe it
was the fact that these monks were less secluded, being housed, as they were,
in the midst of a huge city.
Or
maybe, Brother Braumin mused—and he thought this to be the most likely explanation—the
fact that St. Precious was lighter of heart than St.-Mere-Abelle was a
reflection of the mood of the respective abbots. Dobrinion Calislas, by all
accounts, was a man not unaccustomed to smiling; his great belly laugh was
well-reported in Palmaris, as was his love of the wine—elvish boggle, some
said—his penchant for games of chance—among friends only—and his love of
officiating a grand wedding where no expenses had been spared.
Fattier
Abbot Markwart didn't smile much, Braumin knew, and on those occasions when he
did, those not in his favor grew very ill at ease.
Late
that afternoon, Braumin stood in the carpeted hallway outside the door of
Abbot Dobrinion's private quarters. Many times he lifted his hand to knock on
the door, only to let it fall silently by his side. Braumin understood the
chance he would be taking if he went in to speak with the man now, if he told
Abbot Dobrinion of his fears concerning Markwart and of the quiet alliance that
had been forged against the Father Abbot. On the one hand, Braumin felt he had
little choice in the matter. With Master Jojonah gone, and on a long road that
would keep him out of Braumin's life for years, it appeared, Braumin was
powerless to make any moves against Father Abbot Markwart's decisions,
particularly the decision that had sent Jojonah away in the first place.
Making an ally of Abbot Dobrinion, who by all indications was not having a good
time of it on his own against the Father Abbot, might greatly strengthen the
cause for both men.
But
on the other hand, Braumin Herde had to admit that he really didn't know Abbot
Dobrinion very well, particularly the man's politics. Perhaps Abbot Dobrinion
and Father Abbot Markwart were bickering over control of the prisoners simply
because each wanted the glory of recovering the stones. Or perhaps Abbot
Dobrinion's objections were borne on the wings of simple anger that Markwart
had come into St. Precious and usurped a good deal of his power.
Brother
Braumin spent nearly half an hour standing in that hall, contemplating his
course. In the end Master Jojonah's words of wisdom proved the deciding
component. "Quietly spread the word," his beloved mentor had bade
him, "not against Father Abbot or any others, but in favor of Avelyn and
those of like heart."
Patience,
Brother Braumin decided. This was the long war of Mankind, he knew, the
internal struggle of good and evil, and his side, the side of true goodness and
godliness, would win out in the end. He had to believe that.
Now
he was miserable and feeling so very alone, but that was the burden the truth
in his heart forced upon him, and going to Abbot Dobrinion at this dangerous
time was not the proper course.
As
it played out in the weeks ahead, Brother Braumin Herde would come to regret
this moment when he walked away from Abbot Dobrinion's door.
"Maiyer
Dek and the powrie, Kos-kosio," Pony said, feeling very pleased at the
outcome in Caer Tinella. She, Elbryan, Tomas Gingerwart, and Belster O'Comely
were sitting about a campfire in the refugee encampment, eagerly awaiting the
return of Roger Lockless and the other scouts, trying to get a full measure of
the impact of this night's raid on the monsters. The news would be good, all of
them fully suspected. Several other monsters in addition to the two leaders had
been slain, but they, even the three giants, were not overly important, not
compared to the giant leader and the powrie leader—and especially
given the fact that Maiyer Dek had been the one to kill Kos-kosio, and in full
view of many powrie allies!
Before
the coming of the demon dactyl, giants and powries had rarely allied, indeed
had hated each other as much as each hated the humans. Bestesbulzibar had
halted that feud, and with the fall of the demon, the alliance had only
continued out of necessity, since both armies were deep into the human lands.
But
it was a strained thing, an alliance waiting for an excuse that it might turn
into a feud.
"If
we had convinced Maiyer Dek to join with us, we could not have gotten him to
aid us any more than he did," Elbryan remarked with a chuckle. "My
hopes soared when I saw him throw the powrie leader into the fire."
"And
with Maiyer Dek and three of his giant kin dead," Pony added, "we can
expect that the powries, angry at the giants, now have the clear upper
hand."
"Except
that goblins are more friendly to giants than to the wicked dwarves,"
Tomas Gingerwart noted. "Even though giants often eat them!"
"True
enough," Elbryan admitted. "Perhaps the sides are fairly equal, then,
for Caer Tinella was swarming with the wretched goblins. But unless one of
great charm can be found among the ranks, and quickly, I suspect the fighting
in the town has only just begun."
"Here's
hoping they kill each other to the last," Belster O'Comely said, lifting a
mug of ale—compliments
of Roger Lockless—into the air, then taking a tremendous swallow, draining the
mug.
"So
they are weaker, and our force has grown by a score ready to fight," Tomas
put in.
"A
score ready to help the others get past the towns and to the southland,"
Elbryan corrected. "We, all of us, have seen enough battle."
"To
Palmaris!" Belster roared, finishing with a loud belch.
Tomas
Gingerwart was not amused. "A month ago, even a week ago, even two days
ago, I would have been satisfied with that," he explained. "But Caer
Tinella is our home, and if our enemies are truly weakened, it may be time for
us to reclaim the town. That was the plan, was it not? To wait until we took a
measure of our enemies and then strike?"
Elbryan
and Pony exchanged nervous glances, then looked back to the resolute man, truly
empathizing with his desires.
"This
is a discussion for later," the ranger said calmly. "We do not know
how strongly the monsters remain entrenched in Caer Tinella."
Tomas
snorted. "You got in," he said. "How much more devastating
might the raid have been if all of our warriors were there to fight beside
you?"
"Devastating
to both sides, I fear," Pony replied. "We stung the monsters and
freed the prisoners only because of the element of surprise. If Maiyer Dek had
seen a greater force approaching, he would have ordered every one of the
captured men slain, and the defense of Caer Tinella would have been more
stubborn by far."
Tomas
snorted again, not wanting to hear the negative posturing. By his thinking, if
Elbryan and Pony, their little unseen friend Juraviel and Roger Lockless, could
exact such a toll, then he and his warriors could finish the task.
Elbryan
and Pony looked to each other again, and silently agreed to let it go at that.
They understood Tomas's feelings, recognized that he had to believe that his
home was not lost to him, and they both trusted that the man was sensible
enough to listen to their argument if skirting the town and running to the
south seemed the more prudent move.
Belster
O'Comely, fearing mounting tension, led the discussion in another direction
then, pondering the fate of the monstrous army across all the lands. "If
we've been hitting at them so hard here, then it seems to me that others are
taking them down, as well," he said. "Ho, but I'll be back in the
Howling Sheila in Dundalis in the next spring, I'm betting!" he finished,
then filled and drained his mug once again.
"It
is possible," the ranger said earnestly, his optimism surprising Pony. "If
the monstrous army disintegrates, the King will wish the Timberlands quickly
reclaimed."
"And
Sheila will howl again!" Belster roared, for in his drink-induced state,
he had forgotten all pledges to live out his life quietly in the safety of
Palmaris. His excitement brought others over to the campfire, most bearing
foodstuffs and beverages.
The
conversation took a lighthearted turn then, became the retelling of anecdotes
from happier times, before the monstrous invasion, and what had started as a
serious wait for important information became a sort of victory celebration.
Elbryan and Pony said little, preferring to sit back and listen to the chatter
of the others, often looking to each other and nodding. They had already
arranged a meeting with Juraviel at the break of dawn in the meadow by the
pines, and after they heard what the elf had to say, after they came to
understand the truth of their enemy's strength in the two towns, they could
make their decisions.
The
night deepened, the fires burned low, and most of the folk retired to their
bedrolls. Finally, only an hour before the dawn, the scouts returned, led by an
exuberant Roger Lockless. "All the giants are gone," the young man
proclaimed. "Every one! Driven off by the powries—and they
hardly even put up a fight!"
"They
did not want to be here in the first place," Pony reasoned. "They
prefer their holes in the steep mountains of the Wilderlands."
Tomas
Gingerwart gave a shout of victory.
"And
what of the goblins?" Elbryan asked calmly, interrupting the celebration
before it could begin. He didn't want Roger's excitement to steal the moment
and lead Tomas and all the refugees down a course to absolute destruction. Even
without giants, the remaining powries might prove too formidable.
"There
was a fight and some were killed," Roger replied, not missing a beat.
"Others went scattering into the forest."
"And
still others remained with the powries," Elbryan reasoned.
"
Yes, but—"
"And
few, very few, powries were killed?" the ranger pressed.
"The
goblins who remained will flee at first sign of battle," Roger said
confidently. "They only stay because they're afraid of the bloody
caps."
"Armies
have won great victories inspired purely by fear," Pony said dryly.
Roger
glared at her. "They are ready to be taken," he said evenly.
"We
are a long way from making such a claim," the ranger was quick to reply,
pointedly cutting off Tomas Gingerwart with an upraised hand as he spoke.
Elbryan rose to stand before Roger. "Our responsibilities are too great to
make such a quick judgment."
"As
you made when you went into Caer Tinella alone?" the young man spat back.
"I
did what I thought necessary," Elbryan replied quietly, calmly. He could
feel the gazes of many people settling on him and Roger, and any conflict
between them would obviously prove a source of great discomfort. These people
had come to trust and love Roger Lockless, and he had truly done much for them
in the weeks of their exile. But if he was wrong now, if he was letting his
desire to lead the folk to victory overrule good sense, then all of his
previous exploits would be for naught, for all of the refugees would likely
soon be dead.
"As
did I in rescuing the thirty captured soldiers!" Roger said forcefully,
and loudly.
"All
by yourself?" Pony had to put in.
Elbryan
put up his hand, quieting Pony, quieting all about him. "It is too early
to make the judgment of whether to attack the towns or circumvent them,"
he announced. "We will know more, much more, with the light of day."
The ranger, thinking and hoping that the discussion was finished then, turned
and started away.
"We
take back Caer Tinella," Roger Lockless declared, and there were more than
a few agreeing calls. "And Landsdown," the young man went on.
"And when we have the towns in our possession once more, we send word to
Palmaris, that the King's army might reinforce our position."
"The
Kingsmen will not come this far north," Pony argued. "Or at least,
that is not something upon which we should stake our entire existence. Not yet.
Not while Palmaris is under threat of invasion."
"How
can you know?" Roger asked sternly.
"I
served in the King's army," Pony admitted. "In the Kingsmen and in
the Coastpoint Guards. I understand their priorities, and I can assure you that
measured against the value of Palmaris, second city of Honce-the-Bear and the
gateway of the Masur Delaval, Caer Tinella and Landsdown are not among those
priorities. If Palmaris falls, then the way is open all the way to the King's
seat in Ursal."
That
took a bit of Roger's bluster away. He fidgeted for a few moments, thinking up
a retort, but before he could deliver it, Tomas Gingerwart cut in. "We are
all weary," the man said loudly, commanding the attention of all nearby.
"It is said that good news can be as tiring as bad, and either as tiring
as a week of hard work."
"Oh,
true enough," Belster O'Comely agreed.
"So
our spirits are heightened, our thoughts hopeful," Tomas went on.
"But the ranger and Jilseponie are correct. This is not the time to
decide."
"Our
enemies are disorganized and reeling," Roger argued.
"As
they will remain, for another day at least," Tomas answered bluntly.
"We'll not attack the towns in the light of day anyway, so let us get our
rest now, and hopefully we will see things more clearly in the morning."
Elbryan
locked gazes with Tomas and nodded, sincerely grateful that the man had taken
such levelheaded control. Then he motioned to Pony and the pair walked off,
heading for the pines and the meadow, and a clearer picture of what remained of
their adversaries.
Roger
Lockless waited in the camp for a short while, then, when no one was paying
much attention to him, he stole away, on the trail of the ranger and the woman
and, he knew, their private scout.
He
caught up to Elbryan and Pony in a meadow lined with pine trees, and blushed
deeply, reconsidering his course, when the man and woman embraced each other
and kissed passionately. Roger breathed easier when they broke off the clench.
If
he had examined his feelings a bit more closely, and more honestly, Roger would
have realized that the kiss bothered him more than it should have, that not
only did he not wish to spy on such a private moment, but especially not one
involving this beautiful woman. But Roger wasn't capable of that level of
introspection where these two newcomers were concerned, not yet, and so,
seeing the embrace finished, he crept closer into position, and was not
surprised in the least when a melodious voice came down to the pair from the
branches of a nearby pine.
"Fortune
favored us this night," Juraviel explained. "For the giants are
gone, all of them, and a fair number of goblins, too. The only better scenario
would have been an open brawl between the giants and the powries."
"But
that did not happen," Elbryan replied. "Thus, we must assume that
the powrie force is still considerable."
"Indeed
it is," Juraviel confirmed. "Though their leader has been
roasted!"
"The
folk wish to attack Caer Tinella, to reclaim it as their home," Pony put
in.
"Is
that not correct, Roger Lockless?" Elbryan added, recognizing that the
young man was about.
Roger
went even lower to the ground, put his face right in the grass.
"I
do grow weary of this one's spying," Juraviel remarked, fluttering down
from the tree.
"Well,
come out, then," said Pony. "Since you wished to hear what we would
say, you should at least join in the conversation."
Roger
told himself repeatedly that there was no way these three could see him, no way
that Elbryan and Pony could know, without doubt, that he had followed them.
"Stay
with your face buried in the grass, then," Elbryan said with a chuckle.
"I am against the attack," he offered to Juraviel.
"And
with good reason," the elf replied. "If the war was still a
stalemate, then we might consider striking such a blow. But I doubt that Caer
Tinella serves as anything more than a temporary home for the powries and few
goblins that remain. Certainly, it is not a supply base for any coordinated
monstrous force. I see nothing to gain by attacking—the thought of
reclaiming and holding the town at this point is purely foolhardy—and
everything to lose. Let us not underestimate the strength of the force
remaining in Caer Tinella."
"I.think
it wiser to skirt the town and flee to the southland," Elbryan added.
"It
is likely that the road south will prove open all the way to Palmaris,"
Juraviel replied. "Though how long it will remain that way, I cannot
say."
"Convincing
the townsfolk to abandon their homes will not be easy," Pony explained.
"But
we shall," Elbryan assured her. He looked in the direction of Roger
Lockless as he spoke, thinking that the proclamation might at last bring the
lad from hiding.
"Perhaps
you cared not for your own home!" the young man said, jumping up and
storming across to face the ranger. "But we are loyal to Caer
Tinella!"
"And
so you shall return to Caer Tinella," Elbryan said calmly. "This war
will not last much longer, and as soon as the region about Palmaris is declared
secure, then I expect the King to send the army north."
"And
what will they find?" Roger said, moving right up to the much larger
Elbryan. "Burned-out skeletons of our homes?"
"Rebuild,"
Elbryan calmly replied.
Roger
scoffed at the notion.
"Our
own home of Dundalis was sacked years ago," Pony said. "Then it was
rebuilt, by Belster and his companions. And now it has been sacked again."
"And
so it shall be built again," Elbryan said resolutely. "Houses can be
put back up; people are forever lost."
"My
own family was lost in such a raid," Pony said, taking the young man
gently by the elbow.
"And
my own," Elbryan added. "And all of our friends."
Roger's
visage softened for just a moment as he regarded Pony, but then he pulled away,
anger again filling his eyes. "Tell me not of your grief," he
snapped. "I know all about losing family and friends. And I am not afraid now.
The dwarves are in Caer Tinella, my home, and so I shall go there and get rid
of them, every one! You delayed this, but after the success of our attack, you
cannot stop it. The folk will follow me, Nightbird," he said, poking himself
in the chest. "You think yourself the leader, but it was Roger Lockless,
not you, who rescued the prisoners in the last raid, just as it has been Roger
Lockless all along, feeding the folk, stealing right from under the big nose of
stupid Kos-kosio Begulne. Me!" he yelled, poking his chest again.
"And you will not steer them away from Caer Tinella. They will follow
me."
"To
their doom," the ranger said evenly. "Is this about Caer Tinella,
Roger, or is it about who leads?"
Roger
waved a hand at him dismissively. "We're not done with this,
Nightbird," he said, spitting the elvish title with contempt, and he
turned and walked back across the field.
Pony
started to follow, her face tight with anger, but Elbryan held up his arm to
stop her. "He is young and confused," the ranger explained. "He
thought he had his place carved out among the folk, and then we came
along."
"He
was never formally a leader of the group," said Juraviel. "That lies
more to Tomas Gingerwart and Belster O'Comely. Roger was, rather, working
outside the limits of the band. Your arrival should not have affected that
role."
"In
his own mind, he was the hero of the group," Pony reasoned.
"He
is indeed," Elbryan corrected.
"Agreed,"
said Juraviel. "But he does not understand that there is room for
others."
"Roger
Lockless!" Elbryan called loudly.
Roger,
at the far edge of the meadow, stopped in his tracks and turned about.
"This
must be settled, here and now," the ranger called. "For the good of
all the folk." Even as he spoke the words with determination, though, his
expression revealed his trepidation. "Give Juraviel your sword," he
instructed Pony with a weary sigh.
The
woman considered the request, and the look on her lover's face. "Now is
not the time," she replied.
"It
has to be," the ranger said. "Give Juraviel your sword." He
paused and looked from Pony to the approaching Roger, trying to get an even
deeper measure of Roger's motivations. "And be gone from here," he
added to Pony. "You should not be a witness to this. For his sake."
Pony
slid her small sword from its sheath and handed it to the elf, all the while
staring Elbryan in the eye. "If you hurt him ..." she warned, and she
turned and walked into the cover of the pines.
Elbryan
was wise enough to worry when Pony left a threat unfinished.
"Be
careful," Juraviel cautioned. "There may be grim consequences if you
take all of the man's dignity."
"I
hope it does not come to that," Elbryan said sincerely. "For I do
indeed fear the consequences. But this split cannot continue between us. We
cannot ask folk in so desperate a situation to make a choice between Roger and
me."
"You
think Roger will listen to you?"
"I
will make Roger listen to me," Elbryan assured him.
"You
walk a fine line here, Nightbird," the elf said.
"A
line that you and Tuntun showed me well," the ranger replied.
Juraviel
nodded, conceding the point. "Make him start it," the elf advised.
"If it is to happen."
Elbryan
nodded and then straightened as Roger, bold as ever, strode defiantly to stand
right before him.
"I
grow weary of our bickering, Roger Lockless, who claims leadership of the
group," Elbryan called. "In the last raid on Caer Tinella, we showed
that we can work well together."
"We
showed that my priorities, and not your own, are for the betterment of the
folk," the young man replied.
Elbryan
took the insult in stride, recognizing the frustration behind it. "We
both served valuable functions in the town," he said quietly and calmly.
"You freed the prisoners, and for that, all of us, myself included, are
indeed grateful. And I defeated Maiyer Dek, a blow from which our enemies will
not soon recover."
"But
I could have accomplished my task all the more easily if you were not
there!" the young man said accusingly. "Yet did you even ask me to
go? Where my skills were the ones most needed, did the great Nightbird even
inquire if I might be interested in the mission?"
"I
did not even know that they held prisoners," the ranger replied honestly.
"Else my plan would have been greatly different."
"Your
plan," Roger spat. "Since
you arrived I have heard nothing but your plans!"
"And
are we not better off?"
Again
Roger spat, this time on Elbryan's feet. "I do not need you,
Nightbird," he sneered. "I wish that you and your strange little
friend would just disappear into the forest."
"But
not Jilseponie," Juraviel noted.
Roger's
face turned red. "Her, too!" he said unconvincingly.
Elbryan
realized that it would be better to get off of this delicate subject. "But
we are not leaving," he said. "Not until the folk are safe in
Palmaris, or until the army has marched north to reclaim the towns. I am a fact
of your life, Roger Lockless. And if I am put in a position of leadership, one
that I have earned through my work in the northland and through my experience,
then know that I will not abandon that position for the sake of your foolish
pride."
Roger
moved as if to strike out, but held his anger, though his face continued to
flush.
"My
responsibility is to them, not to you," Elbryan calmly explained.
"There is a place for you among this band, a very valuable place."
"As
your lackey?"
"But
know this," the ranger went on, ignoring the foolish comment, "I
will argue against any fight for Caer Tinella at this time. Fleeing from the
area is the proper course for the folk, and I expect and demand that you will support
me in this decision."
Roger
eyed the man directly, obviously surprised that the ranger had presumed to give
him a direct command.
"I
will accept nothing less from you, Roger Lockless."
"You
threaten me? As did Pon ... Jilseponie with her stupid curse?"
"I
tell you the truth, and nothing less," Elbryan replied. "This is too
important—"
Before
the ranger could finish, Roger exploded into motion, launching a punch at his
jaw. Not surprised in the least, Elbryan knifed a hand up in front of his face
and pushed it out slightly, just enough to deflect Roger's blow harmlessly wide
of the mark. The ranger's open hand then shot forward, slapping Roger hard
across the face, staggering him backward.
Roger
drew out a dagger and started forward, but skidded to a quick stop, facing the
angry glow of Tempest.
"A
fight between us would be pointless," the ranger said. "You have
admitted that you have never killed, yet, regrettably, I have lived by the
sword for a long, long time." That said, Elbryan calmly sheathed Tempest.
"I
can fight!" Roger yelled at him.
"I
do not doubt that," Elbryan replied. "But your real talents lay
elsewhere, in scouting, in hindering our enemy with your wits."
"Wits
you apparently do not trust with any important decision!"
Elbryan
shook his head. "This is battle, not thievery."
"And
I am nothing more than a common thief?"
"You
act now like a spoiled child," the ranger said. "If you attack me,
and kill me, or if I kill you, then what might be the cost to those folk who
look to us two to lead them?"
"I
do not wish to kill you," Roger informed him. "Only to hurt
you!" And on he came, dagger extended.
Elbryan's
left hand slapped out right under the blade, catching Roger by the forearm.
Before the young man could react, the ranger whipped his free hand across in
front of him and brought his left, and Roger's arm, across the other way. Roger
felt a sting in his hand, and then suddenly he was free. He caught his balance
immediately and tried to come up with a countering strike, but noticed he was
no longer holding the dagger, that Elbryan held it in his right hand.
The
ranger's left shot out, slapping Roger three times in rapid succession.
"You care to try again?" Elbryan asked, flipping the knife back to
Roger's nimble grasp.
"Dignity,"
Juraviel whispered behind the ranger.
Realizing
that he might be pushing this too far, that he was insulting the young man,
Elbryan reached back and took Pony's sword from Juraviel, then turned and threw
it so it stuck in the ground at Roger's feet. "If you wish to continue
this, then take up a real weapon," he said.
Roger
reached for the sword, then hesitated, looking up to match the ranger's gaze.
"I can fight," he said. "But these are your weapons, and not
mine. You offer me Pony's ordinary and small sword, while you wield the magical
blade—"
Before
he could finish his protest, Elbryan, in one fluid movement, drew out Tempest
and stuck it in the ground next to Pony's sword, then took the other sword in
hand.
"This
will be finished, here and now," the ranger said evenly. "It should
be so without a fight, but if that is what it takes...
"Pick
up the weapon, Roger Lockless," Elbryan said. "Or do not. But either
way, understand that in the matter of Caer Tinella, my decision shall stand.
And that decision is to bypass the town, and Landsdown, as well, and get these
folk to the safety of Palmaris."
Roger
was hardly listening to anything beyond the ranger's first sentence. This was
not about Caer Tinella, it was about pride. It was about a position of
leadership that Roger thought he deserved, and it was about a woman—
Roger
stopped his train of thought, not willing to go there. He glanced up at Elbryan
only briefly, then put his hand about the crafted hilt of Tempest, the silverel
pommel wrapped in blue leather. This was about his passage to manhood, he
decided, about his courage or fear, about being in control or being controlled—and not by
Elbryan, but by his own cowardice.
He
pulled the blade from the ground and fell back to a balanced stance, Tempest at
the ready.
"First
blood?" he asked.
"Until
one yields," Juraviel explained, to Roger's surprise. Under the normal
guidelines, the sword etiquette, first blood would put an end to such a
challenge, but in this instance Juraviel wanted to make certain that Roger
Lockless learned a valuable lesson.
Elbryan
held his ground calmly; he could tell from Roger's expression that the
impatient young man would strike first and strike hard. Predictably, Roger
charged, skidding up short and launching Tempest in a wide-swinging arc.
Elbryan
reached across his body with the blade of his sword inverted, angled down. As
Tempest connected, the ranger skillfully "caught" the sword with his
own blade and retracted his arm to somewhat absorb the shock of the strike—else, he
feared, Tempest might have shorn his blade in two! Then the ranger smoothly
turned his blade up, lifting his hand as he went so that Roger's attack sailed
harmlessly high.
Elbryan
could have stepped ahead then, and with a short stroke ended the fight. He
started to make that exact move, but remembered Juraviel's warning and stepped
back instead.
On
came Roger, not even realizing that he had already lost the contest. The young
man's sword work this time was more deceptive, Tempest stabbing for Elbryan up
high, then down low, then low again, and, after a feint up high, low a third
time in succession.
Elbryan
simply moved his head to avoid the first attack, slapped at the blade once and
again to defeat the next two, then hopped the last. Now the ranger did counter,
coming forward suddenly as soon as he landed from his slight jump and swinging
at Roger in a wide arc, allowing the young man the time to get Tempest in the
way to parry.
Elbryan
worked furiously, in widely exaggerated and clearly revealed moves, and nimble
Roger easily picked off each attack, even managed to counter on two occasions,
the first surprising Elbryan and almost slipping through his defenses. The
ranger recovered quickly, though, slapping his free hand against the flat of
Tempest's blade, though he did get a slight nick on the side of his hand in the
process.
"In
a contest of first blood, I already won," Roger bragged.
The
ranger sublimated his pride and let the insult pass. He had no time nor desire
for such taunting games, for he had to focus on the challenge of this
particular fight—not
concerning whether he would win or lose, but to make sure that neither he nor
Roger was injured in the process. Elbryan had to choreograph this one
perfectly.
Another
flurry ensued, the two men slapping their swords repeatedly in the air between
them, picking off each other's blows, with Roger gradually gaining an
advantage, the ranger backing steadily. Spurred by the gain, Roger pressed
onward even more forcefully, launching Tempest in mighty swings, inadvertently
opening his defenses.
Elbryan
did not take any of those openings, just continued to back, and to bend a bit,
allowing the smaller man to rise above him.
Roger
yelped with satisfaction and came on hard, slashing Tempest in a downward,
diagonal manner.
Up
came the ranger, flipping his sword to his left hand and parrying strong,
then, in the blink of an eye, turning the blade right over Roger's halted
sword, then driving the tip back under, and whipping the blades out wide so
forcefully that Tempest flew from Roger's grasp. Elbryan let his own blade fall
free, as well.
The
young man dove for the sword; Elbryan dove right in front of him, rolling a
somersault, pivoting as he landed and coming right back in. As Roger reached
for the sword, his right arm was jerked back, bent at the elbow, Elbryan's
right arm sliding under it. Before the young man could react with his free left
arm, Elbryan's left slipped under his armpit, then up and around the back of
Roger's neck. At the same time, the ranger stepped one leg past Roger and
jerked him to the side, over his knee. They went down hard, Elbryan on top of
Roger, the young man's arms helplessly pinned behind his back.
"Yield,"
the ranger instructed.
"Not
fair," Roger complained.
Elbryan
stood up, hauling Roger to his feet with him, then released him, shoving him
forward. Roger immediately went for Tempest.
Elbryan
started a silent call to the sword, which would have floated it back to his
hand, but decided against the move, letting Roger retrieve the blade, then
spin, facing him squarely.
"Not
fair," Roger gasped again. "This is a sword fight, not a contest of
wrestling strength."
"The
hold was merely a continuation of the swordplay," Elbryan replied.
"Would you have preferred getting stuck with a sword?"
"You
could not!" Roger argued. "Your parry cost us both our weapons!"
Elbryan
turned to Juraviel, and saw that the elf recognized the truth of the situation,
that he had fairly won. But the elf said, "The lad is correct," and
Elbryan, seeing that Roger had learned no lesson here, understood and approved.
"Thus the fight is not ended."
"Go
and retrieve your sword," Roger said to Elbryan.
"No
need," Juraviel interjected, and his tone was a bit too jovial for
Elbryan's liking. "The swords were dropped and you were the first to
retrieve. Take the advantage, young Roger!"
Elbryan
glared at Juraviel, thinking the elf might be pushing things a bit.
Roger
came ahead three steps, sword raised in line with Elbryan's face.
"Yield," the young man said, smiling widely.
"Because
you have the advantage?" Elbryan replied. "As you had with the
dagger?"
The
poignant reminder sent Roger leaping ahead, but the ranger sprang out, too,
soaring in a dive right past Roger, spinning up to his feet and scrambling to
his sword before the young man could reverse direction and catch up.
Roger
charged right in, though, furious at his own mistake, swinging wildly. Metal
rang against metal many, many times, Elbryan neatly picking off every blow.
Fast
tiring, Roger tried one of the ranger's tricks, flipping Tempest to his left
hand and slashing in.
Elbryan's
backhand parry nearly knocked him in a complete circle, and when Roger
recovered, raising Tempest defensively before him, he found that the ranger
was not there.
And
then he felt the tip of a sword against the back of his neck.
"Yield,"
Elbryan instructed.
Roger
tensed, calculating a move, but Elbryan only dug the tip in a bit deeper,
ending any such thoughts.
Roger
threw Tempest to the ground and stepped away, turning an angry glare on the
ranger—a
look that grew even darker when Elbryan unexpectedly started laughing.
"Well
fought!" the ranger congratulated. "I did not think you would be so
strong with the blade. It seems that you are a man of many talents, Roger
Lockless."
"You
easily defeated me," the young man spat back.
Elbryan's
smile was unrelenting. "Not as easily as you might believe," he said,
and he looked to Juraviel. "The shadow dive," he explained.
"Indeed,"
replied the elf, cuing in to the ranger's reference, remembering when he had
seen Elbryan beaten on the sparring field by Tallareyish Issinshine, the elf
using just such a move. "It is a move that will work two out of three
times," Juraviel went on, speaking to Roger. "Or at least, in two out
of three attempts, it will not bring absolute disaster."
Juraviel
turned back to Elbryan. "It does not do my old heart well to see you,
Nightbird, whom we elves trained to the highest levels, forced to resort to
such a desperate maneuver to save defeat at the hands of a mere child!" he
scolded.
Elbryan
and the elf looked to Roger, both thinking they had done well here, that the
issue about the towns, and the pecking order between the two of them, had been
settled.
Roger
glowered at the ranger and the elf for a few moments, then spat on the ground
at Elbryan's feet, turned and stormed away.
Elbryan
gave a great sigh. "He is not an easy one to convince," he said.
"Perhaps
he recognized your deception as easily as did I," Juraviel reasoned.
"What
deception?"
"You
could have beaten him at any time, in any manner," the elf stated bluntly.
"Two
out of three," the ranger corrected.
"When
you fought Tallareyish, perhaps," Juraviel was quick to answer. "In
that instance, however, Tallareyish's maneuver had been wrought purely of
desperation, for you had clearly gained the upper hand."
"And
this time?"
"This
time the shadow dive was used for no better reason than to save some of Roger's
dignity, a tactic I am not certain will prove effective."
"But—" Elbryan
started to protest, for Juraviel had bade him do just that before the fight
began.
"Just
take care that your 'lesson' doesn't impart a false sense of ability in
Roger," the elf warned. "If he goes into battle against a powrie,
he'll not likely come out of it alive."
Elbryan
conceded that point, looking to the place where Roger had exited the field.
That seemed the least of their troubles, however, for, given Roger's attitude,
it seemed it would not be easy to convince the folk to go around the two
occupied towns.
"Go
and give Pony back her blade," Juraviel instructed.
Too
caught up in the moment, trying to figure out how he might better correct this
situation with Roger, Elbryan didn't even reply, just retrieved and sheathed
Tempest and walked off into the night.
"While
I go and have a talk with Roger Lockless," Juraviel finished under his
breath when the ranger had walked away.
The
elf caught up with Roger soon after, in a root-strewn clearing beneath the
heavy boughs of a wide-spreading elm tree.
"Etiquette
and simple good manners would have demanded that you congratulate the
winner," Juraviel explained, lighting on a branch right above the young
man.
"Be
gone, elf," Roger replied.
Juraviel
hopped down to the ground right in front of the young man. "Be gone?"
he echoed incredulously.
"Now!"
"Save
your threats, Roger Lockless," the elf answered calmly. "I have seen
you fight and am not impressed."
"I
brought your wonderful Nightbird to a near standstill."
"He
could have beaten you at any time," the elf interrupted. "You know
that."
Roger
straightened up, and though he was not tall by human standards, he still
towered over the elf.
"Nightbird
is as strong as any man alive," the elf went on. "And, trained by the
Touel'alfar, he is as nimble with the blade as any. He is the complete warrior,
and could have turned your own blade back in your face, had he so chosen. Or he
might have simply caught your arm and crushed it in his iron grasp."
"So
says his lackey elf!" Roger cried.
Juraviel
scoffed at the absurdity of the statement. "Have you already forgotten
your first fight?"
Roger's
expression screwed up with curiosity.
"What
happened when you went at Nightbird with the dagger?" the elf asked.
"Is that not proof enough?"
A
thoroughly frustrated Roger punched out at Juraviel. The elf stepped inside the
blow, caught Roger by the wrist, then went right behind the young man, turning
Roger's arm behind his back and grabbing him by the hair with his free hand. A
tug on both arm and hair had Roger turning about, and Juraviel promptly slammed
his face into the trunk of the elm.
"I
am not Nightbird," Juraviel warned. "I am not human, and hold little
compassion for fools!" With that, Juraviel slammed Roger into the tree
once more, then spun the man about and hit him with a backhand that sat him on
the ground.
"You
know the truth, Roger Lockless," he scolded. "You know that Nightbird
is your better in these matters, and that his judgment concerning our course
should be heeded. Yet you are so blinded by your own foolish pride that you
will doom your own people before admitting it!"
"Pride?"
Roger yelled back. "Was it not Roger Lockless who went into Caer Tinella
to rescue—"
"And
why did Roger Lockless go into Caer Tinella?" Juraviel interrupted.
"On both occasions. For the sake of the poor prisoners, or out of fear
that he would be upstaged by this new hero?"
Roger
stuttered over a response, but Juraviel wasn't listening anyway. "He could
have beaten you at any moment, in any manner," the elf said again, and
then he turned and walked away, leaving battered Roger sitting under the elm tree.
"Abbot Dobrinion grows increasingly uneasy," Brother Francis offered to Father Abbot Markwart. The younger monk was obviously agitated; every word that came from him was strained, for in speaking them, Brother Francis was caught somewhere between fear and horror. Of course Abbot Dobrinion was uneasy, he realized, for they were torturing the abbot's subjects in the very dungeons of this holy place!
"It
is not my place to say, perhaps," Francis went on, pausing often, trying
to gauge impassive Markwart's reaction, "but I fear—"
"That
St. Precious is not friendly to our cause," the Father Abbot finished for
him.
"Forgive
me," Brother Francis humbly said.
"Forgive?"
Markwart echoed incredulously. "Forgive your perceptiveness? Your
wariness? We are at war, my young fool. Have you not yet realized that?"
"Of
course, Father Abbot," Francis said, bowing his head. "The powries
and goblins—"
"Forget
them!" Markwart interrupted. "And forget the giants, and the dactyl
demon, as well. This war has become much more dangerous than any matter
concerning mere monsters."
Brother
Francis lifted his head and stared long and hard at Markwart.
"This
is a war for the heart of the Abellican Church," Markwart went on. "I
have explained this over and over to you, and yet you still do not understand.
This is a war between traditions which have stood for millennia, and usurpous
ideas, petty contemporary beliefs concerning the nature of good and the nature
of evil."
"Are
those not timeless concepts?" a very confused Brother Francis dared to
ask.
"Of
course," Markwart replied with a disarming chuckle. "But some, Master
Jojonah among them, seem to believe they can redefine the terms to fit their
own perceptions."
"And
what of Abbot Dobrinion?"
"You
tell me of Abbot Dobrinion," Markwart instructed.
Brother
Francis paused, contemplating the implications. He wasn't quite sure how the
Father Abbot viewed Dobrinion, or anyone else, for that matter. Back at
St.-Mere-Abelle, Markwart had argued often with Master De'Unnero, and often
violently, and yet, despite their differences, it was no secret that De'Unnero
was the Father Abbot's closest adviser, next to Francis himself.
"Brother
Avelyn the heretic used to analyze every question," Father Abbot Markwart
remarked. "He could not simply speak what was in his heart, and that, I
fear, was his undoing."
"Abbot
Dobrinion will fight us," Brother Francis blurted. "I do not trust
him, and think him more akin to Master Jojonah's definitions of good and evil
than to yours... ours."
"Strong
words," Markwart said slyly.
Brother
Francis paled.
"But
not wholly untrue," Markwart went on, and Francis breathed easier.
"Abbot Dobrinion has ever been an idealist, even when those ideals fly in
the face of pragmatism. I thought that his craving for the sainthood of Brother
Allabarnet would allow me to keep him in line, but apparently he is possessed
of greater weakness than I believed."
"He
will fight us," Brother Francis said more firmly.
"Even
as we speak, Abbot Dobrinion petitions for the release of the
Chilichunks," Markwart explained. "He will go to the Baron of
Palmaris, likely to the King himself, and of course, to the other abbots."
"Have
we a right to hold them?" Brother Francis dared to ask.
"Is
the Abellican Order more important than the fate of three people?" came
the curt response.
"Yes,
Father Abbot," Brother Francis replied, bowing his head once more. When
Markwart put it that simple way, it was easy for Francis to put aside his
private feelings about the treatment of the prisoners. Indeed the stakes were
high here, too high for him to let foolish compassion get in the way.
"And
what, then, shall we do?" the Father Abbot asked, though it was obvious to
Brother Francis that the old man had already made up his mind.
Again
Brother Francis hesitated, thinking through the problem. "An Abbot
College," he began, referring to the gathering of all the Church
hierarchy, a process necessary if the Father Abbot meant to remove Abbot
Dobrinion.
"There
will indeed be such a gathering," Markwart replied. "But it will not
convene until mid-Calember."
Brother
Francis considered the words. Calember was the eleventh month, still more than
four months away. "Then we must leave St. Precious at once," he
reasoned at length, guessing, correctly, that the Father Abbot was fast
running out of patience with him. "We must take our prisoners to
St.-Mere-Abelle, where Abbot Dobrinion shall have no say in their
treatment."
"Well
spoken," Markwart congratulated. "Indeed, we must be gone from St.
Precious tomorrow, the centaur and the Chilichunks in tow. See to the
arrangements, and plot our paths."
"A
straight run," Brother Francis assured him.
"And
make it public, very much so, that we are leaving," the Father Abbot went
on. "And see to it that Connor Bildeborough is taken, as well, for that is
news which will spread wide."
Brother
Francis wore a doubting expression. "That may invite trouble from the
crown," he warned.
"And
if so, we will release him," Markwart replied. "Until that happens,
the gossip may reach the ears of the woman we seek."
"But
she may not care about Bildeborough," Brother Francis reasoned.
"Their union was short, and unpleasant, so it is said."
"But
she will come for the Chilichunks," Markwart explained. "And for that
ugly half-horse creature. The arrest of Master Bildeborough will only serve to
publicize our other prisoners."
Brother
Francis considered the reasoning for a moment, then nodded. "And what of
Abbot Dobrinion?" he asked.
"A
smaller thorn than you would believe," Markwart replied quickly, and it
seemed to Francis that the man already had a plan in mind for the venerable
abbot of St. Precious.
Connor
Bildeborough paced the small room—a rented flat in the lower section of
Palmaris. Though the man was of noble blood, he preferred the excitement of the
docks and the rougher taverns. The only adventure he found at his uncle's
palace was the occasional fox hunt, and those he considered foolish, an
ego-propping exercise that did not even
qualify, in his mind, as sport. No, Connor, quick with his wits and quick with
his sword, preferred a good fight in a tavern, or a brush with would-be muggers
in a dark alleyway.
To
that end, he had been spending a considerable amount of time in the fields
north of Palmaris, trying to earn a warrior's reputation in skirmishes with the
many monsters to be found up there. His uncle had presented him with a
magnificent gift at the outset of the war, a slender sword of unmatched
craftsmanship. Its blade gleamed of some silvery metal that could not be
identified, and inset along its golden basket pommel were several tiny magical
magnetites so the weapon could be used beautifully for parrying, practically
attracting an opponent's blade. Its name was Defender, and where his uncle had
ever found such a blade, Connor could not know. The rumors about the sword were
many, and impossible to confirm. Most agreed it had been forged in the smithies
of the first King of Honce-the-Bear—some said by a cunning powrie who had
deserted its kindred on the Weathered Isles. Other tales claimed that the
mysterious Touel'alfar had helped in its creation, and still others claimed
that both races had played a role, along with the best human weaponsmiths of
the day.
Whatever
the truth of the blade's origins, Connor understood that he now possessed a
most extraordinary weapon. With Defender in hand, just a week before he had led
a contingent of Kingsmen against a horde of powerful giants, and though the results
had been somewhat disastrous—as can be expected in a fight with giants—Connor had done
quite well, could even claim two kills by his sword. What glories he had found
in the north!
Now,
though, in this room with his good friend Abbot Dobrinion, Connor understood
that he should be keeping his attention a bit closer to home.
"It
is about Jill," the abbot insisted. "Father Abbot Markwart believes
she is in possession of the gemstone cache which was stolen from
St.-Mere-Abelle."
Jill.
The name hit Connor hard, tugged at
his memories and at his heart. He had courted her for months, wonderful months,
only to have their marriage disintegrate in a matter of hours. When Jill had
refused him his marital rights of consummation, Connor could have demanded her
death.
But
of course he could not have done that, for he had indeed loved the spirited,
though troubled, woman. He had settled for the judgment that she should be
indentured to the King's army, and how his heart had broken when his Jilly left
Palmaris.
"I
had heard that she was far, far away," the young nobleman said somberly.
"In Pireth Tulme, or Pireth Danard, serving in the Coastpoint
Guards."
"So
she may be," Abbot Dobrinion conceded. "Who can tell? The Father
Abbot is searching for her, and believes she was in the north, back in
Dundalis, and even farther, accompanied by Avelyn of St.-Mere-Abelle, who stole
the sacred gemstones."
"Do
you know this man?" Connor asked suddenly, again wondering about this
first monk who had visited Pettibwa Chilichunk.
"Never
met him," Abbot Dobrinion replied.
"A
description, then?" Connor pressed.
"A
large man, big of bone and, they believe, big of belly, as well," the
abbot replied. "So said Master Jojonah."
Connor
nodded, digesting the information. The monk who had visited with Pettibwa was
indeed large, of bone and of belly. Could it be that Jill had come back through
Palmaris in this man's company? Could Jilly, his Jilly, have been so close,
without him ever knowing it?
"The
woman is in trouble, Connor, very great trouble," Abbot Dobrinion remarked
gravely. "And if you know anything concerning her, where she might be, or
if she is indeed in possession of the stones, the Father Abbot will seek you
out. And his techniques of interrogation are not pleasant."
"How
could I know anything about Jill?" Connor replied incredulously. "The
last time I saw her was at her trial, when she was sent away to join the King's
army." His statement was true enough—the last time he had seen Jill was on
the occasion of their annulment, and her indenture—but of late Connor had
traveled out of Palmaris often, to the north to do battle, to make a name for
himself in what many agreed were the waning days of the war. He had heard tales
of a rogue band operating farther to the north, near the towns of Caer Tinella
and Landsdown, using tactics and magic to wreak havoc with the monsters. Might
Jill and the monk Avelyn, with their stolen gemstones, be the source of that
magic?
Of
course, Connor meant to keep his suspicions private, even from Abbot Dobrinion.
"The
Father Abbot means to find her," Dobrinion said.
"If
Jill has made more trouble for herself, then there is little I can do to
rectify the situation," Connor replied.
"But
by the simple fact that you were once wed to the woman, you are involved,"
Dobrinion warned.
"Ridiculous,"
said Connor, but even as he spoke the word, the door to the room burst open and
four monks, Youseff and Dandelion, Brother Francis, and the Father Abbot
himself, entered.
Dandelion
went right for Connor; the man moved to draw his slender sword, only to find it
lifting of its own accord from its scabbard. Connor grabbed at the handle, but
when he caught it by the pommel, he found his arm pulled up high, and in a
moment he was standing on his tiptoes, and for all his strength and all his
weight, he could not bring the sword back down to a defensive posture.
Dandelion
hit him a short, sharp blow, then yanked his hand from the sword hilt and
wrapped him in a tight hug. The sword drifted away, weightless, and Connor
couldn't comprehend it until he noticed that the fourth monk, Brother Francis,
was using a green-ringed gemstone.
"Do
not resist, Master Connor Bildeborough," the Father Abbot instructed.
"We wish to speak with you, that is all, on a matter of tremendous
importance, a matter concerning the security of your uncle's holdings."
Connor
instinctively tried to break free of the hold, but found his efforts futile,
for Dandelion was too strong and too skilled to allow him any openings.
Besides, the other young monk, Youseff, was standing at the ready, a small and
heavy club in hand.
"My
uncle will hear of this," Connor warned Markwart.
"Your
uncle will agree with my decision," the Father Abbot replied confidently.
He gave a nod to his two lackeys and they dragged Connor away.
"You
tread on dangerous ground," Abbot Dobrinion warned. "Baron Rochefort
Bildeborough's influence is not to be taken lightly."
"I
assure you that one of us is indeed treading on dangerous ground," the
Father Abbot calmly replied.
"You
knew that we were looking for Connor Bildeborough," Brother Francis
accused, walking over to take the sword from midair. "Yet you came out to
warn him?"
"I
came out to find him," the abbot corrected. "To tell him that he must
come in and speak with you, that any information he might have—and he has
none, I can assure you—might prove important to winning the war."
Father
Abbot Markwart chuckled snidely throughout Dobrinion's halfhearted protest.
"Words are often such pretty things," he remarked when Dobrinion was
finished. "We use them to speak the truth of facts, yet to hide the truth
of intent."
"You
doubt me?" Dobrinion asked.
"You
have made your position concerning this matter quite clear to me,"
Markwart replied. "I know why you came looking for Connor Bildeborough. I
know what you wished to accomplish, and know, too, that your goals and my own
are not in accord."
Abbot
Dobrinion huffed in reply and strode defiantly past the pair. "The Baron
must be informed," he explained, moving to the door.
Brother
Francis grabbed him roughly by the arm, and he spun, glaring in disbelief at
the young man's brazen action.
Francis
returned that look with a murderous stare, and for a moment Dobrinion thought
the brother would lash out at him. A motion from Father Abbot Markwart ended
the tension of the moment, though, and Francis let go of the abbot with his
hand, if not with his glare.
"The
manner of the telling is all important," Markwart said to Dobrinion.
"Do explain to the Baron that his nephew is not charged with any crime or
sin, and had merely volunteered to answer our questions on this important
matter."
Abbot
Dobrinion stormed away.
"His
report to the Baron will not be flattering," Brother Francis remarked as
Youseff and Dandelion dragged Connor away.
"As
he will," the Father Abbot conceded.
"Baron
Bildeborough could prove a difficult adversary," Brother Francis pressed.
Again
Markwart did not seem overly concerned. "We will see what happens,"
he replied. "By the time Rochefort Bildeborough is even informed, we will
have discerned what Connor knows, and the mere fact of his arrest will publicize
our presence and the identity of our other prisoners. After that, this man
means little to me."
He
started away then, and Brother Francis, after a short pause to consider the
ramifications of this meeting, to consider the strain between Markwart and
Dobrinion and the dire consequences that rivalry might hold for the abbot of
St. Precious, turned to follow.
"Are
we to do battle in the streets of Palmaris?" a frustrated Brother Francis
fumed at Abbot Dobrinion. They had barely begun questioning Connor
Bildeborough—using
polite and friendly tactics—when a host of
soldiers arrived at the gates of St. Precious, demanding the man's release.
"I
told you that arresting the nephew of Baron Bildeborough was no small
matter," the abbot shot back. "Did you not believe that his uncle
would react with force?"
"Enough,
enough, from both of you," Father Abbot Markwart scolded. "Bring to
me the emissary of Baron Bildeborough that we might settle this."
Both
Dobrinion and Brother Francis started for the door, then stopped, glaring at
each other.
"And
you, Abbot Dobrinion," the Father Abbot went on, drawing the man's
attention, then motioning for Francis to go and complete the task. "You
are needed with the centaur. He wishes to speak with you."
"My
place is here, Father Abbot," Dobrinion replied.
"Your
place is where I deem it to be," the old man said. "Go to the pitiful
creature."
Abbot
Dobrinion stared hard at Markwart, not pleased at all. He held no reservations
about speaking with Bradwarden, but the centaur's cell was far below, perhaps
the farthest point in all the abbey from their present position, and by the
time he got down there and back, even if his conversation with Bradwarden
lasted but a few words, the meeting with Bildeborough's men could be long over.
He
did as he was instructed, though, bowing to his superior and storming out of
the room.
Brother
Francis entered a moment later. "Brother Youseff will bring the emissary
presently," he explained.
"And
you will go right off to Connor Bildeborough," Father Abbot Markwart said,
tossing a gray soul stone to Francis. "Or near to Connor, though not where
you can be seen. Go to him in spirit only, at first, and be not gentle. See
what secrets his mind might hold. Then bring him to me. I will delay the Baron's
soldiers for as long as possible, but they will not leave here without
Connor."
Brother
Francis bowed and ran off, and had just exited when another man burst in.
"Where
is Abbot Dobrinion?" the gruff soldier asked, pushing past Brother Youseff
to stand before Father Abbot Markwart. He was a burly man, dressed in the
overlapping leather armor bearing the house insignia, the eagle, of House
Bildeborough. That emblem was emblazoned on his metal shield, as well, and on
the crest of his shining helm, a tight-fitting affair that pulled low over his
ears, with a single strip running down between his eyes to fit over his nose.
"And
you are?" Markwart prompted.
"An
emissary from Baron Bildeborough," the man said imperiously. "Come
to secure the release of his nephew."
"You
speak as if young Connor had been arrested," Markwart remarked casually.
The
burly soldier rocked back on his heels, taken a bit off guard by Markwart's
cooperative tone.
"The
Baron's nephew was only asked in to St. Precious that he might answer some
questions concerning a previous marriage," Markwart went on. "Of
course he is free to leave at his leisure; the man has committed no crime
against the state or the Church."
"But
we were informed—"
"Erroneously,
it would seem," Father Abbot Markwart said with a chuckle. "Please,
sit and take some wine—fine boggle from Abbot Dobrinion's private stock. My man
has already been sent to retrieve Master Connor. They should join us within a
few minutes."
The
soldier looked around curiously, not really knowing how to react to it all. He
had come out with a contingent of more than fifty armed and armored warriors,
ready to do battle, if necessary, to pull Connor Bildeborough from his
imprisonment.
"Sit,"
Father Abbot Markwart bade him again.
The
soldier pulled a chair from a side table, while Markwart retrieved a bottle of
boggle from a cabinet at the side of the room. "We are not enemies, after
all," the Father Abbot said, again in an innocent tone. "The Church
and King are allied, and have been for generations. It amazes me that you would
be so impetuous as to come to the gates of St. Precious thusly armed." He
popped the top from the bottle and poured a generous amount in the soldier's
glass, then just a bit for himself.
"Baron
Bildeborough wastes no effort where young Connor is concerned," the
soldier replied, taking a sip, then blinking repeatedly as the potent wine
washed down.
"Still,
you came here looking for battle," the Father Abbot went on. "Do you
know who I am?"
The
man took another sip—a larger one this time—then eyed the wrinkled old man.
"Another abbot," he answered. "From some other abbey,
St.-Mere-Able, or something like that."
"St.-Mere-Abelle,"
Markwart confirmed. "The mother abbey of all the Abellican Church."
The
soldier drained his glass and reached for the bottle, but Markwart, his
expression changing dramatically to one of outrage, pulled the boggle away.
"You are a member of the Church, are you not?" he asked sharply.
The
soldier blinked a couple of times, then nodded.
"Then
you should be aware that you are now addressing the Father Abbot of the
Abellican Order!" Markwart screamed at him. "With a snap of my
fingers I could have you banished and branded! With a word to your King, I
could have you declared an outlaw."
"For
what crime?" the man protested.
"For
any crime I choose!" Markwart yelled back at him.
Brother
Francis entered the room then, Connor Bildeborough right behind him, the
nobleman looking somewhat unsettled, though not physically harmed.
"Master
Connor!" the soldier said, rising so quickly that his chair toppled behind
him.
The
Father Abbot rose as well, and moved about the desk, coming to stand right
before the obviously intimidated soldier. "Do not forget what I told
you," the old priest said to the man. "With just a word."
"Now
you threaten the soldiers of my uncle's house?" Connor Bildeborough said.
His presence and the forcefulness of his tone bolstered the soldier's resolve,
the man straightening and looking Father Abbot Markwart in the eye.
"Threatening?"
Markwart echoed, and that laugh came again, but this time it held a sinister
edge. "I do not threaten, foolish young Connor. But I think that it would
do you well, would do your uncle well, and would do the soldiers of your
uncle's house well, to understand that these are matters quite beyond their
understanding. And interference.
"I
am not surprised that a willful young man, so full of pride, such as yourself,
would not look past his own importance to comprehend the gravity of our
present situation," Markwart went on. "But it does surprise me that
the Baron of Palmaris would act so foolishly as to send an armed contingent
against the leaders of the Abellican Order."
"He
thought that those leaders had acted improperly, and dangerously," Connor
stated, working hard to keep from seeming defensive. He had done nothing
wrong, after all, and neither had his uncle. If there had been criminal conduct
in all of this, it was perpetrated by the old man standing before him.
"He
thought... you thought," Markwart said dismissively. "It seems that
all of you make your own judgments, and act upon them as though God Himself
blessed you with special vision."
"You
deny that you came and took me?" Connor asked incredulously.
"You
were needed," Markwart replied. "And were you mistreated, Master
Bildeborough? Were you tortured?"
The
soldier puffed out his chest and clenched his jaw.
"No,"
Connor admitted, and the burly man relaxed. "But what of the
Chilichunks?" he asked. "Do you deny that you hold them, and that
their treatment has not been so kindly?"
"I
do not," Markwart replied. "They have, by their own actions, become
enemies of the Church."
"Rubbish!"
"We
shall see," the Father Abbot replied.
"You
mean to take them from Palmaris," Connor accused.
No
answer.
"That
I will not allow!"
"You
hold jurisdiction in such matters?" the Father Abbot asked sarcastically.
"I
speak for my uncle."
"How
pretentious," Markwart said with a snicker. "And tell me, Master
Connor, are we to do battle in the streets of Palmaris, that all the city might
learn of the rift between the Church and their Baron?"
Connor
hesitated before responding, realizing the potentially disastrous
implications. His uncle was held in high regard, but most of the common folk in
Palmaris, and in any other city in Honce-the-Bear, truly feared the wrath of
the Church. But still, the fate of the Chilichunks was at stake here, and for
Connor that was no small matter. "If that is what is necessary," he
said sternly.
Markwart
continued to laugh, his agitated trembling hiding the movement as he slipped
his hands into a pouch on the sash of his voluminous robes, drawing forth a
lodestone. Up came the hand, and a split second later the magnetite shot out to
smash the soldier's helmet on the nose guard. The burly man yelped and grabbed
at his face, blood pouring freely from both nostrils, waves of pain rolling
over him, driving him down to one knee.
At
the same moment, Brother Youseff leaped forward, tightening his hand as though
it were a blade and driving it into the kidney of unsuspecting Connor
Bildeborough, dropping him to his knees, as well.
"Possess
him," Father Abbot Markwart instructed Brother Francis. "Use his
mouth to instruct the soldiers to let us pass." He turned to Youseff.
"The prisoners are ready for transport?"
"Brother
Dandelion has all the caravan loaded and readied in the back courtyard,"
Youseff replied. "But Abbot Dobrinion, before he went down into the
dungeons, set many guards about that yard."
"They
will not battle us," Markwart assured him.
The
soldier groaned and tried to stand as the Father Abbot retrieved the
lodestone, but Youseff, the alert watchdog, was right there, launching a series
of vicious, snapping blows to the man's face that laid him low on the floor.
Markwart
looked to Brother Francis, who stood staring at Connor but apparently taking no
action. "Brother Francis," the Father Abbot prompted sternly.
"I
did get into his thoughts," Brother Francis explained. "And learned
some things which might prove valuable."
"But..."
Markwart prompted, recognizing the hesitant tone.
"But
only when he was caught unawares," Brother Francis admitted. "And
only for a second. He is strong of will and readily expelled me, though he knew
not the nature of the attack."
Father
Abbot Markwart nodded, then stepped closer to the still-dazed Connor. Out shot
the old man's fist, brutally snapping Connor's head to the side, and he
crumbled to the floor. "Now possess him," the Father Abbot said
impatiently. "It should not prove too difficult!"
"But
I will learn nothing when he is in this state," Brother Francis argued. It
was true enough; an unconscious or dazed man might be relatively easily
possessed, but of body only, with no invasion of memory or desire. When
consciousness returned, the fight for control would begin anew.
"We
need nothing more of this one's mind," Markwart explained. "We need
only his body and his voice."
"Evil
doings," Brother Braumin whispered to Brother Dellman as the two stood
solemnly in the courtyard of St. Precious, surrounded by their brothers of
St.-Mere-Abelle, and with the four prisoners close by. Brother Braumin was not
surprised by the sudden order to ready the wagons, for he had been watching the
Father Abbot and his lackey Francis closely in their interactions with Abbot
Dobrinion, and knew their welcome at St. Precious was wearing quite thin.
What
did surprise the monk, though, was the presence of armed soldiers at all of the
abbey's gates, a force sent to contain them, he realized, and particularly to
contain their prisoners. Whispers among the ranks had spoken of a new captive,
a nobleman, though none save Markwart, Brother Francis, and the Father Abbot's
two personal bodyguards had been allowed anywhere near the man. Still, given
the appearance and the demeanor of the soldiers, it wasn't hard to understand
that the Father Abbot might have overstepped his bounds here.
"Why
have they come?" Brother Dellman whispered back.
"I
do not know," Braumin replied, hot wanting to involve this promising young
monk too deeply in the intrigue. Brother Braumin feared that he and his
brothers would be leaving, and if the soldiers tried to stop them, Palmaris
would see a display of magical devastation heretofore unknown in the city.
What
should I do? the gentle Brother Braumin wondered. If the order came from Father
Abbot Markwart to battle the soldiers, what course should he follow?
"You
seem distressed, brother," Dellman remarked. "Do you fear that these
soldiers will attack us?"
"Exactly
the opposite," Brother Braumin replied in exasperation. He growled and
smacked his hand against the wagon. How he wished that Master Jojonah were here
to guide him!
"Brother,"
Dellman said, putting a hand on Braumin's shoulder to calm him.
Braumin
turned to face the younger monk squarely, took him by the shoulders and locked
his gaze. "Watch closely the coming events, Brother Dellman," he bade
the man.
Dellman
stared at him quizzically.
Braumin
Herde sighed and turned away. He wouldn't openly accuse the Father Abbot to
this young man. Not yet. Not until the evidence was overwhelming. Such an
accusation, such a declaration that so much of what Dellman thought holy was a
lie, might break the man, or send him running to Father Abbot Markwart for
comfort.
Then
Braumin Herde's heart would be known, and he, like Master Jojonah, would quickly
be neutralized.
The
monk knew then what he would do if the order came. He would fight with his
brothers, or at least would give the appearance of fighting. He could not
reveal his heart, not yet.
"Forgive
me, Master Jojonah," he mumbled under his breath, and then, on impulse, he
added, "Forgive me, Brother Avelyn."
Soon
after, the grim-faced guards of Baron Bildeborough stood aside, on orders from
the man they had come to rescue, as the caravan from St.-Mere-Abelle rolled out
of the abbey's back gate. The three Chilichunks were bound and gagged in the
back of one wagon, with Brother Youseff standing dangerous guard over them,
while Brother Dandelion sat atop the back of battered Bradwarden, the centaur's
upper, human torso covered in blankets. The monks had tied Bradwarden close to
the wagon in front of him, and brutal Dandelion forced the centaur to bow low
and forward, so that nearly all of that telltale human torso was inside the
leading wagon.
Father
Abbot Markwart and Brother Francis were likewise hidden from sight, the Church
leader not wishing to be bothered with common soldiers, and Brother Francis
deep in the throes of maintaining his possession of Connor. When the caravan
was safely away, moving steadily to the eastern dock area of the city, then
turning north, Francis walked Connor's body back into the abbey and
relinquished control, and the man, still dazed from the pounding Markwart had
given him, slumped to the floor.
The
caravan encountered no resistance as it exited the city altogether, moving
through the north, and not the east gate. Markwart turned them east almost
immediately, and soon they were running clear of Baron Bildeborough's domain.
Again the monks used their levitating malachite to cross the strong flowing
waters of the Masur Delaval, avoiding any possible trouble at the well-guarded
ferry.
From
the moment he reached the lower dungeons, to find that Bradwarden had been
removed by Markwart's men more than an hour before, Abbot Dobrinion knew that
trouble was brewing up above. His first instincts started him running back for
the stone stair, crying for guards.
Pragmatic
Dobrinion calmed and slowed, though. What could he do? he asked himself
honestly. If he even managed to get to the courtyard before the caravan's
departure, would he lead the fight against Markwart's men?
"Yes,
my Abbot!" a young monk, a man barely more than a boy, whom Dobrinion
recognized as a newcomer to St. Precious, cried enthusiastically, skidding to a
stop right before the tired old abbot. "At your bidding."
Dobrinion
pictured this young man as a smoking husk, a charred corpse left in the wake of
a magical fireball. Markwart carried such stones, he knew, and so did Brother
Francis. And those two younger men, Youseff and Dandelion, were trained
killers, or, as the Church called such assassins, Brothers Justice.
How
many dozens of Dobrinion's flock would be slaughtered this day if he went above
and refused to allow Markwart to leave? And even if they proved successful in
defeating the monks from St.-Mere-Abelle, then what?
Dalebert
Markwart was the Father Abbot of the Abellican Order.
"There
is no reason to guard these empty cells," Dobrinion said quietly to the
young monk. "Go and find some rest."
"I
am not weary," the monk replied, wearing a wide and innocent smile.
"Then
rest for me," Dobrinion said in all seriousness, and he started a long and
slow walk up the stone stairs.
Elbryan blew a long sigh and looked helplessly to Pony. He knew that Juraviel, too, was watching him, though the elf remained far from the firelight where the leaders of the band had gathered.
"Once
Caer Tinella and Landsdown are secured," Tomas Gingerwart said, obviously
trying to placate the adamant ranger, "we will follow your lead to the
south, those of us who are not fit to remain and defend our homes, at
least."
Elbryan
wanted to grab the man by the shoulders and shake him hard, wanted to yell into
his face that even if the two towns were taken, there would likely be few
remaining to stand in defense. He wanted to remind Tomas and all the others
that if they went after the towns and failed, and the powries then pursued
them, it was likely that all would be lost: all the fighters, all the elderly,
and all the children. But the ranger kept silent; he had made the argument over
and over, had spoken it in every manner he could think of, and every time, it
had fallen on deaf ears. How bitter this impotence was for Elbryan, to think
that all of his efforts to ensure that the fate that befell his own home and his
own family would not be repeated here, might prove to be in vain because of
foolish pride. They wanted to save their homes, they claimed, but if there
could be no security in a place, how could it be called home?
His
frustration now was not lost on one of the men sitting nearby. "Are ye not
to argue with him, then?" Belster O'Comely asked.
The
ranger looked at his old friend and merely threw up his hands.
"Then
you will join us in our fight," Tomas reasoned, and that notion brought a
cheer from the gathering.
"No,"
Pony said sternly, and unexpectedly. All eyes, even Elbryan's, turned to regard
her.
"I'll
not go," the woman said firmly.
Surprised
gasps turned to angry whispers.
"I've
never shied from a fight, you know that," Pony went on, crossing her arms
resolutely. "But to agree to go and do battle for the two towns would only
bolster your belief that you are following the correct course. And you are not.
I know this, and Nightbird knows it. I am not going to now make the same
arguments that you have ignored for the last days, but neither will I fall in
line for the slaughter. I wish you well in your folly, but I will remain with
the infirm, trying somehow to usher them to safety when the powries roll out of
Caer Tinella into the forest, hunting, and with no one to stand against their
hordes."
It
seemed to Elbryan that Pony might be exaggerating just a bit, but her strong
words prompted many whispered conversations, some angry but others doubting the
course of attack. The ranger had thought to go along for the attack, and
thought Pony would surely stand outside the town proper, launching devastating
magical attacks. Her resolve not to participate—and he knew this to be no
bluff—had caught him by surprise. As he considered it over the next few
seconds, though, he came to understand her point.
"Nor
will I join you," the ranger said, drawing more comments, angry and
astonished. "I cannot condone this course, Master Gingerwart. I will
remain with Jilseponie and the infirm, and if the powries come out, I, we, will
do what we may to hold them at bay and get the infirm to safety."
Tomas
Gingerwart verily trembled as he looked to Belster O'Comely, his expression
openly accusatory.
"Reconsider,
I beg," Belster said to Elbryan. "I, too, have seen too much of this
war, my friend, and would prefer a course around the powries to Palmaris. But
the decision is made, fairly and by vote. The warriors will go after their
homes, and we, as allies, have a responsibility to aid in that fight."
"Even
if it is folly?" Pony asked.
"Who
is to say?" Belster replied. "Many thought your own attack on the
towns to be folly, yet it turned out for the better, by far."
Elbryan
and Pony locked stares, the ranger drawing strength from the resolute woman.
Pony had made up her mind and it would not be changed, and so Elbryan, too,
decided to stay the course.
"I
cannot participate in this," he said calmly. "When I went into Caer
Tinella, my actions brought no threat to those who could not fight."
Belster
looked to Tomas and shrugged, having no practical argument against that simple
logic.
Roger
Lockless, looking bedraggled, walked into the camp then. He stared at Elbryan
for a long while, and all in attendance, the ranger included, thought he would
seize the moment to paint Elbryan as the coward, or as the traitor.
"Nightbird
is right," the young man said suddenly. He stepped past a stunned Elbryan
and Pony to address the whole gathering. "I have just returned from Caer
Tinella," he said loudly. "We cannot attack."
"Roger—" Tomas
started to protest.
"The
powries have reinforced," Roger went on. "They outnumber us, perhaps
two or three to one, and they are entrenched in strong defensible positions.
Also, they have great spear-throwing contraptions hidden among the walls. If we
attack, even if Nightbird and Pony join with us, we will be slaughtered."
The
grim news quieted the gathering for a while, then inspired many more whispered
conversations, though these were neither agitated nor angry, but rather
subdued. Gradually, the looks from every man and woman fell onto the shoulders
of Tomas Gingerwart.
"Our
scouts said nothing of this," the man explained to Roger.
"Were
your scouts, before me, within the town?" Roger replied.
Tomas
looked to Belster and to the other leaders of the band for some help, but all
of them just shook their heads helplessly.
"If
you decide to go to battle, then I, too, will remain with Nightbird and
Pony," Roger finished, stepping back to stand at the ranger's side.
That
was enough, for Tomas and for all the proud and stubborn folk.
"Get
us to Palmaris," Tomas said grudgingly to Elbryan.
"We
break camp at first light," the ranger replied, then looked to Roger,
nodding his approval as the gathering dispersed. Roger didn't return the look
with a smile or a nod; he had done what he had to do, and nothing more. Without
meeting the ranger's stare, without a word to either Elbryan or Pony, the young
man walked away.
Soon
Elbryan and Pony were alone at the fire, and Juraviel came down from the trees
behind to join them.
"What
did you say to him?" the ranger asked, guessing that the elf had spent
some private time with the surprising Roger Lockless.
"The
same thing I said to you at the milking trough when you were blinded by
pride," Juraviel replied with a sly look.
Elbryan
blushed deeply and looked away from Pony and the elf, remembering all too
clearly that embarrassing moment. He had just fought with Tuntun—a real
fight and not a planned sparring match—accusing the female elf of cheating at a
contest that left him with a cold meal. Tuntun had summarily battered him, but
the young Elbryan, blinded by anger and pride, had not accepted the defeat
well, had spouted foolish words and idle threats.
Belli'mar
Juraviel, his mentor, and the closest thing he could then call a friend in all
of Andur'Blough Inninness, had promptly thrashed him, putting him into the cold
water of the trough several times.
"A
painful lesson," Juraviel said at length. "But one that stayed with
you all these years."
Elbryan
couldn't deny the truth of that.
"This
young Roger has promise," the elf went on. "It was no small matter
for him to come in here and side with you, even though he knew that you were
right."
"He
is maturing," Pony agreed.
Juraviel
nodded. "I will begin scouting our path this night," he explained.
"A
wide berth of the powries," Pony said.
The
elf nodded again.
"One
last question," Elbryan begged as ever-elusive Juraviel started back to
the trees. The elf turned to regard him. "Have the powries really
reinforced?"
"Would
it make a difference in your choice?" the elf asked.
"None."
Juraviel
smiled. "To my knowledge—and that knowledge is great concerning this matter, do not
doubt—Roger Lockless has been nowhere near Caer Tinella this night."
The
ranger had suspected as much, and the confirmation made him admire Roger's
choice all the more.
There
was no sign of pursuit; as Father Abbot Markwart had figured, Baron
Bildeborough, Abbot Dobrinion, and indeed all of Palmaris, were simply glad to
be rid of the monks from St.-Mere-Abelle. They set camp that night across the
Masur Delaval, the lights of Palmaris clear in the distance.
After
conferring with Brother Francis and learning of the man's discoveries from his
brief time inside the thoughts of Connor Bildeborough, the Father Abbot spent a
lot of time alone, pacing, fighting hard to control his mounting anxiety. Just
a score of feet away, inside the ring of wagons, the firelight blazed and the
monks talked happily of returning to their home. The Father Abbot blocked it
all out, had no time for such petty matters. Connor Bildeborough knew of the
search for the woman, and furthermore, he believed the woman to be operating,
with the magical stones, not too far away in the battleground north of
Palmaris. Francis had caught the name Caer Tinella in that brief invasion of
Connor's thoughts, and a quick look at his maps confirmed that to be a town
along the road to the Timberlands, a town Francis and the caravan had passed on
their wild run to Palmaris.
The
goal was close, so close, the end of the troubles of Avelyn Desbris, the
restoration of Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart's good name in the annals of the
Abellican Church. Youseff and Dandelion would complete the task and retrieve
the stones, and then all that would be left for Markwart would be the complete
denunciation of the heretic Avelyn. He would destroy the legend as the explosion
at Aida had destroyed the body.
Then
all would be well, would be as it had been before.
"Or
will it?" the Father Abbot asked himself aloud. He sighed deeply and
considered the potential trail of problems his expedition had set for him.
Jojonah was no ally and would likely oppose him, perhaps even going so far as
to speak positively and publicly concerning dead Avelyn! And Abbot Dobrinion
was no longer even neutral on the matter. The abbot of St. Precious was surely
outraged at the abduction of the Chilichunks, and at his own treatment by the
contingent from St.-Mere-Abelle. Particularly the latter, the Father Abbot
mused, thinking that the abbot was more concerned with his wounded pride than
his tortured subjects.
And
what of Baron Bildeborough, who was already prepared to do battle with the
Church for the sake of his nephew?
As
he rolled the problems over and over in his thoughts, they each appeared to
Markwart as a huddled black creature, and each seemed to grow with every
rethinking, mounting powerfully, until they were black walls surrounding him,
choking him, burying him!
The
old man stamped the ground and issued a stifled cry. Would all the world and
all the Church turn against him? Was he alone in his understanding of the
truth? What conspiracies had that wicked Jojonah and that fool Dobrinion
launched? To say nothing of the rot started by the evil Avelyn Desbris!
Markwart's
mind whirled, looking for holes in those black walls, seeking some way to fight
down the darkness. He must call Jojonah back from the trail to Ursal, bring him
back into St.-Mere-Abelle, where he could watch over the man's every move. Yes,
that was necessary.
And
he must set Youseff and Dandelion on the trail at once, settling the issue of
Avelyn's cache, returning the gemstones to their rightful place in
St.-Mere-Abelle. Yes, that would be prudent.
And
Connor and Dobrinion would prove to be trouble. They had to be persuaded, or...
The
Father Abbot stood very still in the small clearing outside the wagon ring,
steadying his breathing. The strength was back in his heart now, the will to
fight on, to do whatever necessary to gain the desired end. Gradually he was
able to open his eyes, and then to unclench his taut fists.
"Father
Abbot?"
The
call came from behind, a familiar voice and not an enemy. He turned to see a
very concerned Brother Francis staring at him.
"Father
Abbot?" the man said again.
"Go
and tell Brothers Youseff and Dandelion to come to me," the old man
instructed. "And then you join in the discussion within the wagon ring. I
must know the mood of my brothers."
"Yes,
Father Abbot," Francis replied. "But should you be out here alone,
with monsters—"
"Now!"
Markwart growled.
Brother
Francis disappeared behind another wagon, into the more common area within the
ring. A moment later two forms, one hulking, the other lithe, appeared, moving
silently to bow before their master.
"It
is time for you to put your training to use," Markwart said to them.
"Brother Justice is your title now, for each of you, the only name that
you will know, the only name by which you will refer to each other. You cannot
comprehend the urgency of this matter; the fate of all the Church rests on your
actions these next few days.
"Brother
Francis has come to believe that the stolen gemstones are in the hands of the
woman, Jilseponie Ault, who is referred to as Jill or Pony by her
friends," the old man went on. "And she, we believe, is in the
region about Caer Tinella, north of Palmaris, along the road to the
Timberlands."
"We
go straightaway," Youseff replied.
"You
go in the morning," Father Abbot Markwart corrected. "In disguise,
and appearing as no monk. You go by ferry across the river, then into Palmaris.
The journey north will wait one day."
"Yes,
Father Abbot," the pair said in unison, cuing on the old man's hesitation.
"Or
five days," Markwart went on, "if that is what it takes. You see, we
have a problem in Palmaris, one which you must eliminate."
Again
Markwart hesitated, considering the course. Perhaps he should split the pair,
that if one of them failed in this matter, the other might still get to the
stones. Perhaps he should bypass Palmaris and concentrate on the gemstones,
and then, when that issue was settled, he could send the pair back out.
No,
he realized. By that time the conspiracy against him would be fully entrenched,
perhaps even expecting trouble from him, and even worse, Connor knew of the
woman and might find her before the monks.
"Connor
Bildeborough," he said suddenly. "He has become a problem to me, to
all the Church. He seeks the gemstones for his personal gain," he lied.
"The
problem is to be eliminated," Brother Youseff reasoned.
"Leave
no trail."
After
a long silence the two men bowed and turned about, starting away.
Markwart
hardly noticed the movement, as he considered his last words. Leave no
trail.
Would
that be possible with a suspicious Abbot Dobrinion in Palmaris? Dobrinion was
no fool, nor was he weak with the few stones he possessed, one of which was a
soul stone. The man might even find Connor's spirit before it flew far from the
world, and from it learn the truth.
But
Dobrinion was alone, isolated. There wasn't another monk at St. Precious of any
consequence, not another who could use hematite for so difficult a task.
"Brothers
Justice," Markwart said.
The
two men spun about, running back to stand before their superior.
"The
trouble is deeper than Connor Bildeborough, for he is in league with another
who might put the stones to devastating use," Markwart explained. "If
this man gets the gemstones, he will claim leadership of the Church, and will
assume his place in St.-Mere-Abelle."
It
was all preposterous, of course, but the two men, their minds bent by the
expert work of Master De'Unnero, hung intent on every word.
"It
pains me greatly," the Father Abbot lied. "Yet, I have no choice in
the matter. You must kill two men in Palmaris, the other being Dobrinion
Calislas, abbot of St. Precious."
Just
a hint of surprise showed on the alert face of Brother Youseff, while Brother
Dandelion accepted the order as easily as if Markwart had just told him to
throw away the dinner scraps.
"It
must appear to be an accident," Markwart went on. "Or an act of our
monster enemies, perhaps. There can be no mistakes. Do you understand?"
"Yes,
Father Abbot," Brother Dandelion replied at once.
Markwart
studied Youseff, who wore a wicked smile. The man nodded, and it seemed to
Markwart that he was enjoying the prospect of this immensely.
"Your
reward awaits you at St.-Mere-Abelle," Markwart finished.
"Our
reward, Father Abbot, is in the service, in the act itself," Brother
Youseff declared.
Now
Father Abbot Markwart, too, was smiling wickedly. And feeling much better.
Suddenly, as with his earlier reflections, everything seemed to come clear to
him, as though he had found a deeper level of concentration where all the
worries could be put aside, all distractions ignored, and problems could be
resolved logically and with foresight. He reconsidered his course about recalling
Master Jojonah. Let the man be gone to Ursal until he died, for all he cared,
for without Dobrinion's backing, Master Jojonah seemed no real threat.
Yes,
if all went well with the Brothers Justice, the elimination of two potential
problems and the retrieval of the stones, the issue would be settled, as would
his own place in the history of the Abellican Order. Now the Father Abbot was
agitated again, excited. He knew that he could not sleep this night and had to
find some distraction, something to allow him to believe he was working toward
that most coveted goal. He went to Brother Francis then, bidding the man to
collect Grady Chilichunk and meet him outside the wagon ring. When Francis
arrived, verily dragging the protesting Grady, Markwart motioned for him to
follow and then led the pair far away from the ring.
"Is
this safe?" Brother Francis dared to ask.
"Brothers
Youseff and Dandelion are shadowing our every move," Markwart lied, for he
was little concerned about any monsters, sensing somehow that few were about.
Like the revelations that had come to him, he just somehow knew there was no
danger out here.
Not
for him, anyway. Poor Grady Chilichunk could not claim the same.
"You
were her brother, for years," Markwart said to him.
"Not
by choice, nor by blood," Grady replied, spitting every word with
contempt.
"But
by circumstance, and that is equally damning," Markwart came back.
Grady
chuckled and turned away, but Francis was there in an instant, forcing the
man's head back so he looked Markwart in the eye.
"You
are not repentant," Markwart remarked.
Grady
tried to look away again, and this time Francis not only forced his head back,
but kicked him hard in the back of the knees, dropping him to a kneeling
position before the Father Abbot. The young monk stayed right beside Grady,
keeping him in that position, grabbing him by the hair and turning up his head
so he could not look away from his superior.
"I
have committed no crime!" Grady protested. "Nor, certainly, have my
parents. You are the unholy one!" Grady Chilichunk had never been a brave
man. He always followed the course of luxury, willingly serving as lackey to
men of higher position, particularly Connor Bildeborough, that his own life be
easier. Nor had he ever been a dutiful son, turning his back on his parents and
their business—except
for the monies it provided him—for many years. But now, helpless and hopeless
on the road with the brutal and powerful monks, something changed within Grady,
some sense of responsibility. He cared little for his own comfort at that time,
focusing rather on the fact that his parents, his mother, were being so
ill-treated. All the world had gone crazy, it seemed, and Grady somehow
understood that all the whining and pleading and cooperating he could muster
would not get him, and certainly not his parents, out of this trouble. With
hopelessness came anger, and that anger in Grady sparked action—a rare thing
for the cowardly man. He spat up at Markwart, hitting the Father Abbot in the
face.
Markwart
only laughed, unconcerned, but Francis, horrified that this common peasant
would do such a thing to the Father Abbot, drove his elbow into the side of
Grady's head. The man groaned and tumbled, and Francis was on him, kicking him
hard, again in the head, then falling atop him, rolling him over onto his belly
and yanking his arms painfully behind his back.
Grady
said nothing, was too dazed to even offer a protest.
"Enough,
Brother Francis," Markwart said calmly, patting his hand in the air.
"His actions only verify that this one has turned his back on the
Abellican Church and all the goodliness in the world."
Still
Grady only lay limply beneath Brother Francis, groaning softly.
"Well,
it seems as though we'll get nothing important from this one this night,"
Markwart remarked.
"I
am sorry, Father Abbot," Francis said with alarm, but again Markwart was
making no complaints. Given the events he had set into motion, the Father Abbot
was simply in too fine a mood to let anything upset him.
"Take
him back and put him in his bed," Markwart said.
Brother
Francis hauled Grady to his feet and started away, but then stopped, realizing
that Markwart wasn't following.
"I
will enjoy the peace of the night," the Father Abbot explained.
"Alone?"
Francis asked. "Out here?"
"Be
gone," Markwart bade him. "There is no danger out here."
Francis
found that he had little choice but to follow the command. He left slowly,
looking back often, and every time seeing his Father Abbot standing calmly,
unafraid.
For
indeed Father Abbot Markwart was absolutely certain of his safety, for though
he didn't know it, he was not alone.
The
spirit of Bestesbulzibar was with him, relishing in his choices this dark
night, guiding those decisions.
Much
later on, Markwart slept contentedly, so much so that when Francis came to
rouse him at the dawn, he instructed the brother to go away, and to let the
others sleep in, as well. Several hours later Markwart did rise, to find most
of the camp astir and a very nervous Brother Francis pacing back and forth near
the three wagons that each held one of the Chilichunks.
"He'll
not awaken," the brother explained to Markwart when he came over to see
what was the matter.
"Who?"
"The
son, Grady," Francis explained, shaking his head, then nodding toward the
wagon that held the man. Markwart went in, and came back out grim-faced.
"Bury
him by the side of the road," the Father Abbot said. "A shallow
grave, unconsecrated ground." And he walked by Francis as though nothing
out of sorts was going on, as though this had just been another routine order.
He stopped just a few steps away and turned back on Francis. "And make
certain that the other prisoners, particularly the dangerous centaur, know
nothing of this," he explained. "And Brother Francis, you bury him
yourself, after, the caravan has departed."
A
panicked look came over Francis, to which Markwart only chuckled and walked
away, leaving the brother alone with his guilt.
Francis'
thoughts whirled. He had killed a man! The night before, he must have hit
Grady too hard, or kicked him too hard. He replayed the events over and over,
wondering how he had done such a thing, or what he might have done differently,
all the while fighting hard not to scream out aloud.
He
was trembling, eyes darting all about. He felt the sweat on his forehead as he
saw the Father Abbot coming back toward him.
"Be
at peace, brother," Markwart said. "It was an unfortunate
accident."
"I
killed him," Francis gasped in reply.
"You
defended your Father Abbot," Markwart answered. "I will perform a
ceremony of absolution back at St.-Mere-Abelle, but I assure you that your
penitential prayers will be light."
Trying
to hide his grin, Markwart left the man.
Brother
Francis was not so easily calmed. He could understand the logic of Markwart's
argument—the
man had, after all, spat in the face of the Father Abbot of the Abellican
Church. But while Francis could logically argue that this had indeed been an
unfortunate accident, his own actions justified, the rationalization could not
take root in his heart. The pedestal had been knocked out from under him, that
pervasive self-belief that he was above all other men. Francis had made
mistakes before, of course, and he knew it, but not to this extreme. He
remembered all the times of his life when he had imagined that he was the only real
person, and that everyone else, and everything else, was merely a part of his
dream of consciousness.
Now,
suddenly, he felt as if he was just another man, a very small player in a very
large script.
Later
that morning, as the caravan moved far away, Brother Francis pushed the dirt on
the pale face of Grady Chilichunk. In one blackened corner of his heart,
Francis knew then that he was a damned thing.
Subconsciously
that heart and soul ran to the Father Abbot then, for in that man's eyes, there
had been no crime, no sin. In that man's view of the world, Brother Francis
could hold his illusions.
I
cried for the death of Brother Justice.
That
was not his real name, of course. His real name was Quintall; I know not if
that was his surname or his birth-given name, or if he even had another name.
Just Quintall.
I
do not think that I killed him, Uncle Mather—not when he was human, at
least. I think that his human body died as a consequence of the strange broach
he carried, a magical link, so Avelyn discovered, to that most evil demon.
Still, I cried for the man, for his death, in which I played a great part. My actions were taken in defense of Avelyn and Pony, and of myself, and given the same situation, I have no doubt that I would react similarly, would battle Brother Justice without hearing any cries of protest from my conscience.
Still,
I cried for the man, for his death, for all the potential lost, wasted,
perverted to an evil way. When I consider it now, that is the true sadness, the
real loss, for in each of us there burns a candle of hope, a light of sacrifice
and community, the potential to do great things for the betterment of all the
world. In each of us, in every man and every woman, there lies the possibility
of greatness.
What
a terrible thing the leaders of Avelyn's abbey did to the man Quintall, to
pervert him so into this monster that they called Brother Justice.
After
Quintall's death, I felt, for the first time, as though I had blood on my
hands. My only other fight with humans was with the three trappers, and to them
I showed mercy—and mercy well repaid! But for Quintall there was no mercy; there could not have been
even if he had survived my arrow and his fall, even if the demon dactyl and the
magical broach had not stolen his spirit from his corporeal form. In no way
short of his death could we have deterred Brother Justice from his mission to
slay Avelyn. His purpose was all-consuming, burned into his every thought by a
long and arduous process that had bent the man's free will until it had broken
altogether, that had eliminated Quintall's own conscience and turned his heart
to blackness.
Perhaps
that is why the demon dactyl found him and embraced him.
What
a pity, Uncle Mather. What a waste of potential.
In
my years as a ranger, and even before that in the battle for Dundalis, I have
killed many creatures—goblins, powries, giants—yet I shed no tears for
them. I considered this fact long and hard in light of my feelings toward the
death of Quintall. Were my tears for him nothing more than an elevation of my
own race above all others, and if so, is that not the worst kind of pride?
No,
and I say that with some confidence, for surely I would cry if cruel fate ever
drove my sword against one of the Touel'alfar. Surely I would consider the
death of a fallen elf as piteous and tragic as the death of a fallen man.
What
then is the difference?
It
comes down to a matter of conscience, I believe, for as in humans, perhaps even
more so, the Touel'alfar possess the ability, indeed the inclination, to choose
a goodly path. Not so with goblins, and certainly not with the vile powries. I
am not so sure about the giants—it may be that they are simply too
stupid to even understand the suffering their warlike actions bring. In either
case, I'll shed no tears and feel no remorse for any of these monsters that
falls prey to Tempest's cut or to Hawkwing's bite. By their own evilness do
they bring their deaths. They are the creatures of the dactyl, evil incarnate,
slaughtering humans—and often each other—for no better reason than the
pleasure of the act.
I
have had this discussion with Pony, and she posed an interesting scenario. She
wondered whether a goblin babe, raised among humans, or among the Touel'alfar
in the beauty of Andur'Blough Inninness, would be as vile as its wild kin. Is
the evil of such beings a blackness within, ingrained and everlasting, or is it
a matter of nurturing?
My
friend, your friend, Belli'mar Juraviel, had the answer for her, for indeed his
people had long ago taken a goblin child into their enchanted land and raised
the creature as if it were kin. As it matured, the goblin was no less vicious
and hateful, and no less dangerous than its kin raised in the dark holes of
distant mountains. The elves, ever curious, tried the same thing with a powrie
child, and the results were even more disastrous.
So
I'll cry not for goblins and powries and giants, Uncle Mather. I shed no tears
for creatures of the dactyl. But I do cry for Quintall, who fell into evil
ways. I cry for the potential that was lost, for the one terrible choice that
pushed him to blackness.
And
I think, Uncle Mather, that in crying for Quintall, or for any other human or
elf that cruel fate may force me to slay, I am preserving my own humanity.
This
is the scar of battle, I fear, that will prove to be the most everlasting.
—elbryan the nightbird
The only magic they carried was a garnet, for detecting the use of the enchanted gemstones, and a sunstone, the antimagic stone. In truth, neither of the pair was very proficient with gemstones, having spent the bulk of their short years in St.-Mere-Abelle in rigorous physical training and in the mental incapacitation necessary for one to truly claim the title of Brother Justice.
The
caravan had gone back to the east that morning, while the two monks, changing
out of their robes to appear as common peasants, had gone south, to the
Palmaris ferry, catching the first of its three daily journeys across the Masur
Delaval at the break of dawn. They were in the city by mid-afternoon, and
wasted no time in going out to the north, over the wall and not through the
gate. By the time the sun was low on the western horizon, Youseff and Dandelion
had spotted their first prey, a band of four monsters—three powries
and a goblin—setting camp amidst a tumble of boulders less than ten miles from
Palmaris. It quickly became obvious to the monks that the goblin was the slave
here, for it was doing most of the work, and whenever it slowed in its movements,
one of the powries would give it a sharp slap on the back of the head, spurring
it to motion. Even more important, the monks noted that the goblin had a rope,
a leash, tied about its ankle.
Youseff
turned to Dandelion and nodded; they would be able to take advantage of this
arrangement.
As
the sun was slipping below the horizon, the goblin exited the camp, followed
closely by a powrie holding the other end of the rope. In the forest, the
goblin began foraging for firewood, while the powrie stood quietly nearby.
Youseff and Dandelion, silent as the lengthening shadows, moved into position,
the slender monk going up a tree, the heavier Dandelion slipping from trunk to
trunk, to close ground on the powrie.
"Yach,
hurry it up, ye fool thing!" the powrie scolded, kicking at the leaves and
dirt. "Me friends'll eat all the coney, and there'll be nothing but bones
for me to gnaw!"
The
goblin, a truly beleaguered creature, glanced back briefly, then scooped
another piece of kindling. "Please, master," it whined. "Me arms
is full and me back is hurtin' so."
"Yach,
shut yer mouth!" the powrie growled."Ye're thinkin' ye got all ye can
carry, but it's not enough for the night fire. Ye're wanting me to come all the
way back out here? I'll flog yer skin red, ye smelly wretch!"
Youseff
hit the ground right beside the startled powrie, plopping a heavy bag over its
head in the blink of a surprised eye. A moment later Dandelion, in full run,
slammed the dwarf from behind, hoisting it in a bear hug and taking it on a
fast run, face first into the trunk of the nearest tree.
Still
the tough powrie struggled, throwing back an elbow into Dandelion's throat. The
big monk hardly noticed, just pressed all the harder, and then, when he saw his
companion's approach, he hooked his arm under the powrie's and lifted the
dwarf's arm up high, exposing ribs.
Youseff's
dagger thrust was perfectly aimed, sliding between two ribs to pierce the
stubborn dwarf's heart. Dandelion, holding fast the thrashing powrie, managed
to free one hand so he could wrap the wound, not wanting too much blood to
spill.
Not
here.
Youseff,
meanwhile, turned to the goblin. "Freedom," he whispered excitedly,
waving his hand for the creature to run away.
The
goblin, on the verge of a scream, looked curiously at the human, then at its
armload of wood. Shaking from excitement, it tossed the wood to the ground,
slipped the rope from its ankle and sped off into the darkening forest.
"Dead?"
Youseff asked as Dandelion let the limp powrie slump to the ground.
The
big man nodded, then went to tighten the bindings on the wound. It was
imperative that no blood would be spilling when the pair returned to Palmaris,
and particularly not when they entered St. Precious. Youseff removed the
powrie's weapon, a cruel-looking serrated and hooked blade as long and thick as
his forearm, and Dandelion put the dwarf in a heavy, lined sack. With a glance
about to make sure the other powries had not caught on to the ambush, they went
on their way, running south, the load proving hardly a burden to the powerful
Dandelion.
"Should
we not have taken the goblin for Connor Bildeborough?" Dandelion asked as
they slowed their pace, nearing the city's north wall.
Youseff
considered the question a moment, trying hard not to laugh at the fact that his
dim-witted friend had only mentioned it now, more than an hour after they told
the goblin to run away. "We need only one," Youseff assured him. The
Father Abbot had made his needs quite clear to Brother Youseff. Any action
against Abbot Dobrinion had to either appear as simply an accident or lead
suspicion in a direction far removed from Markwart; the implications within
the Church should St.-Mere-Abelle seem connected in any way, after all, could
prove grave. Connor Bildeborough, though, was not such a problem. If his uncle,
the Baron of Palmaris, even suspected the Church in Connor's demise, he, in his
ignorance of the rivalries between the abbeys, would be as likely to blame St.
Precious as St.-Mere-Abelle, and even if he did turn his attention to the
abbey on All Saints Bay, there would be little, very little, he could do.
It
was hardly an effort for the skilled assassins to get over the city wall and
past the eyes of weary guardsmen. The battlefield had been pushed back, and
though rogue bands like the one the monks had encountered were still about,
they were not thought to be much of a threat by the garrison entrenched in the
city—a
garrison strengthened in recent days by a full brigade of Kingsmen from Ursal.
Now
Dandelion and Youseff changed back into their brown robes and, with heads
humbly bowed, made their solemn way through the streets. They were bothered
only once, by a beggar man, and when he would not leave them alone, even going
so far as to threaten them if they would not give him a silver coin, Brother
Dandelion calmly tossed him against an alley wall.
It
was long after vespers and St. Precious was quiet and dark, but the monks took
little comfort in that fact, understanding that the men of their Order would
prove more vigilant than the slothful city guards. Again, though, the Father
Abbot had prepared them properly. On the southern wall of the abbey, where the
wall was in fact a part of the main building itself, there were no windows and
no visible doors.
In
truth, there was a single door, carefully concealed, from which the abbey's
kitchen workers brought out the scraps from the day's meals. Brother Youseff
brought forth the garnet, using it to find the invisible doorway, for the
portal, in addition to being magically concealed, was magically sealed against
opening from the outside.
The
door was also conventionally locked—or should have been—but before the
monks of St.-Mere-Abelle had departed St. Precious, Brother Youseff had gone to
the kitchen, ostensibly for supplies, but in truth to destroy the integrity of
the portal's binding. Apparently the Father Abbot had recognized that they
might need a quiet way into St. Precious, he pondered now, and was indeed impressed
by his master's foresight.
Using
the sunstone, Youseff defeated the meager magical lock and carefully pushed
open the door. Only one person was inside, a young woman singing and scrubbing
a pot over a sink of steaming water.
Youseff
was behind her almost immediately. He paused, listening to her carefree song,
taking pleasure in the evil irony of that lively tune.
The
woman stopped singing, sensing the presence.
Youseff
basked in her fear for just a moment, then grabbed her by the hair and drove
her face into the water. She struggled and thrashed, but to no avail against
the efficient assassin. Youseff smiled as she slumped to the floor. He was
supposed to be a passionless killer, a mechanical tool for the Father Abbot's
will, but in truth the monk found that he enjoyed the killing, enjoyed the
victim's fear, enjoyed the absolute power. Looking down at the dead young
woman, he only wished he had been granted more time, that he could have savored
the preliminary game, the terror leading up to the death.
Death,
by comparison, was such a bland and easy thing.
St.
Precious was quiet that night, as if the whole of the place, the abbey itself,
was relaxing after the trials of the Father Abbot's visit. Through the hallways
stalked Youseff and Dandelion, the Brothers Justice, with powerful Dandelion
carrying the sacked powrie over one shoulder. They saw only one monk, and he
didn't see them, all the way to the door of Abbot Dobrinion's private quarters.
Youseff
went down to one knee before the door, a small knife in hand. Though he could
easily pick the meager lock, he scraped and scratched at the wood about it,
whittling it down, making it appear as if the door had been forced.
Then
they were in, and through another door, this one less sturdy and not locked, to
Dobrinion's bedside.
The
abbot awoke with a start. He began to scream out, but fell strangely silent
when he considered the pair, when he saw the heavy serrated blade waving
tantalizingly inches from his face, its metal gleaming in the soft light of the
moon spilling in through the room's lone window.
"You
knew we would come for you," Youseff teased.
Dobrinion
shook his head. "I can speak with the Father Abbot," he pleaded.
"A misunderstanding, that is all."
Youseff
held a finger to pursed lips, smiling wickedly behind it, but Dobrinion pressed
on.
"The
Chilichunks are criminals—that is obvious," the abbot spouted, and he hated the
words as he spoke them, hated himself for his cowardice. Abbot Dobrinion fought
a great battle then, his conscience vying against his most basic survival
instinct.
Youseff
and Dandelion watched his torment, not understanding the source of it, but with
Youseff surely enjoying it.
Then
Dobrinion calmed and stared at Youseff squarely, seeming suddenly unafraid.
"Your Markwart is an evil man," he said. "Never was he truly
Father Abbot of the Abellican Church. I call on you now, in the name of the
solemn vow of our Order—piety, dignity, poverty—to turn against this evil course,
to find again the light—"
His
sentence ended as a gurgle, as Youseff, too far lost to even hear such
conscience-tugging pleas, ripped the serrated edge across the abbot's throat,
opening it wide.
The
pair went to the powrie then, dropping it to the floor. Dandelion unwrapped
and then picked at its wound, removing all sign of scabbing, while Youseff
searched about the abbot's quarters. He found at last a small knife, used for
cutting seals from letters. Its blade was not as broad as the one of his
dagger, but the knife fit fairly snugly into the powrie's mortal wound.
"Take
him from the bed," Youseff instructed Dandelion. As the big man dragged
Dobrinion toward the desk, Youseff walked alongside, cutting a series of
smaller wounds on Dobrinion's corpse, making it seem as if the abbot had put up
a great struggle.
Then
the two killers were gone, silent death, two shadows flowing out from St.
Precious into the black night.
*
* *
Word
of the abbot's murder spread throughout the city the very next morning, frantic
cries sweeping along the fortified walls, teary-eyed soldiers blaming
themselves for allowing a powrie to slip past them. Whispers of doom crossed
from tavern to tavern, street corner to street corner, each retelling the
rumors, embellishing the tale. By the time Connor Bildeborough, waking in a
bed in the infamous brothel, House Battlebrow, heard the story, an army of
powries was reputedly on the outskirts of Palmaris, ready to rush in and
slaughter all of the people in their time of grief.
Half
naked, dressing as he went, Connor exited the house and flagged down a
carriage, demanding that the driver take him at once to Chasewind Manor, the home
of his uncle.
The
gates were closed; a dozen armed soldiers, their weapons drawn, surrounded the
carriage as the horse skidded to an abrupt stop, and both Connor and the poor
frightened driver felt the eyes of many archers upon them.
Recognizing
Connor, the guards relaxed and helped the nobleman down, then ordered the
driver away in no uncertain terms.
"My
uncle is well?" Connor asked desperately as the guards escorted him
through the gate.
"Unnerved,
Master Connor," one man answered. "To think that a powrie could so
easily get through our defenses and slay Abbot Dobrinion! And all of this
coming right behind the troubles in the abbey! Oh, what dark days are upon
us!"
Connor
made no move to reply, but he listened carefully to the man's words, and the unspoken,
probably even unrealized, implications behind them. He rushed through the
manor house then, down the heavily guarded halls and into his uncle's audience
room.
Fittingly,
the soldier standing guard beside Baron Rochefort Bildeborough's desk was the
burly man, face heavily bandaged, whose nose had been smashed under a magical
assault by none other than Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart himself.
"My
uncle knows of my arrival?" Connor asked the man.
"He
will join us presently," the guard replied, his voice slurred, for his
mouth, too, had been battered by the magnetite missile.
Even
as he finished speaking, Connor's uncle entered the room through a side door,
his face brightening as he gazed upon his nephew.
"Thank
God himself that you are alive and well," the man said generously. Connor
had always been Rochefort Bildeborough's favorite relative, and since the man
had no children, it was a common belief in Palmaris that Connor would inherit
the title.
"Should
I not be?" Connor asked in his typically casual manner.
"They
got in to kill Abbot Dobrinion," Rochefort replied, taking his seat
opposite the desk from Connor.
Connor
did not miss the effort his uncle required for the simple action. Rochefort was
overweight and suffered from severe pains in the joints. Until the previous
summer, the man had ridden his fields every day, rain or shine, but this year
he had been out only a couple of times, and never two days in succession.
Rochefort's eyes, too, showed the sudden aging. They had always been gray in
hue, but they were dull now, filmed over.
Connor
had wanted the title of Baron of Palmaris since he was old enough to understand
the prestige and entitlement that came with it, but now, as that moment seemed
to be drawing near, he had discovered that he could wait—and many
years. He would rather that he kept his present position, and that his dear
uncle, the man who had been as a father to him, remained alive and well.
"How
would the monsters even know to look for me?" Connor replied calmly.
"The abbot is a clear target for our enemies, but myself?"
"The
abbot and the Baron," Rochefort reminded.
"And
indeed I am glad to see that you have taken all the proper precautions,"
Connor said quickly. "You may be a target, but not I. To the knowledge of
our enemies, I am nothing more than a common tavern-hunter."
Rochefort
nodded, and seemed relieved by the logic of Connor's reasoning. Like a
protective father, he didn't fear for himself half as much as he feared for
Connor.
Connor,
though, was not really convinced by his own words. The powrie slipping into St.
Precious at this tension-filled time, so soon after the horrible Father Abbot's
departure, seemed a bit too convenient to him, and he only grew more uneasy as
he looked upon the broken face of his uncle's principal guard.
"I
want you to stay at Chasewind Manor," Rochefort said.
Connor
shook his head. "I have business in the city, Uncle," he replied.
"And I have been battling powries for months now. Fear not for me."
As he finished, he patted Defender, comfortably sheathed at his hip.
Rochefort
stared long and hard at the confident young man. That was what he liked about
Connor, the confidence, the swagger. He had been so much like Connor in his own
youth, bouncing from tavern to tavern, from brothel to brothel, living life so
fully, taking each moment to the very limits, of life, of danger. How ironic,
he thought, that now, growing older, and with less pleasure, less excitement,
less life, ahead of him, he should be more protective of his life. Connor,
indeed so much like a younger Rochefort, with so much more to lose, thought
little of potential danger, felt immortal and invulnerable.
The
Baron laughed, and dismissed the thought of ordering Connor to stay at
Chasewind Manor, for that, he realized, would steal all that he loved from the
spirited young man. "Keep one of my soldiers beside you," he offered
in compromise.
Again
Connor resolutely shook his head. "That would only outline me as a
potential target," he reasoned. "I know the city, Uncle. Know where
to garner information and where to hide."
"Go
out! Go out!" the Baron cried in defeat, laughing all the while. "But
know that you carry more than the responsibility of your own life with
you." He rose with considerably less trouble than he had found in sitting,
and rushed about the desk, clapping Connor on the shoulder roughly a couple of
times, then letting his big hand rest intimately about his nephew's neck.
"You carry my heart with you, boy," he said solemnly. "If they
find you as they found Dobrinion, then know that I will surely die of a broken
heart."
Connor
believed him, every word. He gave the man a hug and a pat, then strode
confidently from the room.
"He
will soon be your baron," Rochefort said to the soldier.
The
man snapped to attention and nodded, obviously approving of the choice.
"Open
it."
"But
Master Bildeborough, I see no reason to disturb the sleep of the dead,"
the monk replied. "The coffin has been blessed by Brother Talumus, our
highest-ranking—"
"Open
it," Connor repeated, locking the young man in his unrelenting glare.
Still
the young monk hesitated.
"Should
I bring my uncle?"
The
monk bit at his lip, but surrendered to the threat, bending low to grasp the
wooden lid. With a look back to the resolute Connor, he slid the cover aside.
There lay the woman, her complexion chalky blue in death.
To
the monk's horror, Connor reached in and grabbed her by the shoulder, lifting
and turning the corpse, his face low, impervious to the stench as he studied
her intently. "Wounds?" he asked.
"Just
the drowning," the monk replied. "In the sink. Hot water, too. Her
face was all red at first, but now the blood, and all the life, is gone from
it."
Connor
gently shifted the body back into place and stood back, motioning to the monk
that he could close the coffin. He put his hand to his mouth, running his
thumbnail between his teeth, trying to make sense of it all. The monks of St.
Precious had been very accommodating when he showed up at their gate. They
were frightened and confused, he knew, and the presence of so important a
representative of Baron Bildeborough had helped to settle them.
In
Abbot Dobrinion's room Connor had found little in the way of clues. Both bodies
were still there, the abbot's cleaned and carefully placed in state on his
bed, and the powrie's right where the monks had found it. The blood of both
corpses was liberal about the room, despite all efforts to clean the place.
When Connor protested the changes in the room, the monks took great pains to
describe the struggle, as they had interpreted it, in great detail: the abbot
had been wounded first, and several times, probably taken by surprise while he
lay asleep on his bed. One of the wounds was mortal, a slash across the throat,
but still the brave Dobrinion had managed to struggle across the room to
retrieve the small knife.
How
proud were the monks of St. Precious that their abbot had been able to take
revenge on his killer!
To
Connor, who had battled the tough powries, it seemed unlikely at best that a
single thrown dagger could have so perfectly taken one down, and that
Dobrinion, given the viciousness of the slashed throat, could even have gotten
to the desk. The scenario was not beyond belief, though, and so he kept his
thoughts to himself, accepting the description with a noncommittal nod and a
simple word of praise for gallant Dobrinion.
When
he subsequently inquired about how the powrie might have gained access, Connor
learned of a second victim, a poor girl who had been ambushed and drowned in
the kitchen. It remained a mystery to the monks as to how the powrie had gained
entrance, for the door was magically sealed against being opened from the outside,
and indeed it was little known, being invisible against the abbey's bricked
wall. The only explanation they could find was that the foolish girl had been
in league with, or more likely, been duped by, the powrie and had let the dwarf
in.
That,
too, seemed acceptable to Connor, though a bit of a stretch, but now, in
looking at the girl, her skin unbroken, the young nobleman's fears and suspicions
rose high about him. Still he said nothing to the monks, understanding that
without the guidance of the only man of any authority in all the abbey, they
could do little.
"Poor
girl," was all he muttered as the monk escorted him from the abbey's cellar—just a pair of
stairways up from where the Chilichunks had been held as prisoners, Connor
continually reminded himself.
"Your
uncle will help us to secure the abbey from further intrusion?" one of
the monks waiting in the chapel for the pair inquired.
Connor
asked for parchment and quill, then scribbled out a request for such aid.
"Take this to Chasewind Manor," he instructed. "Of course the
family Bildeborough will do all that we can for the security of St.
Precious."
He
bade the monks farewell then, and swept out into the streets of Palmaris, the
place of whispers and rumors, the place where he might truly find his answers.
Questions
and images haunted him throughout the afternoon. Why would the powries go after
Abbot Dobrinion, who had not been very much engaged in the fighting? Only a
handful of monks had gone out from St. Precious to the fighting in the north,
and they had been far from decisive in any battles. Given that, and the fact
that St. Precious had played more of a healing role in the war, it seemed
unlikely that any of Dobrinion's actions would have spurred the powries to such
a dramatic action.
The
only explanation Connor could think of was that the monks of St.-Mere-Abelle,
who had reportedly come in from the north, had skirmished with the monsters,
probably destroying many, and thus inadvertently set up the abbot as a target
for assassination.
But
after his experiences with Markwart, Connor didn't believe that possible
scenario. The words "too convenient" echoed in his mind whenever he
considered every piece of evidence or any seemingly logical conclusions.
That
night, Connor found his way to Fellowship Way, which he had convinced Dainsey
Aucomb to reopen the previous night, explaining to her that the Chilichunks
would be in desperate straits indeed when they returned to Palmaris—even though
Connor did not believe they would ever
return to Palmaris—if their business had not been maintained. The place was
bustling, all the locals eager for gossip about what had happened to Abbot
Dobrinion and to Keleigh Leigh, the poor drowned kitchen girl. Connor kept
quiet through most of the discussion, more interested in listening than in
speaking, trying to find someone who might have some important and valid
information—no small matter in this sea of rumor. Though he worked hard to keep
a low profile, he was approached often, the commoners suspecting that the
nobleman would know more than they.
Through
all their inquiries, Connor only smiled and shook his head. "I know only
what I have heard since entering the Way," he'd reply.
The
night rolled on without progress; frustrated Connor put his back against the
wall and closed his eyes. Only one fellow's call of "newfolks," the
term commonly applied to visitors who had not been previously seen in the Way,
stirred him from his respite.
It
took him a few moments to focus his vision, to shift his gaze through the crowd
toward the door and the two men, one large, the other small and slender, but
walking with the perfect balance and absolute alertness of a trained warrior.
Connor's eyes went wide. He knew these men, and knew that their present dress,
that of common peasants, was not fitting.
Where
were their robes?
The
mere sight of Youseff brought back pain in Connor's kidney, and given his last
meeting with the two, the nobleman thought it wise to slip even further into
the crowd. He motioned to Dainsey first, bringing her to the bar opposite him.
"See
what they want," he instructed, indicating the two new-folks. "And
tell them that I have not been in the Way all the week."
Dainsey
nodded and slid back the other way, while Connor faded toward the back wall. He
tried to stay close enough to catch any snatches of conversation between
Dainsey and the two as they predictably approached the hostess, but the noise of
the packed tavern allowed for very little eavesdropping.
Until
Dainsey—wonderful
Dainsey!—raised her voice pointedly and called out, "Why, he's not been
in here all the week!"
Connor's
suspicions were confirmed, the monks were looking for him—and he could
guess why easily enough. And now he knew why Keleigh Leigh had not been cut,
why no powrie had dipped its beret in her spilling blood, a tradition that,
according to everything Connor had ever
heard about the cruel bloody caps, no powrie would ever forsake. He dared to
turn about and steal a glance back toward Dainsey, and she looked at him out of
the corner of her eye, then "inadvertently" brushed her other hand
down the front of her blouse, opening it wide, catching the attention of every
man nearby, the two monks included.
Good
girl, Connor thought, and he used the distraction to make some ground,
slipping, weaving, toward the door. It took him more than a minute to cover the
twenty feet, so crowded was the Way, but then he was out in the salty air of
the Palmaris night, the wide sky clear and crisp overhead.
He
glanced back into the tavern, to see the crowd jostling, as though someone was
trying to get to the door.
Connor
didn't wait to discern who that might be; if the monks recognized Dainsey's move
as a diversion, they would understand where to turn next. The nobleman rushed
to the corner of the Way, then went around the corner, turning and peering back
to the door.
Sure
enough, Youseff and Dandelion burst out onto the street.
Down
the alley went Connor, his thoughts spinning. He wasted no time, climbing the
gutter work to the roof, then falling flat on his belly, shaking his head as
the two monks came around the corner on his trail. He turned away, crawling
quietly.
Up
here, with the sky seeming so close, the lights of the city night below him,
Connor couldn't help but fall back in time. This place had been Jill's special
spot, her hideaway from the world. She had come up here often, to be alone with
her thoughts, to seek out past events too painful for her fragile mind to find.
A
metal scraping sound blew away those thoughts of Jill; one of the monks,
Youseff likely, had started to climb.
Connor
was away in an instant, leaping the far alley to the roof of the next building,
rushing over the peak and sliding down, turning, catching the lip of the roof
as he went over, then dropping to the street. He went on in full flight,
running scared, thinking of Jill, thinking of all the craziness that had come
to his little world.
Abbot
Dobrinion was dead. Dead! And no powrie had done it.
No,
it was these two, the lackeys of Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart, the leader of
all the Abellican Church. Markwart had killed Dobrinion because of the abbot's
resistance, and now had set his assassins on him.
The
enormity of that line of reasoning at last hit Connor, and nearly laid him low.
He considered his course—should he seek protection at Chasewind Manor?
Connor
dismissed that, fearing to implicate his uncle. If Markwart had gotten to
Dobrinion, could anyone, even the Baron of Palmaris, be safe? These were
powerful enemies, Connor understood; if all the legions of the King of
Honce-the-Bear were turned against him, they would be no more dangerous enemies
than the monks of the Abellican Church. Indeed, by many standards, not the
least of which concerned those mysterious and little-understood magical powers,
the Father Abbot was a more powerful man than the King.
The
scope of this all, the incredible idea that the Father Abbot would order—had
ordered!—Dobrinion murdered, assaulted the nobleman's sensibilities, kept his
mind whirling as he vanished into the Palmaris night.
But
still, Connor knew that he would run out of places to hide. These two, and
others, if there were more in the city, were professional assassins. They would
find him and kill him.
He
needed answers, and he thought he knew where he might find them. Besides,
someone else was in danger here, the real target of Markwart's wrath. He did
turn to Chasewind Manor then, crossing the gate into the courtyard, but veering
from the main house to the stables. There he quickly saddled Greystone, his favorite
hunting horse, a beautiful and thick-muscled palomino with a long blond mane.
With eager Greystone under him, Connor rode out of Palmaris' northern gate
before the night had crossed its midpoint.
The
traveling was easy—or should have been, for the road stretching along the
western bank of the Masur Delaval south of Palmaris was the finest causeway in
all the world. And early on Jojonah found a ride with a caravan that traveled
for two days, through both day and night.
Master Jojonah, though, was not having a good time of it. His old bones ached
badly, and some two hundred miles south of Palmaris he had taken ill, beset by
terrible cramps and nausea, and by a low fever that kept him sweating
continually.
Bad
food, he supposed, and hoped in all seriousness that this journey and illness
would not be the end of him. He still had much he meant to do before he died,
and in any case, dying alone on the road halfway between Ursal and Palmaris,
two cities of which he had never been overly fond, was not appealing in the
least. So with typical stoicism the old master staggered along from town to
town, walking slowly, leaning heavily on a sturdy stick, and chastising himself
for letting his belly grow so thick. "Piety, dignity, poverty," he
said sarcastically, for truly he felt less than dignified, and it seemed he was
carrying this vow of poverty way too far. As for piety ... Jojonah wasn't sure what
that word meant anymore. Did it mean following blindly the lead of Father Abbot
Markwart? Or following his heart, using those insights that Avelyn, by example,
had given to him?
The
latter, he decided, but in truth, that solved little, for Jojonah wasn't sure
exactly what course he might take to make any real difference in the world.
Likely he'd just get himself demoted in Church rank, perhaps even banished,
perhaps even burned as a heretic—the Church had a long history of
turning like a ravenous animal on a proclaimed heretic, torturing such men to
death. A shudder coursed Jojonah's spine as he considered that thought, like
some grim premonition. Yes, Father Abbot Markwart was in a foul mood of late,
and the more foul it became by far if ever someone mentioned the name of Avelyn
Desbris! Thus the master found a new enemy, despair, on that long road to
Ursal. But he plodded on, putting one foot in front of the other.
He
awoke on the sixth day out to find the sky thick with dark clouds, and by
mid-morning a cool rain had begun. Jojonah was at first glad of the cloud
cover, for the previous day had been brutally hot. But as the first raindrops
began to fall, as the chilly water touched his feverish skin, he grew miserable
indeed, and even considered returning to the town in which he had slept the
previous night.
He
didn't reverse direction, though, but simply slogged along a puddle-filled
road, turning his attention inward, to Avelyn and Markwart, to the direction of
the Church and any course he might follow to alter that dark path. As the
minutes turned to an hour, then two, the master was so deep in thought that he
never heard the wagon approaching fast from behind.
"Be
clear the road!" the driver cried, pulling hard on the reins, then yanking
them to the side. The wagon swerved, narrowly missing Jojonah, spraying him
with a great wash as he tumbled to the muddy ground in surprise and terror.
Off
to the side went the wagon, sinking deep into the mud—and only that
mud, grabbing at the wheels like some living creature, kept the cart from
overturning as the frantic driver fought to gain control. Finally the team
slowed and the wheels slipped to a messy halt. The driver leaped down at once,
taking only a quick glance at his stuck rig, then rushing back across the road
to where Jojonah sat.
"My
pardon," the monk stammered as the man, a handsome fellow of about twenty
years, splashed over to him. "I did not hear you in the rain."
"No
pardon's needed," the man said pleasantly, helping Jojonah to stand and
brushing some of the mud from his soaked robes. "Sure that I been fearing
that since I taked the road outta Palmaris."
"Palmaris,"
echoed Jojonah. "I, too, just came from the most excellent town."
The monk noted that the man's expression soured at the mention of the word
"excellent," and so Jojonah quieted, thinking it prudent to listen
and not to speak.
"Well,
the quicker I'm coming from the same place," the man replied, glancing
back helplessly at his wagon. "Or was," he added despondently.
"We
will not easily extract it from the mud, I fear," Jojonah agreed.
The
man nodded. "But I'll find villagers to help," he said. "There
be a town a three-mile back."
"The
folk are helpful," Jojonah said hopefully. "Perhaps I shall accompany
you; they would be quick to help a priest of the Church, after ail, and were
quite kind to me last night, for that is where I slept. And then, after we have
extracted your wagon, perhaps you'll take me along. My destination is Ursal,
and I've a long road ahead, I fear, and a body not taking well to the
travel."
"Ursal's
me own ending," the man said. "And ye might help in me message, since
it concerns yer own Church."
Jojonah
perked his ears up at that remark and cocked an eyebrow. "Oh," he
prompted.
"Truly
'tis a sad day," the man went on. "So sad a day that sees the death
of Abbot Dobrinion."
Jojonah's
eyes went wide and he staggered, catching hold of the man's sleeve for support.
"Dobrinion? How?"
"Powrie,"
the man answered. "Little rat devil. Sneaked into the church and killed
him to death."
Jojonah
could hardly digest the information. His mind started whirling, but he was too
sickly and too confused. He sat down again, plop, onto the muddy road, and
dropped his face into his hands, sobbing, and didn't know if he was crying for
Abbot Dobrinion or for himself and his beloved Order.
The
driver put a comforting hand on his shoulder. They left together for the town,
the man promising he would spend the night there even if the folk managed to
clear his wagon of the mud. "And ye'll be riding with me the rest o' the
way to Ursal," he said with a hopeful smile. "We'll get ye blankets
to keep ye warm, Father, and good food, lots of good food, for the road."
One
of the families in the small town put Jojonah and the driver up for the night,
giving him a warm bed. The monk retired early, but couldn't immediately fall
asleep, for a crowd was gathering in the house, with all the folk of the area
coming to hear the driver's sad tale of the death of Abbot Dobrinion. Jojonah
lay quiet and listened to them for a long while, then finally, shivering and
sweating, he drifted off to sleep.
Youseff
and Dandelion did not make the return trip.
Master
Jojonah awoke with a start. The house was quiet and, since the clouds hung low
outside, dark. Jojonah looked all around, narrowing his eyes. "Who is
there?" he asked.
Youseff
and Dandelion did not make the return trip! he heard again, more emphatically.
No,
not heard, Jojonah realized, for there was not a sound, save the pat of heavy
raindrops on the roof. He felt the words, in his mind, and he recognized the
man who was putting them there.
"Brother
Braumin?" he asked.
I
fear that the Father Abbot put them on your trail, the thoughts imparted. Run, my friend, my mentor.
Flee back to Palmaris if you are not far away, to the court of Abbot Dobrinion,
and do not allow Brothers Youseff and Dandelion entrance into St. Precious.
The
communication was weak—which Jojonah understood, for Braumin wasn't very practiced
with the hematite, and likely the man was
using it now under less than ideal circumstances. Where are you? he
telepathically asked. St. -Mere-Abelle?
Please,
Master Jojonah! You must hear my call. Youseff and Dandelion did not make the
return trip!
The
contact was lessening—Braumin was getting tired, Jojonah realized. Then,
abruptly, it was gone altogether, and Jojonah feared that perhaps Markwart or
Francis had happened upon Braumin.
If
it really was Braumin, he had to remind himself. If it was anything at all
beyond the delirium of his fever.
"They
did not know," the master whispered, for he realized only then that
Braumin's message had mentioned nothing about Dobrinion. Jojonah scrambled out
of bed, groaning for the effort, and made his way quietly through the house. He
startled the lady first, nearly tripping over her as she slept on a mattress of
piled blankets on the common room floor. She had given up her own bed for him,
he realized, and truly he did not wish to disturb her now. But some things
simply couldn't wait.
"The
driver?" he asked. "Is he in the house, or did he take shelter with
another family?"
"Oh,
no," the woman said as pleasantly as she could. "Sure that he's
sleeping in the room with me little boys. Snug as bugs in a rug, so the sayin'
goes."
"Get
him," Master Jojonah instructed. "At once."
"Yes,
Father, whatever ye're needing," the woman replied, untangling herself
from her bedroll and half walking, half crawling across the room. She returned
in a few moments, the bleary-eyed driver at her side.
"Ye
should be sleeping," the man said. "Not good for yer fever, being up
so late."
"One
question," Jojonah prompted, waving his hands to quiet the man, to make
sure he was paying close attention. "When Abbot Dobrinion was murdered,
where was the caravan of St.-Mere-Abelle?"
The
man cocked his head as if he didn't understand.
"You
know that monks of my abbey were visiting St. Precious," Jojonah pressed.
"A
bit more than visiting, by the trouble they bringed," the man said with a
snort.
"Indeed,"
Jojonah conceded. "But where were they when the powrie killed Abbot Dobrinion?"
"Gone."
"From
the city?"
"Out
to the north, some say, though I heared they crossed the river, and not on the
ferry," the driver replied. "They were out a day and more afore the
abbot fell to the powrie."
Master
Jojonah rocked back on his heels, stroking his large chin. The driver started
to elaborate, but the monk had heard enough and stopped him with an upraised
palm. "Go back to bed," he bade both the man and the lady of the
house. "As will I."
Back
in the solitude of his dark room, Master Jojonah did not fall off to sleep. Far
from it. Convinced now that the contact with Braumin was not a dreamy, imagined
thing, Jojonah had too much to think about. He was not fearful, as Braumin had
been, that Youseff and Dandelion had been set on his trail. Markwart was too
close to his goal, or at least the obsessed man thought he was, to delay the
killers. No, they would go north of Palmaris, not south, onto the battlefield
in search of the stones.
But
apparently they had made one brief stop on the way, long enough to fix a bit of
Markwart's trouble in Palmaris.
Master
Jojonah rushed to the one window in the room, pushed open the shutters and
vomited onto the grass outside, sickened by the mere thought that his Father
Abbot had ordered the execution of another abbot!
It
rang as preposterous! Yet, every detail that was filtering to Jojonah led him
inescapably in that direction. Was he, perhaps, clouding those details with his
own judgments? he had to wonder. Youseff and Dandelion did not make the
return trip!
And
Brother Braumin had no idea that Abbot Dobrinion had met such an untimely end.
Truly
Master Jojonah hoped he was wrong, hoped that his fears and his feverish
delirium were running wild, hoped that the leader of his Order could never have
done such a thing. In any case, there seemed only one road ahead of him now,
back to the north, and not south, back to St.-Mere-Abelle.
Finally
all two hundred were on the move, swinging west and then south of the two towns
still in powrie hands. Elbryan directed the march, keeping scouts well ahead of
the caravan and holding his forty best warriors in a tight group. Of all the
ragged caravan, only about half could fight even if pressed, the other half
being simply too old or too young, or too ill. The general health of the group
was good, though, thanks mostly to the tireless efforts of Pony and her
precious soul stone.
No
resistance came out at them from the two town's, and as the afternoon of the
fifth day began to wane, they were almost halfway to Palmaris.
"Farm
and a barn," Roger Lockless explained, coming back to meet with Elbryan.
"Just a mile ahead. The well's intact, and I heard chickens."
Several
of the people nearby groaned and cooed and smacked their lips at the thought of
fresh eggs.
"But
no one was about?" the ranger asked skeptically.
"None
outside," Roger replied, and he seemed a bit embarrassed that he couldn't
have discerned more. "But I was not far ahead of you," he hastily
explained. "I feared that if I tarried too long, you would get in sight of
the structures, and any monsters inside, if there are any, would see you."
Elbryan
nodded and smiled. "You did well," he said. "Hold the group in
check here while Pony and I go in and see what we might learn."
Roger
nodded and helped Pony climb on Symphony's back behind the ranger.
"Strengthen
the perimeter, particularly in the north," Elbryan instructed the young
man. "And find Juraviel. Tell him where to find us."
Roger
accepted the orders with a nod. He slapped Symphony on the rump and the horse
bounded away. Roger hardly watched the departure, was already moving to
instruct the folk of the caravan to settle into a defensive posture.
The
ranger found the structures easily enough, and then Pony went to work, using
the soul stone to spirit-walk into first the barn and then the farmhouse.
"Powries
in the house," she explained when she came back into her own body.
"Three, though one is sleeping in the back bedroom. Goblins hold the barn,
but they are not alert."
Elbryan
closed his eyes, seeking a deep, meditative calm, transforming, almost
visibly, into his elven-trained alter ego. He indicated a small copse of trees
to the left of the barn, then slipped down from Symphony, helping Pony do the
same. Leaving the horse, the pair moved cautiously to the shadows of the copse,
and then the ranger went on alone, continuing his advance, moving to stumps, to
a water trough, to anything that would conceal him.
Soon
enough he was at the farmhouse, his back to the wall beside a window, Hawkwing
in hand. He peered around, then looked back in Pony's direction and nodded,
fitting an arrow.
He
turned abruptly and let fly, scoring a hit on the back of the head of a powrie
as the unsuspecting dwarf cooked over a stove. The momentum drove the
creature's head forward, forcing its face right into the sizzling grease in the
frying pan.
"What're
ye doing!" the dwarf's companion howled, rushing to the stove.
That
dwarf skidded to a stop, though, noting the quivering arrow shaft, then spun
about to find Nightbird and Tempest waiting.
Down
swept the mighty sword as the powrie reached for its weapon. As its arm fell
free of its body, the howling dwarf tried instead to charge ahead, barreling
into the ranger.
A
sure thrust of Tempest skewered the creature right through the heart, the
lunging ranger putting the blade in all the way to its hilt. After a couple of
wild spasms, the powrie slid dead to the floor.
"Yach,
ye're waking me up!" came a roar from the bedroom.
Nightbird
smiled, then waited a minute, slipping quietly to the door. He paused a few
moments longer, making sure that the dwarf had settled down once more, then
slowly pushed open the door.
There
lay the powrie, on a bed, its back to him.
The
ranger came out of the house soon after, giving a quick wave to Pony. He
retrieved Hawkwing and began a cautious circuit of the barn. Of note was the
hayloft, with one door cracked open and a rope hanging to the ground.
The
ranger glanced all around, to see Pony moving to a new position, one that
allowed her to view both the main door and the hayloft. He was truly blessed to
have such a competent companion, he knew, for if he got into trouble, Pony
would always be there.
And
now, both of them understood the plan. Pony could have charged straight into
the barn, of course, using serpentine and the explosive ruby to blow the place
away, but the smoke of such a fire would not be a good thing. Instead she held
her position, magnetite and graphite in hand, as Nightbird's backup.
And
the ranger did not underestimate the amount of discipline it took for her to
accept that position. Every morning, she performed the sword-dance beside him,
and her blade work was truly becoming magnificent. She wanted to fight, to
stand beside Elbryan, to dance now for real. But Pony was truly disciplined and
patient.
The
ranger had assured her that she would get her chance to use the new techniques—both knew that
she was almost ready.
But
not yet.
Nightbird
tested the rope to the hayloft, then began a cautious and quiet climb. He
paused just below the door, listening, peeking in at the loft level, then
waved one finger up in the air for Pony to see.
Up
he went, level with the door, putting one foot gingerly in the small crack,
though he had to continue to hold on to the rope. He had to move fast, he
realized, and wouldn't likely have time to draw any weapon.
Again
the ranger took a deep, steadying breath, found his center and his necessary
calm. Then he hooked his foot about the bottom of the door and yanked it out,
hurling himself into the loft, into the surprised goblin standing a nonchalant
guard within.
The
goblin gave a cry, muffled almost immediately as the ranger clamped a strong
hand over its mouth, his other arm wrapping tight around the goblin's weapon
hand. Nightbird clamped his hand over the creature's face, squeezing hard, then
turned his wrist and drove the goblin to its knees.
A
cry from below told him he was out of time.
With
a sudden jerk, Nightbird brought the goblin back up to its feet, then twisted
and threw, launching the creature out the open door to dive the ten feet to the
ground. It landed hard and groaned, then tried to get back up, tried to call
out. At the last instant it spotted Pony, the woman standing calm, hand
extended.
A
lodestone traveling many times the speed of a sling bullet blasted right through
the metal amulet the creature had around its neck, a piece of jewelry it had
stolen from a woman who futilely begged for her life.
Inside
the barn, Nightbird set Hawkwing to deadly work, blasting goblins from the
ladder as they tried to gain the loft. A moment later the startled ranger
found out he was not alone, as a second archer joined him.
"Roger
told me of your plans," Belli'mar Juraviel explained. "A good
start!" he added, plunking an arrow into a goblin that had foolishly
scurried into view.
Recognizing
that there was no way they could possibly get up that ladder, the remaining
goblins went for the main door instead, pushing it wide and scrambling out into
the daylight.
A
bolt of streaking lightning laid most of them low.
Then
the elf was above them, at the doors to the loft, firing down at those who
continued to scramble.
The
ranger did not join his friend, but took a different route, slipping down the
ladder. He hit the ground in a roll, avoiding a spear throw by one creature,
and was firing Hawkwing as he came around, taking the goblin right in the face,
then again, taking out a second as it ran for the door.
Then
all was quiet, inside at least, but Nightbird sensed he was not alone. He put
his bow to the ground and drew out his sword, moving slowly, silently.
Outside,
the cries diminished. Nightbird came to a bale of hay, put his back against it
and listened hard.
Breathing.
Around
he went suddenly, holding his swing just long enough to make sure that it was
indeed another goblin and not some unfortunate prisoner, then lopping the
creature's ugly head from its shoulders with a single stroke. He came out into
the daylight afterward, finding Pony and Juraviel walking Symphony toward the
barn, their business finished.
The
elf stayed with Elbryan, securing a new perimeter, while Pony galloped the
stallion back to gather the group.
"I
canno' be turning back now," the driver replied when Jojonah told him of
the plans the next morning. "Though suren I'd love to be helping ye. But
me business—"
"Is
important. Indeed," Jojonah finished for him, excusing him.
"Yer
best way back is with the ships," the driver went on. "Most o' them
are heading up north and to the open sea for the summer season. I'd've come
down on one meself, but few be coming south just now."
Master
Jojonah stroked his stubbly chin. He had no money, but perhaps he could find a
way. "The nearest port, then," he said to the driver.
"South
and east," the man replied. "Bristole by name. A town built for
fixing and supplying the boats and not much else. She's not too far outta me
way."
"I
would be obliged," the monk answered.
So
they were off again, after a hearty breakfast, supplied for free by the goodly
townsfolk. Only when the wagon began rambling down the road did Master Jojonah
comprehend how much better he was feeling physically. Despite the bumpy nature
of the ride, his breakfast had settled well. It was as if the news of the
previous night, the implication that things were darker by far than he had ever
imagined, had pumped strength back into his frail body. He simply could not
afford to be weak now.
Bristole
was as small a town as Jojonah had ever seen, and seemed strangely unbalanced
to the monk. The dock areas were extensive, with long wharves that could
accommodate ten large ships. Other than that, though, there were but a few
buildings, including only a pair of small warehouses. It wasn't until the
wagon pulled into the center of the cluster of houses that Jojonah began to
understand.
Ships
going up- or downriver would need no supplies at this point, since the trip
from Palmaris to Ursal was not a long one. However, the sailors might desire a
bit of relief, and so the ships would put in here for restocking of a different
nature.
Of
the seven buildings clustered together, two were taverns and two were brothels.
Master
Jojonah said a short prayer, but was not overly concerned. He was an accepting
man, ever willing to forgive the weakness of the flesh. It was, after all, the
strength of the soul that counted.
He
bade farewell to the generous driver, wishing he could give the goodly man more
than words for his efforts, and then turned to the business at hand. Three
ships were in; another was approaching from the south. The monk walked down to
the riverbank, his sandals clapping against the extensive boardwalk.
"Hail,
good fellows," he called as he neared the closest ship, seeing a pair of
men bending low behind the taffrail, working hammers on some problem he could
not see. Jojonah noted that this ship was in stern first, an oddity, and, he
hoped, an omen that it would soon depart.
"Hail,
good fellows!" Jojonah yelled more loudly, waving his arms to get their
attention.
The
hammering stopped and one old sea dog with wrinkled brown skin and no teeth
looked up to regard the monk. "And to yourself, Father," he said.
"Are
you heading north?" Master Jojonah asked. "To Palmaris,
perhaps?"
"Palmaris
and the Gulf," the man answered. "But we're not heading anywhere at
all anytime soon. Got an anchor line that won't hold; chain's all busted."
Jojonah
understood why the ship was in dock backward. He looked around, back at the
town, searching for some solution that would get this ship sailing. Any worthy
port would have held the proper equipment—even the meager docks of
St.-Mere-Abelle were supplied with such items as chains and anchors. But
Bristole was no town for ship repairs, was more a place for "crew
repairs."
"Got
a new one sailing up from Ursal," the old seaman went on. "Should
arrive in two days. Are you looking for passage, then?"
"Yes,
but I cannot delay."
"Well,
we'll take you, for five pieces of the King's gold," the old man said.
"A fair price, Father."
"Indeed
it is, but I've not the gold to pay, I fear," Jojonah replied. "Nor
the time to delay."
"Two
days?" the sea dog balked.
"Two
days more than I have to spare," Jojonah answered.
"I
do beg your pardon, Father," came another voice, from the ship next in
line, a wide and sturdy caravel. "We shall be sailing north this very
day."
Master
Jojonah waved to the two on the damaged vessel and walked around to get a
better view of the newest speaker. The man was tall and lean and dark-skinned—not from the
sun, but from his heritage. He was Behrenese, and, given his complexion, likely
from a region of southern Behren, far south of the Belt-and-Buckle.
"I
am afraid that I have no gold to pay," Jojonah replied.
The
dark man flashed a pearly smile. "But Father," he said, "why
would you be needing the gold?"
"I'll
work for my passage, then," Jojonah offered.
"All
on my ship could use a good prayer, Father," the Behrenese man replied.
"More, I fear, after our little stop here. Come aboard, I beg you. We were
not to leave until late in the day, but I've only one man out and he can be
retrieved easily. If you are in a hurry, then we are in a hurry!"
"Very
generous, good sir—"
"Al'u'met,"
the man answered. "Captain Al'u'met of the good ship Saudi
Jacintha."
Jojonah
cocked his head at that curious name.
"It
means Jewel of the Desert," Al'u'met explained. "A bit of a joke on
my father, who wished me to ride the dunes, not the waves."
"As
my own father wanted me to serve ale, not prayer," Jojonah replied with a
laugh. He was more than a bit surprised to find a dark-skinned Behrenese in
command of an Ursal sailing ship, and even more surprised to see the man pay so
much respect to one of the Abellican Order. Jojonah's Church was not prominent
in the southern kingdom; indeed, missionaries had many times been slaughtered
for trying to impose their vision of divinity on the often intolerant priests—yatols in
the Behren tongue—of the deserts.
Captain
Al'u'met helped Jojonah over the last step of gangplank, then dispatched two
of his crewmen to go and find the one missing sailor. "Have you bags to
bring aboard?" he asked Jojonah.
"Only
what I carry," the monk replied.
"And
how far north will you be sailing?"
"Palmaris,"
Jojonah replied. "Or across the river, actually; I can ride the ferry. I
am needed at St.-Mere-Abelle on most urgent matters."
"We
may be sailing past All Saints Bay," Captain Al'u'met said. "Though
you will lose a week at least traveling by sea."
"Then
Palmaris it is," the monk said.
"Exactly
where we were going," Captain Al'u'met replied, and, smiling still, he
pointed to the cabin door leading under the poop deck. "I have two
rooms," he explained. "Surely I can share one with you for a day or
two."
"You
are Abellican?"
Al'u'met's
grin widened. "For three years," he explained. "I found your God
at St. Gwendolyn of the Sea, and as fine a catch as Al'u'met has ever
known."
"But
another disappointment for your father," Jojonah reasoned.
Al'u'met
put a finger to pursed lips. "He does not need to know such things,
Father," he said slyly. "Out on the Mirianic, when the storms blow
high and the waves break twice the height of a tall man above the forward rail,
I choose my own God. Besides," he added with a wink, "they are not so
different, you know, the God of your land and the one of mine. A change in
robes would make a priest a yatol."
"So
your conversion was one of convenience," Jojonah teased.
Al'u'met
shrugged. "I choose my own God."
Jojonah
nodded and returned the wide smile, then made his slow way toward the captain's
cabins.
"My
boy will show you your quarters," Al'u'met called after him.
The
cabin boy was just within the shelter of the room, throwing bones, when Master
Jojonah opened the door. The lad, no more than ten years of age, scrambled
frantically, collecting his dice and looking very guilty—he had been
caught derelict from his chores, the monk knew.
"Set
our friend up, Matthew," Captain Al'u'met called. "See to his
needs."
Jojonah
and Matthew stood staring at each other, sizing each other up for a long time.
Matthew's clothes were threadbare, as was the lot for anybody working aboard a
ship. But they were a fine cut, better than the attire of most crewmen the monk
had met. And the boy was cleaner than most cabin boys, his sun-bleached hair
neatly trimmed, his skin golden tanned. There was one notable blemish, though,
a black patch on the boy's forearm.
Jojonah
recognized the scar, and he imagined the pain the boy must have felt. The patch
had been caused by the second of the three "medicinal" liquids—rum, tar, and
urine—kept on the sailing ships. The rum was used to kill the worms that
inevitably found their way into foodstuffs, to kill the aftereffects of bad
food, and simply to forget the long, long, empty hours. The urine was used for
washing, clothes and hair, and as disgusting as that thought was, it paled in
comparison to the liquid tar. This was used to patch torn skin. The boy,
Matthew, had obviously gashed his arm, and so the sailors had applied tar to
the wound to seal it.
"May
I?" Jojonah quietly asked, reaching for the arm.
Matthew
hesitated, but dared not disobey, cautiously holding the arm up for inspection.
A
fine job, the monk noted. The tar had been sanded flat with the skin, a perfect
patch of black. "Does it hurt?" Jojonah asked.
Matthew
shook his head emphatically.
"He
does not speak," came Captain Al'u'met's voice, the man having moved up
right behind the distracted monk.
"Your
work?" Jojonah asked, indicating the arm.
"Not
mine, but Cody Bellaway's," Al'u'met answered. "He serves as healer
when we are far from port."
Master
Jojonah nodded and let the issue drop—openly, at least, for in his mind the
image of Matthew's blackened arm would not so quickly fade. How many hematites
were locked away in St.-Mere-Abelle? Five hundred? A thousand? The number was
considerable, Jojonah knew, for when he was a younger monk, he had done an
inventory of just that stone, easily the most common stone returned from
Pimaninicuit over the years. Most of these soul stones were of far less power
than the one the caravan to the Barbacan
had taken along, but still, Jojonah had to wonder how much good might come of
these if they were given to the sailing ships with one or two men on each
vessel taught how to bring forth their healing powers. Matthew's wound had been
considerable, no doubt, but Jojonah could have easily sealed it with magic, not
tar. With hardly an effort, much suffering could have been avoided.
That
line of thinking made the master wonder on a grander scale. Why weren't all the
communities, or at least one community in each general region of the kingdom,
given a hematite, with their chosen healers trained in its use?
He
had never discussed such a thing with Avelyn, of course, but somehow Master
Jojonah understood that Avelyn Desbris, if the choice had been his, would
without hesitation have distributed the small hematites to the general
populace, would have opened up St.-Mere-Abelle's horde of magic for the
betterment of all, or at least distributed the most minor hematites, stones too
weak to be used for diabolical purposes such as possession, stones too weak to
be used in any real malevolent way.
Yes,
Jojonah knew, Avelyn would have done it if given the chance, but of course
Father Abbot Markwart would never have given him the chance!
Jojonah
patted the mop of Matthew's blond hair and motioned for the lad to show him to
his room. Al'u'met left them then, calling for his hands to ready the ship for
departure.
Saudi
Jacintha slipped out of Bristole soon
after, her sails fast filling with wind, pushing her against the considerable
current. They would make good time, Al'u'met came and assured the monk, for the
south winds were brisk, with no sign of storm, and as the Masur Delaval
widened, the pull of the water was not so strong.
The
monk spent the bulk of the day in his cabin, sleeping, gathering the strength
he knew he would need. He did get up for a short while, and with a friendly nod
convinced Matthew to play dice with him, assuring him the captain wouldn't mind
if he took a short break from his chores.
Jojonah
wished that the boy could talk, or even laugh, in the hour they spent throwing
dice. He wanted to know where the lad had come from and how he had wound up on
a ship at so tender an age.
Likely
his parents, poverty-stricken, had sold him, the monk knew, and he winced at
the thought. That was how most ships acquired cabin boys, though Jojonah hoped
that Al'u'met had not been the one to purchase him. The captain claimed to be a
religious man, and men of God did not do such things.
A
light rain came up that night, but nothing that impeded Saudi Jacintha's
progress. This crew was well-trained and knew every turn in the great
river, and on the ship plowed, her prow spray foaming white in the moonlight.
It was at that forward rail, in that same night after the rain had stopped,
that Master Jojonah fully accepted the truths that were forming in his heart.
Alone in the darkness with the splash of the prow, the croaking of the animals
on the bank, the flutter of the wind in the sails, Master Jojonah found his
course come clearer.
He
felt as if Avelyn were with him, hovering about him, reminding him of the
three vows—not
just the empty spoken words, but the meaning behind them—that supposedly guided
the Abellican Order.
He
stayed up all through the night and went to bed again right before the dawn,
after coaxing a sleepy-eyed Matthew to go and fetch him a good meal.
He
was up again at dinnertime, dining beside Captain Al'u'met, who informed him
they would reach their goal early the next morning.
"You
might not wish to stay up all the night again," the captain said with a
smile. "You will be back to land in the morning, and will not travel far,
I will guess, if you are asleep."
Still,
later on that evening, Captain Al'u'met found Jojonah again at the forward
rail, staring into the darkness, looking into his own heart.
"You
are a thinking man," the captain said, approaching the monk. "I like
that."
"You
can tell such things simply because I am standing out here alone?" Jojonah
replied. "I might be thinking of nothing at all."
"Not
at the forward rail," Captain Al'u'met said, taking a spot right beside
the leaning monk. "I, too, know the inspiration of this place."
"Where
did you get Matthew?" Jojonah asked abruptly, blurting out the words
before he could even consider them.
Al'u'met
gave him a sidelong glance, surprised by the question. He looked back to the
prow spray and smiled. "You do not wish to think that I, a man of your
Church, purchased him from his parents," the perceptive man reasoned.
"But I did," Al'u'met added, standing straighter and looking directly
at the monk.
Master
Jojonah did not return the stare.
"They
were paupers, living near St. Gwendolyn, surviving on the scraps your Abellican
brothers bothered to toss out for them," the captain went on, his tone
deepening, growing somber.
Now
Jojonah did turn, eyeing the man severely. "Yet this is the Church you
chose to join," he stated.
"That
does not mean that I agree with all of those who now administer the doctrine
of the Church," Al'u'met calmly replied. "As to Matthew, I purchased
him, and at a handsome price, because I came to think of him as my own son. He
was always at the docks, you see—or at least, he was there at those
times when he could escape his wrathful father. The man beat him for no
reason, though little Matthew had not seen his seventh birthday at the time. So
I purchased him, took him aboard to teach him an honest trade."
"A
difficult life," Jojonah remarked, but all animosity and hints of
accusation were gone from his voice.
"Indeed,"
the large Behrenese agreed. "A life some love and others loathe. Matthew
will make up his own mind when he is old enough to better understand. If he
comes to love the sea, as I do, then he will have no choice but to stay aboard
ship—and
hopefully he will choose to stay with me. Saudi Jacintha will outlive
me, I fear, and it would be good to have Matthew to carry on my work."
Al'u'met
turned to face the monk and went quiet, waiting until Jojonah looked at him
directly. "And if he does not love the smell and the roll of the waves, he
will be free to go," the man said sincerely. "And I will make sure
that he has a good start wherever he chooses to live. I give you my word on
this, Master Jojonah of St.-Mere-Abelle."
Jojonah
believed him, and his return smile was genuine. Among the tough sailors of the
day, Captain Al'u'met surely stood tall.
They
both looked back to the water and stood in silence for some time, save for the
splashing prow and the wind.
"I
knew Abbot Dobrinion," Captain Al'u'met said at length. "A good
man."
Jojonah
looked at him curiously.
"Your
companion, the wagon driver, spread word of the tragedy in Bristole while you
were seeking passage," the captain explained.
"Dobrinion
was indeed a good man," Jojonah replied. "And a great loss it is for
my Church that he was killed."
"A
great loss for all the world," Al'u'met agreed.
"How
did you know him?"
"I
know many of the Church leaders, for, given my mobile profession, I spend many
hours in many different chapels, St. Precious among them."
"Have
you ever been to St.-Mere-Abelle?" Jojonah asked, though he didn't think
Al'u'met had, for he believed that he would remember this man.
"We
put in once," the Captain replied. "But the weather was turning, and
we had far to go, so I did not get off the docks. St. Gwendolyn was not so far
away, after all."
Jojonah
smiled.
"I
have met your Father Abbot, though," the Captain went on. "Only once.
It was 819, or perhaps 820; the years do seem to blend as they pass. Father
Abbot Markwart had put out a call for open-seas sailing ships. I am not really
a river-runner, you see, but we took some damage last year—powrie
barrelboat, for the wretched dwarves seemed to be everywhere!—and were late
getting out of port this spring."
"You
answered the Father Abbot's call," Jojonah prompted.
"Yes,
but my ship was not chosen," Al'u'met replied casually. "Truthfully,
I think it had something to do with the color of my skin. I do not believe that
your Father Abbot trusted a Behrenese sailor, especially one who was not, at
that time, an anointed member of your Church."
Jojonah
nodded his agreement; there was no way that Markwart would have accepted a man
of the southern religion for the journey to Pimaninicuit. The monk found that
notion ironic, laughable even, given the carefully planned murderous end of the
voyage.
"Captain
Adjonas and his Windrunner were the better choice," Al'u'met
admitted. "He was riding the open Mirianic before I ever learned to work
an oar."
"You
know of Adjonas, then?" Jojonah asked. "And of the end of the Windrunner?"
"Every
seaman on the Broken Coast knows of the loss," Captain Al'u'met replied.
"Happened just outside of All Saints Bay, so they say. A rough bit of
water, to be sure, though I am amazed that a man as sea-seasoned as Adjonas got
caught too near the shoal."
Jojonah
only nodded; he could not bring himself to reveal the awful truth, to tell this
man that Adjonas and his crew had been slaughtered in the sheltered waters of
All Saints Bay by the holy men of the religion Al'u'met had freely joined.
Looking back at that now, Master Jojonah could hardly believe that he had gone
along with the plan, the terrible tradition. Had it always been that way, as
the Church insisted?
"A
fine ship and crew," Al'u'met finished reverently.
Jojonah
nodded his agreement, though in truth, he hardly knew any of the sailors, had
met only Captain Adjonas and the first hand, Bunkus Smealy, a man he did not
like at all.
"Go
and get your sleep, Father," Captain Al'u'met said. "You've a hard
day of walking ahead of you."
Jojonah,
too, thought that to be a good time to break the conversation. Al'u'met had
inadvertently given him much to think about, had rekindled memories and put
them in a new light. That does not mean that I agree with all of those who
now administer the doctrine of the Church, Al'u'met had said, words that
rang as truly prophetic to the disillusioned master.
Jojonah
slept well that night, better than he had since he had first arrived in
Palmaris, since all the world had spun completely over. A cry concerning dock
lights woke him with the sun and he gathered his few possessions and raced
onto the deck, thinking to see the long wharves of Palmaris.
All
that he saw was fog, a heavy gray blanket. All the crew was abovedecks, most at
the rail, holding lanterns and peering intently into the gloom. Looking for
rocks, or even other ships, Jojonah realized, and a shudder coursed his spine.
The sight of Captain Al'u'met calmed him, though, the tall man standing
serenely, as though this situation was nothing out of the ordinary. Jojonah
made his way to join him.
"I
heard a cry for dock lights," the monk explained, "though I doubt
that any might have been spotted in this fog."
"We
saw," Al'u'met assured him, smiling. "We are close, and getting
closer by the second."
Jojonah
followed the captain's gaze out over the forward rail, to the gloom. Something—he couldn't
quite identify it—seemed out of place to him, as though his internal direction
sense was askew. He stood quiet for a long while, trying to sort it out, noting
the position of the sun, a lighter splotch of grayness ahead of the ship.
"We
are traveling east," he said suddenly, turning to Al'u'met. "But Palmaris
is on the western bank."
"I
thought that I would save you the hours on the crowded ferry," Al'u'met
explained. "Though they might not even run the ferry in this gloom."
"Captain,
you did not have to—"
"No
trouble, my friend," Al'u'met replied. "We would not be allowed into
Palmaris port until the fog rolled back anyway, so rather than set anchor, we
turned to Amvoy, a smaller port and one with less rules."
"Land
to forward!" came a call from above.
"Amvoy's
long dock!" another sailor agreed.
Jojonah
looked to Al'u'met, who only winked and smiled.
Soon
after, Saudi Jacintha glided easily into position beside the one long
dock at Amvoy, the skilled sailors expertly tying her in place.
"I
wish you well, Master Jojonah of St.-Mere-Abelle," Al'u'met said sincerely
as he led the monk to the gangplank. "May the loss of good Abbot Dobrinion
strengthen us all." He shook Jojonah's hand firmly, and the monk turned to
go.
At
the edge of the plank he stopped, torn, prudence battling conscience.
"Captain
Al'u'met," he said suddenly, turning about. He noted several other sailors
in the vicinity, all listening to his every word, but didn't let that deter
him. "In the coming months you will hear stories of a man named Avelyn
Desbris. Brother Avelyn, formerly at St.-Mere-Abelle."
"The
name is not known to me," Captain Al'u'met replied.
"But
it will be," Master Jojonah assured him. "You will hear terrible
stories of the man, naming him as a thief, a murderer, a heretic. You will hear
his name dragged through the very fires of hell."
Captain
Al'u'met made no reply at all as Jojonah paused and swallowed hard on his
words.
"I
tell you this in all sincerity," the monk went on, realizing that he was
crossing a very delicate line here. Again he paused, swallowing hard.
"The stories are not true, or at least, the manner in which they will be
told will be slanted against the actions of Brother Avelyn, who was, I assure
you, a man following his God-inspired conscience at all times."
Several
of the crewmen merely shrugged, thinking that the words meant little for them,
but Captain Al'u'met recognized the gravity in the monk's voice and understood
that this was a pivotal moment for the man. From Jojonah's tone, Al'u'met was
wise enough to understand that these tales of this monk he did not know might
indeed affect him, and everyone else associated with the Abellican Church. He
nodded, not smiling.
"Never
has the Abellican Church fostered a better man than Avelyn Desbris,"
Jojonah said firmly, and he turned and left the Saudi Jacintha. He
understood the chance he had just taken, realizing that the Saudi Jacintha would
likely find its way to St.-Mere-Abelle again one day, and that Captain
Al'u'met, or more likely, one of the eavesdropping crewmen would speak with men
at the abbey, would perhaps speak with Father Abbot Markwart himself. But for
some reason, Jojonah didn't try to qualify the story, or retract it. There, he
had said it, openly. As it should be.
Still,
the monk's words followed him as he entered Amvoy, filling him with doubts. He
secured a ride to the east on a wagon, and though the driver was a member of
the Church, and a man as friendly and generous as Captain Al'u'met, at their
parting three days later, only a few miles from the gates of St.-Mere-Abelle,
Master Jojonah did not recount his tale of Avelyn.
It
wasn't until he came in sight of the abbey that the master's doubts vanished.
From any perspective, St.-Mere-Abelle was an impressive place, its walls
ancient and strong, a lasting part of the mountainous coastline. Whenever he
looked upon the abbey from out here, Jojonah was reminded of the long, long
history of the Church, of traditions that preceded Markwart, and even the last
dozen Father Abbots before him. Again Jojonah felt as if Avelyn's tangible
spirit was about him and in him, and he was overcome with a desire to dig
deeper into the Order's past, to look for the way things had once been so many
centuries before. For Master Jojonah could hardly believe that the Church as
it now existed could have become such a dominant religion. These days, people
were drawn to the Church out of heritage; they were "believers"
because their parents had been, their grandparents had been, their grandparents'
parents had been. Few were like Al'u'met, he understood, recent converts,
members out of their heart and not their heritage.
It
could not have been like that in the beginning, Jojonah reasoned.
St.-Mere-Abelle, so vast and impressive, could not have been built with the few
who would have agreed, in heart, with the teachings of the present-day Church.
Bolstered
by his insight, Master Jojonah approached the strong gates of St.-Mere-Abelle,
the place he had called home for more than two-thirds of his life, the place
that now seemed to him a facade. He did not yet understand the truth of the
abbey, but, with Avelyn's spirit guiding nun, he meant to find it out.
Connor Bildeborough didn't feel nervous in the least as he left the familiar and safe, until now, confines of Palmaris behind. He had been in the open northland many times in the last months, and was confident he could avoid any trouble from the large numbers of monsters still to be found up there. The giants, with their dangerous rock-throwing abilities, had become quite scarce, and goblins and powries did not ride horses and would never catch Greystone.
Even
when he set camp that first night, some thirty miles north of the city, the
nobleman wasn't concerned. He knew how to conceal himself, and since it was
summer, he didn't even need a fire. He reclined under the boughs of a bushy
spruce, his horse nickering softly nearby.
The
next day and night were much the same. Connor avoided the one real road that
ran up this way, but he knew where he was going, and found enough level and
clear ground to keep the pace swift.
On
the third day, well over a hundred miles north of Palmaris, he came upon the
ruins of a farmhouse and barn, and the tracks in the area told the experienced
hunter exactly what had happened: a goblin troupe, a score at least, had come
this way within the last couple of days. Fearing rain and an obscurement of the
tracks, for the sky was heavy, Connor was back on his horse at once, following
the easy trail. He caught up to the raiding band late that afternoon, a light
rain just beginning to fall. While Connor was glad to see that it was indeed
only goblins, their numbers were twice his estimate and they were outfitted for
war and marching with some measure of discipline. The nobleman considered their
course, north-by-northwest, and thought it prudent to follow them. If what he
suspected, if what the rumors had told him, were true, then these foolish
goblins might lead him to the warrior band, and to the person using the magical
gemstones operating in the area.
He
rested within half a mile of the noisy goblin encampment. At one point, late in
the night, he dared to sneak close to the perimeter—and was again
impressed by the professionalism shown by the normally slovenly creatures.
Still, Connor managed to get close enough to hear pieces of various
conversations, complaints mostly, and a confirmation that most of the giants
had gone home and the powries were too concerned with their own welfare to
worry about any goblins.
Then
Connor listened with great interest as a pair of goblins argued about their
destination. One wanted to go north, to the encampment at the two towns—Caer Tinella
and Landsdown, Connor realized.
"Argh!"
the other scolded. "Yer knowin'
that Kos-kosio's dead and gone, and so's Maiyer Dek! Ain't nothing up there but
that Nightbird and his killers! The towns're all but lost, ye fool, and gettin'
hit with balls o' fire every day!"
A
smile widened on Connor's face. He went back to his impromptu camp and his
horse and managed to steal a few hours' sleep, but was up and ready to go well
before the dawn. He followed the goblin troupe again, thinking to swing wide
to the west with them, just in case, then turn back to explore the area near
Caer Tinella and Landsdown.
The
rain was back, heavier this day, but Connor hardly cared.
They
took their rest under the shelter of the buildings, using the well, and they
did indeed find fresh eggs and fresh milk for their enjoyment. They also found
a wagon in the barn, and oxen to pull it, some whetstones to hone their blades
and a pitchfork, which Tomas thought would look fine tucked into the belly of a
giant. Roger, snooping about every corner of the barn, found a thin but strong
rope and a small block and tackle, small enough that he could carry it without
trouble. He had no idea what he might use it for, except maybe to rescue the
wagon from some mud, but he took it anyway.
And
so when the refugees left the farmhouse later that same night, they were
refreshed and ready for the last leg of their flight to safety.
As
usual, Roger and Juraviel moved into the point position, the elf scrambling
nimbly along the lower branches of the trees, the tireless young Roger running
a sweeping arc, always alert, always looking for signs of danger.
"You
did well today," Juraviel said unexpectedly, catching Roger off his guard.
The
young man looked up at the elf curiously. The two hadn't spoken much since
Juraviel's thrashing of Roger, other than to agree to plans for their common
scouting routes.
"After
you spotted the farmhouse and barn, you accepted the position Nightbird gave
to you without question," the elf explained.
"What
was I to do?"
"You
could have argued," the elf replied. "Indeed, the Roger Lockless I
first met would have seen the duty of staying with the caravan as a slight to
his abilities, would have grumbled and complained and probably run off to the
farmhouse anyway. In fact, the Roger Lockless I first met would not even have
come to Nightbird and the others with the news, not until he had first had his
way with the powries and the goblins."
Roger
considered the words for a moment, and found that he could not disagree with
the assessment. When he had first spotted the farmhouse, his instincts goaded
him to go in for a better look, and a bit of light-fingered fun, perhaps. But
that course had screamed as dangerous to Roger, not so much for him, but for
the others, who were moving along not so far behind. Even if he hadn't been
caught—which
seemed to him likely, whatever monsters might have been inside—he might have
had to lie low and stay put, and thus the caravan would not have been warned in
time, and a fight—not on favorable terms—might have ensued.
"You
understand, of course," the elf went on.
"I
know what I did," Roger replied curtly.
"And
you know that you did well," Juraviel said, and then, with a sly smile, he
added, "You learn quickly."
Roger's
eyes narrowed as he snapped his angry gaze over the elf; he certainly didn't
need to be reminded of the "lesson."
Juraviel's
continuing smile defeated him, though, put his pride in its proper place. Roger
knew then that they had come to an understanding, he and this elf. The lesson
had taken, he had to admit. The cost of failure in this situation was bigger
than his own life, and thus he had to accept directions from those more
experienced than he. He relented his angry glare, and even managed a nod and a
grin.
Juraviel
perked up his ears suddenly, his eyes darting to the side.
"An
approach," he said, and then he was gone, slipping into the tree cover so
quickly that Roger blinked many times.
Then
the young man moved fast, finding cover. He spotted the "approach"
soon after, and relaxed when he recognized the source, a woman of his group,
also out scouting. He startled her so much when he stepped out from behind a
tree that she nearly drove her dagger into his chest.
"Something
has put you on edge," Roger understated.
"A
group of enemies," the woman replied. "Moving west, south of our
position."
"How
strong?"
"There
are quite a few, two score, perhaps," she answered."
"And
what manner of enemies?" came a question from the trees above.
The
woman looked up, though she knew she would not catch a glimpse of this
ever-elusive friend of Nightbird. Few of the advance scouts had seen Juraviel,
though all had heard his melodic voice from time to time. "Goblins,"
she replied. "Just goblins."
"Back
to your place, then," the elf bade her. "Find the next in line, and
he, the next in line, that all the scouts are linked, that word can be passed
quickly."
The
woman nodded and sped away.
"We
could let them pass," Roger offered as Juraviel came back in sight on a
lower branch.
The
elf was not looking at him, was staring far away. "Go back and tell
Nightbird to prepare a surprise," he instructed Roger.
"By
Nightbird's own words, we are not to engage," Roger argued.
"Just
goblins," Juraviel replied. "And if they are part of a larger band,
they might be flanking us, and thus should be defeated quickly. Tell Nightbird
that I insist we attack."
Roger
looked long and hard at the elf, and for a moment Juraviel thought he would
refuse the order. And that was exactly what Roger was thinking. The young man
bit back that response, though, nodded and ran off.
"And
Roger," Juraviel called, stopping him before he had gone five strides. He
turned back to regard the elf.
"Tell
Nightbird that this was your plan," Juraviel said. "And that I
approve completely. Tell him that you believe we must hit the goblins fast and
hard. The plan is yours to claim."
"That
would be a lie," Roger protested.
"Would
it?" asked the elf. "When you heard of the goblins, did you not first
think that we should attack? Was it not only your obedience to the words of
the ranger that stopped you from saying so?"
The
young man pursed his lips as he considered the words, the simple truth of them.
"There
is nothing wrong with disagreeing," Juraviel explained. "You have
proven repeatedly that your opinion in these matters is truly valuable, and
Nightbird understands this, as does Pony, as do I."
Again
Roger turned and sped off, and this time with a noticeable spring in his step.
"My
baby!" the woman screamed. "Oh, do not hurt him, I beg of you!"
"Duh?"
one goblin asked its leader, scratching its head at the unexpected voice. This
band had come from the Moorlands, and were not well-versed in the common
language of the land. From their dealings with powries, they knew enough words
to understand the general meaning of it all, though.
The
goblin leader saw its band shuffling anxiously. They were thirsty for blood,
though in no mood for any real battle, and now, delivered into their hands, it
seemed, was an easy kill. The overcast had finally broken, and a bright full
moon illuminated the night.
"Please,"
the unseen woman went on. "They are all just children."
That
was all the goblins could stand. Before the leader of the band even gave the
word, they were off and running into the forest, each wanting to be the first
to claim a kill.
Another
cry came out of the shadows, but seemed no closer. The goblins continued their
blind charge, crashing through the brush, tripping over roots, but scrambling
right back to their feet and running on. Eventually they all came into a small
clearing, bordered on the back by a tumble of boulders, on the left by a stand
of pines, and on the right by an equally thick mix of oak and maple.
From
somewhere behind those pines came the woman's voice, but now it did not seem so
frantic as she sang:
Goblins, goblins, running hard,
Delivering songs unto the bards.
For in your folly you've come to play
And every goblin dies this day!
"Duh?" the goblin asked its leader again.
Another
voice, melodious and clear, the voice of an elf, picked up the impromptu tune
from somewhere within the shadows of the oak.
Dies from arrow, dies from blade,
From magic woven, the toll is paid.
For every person who at your hands
Was murdered most foul while you walked these lands,
We take revenge, we cleanse the night,
That dawn might bring a shining light.
More
verses came at the confused monsters as many others took up the song, and
laughter followed some of the lines, particularly the ones insulting to the
goblins. Finally a resonating, powerful voice joined in, in a tone calm and
deathly serious, and all the forest went quiet, as if to hear the words:
By your own evil have you brought this hour,
And by my hands and by my power,
Beg not for mercy, for judgment is passed,
We cut you down unto the last.
As he finished, the man walked his shining black stallion out from the shadows behind the boulders, in plain view of the stunned goblins.
"Nightbird,"
more than one creature whispered, and they knew then, every one, that they were
truly doomed.
From
a hillock not so far away, Connor Bildeborough watched the unfolding spectacle
with more than a passing interest. For that first voice, the woman's, haunted
the man, a voice he had listened to for so many wonderful months.
"I
would give you a chance to surrender," the ranger said to the goblins.
"But I am afraid that I have no place to put you, nor do I trust the likes
of smelly goblins."
The
goblin leader strode forward boldly, clenching tight its weapon.
"Are
you the leader of this ragged band?" the ranger asked.
No
answer.
"Impertinence!"
the Nightbird shouted, and he pointed his finger at the goblin's helmeted head.
"Die!" he commanded.
The
sharp retort had every goblin jumping, and then staring incredulously as their
leader's head snapped violently to the side, as this powerful goblin who had
bullied its way to a position of prominence simply fell over dead!
"And
who is now the leader?" the ranger asked ominously.
The
goblins went into a frenzy, scrambling every which way, most turning about,
trying to run out the way they had come in. But Nightbird's band had not been
idle during the minutes of the taunting song, and a strong contingent of
archers was now in place in the forest behind the monsters. As they turned to
the trees, they were met by a hail of stinging arrows, and then, when they
scrambled yet another way, a sizzling bolt of lightning thundered out of the
pines, blinding them all and killing several.
On
came Nightbird, on came his warriors, charging down on the confused and
disorganized band.
And
on came Connor Bildeborough, as well, Defender in hand. The nobleman had seen
and heard enough, and galloped headlong into the battle, the name of Jilly
ringing from his lips.
Nightbird
seemed to be everywhere he was most needed, bolstering his soldiers wherever
the goblins appeared to have gained any advantage.
From
the oak stand, Belli'mar Juraviel, so sure of hand and eye, peppered the
monsters with his small arrows, even stinging several who were engaged in close
combat.
Across
the way from the elf, Pony held her magic in check, conserving her strength,
thinking, fearing, that she would have to use the healing soul stone soon
enough.
By
the time he got near the clearing, Connor was truly impressed. No ragtag band
this! The lightning, the arrows, the perfect timing of the ambush—he lamented
that if the King's soldiers were as well-trained, this war might have ended
long ago!
He
hoped to find Jilly when he came onto the clearing, but she was not about and
he couldn't rightly go looking for her. His sword was needed now, and so he
kicked Greystone into a short burst, slashing one goblin as he passed and then
trampling a second who had put a man to the ground.
The
horse stumbled and Connor lost his seat, tumbling hard to the ground. No
matter, though, for he was not badly hurt and he was up and ready with his
sword in an instant.
Luck
was not with the nobleman, though, for several goblins had chosen this
particular place as their exit point, and now only Connor stood between them
and the forest. He raised his sword and bravely assumed defensive posture,
slipping his thoughts to the magnetites, activating their attracting magic.
A
goblin sword slashed in, but Defender easily got in its path, blade against
blade. When the goblin tried to retract its weapon, it found the blade somehow
stuck to the nobleman's sword.
A
deft twist and swing of Defender, a release of the magnetite magic, and the
goblin's sword was flying free.
But
Connor was far from free, for other goblins pressed in, and many carried not
metal weapons, but thick wooden clubs.
A
small arrow zipped out from behind Connor, taking one goblin in the eye. Before
he could even glance back to discern the source, the warrior astride the
stallion was there beside him, his magnificent sword glowing of its own magical
light.
The
goblins turned about, shouting "Nightbird!" and "Doom!"
repeatedly, and seemed not to care that they were running from two men into the
whirling swords of two score.
It
was over in a matter of minutes, and the wounded—and there weren't many, and
only one or two appeared seriously injured—were quickly ushered back to the
forest in the north, into the pines.
Connor
went to his horse, carefully inspecting the beast's legs and breathing a deep
sigh indeed when he discerned that beautiful Greystone had not been seriously
injured.
"Who
are you?" the man on the stallion asked him, walking near. His tone was
not threatening, was not even suspicious.
Connor
looked up to see that many of the warriors were about him, eyeing him
curiously.
"Forgive
us, but we have not found many allies so far from the more populated
lands," the ranger added calmly.
"I
am a friend from Palmaris, it would seem," Connor answered. "Out
hunting goblins."
"Alone?"
"There
are advantages to riding alone," Connor answered.
"Then
hail and good greetings," Elbryan said, sliding down from Symphony and
walking to stand directly before the man. He took Connor's hand in a firm
shake. "We have food and drink, but we will not be stopping for long. Our
road leads to Palmaris, and we plan to use the hours of the night to our
advantage."
"So
it would seem," Connor said dryly, looking at the many goblin dead.
"You
are welcome to join us," Elbryan said. "In fact, we would consider it
an honor and a great favor."
"I
did not prove myself so worthy a fighter in that battle," Connor remarked.
"Not measured next to the one called Nightbird," he added, offering
the ranger a smile.
Elbryan
only smiled in reply, and started away, Connor falling in beside him. He went
to the first kill, the goblin who had led the band, and bent low, pulling aside
the creature's bent and torn helmet.
"How
far to the city?" another man, young and slight, asked.
"Three
days," Connor replied. "Four, if you have any who will slow you
down."
"Four,
then," Roger replied.
Connor
looked from him to the ranger just in time to see the large man dig a gemstone
out of the goblin's smashed head.
"Then
you are the worker of magic," the nobleman reasoned.
"Not
I," replied Elbryan. "I can use the stones to some small degree, but
pale indeed beside the true wielder."
"A
woman?" Connor asked breathlessly.
Elbryan
turned and rose, facing Connor directly, and Connor realized that his question
had touched some nerve, had unsettled this man as surely as a threat. As eager
as he was, Connor was wise enough to let the matter drop for now; these folks,
the magic-user at least, were outlaws in the eyes of the Church, and they might
know it, and might be more than a little suspicious of anyone asking too many
probing questions.
"I
heard the woman's song," Connor went on, deflecting his true intent.
"I am a nobleman, and have seen magic before, but never have I witnessed
such a magnificent display."
Elbryan
didn't reply, but his visage softened somewhat. He looked around, to see that
the refugees were efficiently ending the suffering of those goblins who had not
yet succumbed to their wounds, then going about the task of taking whatever
supplies they could find among the dead monsters. "Come," he bade the
stranger. "I must ready the folk for the continuing march."
He
led Connor, Roger in tow, into the forest then, moving to an area where the
undergrowth was not so dense. Several fires were burning, guiding the people as
they went about their work, and beside one such blaze Connor saw her.
Jilly,
working over the wounded. His Jilly, as beautiful—more beautiful!—than she had
been back in Palmaris, before the war, before all the pain. Her blond hair was
shoulder-length now, and so thick that he felt as if he could lose himself in
it, and even in the dim light of the fires her eyes shone blue, sparkling and
rich.
All
color left Connor's handsome face and he broke away from Elbryan, walking as if
in a daze toward her.
The
ranger caught up to him in an instant, taking him by the arm. "Are you
wounded?" Elbryan asked.
"I
know her," was Connor's breathless reply. "I know her."
"Pony?"
"Jilly."
Still
the ranger held him firmly, more firmly, in place, turning him and eyeing him
directly. Elbryan knew that Pony had married a nobleman in Palmaris, with
disastrous consequences. "Your name, sir," the ranger inquired.
The
man straightened. "Connor Bildeborough of Chasewind Manor," he
answered boldly.
Elbryan
didn't know how to react. One part of him wanted to punch the man in the face,
to lay him low... because he had hurt Pony? No, that wasn't the reason, the
ranger had to admit, to himself if not openly. He wanted to punch Connor out
of sheer jealousy, out of the fact that, for a time at least, this man had
found Pony's heart. She may not have been in love with Connor as she now loved
him, may not even have consummated their relationship, but she had cared
deeply about Connor Bildeborough, had even married him!
The
ranger closed his eyes for a brief moment, finding his center and his calm. He
had to consider how Pony would feel if he clobbered the man now, had to
consider how she would feel at the mere sight of Connor Bildeborough.
"Better to wait until she is finished with the wounded," he explained
calmly.
"I
must see her and speak with her," Connor stuttered.
"To
the detriment of those who just battled the goblins beside her," the
ranger said firmly. "You will prove a distraction, Master Bildeborough,
and the work with the stones requires absolute concentration."
Connor
glanced again to the woman, even took a step that way, but the ranger tugged
him insistently back, with strength that frightened the man. He turned again
to face Elbryan, and understood he would not get near Jilly now, that this man
would drag him away forcibly, if need be.
"She
will be finished within the hour," Elbryan said to him. "And then you
may see her."
Connor
studied the ranger's face as he spoke, and realized only then that there was
something more than friendship between this man and the woman who had been his
wife. He sized up Elbryan in light of his new observation, taking a measure of
the ranger should they come to blows.
He
didn't like the prospect.
So
he followed the ranger as the man went about the business of preparing for the
move. Connor glanced over at Jill often, as did Nightbird, and neither of them
doubted that they were thinking much the same things. Finally Connor broke away
from the ranger and moved to the far end of the encampment, putting as much distance,
and as many people, between himself and Jill as possible. The sight of her, the
realization that she was once again so near, was finally settling in on the
nobleman; he had gone past the pleasant recollections to that one horrible
night, their wedding night, when he had almost raped his unwilling bride. And
then he had paid for an annulment, and forced charges against Jill for refusing
him, an accusation that had taken her from her family and indentured her to the
King's army. How would she feel about seeing him again? he wondered, and
worried, for Connor could not believe that she would return his wistful smile.
They
were on the road for nearly half an hour before Connor finally mustered the
courage to ride up beside the woman, who was riding Symphony, the ranger
walking along beside her.
Elbryan
saw him coming first. He looked up at Pony, locking her gaze. "I am here
in support of you," he said. "For whatever you need of me, even if
that means that I must leave you alone."
Pony
eyed him curiously, not understanding, then heard the hoofbeats. She knew that
a stranger had joined in the battle, a nobleman from Palmaris, but Palmaris
was a big city, and she had never imagined that it might be...
Connor.
Pony
nearly toppled from Symphony at the sight of the man; her arms and legs went
weak, her stomach churned. The black wings of remembered pain fluttered up
about her, threatening to bury her. It was a part of her life that she did not
want to recall, a memory better lost. She had survived the pain, had even grown
from the pain, but she did not wish to relive it, especially not now, with the
future so uncertain and so full of challenges.
Still,
she could not avoid those images. She had been held down, like an animal, her
clothes torn from her and her limbs held steady. And then, when he, this man
who had professed to love her, could not follow through, she had been summarily
dismissed, dragged from her bedchamber. Even that was not enough for him, for
then Connor—this
man, this gallant-looking figure so splendid on his well-groomed riding horse,
with jewels in his sword belt and clothes cut of the finest cloth—had ordered
both the handmaidens to return to him for his pleasure, had cruelly shot the
barb right into her heart.
And
here he was, astride his horse right beside her, a smile finding its way onto
his undeniably handsome face. "Jilly," he blurted, so full of
excitement.
"You
would allow your beloved husband to be tortured for the sake of your outlaw,
adopted daughter?" Father Abbot Markwart asked the poor woman.
Pettibwa Chilichunk was a wretched sight. Dark bluish bags circled her eyes and all of her skin seemed to sag, for she had not slept more than a few hours in many days, ever since Grady had died on the road. Pettibwa had been heavy for many years, but had always carried her round form with grace and a light bounce in her step. No more. Even during those times when sheer exhaustion laid the woman low, she was ultimately awakened by horrible nightmares, or by her captors, who seemed as wicked as any dream could ever be.
"We
will take his nose first," Father Abbot Markwart went on.
"Right
to here," he added, running his finger along the crease of a flared
nostril. "It makes for a gruesome sight indeed, and assures that poor
Graevis will be forever an outcast."
"Why
would ye be doin' such a thing, and yerself claimin' to be a man o' God!"
Pettibwa cried. She knew that the old man was not lying, that he would do
exactly what he had threatened. She had heard him just minutes before, in the
adjoining room in the southernmost cellar of St.-Mere-Abelle, formerly a
storage area but now converted to hold the two Chilichunks and Bradwarden.
Markwart had gone to Graevis first, and Pettibwa heard the agonized screams
quite clearly through the earthen wall. Now the woman wailed and repeatedly
made the holy sign of the evergreen, the symbol of the Abellican Order.
Markwart
was unrepentant and unimpressed. He came forward suddenly, powerfully, moving
his leering visage to within a hair's breadth of Pettibwa's face. "Why,
you ask!" he roared. "Because of your daughter, foolish woman!
Because your dear Jilly's evil alliance with the heretic Avelyn could bring
about the end of the world!"
"Jilly's
a good girl!" Pettibwa yelled back at him. "Never would she do—"
"But
she has!" Markwart interrupted, growling out every word. "She has the
stolen gemstones, and I will do whatever is necessary—pity
Graevis!—to see that they are returned. Then Pettibwa can look upon her disfigured
outcast husband and know that her own foolishness condemned him, as it
condemned her son!"
"Ye
killed him!" Pettibwa cried, tears streaming down her face. "Ye
killed me son!"
Markwart's
expression went perfectly cold, stone-faced, and that, in turn, seemed to
freeze the woman, locked her in his gaze. "I assure you," the Father
Abbot said in even tones, "that your husband, and then you, will soon
envy Grady."
The
woman wailed and fell back—and would have fallen right to the ground had not Brother
Francis been behind to support her. "Oh, what're ye wantin' o' poor
Pettibwa, Father," she cried. "I'll tell ye. I'll tell ye!"
A
wicked smile crossed the Father Abbot's face, though he had been looking
forward to cutting off the stupid Graevis' nose.
St.-Mere-Abelle
was buttoned up tight, with guards, young monks armed with crossbows, and the
occasional older student armed with a potent gemstone, graphite or ruby,
patrolling every section of wall. Master Jojonah, recognized by all and liked
by most, had no trouble getting back into the abbey, though.
Word
of his arrival preceded him, and he was met in the main hall almost as soon as
he entered by a very sour-looking Brother Francis. Many other monks were in
that hall, as well, curious as to why Jojonah had returned.
"The
Father Abbot will speak with you," the young monk said curtly, looking
around as he spoke, as though playing to the audience, showing them which of
them, he or Jojonah, was truly in the favor of Markwart.
"You
seem to have forgotten respect for your superiors," Master Jojonah
replied, not backing off an inch.
Francis
snorted and started to reply, but Jojonah cut him short.
"I
warn you, Brother Francis," he said gravely. "I am sick and have been
too long on the road and too long in this life. I know that you fancy yourself
Father Abbot Markwart's adopted son, but if you continue this attitude toward
those who have attained a higher rank than you, toward those who, by their
years of study and the wisdom of simple age, are deserving of your respect, I
will bring you before the College of Abbots. Father Abbot Markwart may protect
you there, in the end, but his embarrassment will be considerable, as will his
vengeance upon you."
All
the hall went deathly silent, and Master Jojonah pushed past the stunned
Brother Francis and exited. He needed no escort to Markwart's room.
Brother
Francis paused for a long while, regarding the other monks in the room, their
suddenly condescending stares. He responded with a threatening glare, but for
now, at least, Master Jojonah had stolen the bite from this dog's bark. Francis
stormed out of the main hall, feeling the eyes of his lessers upon him.
Master
Jojonah entered the Father Abbot's room with hardly a knock, pushing through
the unlocked door and moving right up to the desk of the old man.
Markwart
shifted aside some papers he had been studying and sat back in his chair,
sizing up the man.
"I
sent you on an important matter," the Father Abbot stated. "Surely
you could not have completed your mission in Ursal and returned to us
already."
"I
never got near to Ursal," Master Jojonah admitted. "For I was taken
by illness on the road."
"You
do not seem so sick," Markwart remarked, and not kindly.
"I
was met on the road by a man with news of the tragedy in Palmaris,"
Master Jojonah explained, eyeing Markwart closely as he spoke the words, trying
to see if the Father Abbot would inadvertently offer any clue that the death
of Abbot Dobrinion had not been unexpected.
The
old man was too sly for that. "Not so much a tragedy," he replied.
"The issue was settled with the Baron amicably, his nephew returned to
him."
A
knowing grin made its way onto Master Jojonah's face. "I was speaking of
the murder of Abbot Dobrinion," he said.
Markwart's
eyes widened and he came forward in his chair. "Dobrinion?" he
echoed.
"Then
news has not reached St.-Mere-Abelle," Jojonah reasoned, going with the
obvious bluff. "It is good that I have returned."
Brother
Francis bumbled into the room.
"Yes,
Father Abbot," Jojonah went on, ignoring the younger man. "Powries,
or a single powrie, at least, entered St. Precious and murdered Abbot
Dobrinion." Behind him, Brother Francis gasped, and it seemed to Master
Jojonah that the news was a true surprise to the younger man. "As soon as
I heard, of course, I turned back for St.-Mere-Abelle," he went on.
"It would not do for us to be caught so unawares; it would seem that our
enemies have singled out their prey, and if Abbot Dobrinion is a target, it
only stands to reason that the Father Abbot of the Abellican Order—"
"Enough,"
Markwart interrupted, putting his head down in his arms. Markwart realized what
had just happened here, understood that Jojonah, ever the clever one, had just
turned his feigned surprise back against him, had just justified his return to
St.-Mere-Abelle beyond any question.
"It
is good that you returned to us," Markwart said a moment later, looking
back to the man. "And a tragedy indeed that Abbot Dobrinion met with such
an untimely end. But your business here is finished, and so prepare again for
the road."
"I
am not physically able to make the journey to Ursal," Jojonah replied.
Markwart
eyed him suspiciously.
"Nor
do I think such a move prudent, given the demise of the chief sponsor for
Brother Allabarnet's sainthood. Without Dobrinion's backing, the process will
be set back years, at least."
"If
I order you to go to St. Honce, then you shall go to St. Honce," Markwart
answered, the rough edge of his ire beginning to show through.
Still,
Master Jojonah didn't back away. "Of course, Father Abbot," he
replied. "And by the code of the Abellican Order, when you find
justification to send a sickly master halfway across the kingdom, I will
willingly go. But there is no reason for that now, no justification. Just be
pleased that I was able to return in time to warn you of the potential danger
from the powries." Jojonah turned on his heel suddenly, putting his
smirking face right in front of Brother Francis.
"Step
aside, brother," he said ominously.
Francis
looked past him, to Father Abbot Markwart.
"This
young monk moves dangerously close to a trial before the College of
Abbots," Jojonah said calmly.
Behind
him, Father Abbot Markwart motioned for Brother Francis to get out of the
master's way. Then, when Jojonah was gone, Markwart motioned for the flustered
young monk to close the door.
"You
should have sent him back out on the road," Brother Francis argued
immediately.
"For
your convenience?" Markwart replied sarcastically. "I am not the
supreme dictator of the Abellican Order, but only the appointed leader, forced
to work within prescribed guidelines. I cannot simply order a master,
particularly a sickly one, on the road."
"You
did so before," the young monk dared to put in.
"With
justification," Markwart explained, rising from his seat and walking
around the desk. "The canonization process was very real, but Master
Jojonah is correct in saying that Dobrinion was its chief sponsor."
"And
it is true that Abbot Dobrinion is dead?"
Markwart
gave the young man a sour look. "So it would seem," he replied.
"And thus, Master Jojonah was correct in returning to St.-Mere-Abelle, and
is correct in refusing to go back out at this time."
"He
did not look so sickly," Brother Francis remarked.
Markwart
was hardly listening. Things had not played out as he had hoped; he wanted
Jojonah settled at St. Honce in Ursal long before news of the abbot's death
reached him. Then he would have sent news to Abbot Je'howith to use the master
as his own, giving a temporary appointment of Jojonah to St. Honce—a temporary
appointment that Markwart meant to make last until the portly master had died.
Still, this scenario did not seem so terrible to him. Jojonah was a thorn in
his side—one growing sharper and longer daily, it seemed—but at least with
Jojonah here, he could keep an eye on him.
Besides,
it was hard for Markwart to be upset. Youseff and Dandelion had completed part
of their mission, at least, and certainly the most dangerous part in Palmaris.
By Jojonah's own words, a powrie was being blamed. One very formidable enemy
had been eliminated, and the other had no proof that Markwart had been involved.
All the Father Abbot needed now was the return of the stolen stones and his
position would be secured. He could deal with Jojonah, could crush the man if
need be.
"I
will attempt contact with the Brothers Justice," Brother Francis offered.
"We should keep abreast of their progress."
"No!"
Markwart said suddenly, sharply. "If the thief with the stolen stones is
wary, such contact might be detected," he lied, noting Brother Francis'
questioning stare. In truth, Markwart meant to use a soul stone himself to
speak with Youseff and Dandelion; he didn't want anyone else, including
Brother Francis, to contact them, to perhaps learn of their doings in
Palmaris.
"Keep
an eye and an ear bent always toward Master Jojonah," he instructed
Francis. "And be wary, too, of your peer, Brother Braumin Herde. I want to
know with whom they converse during their free time, a complete list."
Brother
Francis hesitated a long while before nodding his understanding. So many
things were going on about him, he realized, things of which he knew so very
little. But again, as was typical for the man, he saw the opportunity to
impress his Father Abbot, saw the course toward personal growth, and he was
determined that he would not fail.
The
news was not so disconcerting to Father Abbot Markwart as Brother Youseff had
feared. Connor Bildeborough had escaped and could not be found. He had gone
underground, into the bowels of the city, or perhaps out to the north.
Go
for the gemstones, Markwart
telepathically instructed the young monk, and with that, Markwart imparted a
clear picture of the woman who went by the various titles of Jill, Jilly, Pony,
and Cat-the-Stray. Pettibwa had been quite helpful that morning. Forget the
Baron's nephew.
As
soon as Youseff's reply of understanding came back to him, the weary Father
Abbot broke the connection, let his spirit fall back into his own body.
But
there was something else...
Another
presence, Markwart feared, thinking that his lie to Brother Francis about
Avelyn's protege sensing the magic of the soul stone might hold more truth than
he believed.
He
relaxed, and quickly, though, for he came to recognize the intrusion as just
another part of his own subconscious. Monks had traditionally used the soul
stones for the deepest forms of meditation and introspection, though rarely in
these times, and it seemed to Markwart that he had inadvertently stumbled down
that path.
So
he followed the course to the destination, thinking he was laying bare his own
innermost feelings, thinking that perhaps in this state he might find needed
moments of pure clarity.
In
his thoughts he saw Master Jojonah and the younger monk, Brother Braumin Herde,
plotting against him. Of course this didn't surprise Markwart; hadn't he just
sent Brother Francis to keep a close watch over them?
But
then something else came into the scene: Master Jojonah with a handful of
stones, walking toward a door, a door that Markwart knew, Markwart's own door.
And in the master's hand ... graphite.
Jojonah
kicked open the door and released a tremendous bolt of energy at the Father
Abbot as he sat quiet on his chair. Markwart felt the sudden flash, the burn,
the jolt, his heart fluttering, his life rushing away...
It
took Markwart several agonizing seconds to separate imagination from reality,
to realize it was only insight and not actually happening. Before this moment
of enlightenment, he had never imagined just how dangerous Jojonah and his
wicked cohorts could be!
Yes,
he would watch them closely, and would act against them in a brutal and
definitive manner if need be.
But
they would grow strong, his inner voice told him. As the war ended, the great
victory achieved, the still little-known fight at Mount Aida would be whispered
and then spoken openly, and, with Jojonah's prodding, Avelyn Desbris might be
held up as a hero. Markwart could not tolerate that possibility, and he
understood then that he must move quickly against the memory of the thief and
murderer, must paint such a dark portrait of Avelyn—one that put
him in league with the demon dactyl—that the whispers would speak of fortunate
infighting between enemies at Aida, not the actions of a heroic man.
Yes,
he must thoroughly discredit Avelyn and put the heretic in his proper place in
the thoughts of the people and in the annals of Church history.
Markwart
came out of his trance suddenly, realizing only then how tightly he was
clutching the soul stone, his withered old knuckles gone white from the strain.
He
smiled, thinking himself clever for attaining such a high level of
concentration, then put the stone back in the secret drawer of his desk. He was
feeling much better, caring not at all that the bothersome Connor had
apparently gotten away—the man could do him no harm in any case. Dobrinion, the
true threat in Palmaris, had been taken care of, and now Markwart understood
the true nature of Jojonah and his cohorts. As soon as the Brothers Justice
delivered the stones, his own position would be secured. And from such a
position of strength, Markwart knew he could easily deal with any trouble
Jojonah put his way. Yes, he decided, he would begin the preemptory strike
against Jojonah soon, would speak with Je'howith, who was a longtime friend and
a man as dedicated to the preservation of the Order as he was, and through the
influence of the abbot of St. Honce, Markwart thought, he could enlist the aid
of the King.
At
the other end of the broken connection, the spirit of Bestesbulzibar, the
demon dactyl, was satisfied. The supposed spiritual leader of the human race
was in his palm now, was accepting the precepts that Bestesbulzibar fed to him
as though they were his own thoughts and beliefs.
The
demon remained bitter about the defeat at Aida, about the loss of its corporeal
form—which
it had not yet figured out how to replace or recover—but found this puppet game
with the Father Abbot of the Abellican Church, the institution that had ever
been the demon's greatest foe, quite pleasant, a distraction that allowed
Bestesbulzibar to forget the defeat.
Almost.
*
* *
"Why
are we down here?" Brother Braumin asked, glancing nervously at the
flickering shadows cast by his torch. Rows of bookcases filled with dusty
ancient texts were crowded all about the two men, and the ceiling, too, closed
in on them, for it was low and thick.
"Because
here is where I will find my answers," Master Jojonah replied calmly,
seeming oblivious to the tons and tons of rock hanging thick over his head. He
and Brother Braumin were in the sublibrary of St.-Mere-Abelle, the oldest
section of the abbey, buried deep beneath the newer levels, almost down at the
level of the waters of All Saints Bay. In fact, in the abbey's earliest days,
there had been a direct exit from this section of rooms to the rocky beach, a
tunnel connecting to the corridor and portcullis Master De'Unnero had defended
against the powrie attack, but that ancient passageway had been closed off as
the abbey moved upward on the mountainside.
"With
Abbot Dobrinion dead and the canonization process at least delayed, the Father
Abbot has no excuse to send me out of St.-Mere-Abelle," Jojonah explained.
"But he will keep me quite busy, if he has his way, and no doubt Brother
Francis or some other will hover about my every move."
"Brother
Francis would not be quick to come down here," Brother Braumin reasoned.
"Oh,
but he will," Master Jojonah replied. "In fact, he has, and recently.
In these ancient rooms, Brother Francis found the maps and texts to guide our
journey to Aida. Some of those maps, my friend, were drawn by Brother
Allabarnet of St. Precious himself."
Brother
Braumin cocked his head, not quite catching on.
"I
will assume the role as chief sponsor of Brother Allabarnet for
sainthood," Master Jojonah explained. "That will allow me room from
the Father Abbot's intrusions, for no doubt he intends to keep me so busy that
I have little time for any mischief. When I announce publicly that I will
sponsor Allabarnet, the Father Abbot must concede time to me or risk the enmity
of St. Precious, thus freeing me even from my normal duties."
"That
you might spend your days down here?" Brother Braumin asked doubtfully,
for he saw no gain in being in this place; indeed, he wanted to run out of
there at once, back into the daylight, or at least into the lighter and more
hospitable rooms of the upper abbey. This place was too much like a crypt for
his liking—and
in fact there was a crypt nearby, in several of the adjoining rooms!
Even
worse, in the far corner of this very library stood a shelf of very old books,
ancient tomes of sorcery and demon magic that the Church had banned. Every copy
that had been discovered save these—preserved that the Church might better
investigate the workings of its enemies—had been burned. Braumin wished that
none had been spared, for the mere presence of these ancient tomes sent a
shudder through him, a palpable aura of cold evil.
"This
is where I must be," Master Jojonah explained.
Brother
Braumin held out his arms, his expression purely incredulous. "What will
you find down here?" he asked, and subconsciously glanced at the shelf of
horrible tomes.
"I
do not honestly know," Jojonah replied. He noted the direction of
Braumin's glance but thought little of it, for he had no intention of going
anywhere near the demonic volumes. Drawing Braumin's attention, he moved to the
nearest shelf and reverently lifted one huge volume, its cover holding on by
barely a strand. "But here, in the history of the Church, I will find my
answers."
"Answers?"
"I
will see as Avelyn saw," Jojonah tried to elaborate. "The attitudes
I witness now among supposedly holy men cannot be the same as those who founded
our order. Who would follow Markwart now, were it not for traditions that root
back a millennium and more? Who would adhere to the doctrines of the leaders of
the Abellican Church if they could see past their blindness and recognize the
men as merely men, full of the failings adherence to the higher order of God is
supposed to erase?"
"Strong
words, Master," Brother Braumin said quietly.
"Perhaps
it is time that someone spoke those strong words," Jojonah replied.
"Words as strong as Avelyn's deeds."
"Brother
Avelyn's deeds have branded him as a thief and a murderer," the young
monk reminded.
"But
we know better," Jojonah was quick to reply. He looked back to the ancient
tome again, brushing the dust from the battered cover. "And so would they,
I believe. So would the founders of the Order, the men and women who first saw
the light of God. They would know."
Jojonah
fell silent, and Brother Braumin spent a long time digesting the words. He
knew his place here, though, that of portraying the worst-case scenario, and
so he had to ask, "And if your studies show that they do not, that the
Church is as it has always been?"
The
words hit Master Jojonah hard, and Brother Braumin winced as the older man's
round shoulders visibly slumped.
"Then
my life is a waste," Jojonah admitted. "Then I have followed
errantly that which is not holy, but humanly."
"Heretics
have spoken such words," Brother Braumin warned.
Master
Jojonah turned and eyed him directly, locked his gaze with the most intense
stare the immaculate had ever seen from the normally jovial man. "Then let
us hope the heretics are not correct," Jojonah said gravely.
The
master turned back to the texts, and Braumin again paused, letting the words
sink in. He decided that to be enough of that line of questioning—Master Jojonah
had embarked upon a course for which there could be no retreat, one of
enlightenment that would lead to justification or to despair.
"Brother
Dellman has been asking many questions since we departed St. Precious,"
Brother Braumin said, trying to lighten the conversation.
That
notion brought a welcome smile to Master Jojonah's face.
"The
Father Abbot's actions concerning our prisoners seem out of place, of
course," Brother Braumin went on.
"Prisoners?"
Jojonah interrupted. "He brought them?"
"The
Chilichunks and the centaur," Brother Braumin explained. "We know not
where they are being held."
Master
Jojonah paused. He should have expected as much, he realized, but in the
commotion over Abbot Dobrinion's death, he had almost forgotten about the
unfortunate prisoners. "St. Precious did not protest the taking of
Palmaris citizens?" he asked.
"Rumors
say that Abbot Dobrinion was not pleased at all," Brother Braumin replied.
"There was a confrontation with Baron Bildeborough's men, over his nephew,
who was reportedly once married to the woman who accompanied Brother Avelyn.
And many say that Abbot Dobrinion was in league with the Baron against the
Father Abbot."
Jojonah
chuckled helplessly. It all made sense, of course, and now he was even more
certain that no powrie had murdered Abbot Dobrinion. He almost said as much to
Brother Braumin, but wisely held his tongue, understanding that such terrible
information might break the man, or launch him on a course so bold as to get
him killed.
"Brother
Dellman has paid attention to the events, then?" he asked. "He is not
closing his eyes and ears to the truth about him?"
"He
has asked many questions," Brother Braumin reiterated.
"Some
bordering on being openly critical of the Father Abbot. And of course, we are
all concerned about the two brothers who did not make the return trip to
St.-Mere-Abelle. It is no secret that they were in the Father Abbot's highest
favor, and their demeanor has ever been a conversation point among the younger
brothers."
"We
would all do well to watch closely the hunting dogs of Father Abbot
Markwart," Master Jojonah said gravely. "Do not trust Brother Youseff
or Brother Dandelion. Go now to your duties, and do not visit me unless your
news is most urgent. I will contact you when I see the opportunity; I will wish
to hear of Brother Dellman's progress. Pray ask Brother Viscenti to befriend
the man. Viscenti is enough removed from me that his conversations with
Brother Dellman will not be noticed by the Father Abbot. And Brother Braumin,
do find out about the prisoners, where they are and how they are being
treated."
Brother
Braumin bowed and turned to go, but stopped as Master Jojonah called to him
once more.
"And
keep in mind, my friend," Jojonah warned, "that Brother Francis and
some of those other, less obvious hunting dogs of Father Abbot Markwart will
never be far away."
Then
Master Jojonah was alone with the ancient texts of the Abellican Order,
parchments and books, many of which had not been viewed in centuries. And
Jojonah felt the ghosts of his Church in the adjoining crypts. He was alone
with that history now, alone with what he had spent his life accepting as
divine guidance.
He
prayed he would not be disappointed.
"Jilly,"
Connor repeated, as softly and gently as he could.
The
look on the woman's face was caught somewhere between sheer incredulity and
horror, the expression of a child faced with impossible and terrible
circumstances.
Elbryan, gazing up at his love, had seen that expression on her face only once before, up on the north slope overlooking Dundalis, when their first kiss had been interrupted by the sounds of their town dying. He put a hand firmly on Pony's thigh, supporting her, holding her in place, for she was surely swaying unsteadily on Symphony's broad back.
The
moment passed; Pony pushed aside the troubling emotions and found the same
inner resolve that had carried her through the trials of so many years.
"Jilseponie," she corrected. "My name is Jilseponie, Jilseponie
Ault." She glanced down at Elbryan, gathering strength from his unending
love. "Jilseponie Wyndon, actually," she corrected.
"And
once, Jilly Bildeborough," Connor said quietly.
"Never,"
the woman spat, more sharply than she had intended. "You erased that
title, proclaiming before the law and before God that it had never been. Is it
now convenient for the noble Connor to reclaim that which he disposed of?"
Again
the ranger patted her firmly, trying to calm her down.
Her
words stung Connor profoundly, but he accepted them as earned. "I was
young and foolish," he replied. "Our wedding night... your actions
hurt me, Jilly... Jilseponie," he corrected quickly, seeing her grimace.
"I—"
Pony
held up her hand to stop him, then glanced down at Elbryan. How painful this
must be to him, she realized. Certainly he did not need to suffer through a
recounting of the night she was wed to another man!
But
the ranger stood calm, his bright eyes showing nothing but sympathy for the
woman he so loved. He didn't even let those green orbs reflect his anger,
jealous anger, toward Connor, for he knew that to do so would be unfair to
Pony. "You two have much to discuss," he said. "And I have a
caravan to watch over." He patted Pony's thigh one more time, this time
gently, almost playfully, showing her that he was secure in their love, and
then, with a playful wink, the perfect gesture to lessen the tension, he walked
away.
Pony
watched him go, loving him all the more. Then she glanced about, and, seeing
that others were too near and might overhear, she kicked Symphony into a walk.
Connor and his mount followed closely.
"It
was not meant against you," Connor tried to explain when they were alone.
"I did not mean to hurt you."
"I
refuse to discuss that night," Pony said with finality. She knew better,
knew that Connor had indeed tried to hurt her, but only because her refusal to
make love with him had wounded his pride.
"You
can so easily dismiss it?" he asked.
"If
the alternative is to dwell on that which needs no explanation and can only
bring pain, then yes," she answered. "What is past is not as
important as what is to come."
"Then
with your dismissal, allow forgiveness," Connor begged.
Pony
eyed him directly, looked deeply into his gray eyes and remembered those times
before the disastrous wedding night, when they had been friends, confidants.
"Do
you remember when we first met?" Connor asked, reading her expression.
"When I came out into the alley to protect you, only to find rogues
raining down about me?"
Pony
managed a smile; there were some good memories, many good ones, mixed in with
the ultimately painful ending. "It was never love, Connor," she said
honestly.
The
man looked as though she had slapped him with a wet towel.
"I
did not know what love was until I came back and found Elbryan," Pony went
on.
"We
were close," the man protested.
"We
were friends," Pony replied. "And I will value the memory of that
friendship before we tried to make it more than that. I promise you."
"Then
we can still be friends," Connor reasoned.
"No."
The answer came straight from Pony's heart before she could even spend a moment
to consider it. "You were friends with a different person, with a little
lost girl who did not know from where she had come, and did not know to where
she was going. I am not that person anymore. Not Jilly, not even Jilseponie, in
truth, but Pony, the companion, the lover, the wife, of Elbryan Wyndon. My
heart is his, and his alone."
"And
is there no room in that heart for Connor, your friend?" the man asked
gently.
Pony
smiled again, growing more comfortable. "You do not even know me,"
she replied.
"But
I do," the nobleman argued. "Even when you were, as you proclaim,
that little lost girl, the fire was there. Even when you were most vulnerable,
most lost, there was, behind your beautiful eyes, a strength that most people
will never know."
Truly
Pony appreciated the sentiment. Her relationship with Connor had never been
properly resolved, had been left on a note too sour to do justice to the
enjoyable months they had spent together. Now, with his simple words, she felt
a sense of closure, a true sense of calm.
"Why
did you come out here?" she asked.
"I
have been out north of the city for months," Connor replied, a bit of the
swagger finding its way back into his voice. "Hunting goblins and powries—and even a few
giants, I dare say!"
"Why
did you come out here now?" the perceptive woman pressed. She had seen it
on his face: Connor had not been nearly as surprised to see her as she to see
him, and yet, given the last each knew of the other's whereabouts, the surprise
to him should have been greater. "You knew, did you not?"
"I
suspected," Connor admitted. "I have heard tales of magic being used
against the monsters up here, and you have been linked to the enchanted
gemstones."
That
gave Pony pause.
"Call
back your... husband," Connor said. "If you are, as you say, ready to
let go of the past and pay attention to the future. I did indeed come out here
for a reason, Jill... Pony. And more of a reason than to see you again, though
I would have traveled the length and breadth of Honce-the-Bear for that
alone."
Pony
bit back her response, questioning why, then, Connor had not done just that in
all the years she had been indentured to the army. There was no need for such
bickering, no need to tear the scabs from old wounds.
They
met shortly thereafter, Connor, Pony, and Elbryan, and with Juraviel
comfortably tucked within the sheltering boughs of a nearby tree.
"You
remember Abbot Dobrinion Calislas," Connor started, after pacing nervously
for what seemed like an hour, trying to figure out where to begin.
The
woman nodded. "The abbot of St. Precious," she said.
"No
more," Connor explained. "He was murdered a few nights ago, in his
own room at the abbey." The nobleman paused, studying their reactions,
and was at first surprised that none of them seemed overly concerned. Of
course, Connor realized, they did not really know Dobrinion and his good heart;
their experience with the Church was less than enamoring.
"They
said a powrie did it," Connor went on.
"Dark
times indeed if a powrie can so easily get into what should be the most secure
building in a city braced for war," Elbryan remarked.
"I
think that he was killed by the Church he served," Connor said outright,
watching the ranger closely. Now Elbryan did lean forward a bit, growing more
than a little intrigued. "The monks from St.-Mere-Abelle were in
Palmaris," Connor explained. "A great contingent, including the
Father Abbot himself. Many had just returned from the far north, from the
Barbacan, so it is said."
He
had their attention now.
"Roger
Lockless saw such a caravan flying swiftly to the south past Caer Tinella and
Landsdown," Pony reminded.
"They
are looking for you," Connor said bluntly, pointing to Pony. "For
those gemstones, which they claim were stolen from St.-Mere-Abelle."
Pony's
eyes went wide. She stuttered a few undiscernible words as she turned to her
lover for support
"We
feared as much," Elbryan admitted. "That is why we were insistent on
bringing the folk to the safety of Palmaris," he, explained to Connor.
"Pony and I cannot remain with them—the risk for the folk is too great. We
would see them to safety, then go our own way."
"The
risk is greater than you believe," Connor put in. "The Father Abbot
and most of his companions have left, heading back to their own abbey, but he
left a pair—at
least a pair—behind, men trained to kill, do not doubt. I believe it was those
two who killed Abbot Dobrinion. They came after me, as well, for my connection
to Pony is known to them, but I managed to elude them, and now they will hunt
for you."
"Brothers
Justice," the ranger reasoned, shuddering at the thought of dealing with
another like Quintall—apparently a pair of them this time.
"But
why would they murder Abbot Dobrinion?" Pony asked. "And why would
they come after you in such a manner?"
"Because
we opposed the Father Abbot's methods," Connor replied.
"Because..." He paused and cast a truly sympathetic look Pony's way.
She would not like this news, not at all, but she had to be told. "Because
we did not approve of his treatment of the Chilichunks—treatment he
had planned for me, as well, before my uncle the Baron intervened"
"Treatment?"
Pony replied, leaping to her feet. "What treatment? What does that
mean?"
"He
took them, Pony," Connor explained. "In chains, back to
St.-Mere-Abelle, along with the one called Bradwarden, the centaur."
Now
the stunned Elbryan was on his feet, as well, moving before Connor, too
overwhelmed to even voice the question.
"Bradwarden
is dead," came Juraviel's voice from the trees.
Connor
spun about but saw nothing.
"He
was killed in Aida," the elf went on. "Upon the defeat of the demon
dactyl."
"He
was not killed," Connor insisted. "Or if he was, then the monks found
a way to resurrect him. I have seen him with my own eyes, a beleaguered and
pitiful creature, but one very much alive."
"As
I saw him," put in Roger Lockless, coming out of the trees to join the
group. He moved to Elbryan's side and dropped a hand on the man's strong
shoulder. "The caravan, at the back of the caravan. I told you as
much."
Elbryan
nodded, remembering well Roger's description, remembering his own emotions
when Roger had told of the monks' passage by the two towns. He turned to Pony
then, who was eyeing him directly, those telling fires burning brightly behind
her blue orbs.
"We
must go to them," she said, and the ranger nodded, their path suddenly
clear.
"The
monks?" Roger asked, not understanding.
"In
time," Connor interrupted. "And I will go with you."
"This
is not your affair," the ranger said suddenly, wanting to retract the
words, words prompted by his desire to get this man far from Pony as soon as
possible, even as he spoke them.
"Abbot
Dobrinion was my friend," the nobleman argued. "As are the
Chilichunks, all three. You know this," he said, looking to Pony for
support, and the woman nodded. "But first, we, you, must deal with the
killers. They are not to be taken lightly. They got to Dobrinion and made it
look enough like a powrie assassination to deflect all attention. They are
cunning and they are deadly."
"And
they will be dead, soon enough," the ranger said with such determination
that none would dare offer a doubt.
"We
will meet again," Elbryan assured Belster O'Comely early the next morning,
taking the man's hand firmly. Belster was holding back tears, Elbryan knew, for
he suspected, and Elbryan could not disagree, that this was the last time they
would see each other. "When the war is settled and you open your tavern
again in the Timberlands, then know that Nightbird will be there, drinking your
water and scaring away your other patrons."
Belster
smiled warmly, but he didn't expect that he would be making the journey back to
Dundalis even if the monsters were driven away very soon. He was not a young
man, and the pain of the memories would be great indeed. Belster had fled
Palmaris because of debt, and only because of debt, but that time seemed many
centuries ago, given all that had happened, and he was quite sure he could open
an establishment right in the city without fear of his past coming back to
haunt him. There was no reason to tell all of that to the ranger, though. Not
now, and so he only held fast his assuring smile.
"Lead
them well, Tomas," the ranger said to the man standing beside Belster.
"The road should be clear, but if you find trouble before you find
Palmaris, then I trust you will see them through."
Tomas
Gingerwart nodded gravely, and stamped his new weapon, the pitchfork, on the
ground. "We owe you much, Nightbird," he said. "As we owe Pony,
and your little unseen friend, as well."
"Do
not forget Roger," the ranger was quick to reply. "To him the folk of
Caer Tinella and Landsdown owe perhaps the most of all."
"Roger
would never let us forget Roger!" Belster said suddenly, jovially, in a
voice that reminded Elbryan so much of Avelyn.
That
gave them all a laugh, a proper note to end the discussion. They shook hands
and parted as friends, Tomas running to the front of the caravan and calling
for them to move along.
Pony,
Connor, and Juraviel joined Elbryan soon after, watching the train depart, but
not so far down the road Tomas stopped the group momentarily and a lone figure
moved away, running back toward the ranger and his friends.
"Roger
Lockless," Pony said, not surprised. Behind him the caravan started away
once more, drifting to the south.
"You
were to serve as Tomas' principal guide," Elbryan said when Roger moved to
join him.
"He
has others who can serve in that role," the young man replied.
The
ranger's look was stern and uncompromising.
"Why
is he to stay?" Roger protested, pointing to Connor. "Why are you,
with Palmaris only three days' march? Would not Elbryan and Pony prove of great
value to the city's garrison in these dark times?"
"There
are other matters which you do not understand," Elbryan said calmly.
"Matters
that concern him?" Roger asked, pointing again at Connor, who resisted
the urge to walk over and punch the young man.
Elbryan
nodded gravely. "You should go with them, Roger," he said, speaking
in the tone of a friend. "We cannot, for there is a matter that must be
settled before any of us show our faces in the city. But trust me when I say
that the danger here is greater for you by far than any danger you might find
in Palmaris. Be quick now, and catch Tomas and Belster."
Roger
shook his head resolutely. "No," he answered. "If you are to
stay up here, fighting on, then so am I."
"There
is nothing left for you to prove," Pony put in. "Your name and
reputation are secured and well-earned."
"Name?"
Roger balked. "In Palmaris, soon enough, I will be Roger Billingsbury
again. Just Roger Billingsbury. An orphan, a waif, a cast-aside."
"My
uncle the Baron would value one of your talents," Connor offered.
"Then
when you are able to return to your uncle to tell him about me, I will join
you," the young man quickly replied with a smirk. That flippant look
disappeared at once, though, and he cast a very serious stare at Elbryan.
"Do not make me return," he begged. "I cannot go back to being
Roger Billingsbury again. Not yet. Out here, fighting monsters, I was able to
find a side of myself that I never knew existed. I like that side of me, and
fear to lose it in the mundane life of a secure city."
"Not
so secure," Connor quipped under his breath.
"You'll
not lose your new mantle," the ranger said in all seriousness. "You
will never go back to being that person you were before the invasion of your
home. I know this, better than you can imagine, and I tell you honestly that,
here or in Palmaris, you are, and will remain, Roger Lockless, hero of the
north." He looked over to Pony and considered the weight of such a
responsibility, thought of the vow of celibacy that he and his lover had been
forced by circumstance to accept, and added, "That may not be as grand a
thing as you believe, Roger."
The
young man straightened a bit and managed a nod, but his overall expression,
begging for acceptance, did not change, leaving the issue squarely on the
shoulders of the ranger.
Elbryan
looked to Pony, who nodded.
"There
are two men hunting for Pony and for me," the ranger began. "And for
Connor; they tried to kill him in Palmaris, which sent him on the road in
search of us."
"He
knows you two?" Roger asked. "And knew you were up here?"
"He
knows me," Pony put in.
"He
came in search of the one wielding magic, though he knew not who that might
be," the ranger explained. "We are outlaws, Roger, both Pony and me.
You heard us express as much that time we spoke with Juraviel soon after the
caravan passed the northern towns. The Church wants the magic stones back, yet
on the grave of our friend Avelyn, we'll not return them. Thus have they sent
assassins in search of us, and they are not far away, I fear." Despite
the grim words, the ranger flashed a comforting smile to Roger. "But
easier will our task be if Roger Lockless desires to join in our cause."
Roger's
grin nearly took in his big ears.
"Understand
that you, too, will then be considered an outlaw in the eyes of the
Church," Pony remarked.
"Though
my uncle will remedy that situation when this is finished," Connor was
quick to add.
"Do
you plan to run from them, or fight them on your own terms?" Roger asked
determinedly.
"I'll
not spend my days glancing over my shoulder for assassins," the ranger
replied in a tone so grim that it sent a shudder coursing along Connor's spine.
"Let them look back for me."
Her
spirit walked through the shadowed forest. She saw Belli'mar Juraviel working
his way along the mid-level boughs of a grove and brushed right past him. The
perceptive elf perked up his ears, for though Pony's spirit was invisible and
silent, Juraviel's keen senses felt something.
Then
down to the ground the woman went, flying as if on the wind. She found Connor,
pacing his golden horse in a defensive perimeter about the small encampment.
She even saw her own body, sitting cross-legged, far behind the man. And even
farther back, behind her corporeal form, she saw the large elm, and the dark
hole at its base. Elbryan was in that hole, at Oracle, and Pony did not dare
enter and disturb that deepest of concentrations.
Instead
her thoughts lingered on Connor, trying to gain some perspective on all that
had happened between them. She found his protectiveness of her as he paced his
horse somewhat comforting, and indeed the nobleman had touched her simply by
coming out here to find her and warn her. He had known all along that it was
she with the gemstones, or at least had suspected as much, and knowing, too,
that those stones were the Church's main focus, he could have gone south, to
more populated regions, in his flight from the assassins. Or had he betrayed
her openly, he might have remained in the comforts of Palmaris, for the Church
would not even consider him an enemy. But he had not; he had come north, to
warn her. And had stood behind his friends, the Chilichunks.
Pony
had never hated Connor, not even on the morning after their tragic wedding
night. He had been wrong, she believed with all her heart, but his actions were
based on very real frustrations that she had inspired. And in the final
analysis of that night, Connor had not been able to follow through with forcing
himself upon her, had cared for her too much to take her in that way.
So
Pony had forgiven him, long ago, within the first days of her service in the
King's army.
But
what did she feel now, in looking on this man who had been her husband?
It
wasn't love, was never that, she understood, for she knew how she felt when she
looked upon Elbryan and that was something very different, very much more
special indeed. But she did care for Connor. He had been a friend when she had
needed one; because of his gentleness in those months of courting, she had
begun the road to recovery of her memory and her emotional health. If things
had been better on her wedding night, she would have stayed married to him,
would have borne him children, would have—
Pony's
line of thought ended abruptly as she realized she no longer regretted the
events of that wedding night. For the first time, she came to understand the
benefits of what she had deemed a horrible experience. That night had set her
on a course to become who she now was, had put her in the army, where she
received superb training and discipline for her natural fighting talents. That
experience had subsequently brought her to Avelyn's side, where she learned of
deeper truths, where she gained her spirituality, and that turn of events in
Palmaris had, ultimately, brought her back to Elbryan. Only now, measuring her
feelings for the ranger against the feelings she had held for another man in
another time, did Pony realize just how special was their love.
They
had battled for months against the invading monsters, had lost dear friends,
and now her adoptive family and another friend were apparently in danger, and
still Pony would not trade who she was, this very moment, this very place, for
any feasible alternative. The lessons in life were often bitter, but they were
necessary building blocks.
So
Pony was warmed by the sight of Connor Bildeborough pacing a stoic guard about
her—and
about Elbryan. At that moment she put her past to rest.
But
she knew she could not linger and savor the scene, and so her spirit went out
again, into the forest. She found Roger, and then Juraviel above him, and she
went out ahead, searching the shadows, looking for some sign.
I
do fear the weight of the Church, Uncle Mather, Elbryan admitted, sitting back against a stone in the
cramped cave, staring into the depths of the barely visible mirror. How many
of these assassins will come after us?
The
ranger leaned back and sighed. The Church would not give up, that much was
obvious to him, and eventually, some day in some remote place, he and Pony
would lose. Or they would lose in St.-Mere-Abelle, where Elbryan knew they must
go for the sake of Bradwarden and the Chilichunks, who had been Pony's family.
But
I have to fight on, he said to the
ghost of his uncle. We have to fight on, for the sake of Avelyn's memory,
for the truth that he found within the twisted ways of his Order. And soon we
will take that fight right to the spider's web.
But
first... ah, Uncle Mather, one Brother Justice nearly defeated me and Pony and
Avelyn before. How might we handle the likes of two such expert killers?
Elbryan
rubbed his eyes and stared into the mirror. Images came back to him of the
first fight with the Church, when Avelyn's old classmate Quintall, carrying the
title of Brother Justice, had battled him in a cave. First the assassin had
sealed that cave from magic using a sunstone, the same gem that was on the
pommel of Elbryan's sword.
And
he had used a garnet to locate Avelyn, for that stone detected magic.
A
garnet...
A
smile found its way onto Elbryan's face, the answer coming clear before him. He
leaped up and squirmed out the narrow cave opening, rushing to Pony and shaking
her vigorously, trying to break her trance.
Her
spirit, sensing the disturbance at her corporeal body, soared back, and in but
a few moments she blinked open her physical eyes.
Elbryan
stood over her; behind him, Connor was slipping down from his horse, coming to
see what the commotion was about.
"No
more use of the soul stone," the ranger explained.
"With
my spirit freed, I can scout out far more than the others," the woman
argued.
"But
if our enemies are using garnet, they will feel the vibrations of your
magic," Elbryan reasoned.
Pony
nodded; they had already talked about that potential problem.
"We
have garnet," Elbryan explained. "The one taken from Quintall. How
much more effective will your search be with the broader sight of that
stone?"
"If
they are using magic," Pony reasoned.
"How
could they hope to find us in this vast land without such aid?" the ranger
countered.
Pony
paused and studied him for a long moment, and Elbryan noted the look of
curiosity that came over her face.
"You
seem very sure of yourself suddenly," she noted.
Elbryan's
smile widened.
"Quintall
was a deadly enemy," Pony reminded. "Alone he nearly defeated me,
you, and Avelyn."
"Only
because he shaped the battlefield to his liking," the ranger replied.
"He held the element of surprise, and in a place of his choosing and his
preparation. These two killers will prove formidable in battle, but if we hold
the element of surprise, in a place of our choosing, then the battle will be
decided quickly, I do not doubt."
Pony
did not seem convinced.
"One
fault in Quintall's plan was arrogance," the ranger explained. "He
played his hand early, in the Howling Sheila, because he felt that he was
supreme, that his training had elevated him above all others in matters of
battle."
"There
was some truth in that belief," said Pony.
"But
his training, and that of our present foes, does not equal that which I
received at the hands of the Touel'alfar, that which you have received by me
and by Avelyn, and that which we have both learned through months of fighting.
And we have three powerful allies. No, my fear for this situation has lessened
considerably. If you can use the garnet to track our adversaries, we will bring
them in to a place we have prepared and to a battle for which they cannot be
prepared."
It
made perfect sense to Pony, and she believed she could indeed track the
assassins in the manner Elbryan had described. The monks would be using magic
to detect magic, and thus she could use magic to detect their magic.
"And
once we have located them, we will know that they have likewise seen us,"
the ranger went on. "We will know their destination, but they will have
little understanding of ours."
"The
time and the place will be ours to choose," Pony said. She went to work
immediately, and soon sensed the use of magic, the monks probably employing
garnet. It was short-lived, though, and Pony figured that the pair had sensed
her magic use and altered their general direction accordingly.
"They
put up a sunstone shield, I would guess," the woman explained to
Belli'mar Juraviel, opening her eyes to see that the elf had come to join her.
"But
is this not also magic use?" the elf inquired. "Can you not detect it
as well?"
Pony's
face crinkled at the simple but somehow errant logic. "Not the same,"
she tried to explain. "Sunstone is antimagic. I could enact such a shield
using the stone in the pommel of Tempest, and our enemy's use of garnet would
be for naught."
Juraviel
shook his delicate head, not believing a word of it. "All the world is
magic, so say the elves," he explained. "Every plant, every animal,
is possessed of magical energy."
Pony
shrugged, seeing no sense in arguing the point.
"If
sunstone defeats all magic, there will be a hole in the continuum,"
Juraviel explained. "An empty spot, a hole in the blanket of magic that
fills all the world."
"I
cannot—"
Pony began.
"Because
you have not learned to see the world through the eyes of the
Touel'alfar," the elf interrupted. "Join with me in spirit, as you
and Avelyn used to join, that we might search together, that we might find the
hole, and thus our enemies."
Pony
thought it over for just a minute. Her joining through hematite with Avelyn had
been personal, intimate, and left her incredibly vulnerable, but when she
considered her elven friend, she felt no threat whatsoever. She didn't believe
that Juraviel was right about this matter, thought that his perspective was
just that—a
different way of looking at the same things—but she did produce the soul
stone, and then together the pair went out through the garnet.
Pony
was quickly amazed at how vibrant all the world seemed, a glow of magic about
every plant and every animal. Soon, very soon, they found the hole Juraviel had
described, tracking the monks as easily as if the pair were using garnet
instead of sunstone.
Guide
me, Juraviel imparted to her, and
then she sensed that he was physically gone from the spot, following the trail
out to meet their foes.
When
he returned to the encampment, barely three hours later, his report of the
monks exceeded anything Elbryan could have hoped for. The elf had found them
and studied them from the hidden boughs of the trees. Of particular note were
their weapons, with nothing of range, except one or two small daggers and any
magical stones they might possess. Juraviel had even overheard some of their
conversation, a discussion about capturing Pony, that she might be brought to
Father Abbot Markwart alive.
The
ranger smiled. With their bows and Pony's gemstones, they could more than
counter any such distance attacks, and their discussion of taking a captive
proved to him that these two did not comprehend the power that would come
against them. "Lead them in to us," he bade Pony. "Let us
prepare the battleground."
The
small plateau seemed an obvious choice for an encampment, set on a ledge on a
rocky hillside with but one approach, and that being steep and dangerously
exposed. There was one open area, a small campfire burning, surrounded on three
sides by more rocks and on the fourth by a small copse of trees.
Brother
Youseff smiled wickedly; the garnet indicated that magic was in use up there.
He put the stone away in a pouch on the rope belt of his brown robes, which he
and Dandelion had donned again when they left the city, and took out the
sunstone, bidding Dandelion to take his hand, that they might combine their
powers to make the antimagic shield that much stronger.
"They
will try to use magic against us," Youseff explained. "That is their
primary weapon, no doubt, but if we are strong enough to defeat that use, then
their conventional weapons will prove worthless against our training."
Dandelion,
so physically strong and skilled, grinned at the prospect of some solid
hand-to-hand fighting.
"We
kill the woman's companions, first," Youseff explained. "Then we go
after her. If we must kill her, then so be it. Otherwise we will take her and
the gemstones and be on our way."
"To
Palmaris first?" Dandelion asked, for he wanted another chance at Connor
Bildeborough.
Youseff,
understanding the supreme importance of this part of their mission, shook his
head. "Straight through the city and back to St.-Mere-Abelle," he
explained. He closed his other hand over Dandelion's. "Concentrate,"
he instructed.
A
few moments later, the antimagic shield strong and in place, the pair began
easily scaling the rocky cliff, moving silently and confidently.
Near
the top they peeked over the ridge, and both smiled even wider, for there,
sitting beside the woman, was Connor Bildeborough— all the eggs in one basket, it
seemed.
With
a look to each other to coordinate the movement, the two monks hauled
themselves over the lip, landing gracefully and in a defensive posture.
"Welcome!"
Connor cried, his tone light—and to the monks, confusing. "Remember me?"
Youseff
glanced at Dandelion, then took a sudden stride forward, covering a third of
the distance to the still-sitting man. Then he lurched, a small arrow boring
into the back of his calf, cutting right into the tendon.
"Oh,
but my friends will not allow you to approach," Connor said happily.
"You
do not understand how hopeless your situation is," added Roger Lockless,
stepping out from behind some rocks directly behind Pony and Connor.
"Have you, by chance, met the one called Nightbird?"
On
cue, the ranger, looking splendid atop Symphony and with Hawkwing in hand,
stepped out of the copse of trees.
"What
are we to do?" Brother Dandelion whispered.
Youseff
snapped his angry glare over Connor. "You have discredited and disgraced
your uncle and all your family," he growled. "You are an outlaw now,
as surely as are these ragged fools you call friends."
"Brave
words for one in your position," Connor replied casually.
"Think
you that?" Youseff remarked, suddenly calm. With the hand that was
clenching his wounded leg, he gave a subtle signal to Dandelion.
Suddenly,
brutally, Dandelion charged past his companion, springing upon Connor as the
man rose and drew out his sword, moving too quickly for anyone to react. He
slapped aside Connor's sword, then laid the man low with a wicked forearm smash
to the throat. Then he ran right over the falling Connor, forcing Roger back
against the stones.
Youseff
sprang forward from his good leg right behind Dandelion, thinking to get to
the woman, to put her in a deadly hold that he might bargain his way out. But
as in the initial assault, the confident monk underestimated his opponent, did
not appreciate just how powerful Pony was with the gemstones. The antimagic
shield was still strong, though not as much so with both its creators otherwise
engaged, but even if Youseff and Dandelion were doing nothing but concentrating
on the sunstone, they would not have defeated Pony's power.
Youseff
felt his feet slip out from under him, not to fall, but rather to rise,
harmlessly, into the air. His momentum continued to carry him forward, toward
Pony, but when he reached for her in this unfamiliar weightless state, he
tumbled headlong, turning a half somersault. Then he felt the sudden sting in his
back as Pony rolled over and kicked out, both feet landing squarely, propelling
Youseff back the way he had come, back out over the cliff to dangle helplessly
in midair.
Overwhelmed
by the charge, Roger was in no position to counter as Dandelion swung back the
other way, again smashing Connor as the man tried to rise, then falling down
atop him, pinning him to the ground. Up came the big man's arm, fingers stiff
and straight, poised for the killing slash into defenseless Connor's exposed
neck.
Connor
growled and tried to cry out, tried to wriggle free. He closed his eyes for
just an instant.
The
blow did not fall. Connor opened his eyes to see Dandelion still poised above
him, struggling to drop the punch, a look of absolute incredulity on his face
that anything could so hold back his powerful arm.
Nightbird
held him fast by the wrist.
Dandelion
spun with amazing agility for one so large, turning and putting his feet under
him, at the same time dipping his shoulder to bowl the ranger over. But
Elbryan, too, was moving, spinning right under Dandelion's arm, turning about
with a vicious jerk that popped the man's elbow out of joint.
Howling
with pain, Dandelion spun about and launched a heavy punch—which never
came near to hitting Nightbird, the ranger sidestepping, then wading right back
in with a powerful combination of blows on Dandelion's face and chest.
On
came the big monk, growling past the pain in his arm, accepting more punches,
that he could get close enough to wrap Elbryan in a tight hug.
The
ranger cupped Dandelion's chin with one hand, grabbed the back of the man's
hair with the other, meaning to turn him aside. He stopped, though, feeling a
curious prodding in his chest. At first he thought Dandelion had somehow
deceived him and brought a dagger to bear, but when he looked past the man, to
Connor Bildeborough standing behind him, the ranger understood.
Dandelion,
Connor's sword right through his back and chest, slumped in the ranger's arms.
"Bastard,"
Connor muttered grimly, shifting to keep his hold on the sword as dead
Dandelion rolled to the ground.
Nightbird
let the man fall free, then went to Symphony and took up Hawkwing, fitting an
arrow and turning his attention to Youseff. He leveled and drew back.
But
the threat was ended, the monks obviously defeated, and Elbryan could not
simply kill this man.
"Do
not," Pony said, in full agreement as the ranger eased his bowstring back
to rest.
"I
will kill him," Connor said grimly, finally extracting his sword from the
heavy corpse.
"As
he hangs there helpless?" Pony asked skeptically.
Connor
kicked at the ground. "Drop him to the rocks, then," he said, but he
wasn't serious; he could no more kill this helpless man than could Elbryan.
Pony
was glad for that.
"We
are going to find our friends," the ranger said to Youseff, "whom
your Father Abbot has unjustly imprisoned."
Youseff
scoffed at the sheer folly of such a claim.
"And
you will lead us, every step," the ranger finished.
"To
St.-Mere-Abelle?" the monk replied incredulously. "Fool. You cannot
begin to comprehend the power of such a fortress."
"As
you could not comprehend the force prepared against you in this place,"
Elbryan calmly replied.
That
hit Youseff hard. He narrowed his eyes dangerously and glared at Elbryan.
"How long can you hold me here?" he asked, his voice even and deathly
calm. "Kill me now, fools, else I promise to avenge—"
His
bluster was lost suddenly as a small form rushed past him, spinning him over in
the air. He flailed and tried to respond, and realized that he had lost his
grip on the sunstone. When he finally straightened out again, Youseff saw the
winged elf land easily on the ledge beside the others.
"Sunstone,
as you guessed, Nightbird," Juraviel said, displaying the pilfered stone.
"I suspect the garnet is in his belt pouch, if not on the dead man."
Elbryan
watched Youseff closely as Juraviel spoke, and saw that the elf's words, too,
were unnerving the man.
"He
may have a soul stone, as well," Pony interjected. "Some way to keep
in contact with his leaders."
"Of
course, we'll not let him use that," Connor said with a chuckle. "But
I must disagree with your decision," he said to the ranger. "He'll
not lead us to St.-Mere-Abelle, but will be returned to St. Precious, where he
can answer for the murder of Abbot Dobrinion. I will take him myself, with
Roger Lockless beside me, and let the Church learn the truth of its Father
Abbot!"
Elbryan
looked long and hard at Connor, considering for just a moment the implications
of his actions, which had saved the man's life. If he had hesitated for just an
instant, then Connor Bildeborough, this man who had so wronged Pony, would
also be dead.
The
ranger would tolerate no such weakness within himself, and so he dismissed
those dark thoughts out of hand, and knew in his heart that he would have
thrown himself in the way of the deadly monk's strike if that was the only way
to save Connor, or any of his companions.
He
looked back to Youseff then, and considered the truth of Connor's words. He
remembered the fervor of the first Brother Justice, and understood that Youseff
would be no willing guide, no matter the threats. But if they did as Connor
suggested, then perhaps they would not be alone in their quest to free their
friends.
Would
not the Church have to admit its complicity, thus discrediting the Father
Abbot?
It
seemed plausible. "Bring him in," the ranger instructed.
Belli'mar
Juraviel flew out from the ledge, moving behind the dangling Youseff. Using his
bow as a pole, the elf prodded the man toward the ledge. At first Youseff offered
no resistance, but then, as he neared the lip, as the drop beneath him became
not so far, he spun suddenly, grabbed at the elf and caught hold of the bow as
Juraviel wisely let it go. The monk had no way to stop his momentum, though,
and so he continued to rotate right around.
To
see Elbryan at the edge of the lip, fist cocked.
The
blow sent Brother Youseff spinning head over heels away from the ledge, and
sent the man's mind flying into unconsciousness.
Juraviel,
laughing at the outrageous sight, retrieved his bow and prodded the now limp
monk to the ledge.
Of
all the duties for the young monks at St.-Mere-Abelle, Brother Dellman found
this one the most painful. He and two other monks were braced against spokes on
a giant wheel crank, bending their backs to turn the thing, grunting and
groaning, digging in their heels, but slipping often against the tremendous
weight.
Down
below, far, far below, supported by heavy chains—which themselves weighed more
than a thousand pounds—was a great block of stone. Good stone, solid, taken
from an underground quarry just inside the southernmost courtyard of
St.-Mere-Abelle. The wide expanse of that quarry was reached through the lower
tunnels of the original abbey—in fact, Master Jojonah, huddled in the lower
libraries, could sometimes hear the chipping of the stones—but the best way to
bring stones needed for the upper walls of the abbey was by use of this crank.
The
pain and the struggle were good for the young monks, in the eyes of the masters
and the Father Abbot.
Another
day, Brother Dellman might have agreed with that. Physical exhaustion was good
for the soul. But not today, not so soon after his return from a long and
difficult journey. He wanted nothing more than to go to his eight-foot-square
chamber and curl up on his cot.
"Push
on, Brother Dellman," scolded Master De'Unnero in his sharp voice.
"Would you force brothers Callan and Seumo to do all the work?"
"No,
Master De'Unnero," Brother Dellman grunted, bending his shoulder to press
harder against the spoke and driving on, the muscles in his legs and back
straining and aching. He closed his eyes and issued a long and low groan.
But
then the weight seemed to grow suddenly, the wheel pushing back. Dellman's eyes
popped open wide.
"Hold
it fast, brother!" Dellman heard Callan cry. He saw the man, lying on the
ground, then noted Seumo skittering, off-balance, to the side.
"Peg
it!" Master De'Unnero shouted, meaning that someone, anyone, should drive
the locking peg back into the crank.
Poor
Dellman fought with all his strength, pressed as hard as he could against the
wheel. But his feet were inevitably beginning to slide. Why wasn't Callan back
at the wheel? he wondered. And why wouldn't Seumo get up? Why were they moving
so slowly?
He
thought to let go and spring out of harm's way, but knew that to be impossible.
With no one bracing the wheel, the spin would be too fast, too sudden, and he
would be smashed and thrown.
"Peg
it!" he heard De'Unnero cry again, but everyone seemed to be moving in so
slowly!
And
the wheel was winning now, Dellman's muscles strained past their breaking
point.
Then
he was moving backward, bending over, all his joints seeming to go the wrong
way. He heard the sudden snap, like a whip, as one of his legs exploded in
pain, and then he was rolled over backward. One of his arms was hooked, though,
and the spinning wheel took him on a wild ride, finally throwing him far and
wide, to smash hard against a water trough, shattering its side, and his
shoulder.
He
lay there, barely conscious, drenched and covered with mud and blood.
"Carry
him to my private chambers," he heard a voice, De'Unnero's, he thought.
Then
the master was right before him, leaning over, seeming truly concerned.
"Fear not, young Brother Dellman," De'Unnero said, and though it
appeared he was trying to be comforting, his voice still held that wicked edge.
"God is with me, and by His power I will help to mend that broken
body."
The
pain grew more intense suddenly as Callan and Seumo took the battered young
monk by the arms and lifted him. Waves of agony rolled over poor Brother
Dellman, fires ignited within every muscle of his body. And then he was
sinking, sinking, into a profound blackness.
The
days blended into one, for he did not notice their passing. Time held no
meaning for Master Jojonah now. He left the lower library only when the
physical needs of his body forced him out, and returned as soon as possible. He
had found nothing useful among the stacks and stacks of tomes and parchments,
but knew he was close. He felt it, in his heart and soul.
He
glanced often at the shelf of forbidden books, wondering if, perhaps, they had
been placed off-limits not because of any evil penning, but because they held a
truth that would prove damning to the present leaders of the Abellican Order.
After many such musings, even one point where he rose and took a few steps for
the shelf, Master Jojonah laughed aloud at his own paranoia. He knew those
books, for he had helped to inventory them as one of his requirements before he
attained the rank of immaculate. There were no hidden truths there; those were
the books of evil, of dactyl earth-magic and of perverting the powers of the
sacred stones for evil purposes, for summoning demons or animating corpses, for
causing plague or withering crops—unacceptable practices even in times
of war. From a private Masters' Gathering, Jojonah knew that one of the books,
in fact, described a massive crop destruction the Church leveled on the
southern kingdom of Behren in God's Year 67, when Behren and Honce-the-Bear had
been embroiled in a bitter war for control of the passes through the
Belt-and-Buckle mountain range. The famine had turned the tide of battle, but
the cost in terms of innocent lives and lasting enmities had not, in retrospect,
been worth the gain.
No,
those books shelved in the dark corner of the lower library held no measure of
justice and truth, unless that was in the lessons to be learned from terrible
past mistakes.
But
Jojonah had to remind himself of that quite often as the days wound on without
any dramatic success. And one other thing began to nag at the sensibilities of
the gentle master, growing in him until it proved a tremendous distraction: the
plight of Markwart's prisoners. They were paying dearly, perhaps had already
paid the supreme price, for the sake of his delay here. A large part of
Jojonah's conscience screamed at him to go and see to those poor people and to
the centaur, who, if he had been with Avelyn when the dactyl demon was defeated,
was indeed heroic.
But
Jojonah could not pull himself away, not yet, and so he had to sublimate his
worries about the prisoners. Perhaps his work here would save them, he told
himself, or perhaps it would prevent any such atrocities from being committed
by the Church in the future.
He
was beginning to make some progress, at least. The library was not as
haphazardly laid out as he had first believed. It was divided into sections,
and those, roughly, were set out chronologically, dating from the very earliest
days of the Church to the time less than two centuries before, when the newer
libraries were constructed and this place became a vault and not a working
area. Fortunately for Jojonah, most of the writings of the time in which
Brother Allabarnet lived, at least those collected from outside
St.-Mere-Abelle, were stored down here.
As
soon as he discovered the general layout, Master Jojonah began his search among
the very earliest tomes, those dating back before God's Year 1, the Great
Epiphany, the Renewal, which separated the Church, Old Canon and New Canon.
Jojonah figured that his answers might lie in the time before the Renewal, at
the very inception of the organized Church, the time of Saint Abelle.
He
found no answers there; what few pieces remained—and fewer still that remained
legible—were decorous works, songs mostly, exalting the glory of God. Many were
written on parchments so brittle that Jojonah did not dare to even handle
them, and others were carved on tablets of stone. The writings of Saint Abelle
were not down here, of course, but were on display in the higher library.
Jojonah knew them by heart, and remembered nothing about them that would help
in his quest. The teachings were general mostly, wise words about common
decency, and open to many interpretations. Still, the master vowed to go and
view them again, when the time presented, to see if he might read them in a new
light with his new insights, to see if
they might afford him some hint of the true precepts of his Church.
What
Jojonah most wanted down here was to find the Abbot's Doctrine of that
momentous year of the Great Epiphany, but he knew that to be impossible. It was
one of the great travesties of the Abellican Order that the original Abbot's
Doctrine had been lost, centuries before.
So
the master went on with what was available, moving to the writings immediately
following the creation of the New Canon. Jojonah found nothing. Nothing.
A
man of lesser heart would have surrendered to the daunting task, but the
thought of quitting never entered Jojonah's mind. He continued his
chronological scan, found some promising hints among the writings of the early
Father Abbots, a turn of a phrase, for instance, that he could never imagine
Markwart saying.
And
then he found a most interesting tome indeed, a small book, bound in red cloth,
and penned by a young monk, Brother Francis Gouliard in God's Year 130, the
year after the first journey to Pimaninicuit following the Great Epiphany.
Jojonah's
hands trembled as he gingerly turned the pages. Brother Francis—and how ironic
that name seemed!—had been one of the Preparers on that journey, and he had
returned and penned his story!
That
alone hit Jojonah profoundly; monks returning from Pimaninicuit now were
discouraged, indeed even prohibited, from ever speaking of the place. Brother
Pellimar had come back wagging his tongue, and not coincidentally, he had not
survived for long. Yet back in Francis Gouliard's time, the Preparers were encouraged,
according to the text, to detail their accounts of the journey!
Though
it was cool in the dark room, Jojonah felt sweat beading on his forehead, and
he took care so that it did not drop on the delicate pages. Fingers trembling,
he gingerly turned the page and read on:
to finde thee thy smallst stones of greye and redde, that thee may prepare ample to bringe Godly healing to all the knowne worlde.
Master
Jojonah sat back and took a deep and steadying breath. Now he understood why
the abbey held such a huge cache of small hematites, the small stones of gray
and red! The next passage, in which Brother Francis Gouliard wrote of his
fellow voyagers, struck the master even more profoundly:
Thirty-and-three brothers did crewe the Sea Abelle, men younge and strange, trained well and trusted well to bringe we two Preparers to Pimaninicuit and back And then did all thirty-and-one (for two had died on the voyage) join in the final cataloguing and preparing.
"Brothers,"
Jojonah mouthed softly. "On the Sea Abelle. They used monks."
The master found it hard to speak through breath that would not come. A flood
of tears streamed down his face as he recalled the fate of the Windrunner and
her unfortunate crew, hired men, and one woman, and not brothers. It took him a
long time to compose himself and read on. Brother Francis Gouliard's style was
difficult, many of the words too arcane for Jojonah to decipher, and the man
tended to pen in a stream-of-consciousness manner, instead of purely
chronologically. A few pages on and Francis was describing the departure from
St.-Mere-Abelle, the beginning of the voyage.
And
there it was before Jojonah, an edict from Father Abbot Benuto Concarron in his
farewell speech to the good ship and crew, demanding that the Abellican Order
spread the wealth of God, the gemstones, along with the word of God.
Piety,
dignity, poverty.
The
tears came freely; this was the Church that Jojonah could believe in, the
Church that had coaxed in a man as pure of heart as Avelyn Desbris. But what
had happened to so alter this apparent course? Why were the stones of greye
and redde still within St.-Mere-Abelle? Where went the charity?
"And
where is it now?" he asked aloud, thinking again of the poor prisoners.
Where had the Church of Brother Francis Gouliard and Father Abbot Benuto
Concarron gone?
"Damn
you, Markwart," Master Jojonah whispered, and he meant every word. He
tucked the book under his voluminous robes and left the cellars, going straight
to the privacy of his room. He thought that he should look in on Brother
Braumin, but decided that course could wait, for there was another matter that
had been weighing heavily on Jojonah for several days.
So
he was soon descending once more into the lower levels of St.-Mere-Abelle, on
the other side of the great abbey, down to the rooms Father Abbot Markwart had
converted into dungeons. He was not really surprised when he was met by a monk
standing guard, the young man moving to block his path.
"I'll
not stand and argue with you, young brother," Jojonah blustered, trying
to sound imposing. "How many years have passed since you traveled the
Gauntlet of Willing Suffering?"
Indeed
the formidable master was imposing to the poor young brother! "One year,
Master," he said softly. "And four months."
"One
year?" Jojonah boomed. "And yet you dare to block my way? I attained
the rank of master before you were born, and yet you stand before me now,
telling me that I cannot go on."
"The
Father Abbot—"
Jojonah
had heard enough. He reached across, bringing his arm along the young monk's
side, and bulled his way past, staring hard at the young man, daring him to try
and stop the move.
The
young monk stuttered over a few protests, but only stamped his foot in impotent
frustration as Jojonah continued on down the stairs. At the bottom two more
young monks stood to block Jojonah's way, but he didn't even bother to speak
with them, just continued on, pushing through, and again they didn't dare try
to physically stop him. One did follow, though, complaining every step, while
the second ran back the other way—to inform Father Abbot Markwart,
Jojonah knew.
He
was treading on dangerous ground here, Jojonah knew, perhaps pushing the
Father Abbot too far. But the book he had found had only bolstered his resolve
to stand strong against Markwart's injustices, and he vowed silently that he
would not be turned away, whatever the punishment, that he would check on the
poor prisoners, just to make sure they were alive and not being treated too
badly. Jojonah was risking a great deal, and could rationally argue that the
long-term greater good called for him to continue to remain quiet and obscure.
But that course would not do much to help the poor Chilichunks and the heroic
centaur; that argument, Jojonah knew, was one that men such as Markwart often
used to justify ungodly or cowardly actions.
So
he didn't even care that he might be pushing Markwart to the very edge of rage.
He pressed on, through one door, by another startled young monk, and down
another stair. Then he paused, Brother Francis standing before him.
"You
should not be down here," Francis remarked.
"By
whose command?"
"Father
Abbot Markwart," Francis answered without hesitation. "Only he,
myself, and Master De'Unnero are to be allowed past the lower stairs."
"A
worthy crew," Master Jojonah said sarcastically. "And why is that, Brother
Francis? That you might torture the poor innocent prisoners in privacy?"
He said it loudly, and took some satisfaction in the uncomfortable shuffling of
feet he heard from the young guard standing behind him.
"Innocent?"
Francis echoed skeptically.
"Are
you so ashamed of your actions that they must take place down here, away from
all prying eyes?" Master Jojonah pressed, moving forward another step as
he spoke. "Yes, I have heard the tale of Grady Chilichunk."
"An
accident on the road," Francis protested.
"Hide
thy sins, Brother Francis!" Jojonah replied. "Yet they remain sins
all the same!"
Francis
snorted derisively. "You cannot comprehend the meaning of this war we
wage," he protested. "You show pity for criminals, while innocents
pay dearly for their crimes against the Church, against all of Mankind!"
Master
Jojonah's answer came in the form of a heavy left hook. Brother Francis was not
caught completely unawares, though, and managed to turn so the blow only grazed
his face, and as Master Jojonah overbalanced from the miss, the younger monk
leaped behind him, locking him in a tight choke hold and twisting hard,
stealing the man's balance.
Master
Jojonah squirmed and twisted, but only for a moment, for the blood supply was
cut short and his brain, starved, fast drifted into unconsciousness.
"Brother
Francis!" the younger monk yelled, panicking, and he rushed forward,
trying to separate the two. Francis willingly let go, allowing the heavy
Jojonah to slump to the floor.
He
heard the footsteps sharp against the wood. Pacing, pacing, and he fell into
the rhythm of that stride, went along with it, let it carry him back to the
world of the living. The light seemed harsh to his eyes, which had known so
much darkness in the previous days, but as soon as he found his focus, he knew
exactly where he was: propped in a chair in the private room of Father Abbot
Markwart.
Markwart
and Brother Francis stood before him, neither appearing very pleased.
"You
attacked another monk," Father Abbot Markwart began curtly.
"An
impertinent subordinate needing a scolding," Master Jojonah replied,
rubbing the weariness from his eyes. "A brother desperately in need of a
good thrashing."
Markwart
looked over at the smug Brother Francis. "Perhaps," he agreed, merely
to deflate the puffy young man. "And yet," Markwart continued,
turning his attention squarely back to Jojonah, "he was only acting as I
instructed."
Master
Jojonah fought hard to maintain control, for he wanted, desperately wanted, to
burst loose of his pragmatic bonds and tell Markwart, wicked Markwart, exactly
what he thought of him and his so off-course Church. He just chewed his lip and
let the old man continue.
"You
abandon your duties to support the cause of Brother Allabarnet," the
Father Abbot fumed. "A worthy cause, so I thought, given the fate of poor
Abbot Dobrinion, for the monks of St. Precious are in need of some morale at
this dark time. And yet you abuse the free time I allow you and find yourself
across the whole of the abbey, meddling in affairs which do not concern
you."
"Am
I not to care that we have innocent prisoners hanging from dungeon walls?"
Master Jojonah replied, his voice firm and strong. "Am I not to care that
people who have committed no crimes and no sins, and a centaur who may indeed
be a hero, stand in this supposedly holy sanctuary's dungeons in chains, and
are subjected to torture?"
"Torture?"
scoffed the Father Abbot. "You know nothing of it!"
"Thus
I tried to find out," Jojonah countered. "Yet you would deny me that,
would deny all eyes."
Again
Markwart scoffed. "I would not subject the frightened Chilichunks and the
potentially dangerous Bradwarden to the private inquisitions of others. They
are my responsibility."
"Your
prisoners," Jojonah corrected.
Father
Abbot Markwart paused and took a deep breath. "Prisoners," he
echoed. "Yes, they are. No sins, say you, yet they are in league with the
thieves who hold the stolen stones. No crimes, say you, yet we have every
reason to believe that the centaur was in league with the demon dactyl, and
only the accidental destruction of Aida prevented him from joining in the
rampage against all the godly people of the world!"
"Accidental
destruction," Jojonah echoed incredulously, sarcastically.
"That
is the decision of my investigation!" Markwart yelled suddenly, moving
very near the sitting master, and Jojonah thought for a moment that the man
meant to strike him. "You chose at this time to pursue another
course."
If
only you understood the truth of that, Jojonah
silently replied, and was quite glad then that he had hidden the ancient book
in his room before he tried to get to the prisoners.
"And
yet you could not even hold true to that course!" Markwart went on.
"And while you were at your work, buried in ancient writings that bear no
importance to the present dangerous situation, one of our younger brothers
nearly met his doom!"
That
perked up Jojonah's ears.
"In
the courtyard," Markwart went on. "Doing work that Master Jojonah
would normally oversee, but that Master De'Unnero had to watch over, in
addition to the other laborers he was directing. Perhaps that was why he could
not react in time when two of the three brothers slipped off the wheel, when
the third, poor Dellman, was nearly broken in half by the sudden weight."
"Dellman!"
Jojonah cried, nearly coming out of his seat, forcing Markwart to take a step
back. Panic crept through Jojonah's mind; he worried suddenly for Brother
Braumin, whom he had not seen in days. How many "accidents" had there
been?
He
realized, though, that his excitement only implicated Dellman as a fellow
conspirator, and so he worked hard to control himself, to settle back into his
chair. "The same Brother Dellman who accompanied us to Aida?" he
asked.
"The
only Brother Dellman," Markwart sternly replied, seeing right through the
ruse.
"Such
a pity," Jojonah remarked. "He is alive, though?"
"Barely,
and perhaps not for long," the Father Abbot answered, going into his
pacing once more.
"I
will see to him."
"You
will not!" the Father Abbot snapped. "He is under the care of Master
De'Unnero. I forbid you from trying to so much as speak to him. He does not
need to hear your apologies, Master Jojonah. Let the guilt of your absence
weigh on your mind. Perhaps that will lead you back to your true duties and
purpose."
The
thought that he was somehow responsible was preposterous, of course, but
Jojonah understood the subtle meaning behind it. Markwart was only using that
excuse to keep him away from Brother Dellman, to keep his influence from the
man while De'Unnero, the master so proficient at bending the minds of the
brothers sent on Avelyn's trail, worked his wicked way.
"You
are my witness to this, Brother Francis," Markwart said. "And I warn
you, Master Jojonah, if I hear that you go anywhere near Brother Dellman, the
consequences will be dire—for you and for him."
It
surprised Jojonah that Markwart had drawn so clear a line in the sand, had all
but openly threatened him. Things were going Markwart's way, it seemed to
Jojonah, so why had he taken such a bold step as that?
He
didn't press the issue, simply nodded and left, and had no intention of
crossing Markwart's line anytime soon. It would be better for Brother Dellman,
he reasoned, if he broke all connection with the man for the time being.
Besides, Jojonah was only beginning his work. He took a quick meal, went to
his room and sighed profoundly in relief to find the tome still in place. Then
he went right back to the lower stairs, heading again for the ancient
libraries, for more pieces to this ever-more-interesting puzzle.
The
doors were sealed, barred by heavy planks. One young monk, a man Jojonah did
not know, was standing guard.
"What
is the meaning of this?" the master asked.
"No
entrance to the lower libraries at this time," the man mechanically
replied. "By order of—"
Before
he had even finished, Master Jojonah stormed away, taking the stairs two at a
time. He was not surprised to find Father Abbot Markwart waiting for him in his
private quarters, this time alone.
"You
said nothing about ending my work," Master Jojonah began, feeling his way
cautiously into this fight, for he believed this one might prove conclusive.
"Now
is not the time to worry about Brother Allabarnet's sainthood," the
Father Abbot replied calmly. "I cannot afford to have one of my masters
wasting precious time in the dungeons."
"A
curious choice of words," Jojonah came back, "considering that you
have many of your most trusted brothers wasting time in dungeons of another
sort."
He
saw the flicker of anger in the old man's eyes, but Markwart got it quickly
under control. "The canonization process will wait until the war is
ended," he said.
"By
all reports, it may already be over," Jojonah was quick to reply.
"And
until the threat to our Order is ended," Markwart added. "It is
reasonable to assume that if a powrie could get to Abbot Dobrinion, then none
of us are safe. Our enemies are desperate now, for their war is going badly,
and it is prudent to believe that they might begin a larger campaign of
assassinating important leaders."
Jojonah
had to fight very hard to hold his tongue, to stop from accusing Markwart then
and there of facilitating Dobrinion's murder. He didn't care anymore for his
personal well-being, would have laid into Markwart openly, publicly, beginning
an internal struggle that would likely cost him his life. But he could not, he
reminded himself many times in the next few seconds. There were others to
consider—Dellman,
Braumin Herde, Marlboro Viscenti, and the poor prisoners. For their sake, if
not his own, he could not begin the open battle against Markwart.
"The
process will also wait until the stolen gemstones are returned," Markwart
went on.
"Thus
I will sit idle, wasting my time in the upper levels," Jojonah did dare to
remark.
"No,
I have other plans for you," Markwart replied. "More important
matters. You are obviously well again—fit enough to attack another monk—and
so you should prepare yourself for the road."
"You
just said that the sainthood would wait," Jojonah responded.
"So
I did," Markwart replied. "But your destination is no longer St.
Honce. You will go to Palmaris, to St. Precious, to witness the appointment of
a new abbot."
Master
Jojonah could not completely hide his surprise. There was no monk at that abbey
prepared for the job, and thus, as far as he knew, nothing of succession had
even been discussed, and would be a matter for the College of Abbots later that
year.
"Master
De'Unnero," Father Abbot Markwart answered his unspoken question.
"De'Unnero?"
Jojonah echoed incredulously. "The junior master in all of
St.-Mere-Abelle, a man prematurely promoted due to the death of Master
Siherton?"
"The
murder of Master Siherton, by Avelyn Desbris," Markwart was quick to
remind.
"He
will assume the leadership of St. Precious?" Jojonah continued, too
engrossed to even feel the sting of that last verbal barb. "Surely that
position is of utmost importance, given the fact that Palmaris remains closest
to the lines of battle."
"That
is exactly why I chose De'Unnero," Markwart replied calmly.
"You
chose?" Jojonah echoed. There was little precedence for such a move; the
appointment of an abbot, even one coming from within the ranks of the affected
abbey, was no small matter, one open to the collective reasoning of the College
of Abbots.
"There
is no time to convene the College prematurely," Markwart explained.
"Nor can we wait until the scheduled meeting in Calember. Until then,
acting on what I deem to be emergency circumstances, I have appointed Master
De'Unnero as Dobrinion's replacement."
"Temporarily,"
Jojonah said.
"Permanently,"
came the stern reply. "And you, Master Jojonah, will accompany him."
"I
just returned from many weeks on the road," Jojonah protested, but he
knew he was defeated, and understood that he had erred in trying to get to the
prisoners, in pushing hard against Markwart. And now he would pay. Markwart had
been well within his rights to halt the canonization process for the time
being, and whether or not the Father Abbot's choice of De'Unnero for abbot
would stand would be decided at the fall College of Abbots, and not before.
Jojonah was out of excuses and out of dodges.
"You
will remain at St. Precious to aid Master... Abbot De'Unnero, as his
second," Markwart went on. "If it pleases him, you may return to
St.-Mere-Abelle with him for the College."
"I
outrank him."
"No
more," Markwart replied.
"I...
the College will not stand for this!" Jojonah protested.
"That
will be determined in mid-Calember," Markwart replied. "If the other
abbots and their voting seconds see fit to overrule me, then perhaps Jojonah
will be appointed abbot of St. Precious."
But
by that time, Jojonah knew, Markwart would likely have his gemstones back, and
all of those monks (who had been in league with, or even friendly to, Jojonah's
cause) would have been weeded out of St.-Mere-Abelle, the victims of
"accidents" like the one that befell Brother Dellman, or converted to
Markwart's way of thinking by a barrage of lies and threats. Or, for those
brothers of conviction like himself, Markwart would find missions in faraway,
dangerous lands. Until this moment, Master Jojonah had not truly appreciated
how formidable a foe the old Father Abbot would prove to be.
"Perhaps
we will meet again," Markwart said, waving his hand dismissively.
"For the sake of peace of mind for both of us, I hope not."
And
so it ends, Master Jojonah thought.
They
came in sight of the clusters of houses, farms mostly, just to the north of
Palmaris, and were heartened indeed to see that many of the folk had come out
of the walled city and returned to their homes.
"The region is returning to normal," Connor remarked. He was sitting astride his horse, riding next to Pony, who along with Belli'mar Juraviel was up on Symphony, while Elbryan and Roger walked in front, flanking Brother Youseff, whose hands were bound tightly behind his back. "We will know peace again, and soon," Connor promised, and that seemed a likely notion to all the others, for they had seen no monsters all the way to this point.
"Caer
Tinella and Landsdown may have been the last monstrous strongholds in the
region," the ranger reasoned. "What few remain there should prove of
little trouble to Palmaris' garrison." The ranger stopped then, taking
Symphony's bridle and bringing the horse to a halt. He looked up at his two friends,
and both Pony and Juraviel understood.
"We
do not dare enter the city," Elbryan said to Connor. "Nor even get
close enough that those folk in the farms might see us." He looked at
Brother Youseff as he finished the thought. "Even knowing of us seems to
endanger people."
"Because
you recognize that you are rightly branded as outlaws," Brother Youseff
retorted sharply. "Do you believe that the Church will cease its hunt for
you?" He laughed wickedly, seeming not at all the prisoner here.
"It
may be that the Church will have other, more pressing problems when the truth
of your actions at St. Precious becomes known," Connor put in, stepping
Greystone up between the monk and the ranger.
"And
you have proof of these absurd accusations?" Brother Youseff was quick to
reply.
"We
shall see," Connor answered, and turned back to Elbryan and the two on
Symphony. "Roger and I will deliver him to my uncle," he explained.
"We will use the secular channels of power before trying to decide how
much of the Church will side with this dog and his masters."
"You
might be starting a small war," Pony reasoned, for it was well-known that
the Church was nearly as powerful as the state—and some who had witnessed the
magical powers of St.-Mere-Abelle considered the Church even more powerful.
"If
such a war is to begin, then it was started by those who murdered Abbot
Dobrinion, not by me or my uncle," Connor replied with conviction. "I
am only following the proper course in response to that heinous act, and in
defense of my own life."
"We
will wait for word," Elbryan put in, not wanting to belabor this point any
longer.
"Roger
and I will return to you as soon as possible," Connor agreed. "I know
that you are anxious to be on your way." He was careful to end the thought
there, for he did not want the dangerous monk prisoner to know that Elbryan
intended to go straightaway to St.-Mere-Abelle. Given the wonders he had seen
of stone magic, Connor had thought it foolish that the ranger openly declared
to Youseff that they would be going after their captured friends. The less
precise information this dangerous man held, the better for all of them.
Connor
motioned to Elbryan and turned his horse aside, the ranger walking beside him,
away from the others. "If I cannot get back out to you, then farewell,
Nightbird," the nobleman said in all sincerity.
Elbryan
followed the nobleman's gaze back to Pony.
"I
would be a liar if I did not admit that I was envious of you," Connor went
on. "I, too, loved her; who could not, after witnessing her beauty?"
Elbryan
had no practical response, and so he said nothing.
"But
it is obvious where lies Jill's ... Pony's heart," Connor added after a
long and uncomfortable pause. "That heart is for you," he said,
looking the ranger in the eye.
"You
do not intend to return to us," Elbryan suddenly understood. "You
will deliver the monk, then stay in Palmaris."
The
man shrugged noncommittally. "It is painful to see her," he admitted.
"Painful and wonderful all at once. I have not yet decided which is the
more prominent emotion."
"Farewell,"
Elbryan replied.
"And
to you," said Connor. He looked again to Pony. "May I say my
good-byes to her privately?" he asked.
Elbryan
offered a consenting smile—not that he considered this in any way his decision. If
Pony wanted to speak privately with Connor, then she would do so, whatever he,
Elbryan, might think of it. He made things easier for Connor, feeling some
honest sympathy for the man, by walking back to Pony and delivering the
message. After waiting for Juraviel to slip down from Symphony, the woman urged
the horse out to join the man.
"I
may not return," Connor explained.
Pony
nodded, still unsure why Connor had come out in the first place.
"I
had to see you again," he went on, understanding her unspoken question.
"I had to know that you were well. I had to..." He paused and sighed
deeply.
"What
do you need from me?" Pony asked bluntly. "What can we say that has
not been said?"
"You
can forgive me," Connor blurted, and then tried desperately to explain.
"I was hurt... my pride. I did not want to send you away, but could not
stand to see you, to know that you did not love me..."
Pony's
smile silenced him. "I never blamed you, so there is nothing for me to
forgive," she replied quietly. "I find what happened between us to be
tragic, for both of us. We had a special friendship, and I shall always
treasure that."
"But
what I did, on our wedding night..." Connor protested.
"It
is what you did not do that allowed me to place no blame," said Pony.
"You could have taken me, and if you had, I would never have forgiven you—indeed, I
might have used my magic to cut you down on the field when first I saw you
again!" She knew that to be a lie as soon as she heard the words come out
of her mouth. Whatever her feelings toward Connor, she could not use the
gemstones, the sacred gifts of God, in such a vengeful way.
"I
am sorry," Connor said sincerely.
"As
am I," Pony replied. She leaned over and kissed the man on the cheek.
"Farewell, Connor Bildeborough," she said. "You see the enemy
plainly now. Fight well." And she turned her horse about and walked back
to Elbryan.
Soon
after, Pony, Elbryan, and Juraviel were heading back to the north, full of
hope, but making plans for a journey that they knew might be as dark as their
trip to Aida to face the demon dactyl. They hoped Connor's mission would be
fruitful, and quickly, and that the King, and the sensible and godly members of
the Abellican Order, if there were any left, would turn against this wicked
Father Abbot who had so wrongly imprisoned Bradwarden and the Chilichunks. They
hoped, too, to find their friends healthy and free before they ever entered
St.-Mere-Abelle.
But
practicality told them otherwise, for such political actions might take months,
even years. Bradwarden and the Chilichunks could not wait, did not deserve to
wait, and so the three planned to set off for the abbey on All Saints Bay as
soon as Roger, and perhaps Connor, returned to them.
It
was with equal determination that Roger and Connor strode toward Palmaris.
Connor held great faith in his uncle Rochefort. Ever since he was a child,
Connor had looked up to the man as someone who could get things done, a great
man who shaped life in the city. All the many times Connor had gotten himself
into trouble, his uncle Rochefort had taken care of things quietly and
effectively.
Brother
Youseff recognized that confidence in the man, both from his boasts of what his
uncle would now accomplish and the swaggering manner in which he sat in his
saddle.
"You
should understand, Master Bildeborough, the ramifications of being in league
with those two," the monk taunted.
"If
you do not shut your mouth, I will gag you," Connor promised.
"But
the embarrassment to your uncle!" Youseff pressed. "What fun it shall
be when the King learns that Baron Bildeborough's nephew is traveling with
outlaws."
"I
am indeed," Connor said, looking down at the man. "Now."
Brother
Youseff was not amused. "Your accusation is ridiculous, of course,"
he said. "And your uncle will recognize that fact and apologize profusely
to the Church—and
perchance the Church could be persuaded to accept the apology and not
excommunicate him."
Connor
scoffed openly, not really impressed, and certainly not believing this
dangerous monk's words. Fear did lick at Connor's thoughts, though, for himself
and for his uncle. He tried to hold fast to his confidence in the great man,
the Baron of Palmaris, but reminded himself repeatedly not to underestimate the
power of the Church.
"Perhaps
even you two could be forgiven," Youseff went on slyly.
"Forgiven
for defending ourselves?" Roger quipped.
"Neither
of you was involved," Youseff replied. "Only the girl and the other
one. And perhaps the elf—no such creature was known to us, and thus his fate is yet
to be determined."
Again
Connor scoffed. For this man who had stalked him at the Way, who had tried to
catch him to kill him, to insist that he wasn't involved was purely ridiculous.
"Ah
yes, the girl," Brother Youseff went on, changing his tone, looking up out
of the corner of his eye to measure Connor's response. "How sweet that
capture will prove," he said lewdly. "Perhaps I might find time to
take pleasure with her before I present her to my superiors."
The
monk saw the strike coming—indeed he had invited it!— and he didn't waver now, but let
Connor smack him across the back of his head. It wasn't a hard blow, but one
that Youseff could convincingly use as he dove down to the ground, slamming
his left shoulder squarely and pushing through the blow. He heard the popping
sound as the bone dislocated, felt the waves of pain washing over him, and he
cried out, seemingly from the pain, but really to cover the movements as he
brought his arms closer together behind his back, changing the angle of the
bindings.
"We
are almost to the city!" Roger scolded. "Why did you hit him?"
"Did
you not want to do exactly the same thing?" Connor replied, and Roger had
no answer. Roger went for the fallen monk then, as did Connor, sliding down
from Greystone.
The
security of Youseff's ties depended on not being able to bring his arms farther
back behind him, but now, with the shoulder popped out of place, that was no
longer true. He got his left hand free in moments, but held his position,
keeping his hands close together, ignoring the numbing pain in his left shoulder.
Roger
was beside him first, stooping to put his arms around the man.
Youseff
bided his time—this
one was not the most dangerous of the pair.
Then
Connor was there, helping Roger hoist the monk back to his feet.
Faster
than either of them could realize, Brother Youseff tucked his feet under him
and came up straight. The binding ropes flew wide as his right arm swung about,
fingers and thumb locked in a rigid C position. That deadly hook drove right
into Connor's throat, stunning the man, smashing against his exposed flesh,
then driving right through so that Youseff held Connor's windpipe in his hand.
He
looked the nobleman right in the eye, unblinking, uncaring, then tore out
Connor's throat.
Connor
Bildeborough fell away, clutching at his mortal wound, gasping for breath that
would not come, trying futilely to stem the explosion of blood that rose about
him in a crimson mist, that backed down his open windpipe into heaving lungs.
Youseff
spun and struck, knocking stunned Roger to the ground.
The
young man wisely discerned that he could do nothing for Connor and little
against the powerful monk. He was moving as soon as he hit the ground, and
while Youseff turned back to taunt the dying Connor, Roger managed to get to
the horse.
"I
think I will go and kill your uncle next," Youseff said with an evil grin.
Connor
heard him, but only from far, far away. He was falling, he felt, slipping
deeper and deeper into a blackness, deeper within himself. He felt cold and
alone, all noises diminishing to nothingness. His vision narrowed, became
points of light.
Bright
and warm.
He
found one place of great comfort, one place of hope: he had made his peace with
Jill.
Everything
was gone now, except the light, the warmth. Connor's spirit walked toward it.
Roger
held on dearly to one stirrup as Connor's frightened horse bolted, dragging him
along. Behind him he heard the monk coming hard; Youseff had taken up the
chase.
Growling
against the pain, Roger pulled himself closer to the horse as he ran alongside
it. He strengthened his grasp on the saddle, then reached back and slapped
Greystone hard, spurring the horse on. He managed to glance back as he did, and
saw Youseff, running fast, closing ground.
Using
all of his agility, every ounce of his strength, Roger pulled himself up, up.
He somehow got his feet off the ground, and with the drag gone, the horse put
some ground between itself and the running monk.
Roger
didn't even try to gain a proper seat, but just pulled himself over the saddle
sidelong, hanging head down, grimacing with each painful jolt.
The
fine horse left the monk behind.
A
frustrated Brother Youseff kicked hard at the ground. He glanced up and down
the road, both ways, wondering which course he should take. He could go back to
Palmaris—with
Connor dead, there would likely be no accusations raised against him concerning
the murdered abbot. Certainly the word of the rogues in the north would not be
sufficient to bring such charges against the Abellican Church.
But
while he didn't fear the Baron of Palmaris or the monks of St. Precious, the
thought of reporting back to Father Abbot Markwart with news of the disaster
made the hairs on the back of Youseff's neck stand up. Dandelion was dead, but
so was the troublesome Master Bildeborough.
Youseff
looked the way Roger had gone, to the north. He had to get to him before Roger
could rendezvous with the others, had to ensure complete surprise when he
sprang back upon the woman. And Youseff knew he would indeed go back after her,
and her two companions. They had only beaten him the first time because they
knew he was coming, but now...
Then
he could report back to the Father Abbot.
Brother
Youseff started to run, legs pumping tirelessly, carrying him over the miles.
Roger
was riding easily, but quickly. The monk hadn't given up, he suspected, for
they both knew that Roger meant to get back to Elbryan and Pony, which Youseff
could not allow. Still, Roger was not too worried, for with the horse he could
keep ahead.
But
barely, he saw when he climbed the side of one hillock, looking back down the
road to see the monk, far in the distance, but still running!
"Impossible,"
Roger muttered, for they must have covered more than five miles by then. Yet
the monk's speed seemed as great as if he had just taken up the chase!
Roger
climbed back on the horse and started away at a faster pace. He could tell that
the mount was tired—sweat glistened on the
golden coat—but
he couldn't afford to let Greystone slow down. He glanced back many times,
hoping, praying, that the monk could not outlast his mount. On and on he went,
staying to the road, more concerned with speed than stealth, knowing that the
monk, incredible as the man was, could not match his horse's pace.
He
was riding easily again soon after, confident that he had left his pursuer far
behind, and plotting the best course to find his friends; they had arranged to
meet at an abandoned farmhouse no more than ten miles farther.
The
horse stumbled, and Roger's eyes went wide when he saw the gleam of metal to
the side of the road. Greystone was limping now, having thrown a shoe.
Roger
was down to the ground in an instant, running to retrieve the shoe, then back
to the horse to see what leg it had come from. The answer was obvious before he
even approached, for the horse was limping badly now, favoring its rear left
leg. Gingerly, Roger hooked his arm about that limb and bent it up at the knee.
The
hoof was in bad shape. Roger didn't know much about horses, but realized that
this one couldn't go on unless that shoe was replaced. And there was no way he
could do that.
"Bloody
powrie luck," the young man cursed, glancing back nervously down the
road. It took all of Roger's willpower to control his mounting fears, to force
himself to think clearly, to reason through the problem. First he considered
running, but he dismissed that thought, sensing that the monk would find and
catch him long before he got to Elbryan and the others. He then wondered if any
houses this far north were inhabited once more, thinking he might find someone
to replace the shoe, but again he understood that he had not the time.
"The
fight is mine," Roger said aloud, needing to hear the words as he
continued to gaze back down the road. He went to the saddlebags then, for he
and Connor had collected many items on the journey south, looking for something—anything!—that
might help him now.
Most
of the items were simply general supplies for the road: ropes and a grapnel, a
small shovel, pots and pans, extra clothing and the like. One item caught his
attention, though. At the last stop, at the very farm where Elbryan and the
others would wait, Roger had taken a come-along, a small block-and-tackle unit
favored by farmers for hoisting bales, or even for pulling in stubborn bulls.
Roger
held the item in his hand, studying it, trying to find some way to put it to
use. Several images flashed in his mind, and he focused at last on one in
particular, one that utilized his abilities. He couldn't outfight the monk, he
knew, but he might be able to outwit the man.
By
the time Brother Youseff got to that spot, Roger and the horse were gone, but
the horseshoe remained, right in the middle of the road. The monk stopped and
examined the shoe, then stood and glanced all about curiously. He couldn't
imagine that the young man had been so foolish as to leave the telltale item
behind.
Youseff
searched ahead on the road and saw no fresh tracks beyond a dozen or so feet.
To the side of the trail, he easily found signs of the limping horse's passage,
and on the other side, a spot of blood and a lighter set of tracks, the
footprints of a light man. Now it made sense to the monk. The horse had thrown
the shoe and had then thrown the young man. Smiling widely, the monk started
down the sloping ground, toward a copse of trees, in which, he suspected, he
would find his second victim.
From
high in one of those trees, Roger Lockless, rope, grapnel, and come-along in
hand, watched the monk's confident approach. Youseff slowed as he neared the
trees, moving with more caution, darting from cover to cover.
Roger
lost sight of the monk when he entered the copse. Again he was amazed when
Youseff emerged at another point, quite far into the trees, for the man had
traveled many yards without even stirring the thick underbrush. Roger looked to
his items, to the finger he had purposely pricked to leave a blood trail, and
wondered if his wits would be enough.
It
was too late to change his mind about his plans, though, for Youseff was right
at the base of the tree now and had spotted the last drop of blood.
The
monk's head slowly turned up, staring through the leafy shadows, his gaze at
last settling on the dark shape high among the branches, hugging tight to the
trunk.
"If
you come down, I will spare your life," the monk called.
Roger
doubted that, but still, he almost began a negotiation.
"If
you make me climb all the way up there to drag you out, then know that your
death will be most unpleasant," Youseff went on.
"I
never did anything against your Church!" Roger replied, playing the part
of a frightened child, which at that moment did not seem to him to be too much
of a stretch.
"And
thus I will spare your life," Youseff repeated. "Now come down."
"Go
away," Roger cried.
"Come
down!" Youseff yelled. "I give you one last chance."
Roger
didn't reply, other than to whimper loudly enough for the monk to hear him.
As
Youseff started to climb, following a predictable course among the branches,
Roger watched the monk closely. He tugged on one rope for the hundredth time,
testing it. One end was tied fast to the tree, the other secured to one end of
the come-along. A second rope, fastened to the grapnel, was tied to the
come-along's other end.
The
knots were secure and the ropes were the right length, Roger reminded himself,
but still, when he considered the enormity of his plan, the need for perfect
timing and more than a bit of luck, he nearly swooned.
Youseff
was more than halfway up now, fully twenty feet from the ground.
"One
more branch," Roger muttered.
Up
came the monk, planting his feet on the last solid limb of the lower trunk. He
would have to pause there, Roger knew, and map out the rest of the climb, for
he was in an open area that afforded no ready branches.
As
soon as Youseff was in place, Roger Lockless took his rope firmly in hand and
leaped out. He plummeted between a pair of branches, getting a few nasty
scratches in the process. Then, some feet out from the trunk, he hit another
branch, as he had planned, and kicked out, launching himself on a circuitous
route about the tree. He crashed and bounced repeatedly but held fast to his
circular, descending course, passing the startled Youseff barely an arm's
length away.
How
Roger breathed easier as he continued around, for Brother Youseff had been too
surprised to leap out at him.
"Damn
you!" the monk cried. Youseff had at first thought that Roger was using
the rope to get ahead of him to the ground, but suddenly, as the loop tightened
about him, pinning him to the trunk, as Roger swung around and below, he
understood.
On
the last turn, Roger, holding the rope in only one hand now, took up the other
rope and launched the grapnel at a cluster of white birch. Then, hoping it
would catch, Roger braced his feet as he came around the base of the trunk, the
first length of rope playing out to the end. He dug in then, pulling with all
his strength to keep the rope taut about Youseff.
He
knew he didn't have long, for with the many branches interfering with the
pull, the rope was not tight enough to hold the agile and strong monk for long.
Not
yet.
Roger
pulled on the rope in the birch trees with one hand, using the other to crank
the come-along and take up some slack. He groaned aloud as he felt the grapnel
slipping through tangle. Finally, though, it caught fast.
Up
above, Youseff was laughing and trying to extricate himself. He had the rope up
above his elbows now and would soon slip under it.
Roger
gave one final tug, and then, seeing that the slack was nearly gone, he dove
for the come-along, cranking hard and fast with both hands.
Youseff
had just started to lift the rope over his head when it snapped taut, slamming
him back against the tree trunk. "What?" he asked, for he knew that
the skinny little man couldn't pull so powerfully. He could see well enough
below to know that no horse had come into the area, and so he stubbornly pushed
back against the rope.
He
heard the crack of a branch below, breaking under the strain, and was loose for
just an instant before the rope pulled hard again, squeezing him against the
trunk. Youseff's left arm was free and under the rope now, but the binding
crossed diagonally down his shoulder, right under his other arm, pinning him
tightly. He continued his stubborn fight as the rope tightened even more.
Roger
wasn't looking up, was just pulling on the come-along's crank with all his strength.
The rope was no longer even vibrating, was out straight and tight, and so Roger
finally stopped, fearing he would pull one of the birch trees right out of the
ground.
He
stepped out from under the tree and looked up to see the squirming, helplessly
pinned monk. Now he did smile, with absolute relief. "I will return,"
he promised. "With friends. It seems that you now have two murders to
answer for!" And he turned and ran off.
Youseff
paid the words little heed, just continued struggling against the impossibly
tight binding. He squirmed and shifted, thought to try and slip out under the
rope.
He
realized that to be a foolish move almost immediately—but too
late—as the rope slipped up an inch, creasing the side of his neck.
*
* *
Belli'mar
Juraviel was first into the copse, moving ahead of Elbryan, Pony, and Roger.
The sun was low in the sky now, its bottom edge dipping below the horizon. The
group had hurried back to the spot as soon as Roger had come to them, wanting
to capture and secure the dangerous monk before nightfall.
Elbryan
and the others waited outside the cluster of trees, the ranger watching Pony
closely. She had been silent all the way back to this place; the news of
Connor's death had hit her hard.
Strangely,
her mourning did not incite any jealous feelings within Elbryan, only an
empathy for her. He understood, truly understood, the relationship between Pony
and the nobleman, and he knew now that with Connor's death, the woman had lost
a part of herself, had lost that time of healing in her life. So Elbryan vowed
silently to keep his own negative feelings private, to focus on Pony's needs.
She
sat straight and tall on Symphony now, cutting a stoic and strong figure in the
fading light. She would get through this, as she had come through the first
massacre at Dundalis, as she had come through the bitter war and all the
losses, particularly the death of Avelyn. Once again the ranger found himself
marveling at the woman's strength and courage.
He
loved her all the more for it.
"He
is dead," came a call from the tall grass, Juraviel returning to the
group. The elf cast a glance at Roger, one that perceptive Elbryan didn't miss,
and explained, "He was just about free when I came upon him, stuck in the
tree just as you described. I had to cut him down—it took several arrows."
"You
are sure he is dead?" Roger asked nervously, not wanting anything more to
do with that one.
"He
is dead," Juraviel assured him. "And I believe that your horse,
Connor's horse, is just over there," the elf added, pointing across the
road.
"He
threw a shoe," Roger reminded.
"Which
can be easily repaired," Juraviel replied. "Go and get him."
Roger
nodded and started away, and Pony, on Elbryan's signal, kicked Symphony into a
trot after him.
"Your
quiver is full," the ranger noted when he and the elf were alone.
"I
retrieved my arrows," Juraviel replied.
"Elves
do not retrieve arrows that have hit the mark," the ranger replied.
"Not unless the situation is desperate, which ours, now that the monks are
both dead, is not."
"Your
point?" Juraviel asked dryly.
"The
man was dead when you went into the copse," Elbryan reasoned.
Juraviel
agreed with a nod. "He apparently tried to get out of the bindings,
choking himself," he explained. "Our young Roger did well in
tightening the bonds, and was quite clever in capturing the man in the first
place. Too clever, perhaps."
"I
have battled with one called Brother Justice before," Elbryan said.
"And you saw the fanaticism at our ambush. Did you doubt that it must end
like this, with the death of the monk?"
"I
wish he had not died at young Roger's hands," Juraviel replied. "I do
not believe that he is ready for that."
Elbryan
glanced to the road, to see Pony and Roger walking together, leading Symphony
and Connor's limping horse.
"He
must be told the truth," the ranger decided, and he looked to Juraviel,
expecting an argument.
"He'll
not take it well" was all the elf warned, but Juraviel did not disagree
with the ranger. The road ahead for all of them would be dark, no doubt, and
perhaps it was better to get this unpleasantness over with here and now.
When
the pair arrived with the horses, Juraviel took Greystone and, after examining
the injured hoof, led the creature away, motioning for Pony to take Symphony
and follow.
"Juraviel
did not kill the monk," Elbryan said to Roger as soon as the others were
gone.
Roger's
eyes widened in panic and he glanced all around, as if expecting Brother
Justice to leap out at him at any moment. The man had unnerved Roger more than
any other foe, even Kos-kosio, ever had.
"You
did," Elbryan explained.
"You
mean that I was the one who defeated him," Roger corrected. "And
that the kill by Juraviel was no large matter."
"I
mean that you killed him," the ranger said firmly. "I mean that you
tightened the rope and it somehow slipped about his neck, choking the life from
him."
Roger's
eyes widened again. "But Juraviel said—" he started to protest.
"Juraviel
feared for your sensibilities," Elbryan bluntly replied. "He was not
certain how you would accept such grim reality, and thus feared to speak
plainly."
Roger's
mouth moved but no words came forth. The weight of the truth was hitting him
hard, Elbryan realized, and he could see that he was swaying.
"I
had to tell you," Elbryan said, softly now. "You deserve to know the
truth, and must get beyond it if you are to handle the responsibilities that
have now been put on your young shoulders."
Roger
was hardly listening, was swaying more pronouncedly now and seemed as if he
might simply topple over.
"We
will speak later," Elbryan said to him, walking up to him and dropping a
comforting hand on his shoulder. Then the ranger continued past, going to join
Juraviel and Pony, leaving Roger alone with his thoughts.
And
with his pain, for truly Roger Billingsbury—and suddenly he craved for that title
again and not the foolishly pretentious Roger Lockless—had never been hit by
anything like this. He had known grief many times, too many times, in his young
life, but that pain was different. That pain allowed him to keep himself up on
a pedestal, to continue to view himself as the center of the universe, as
somehow better than everyone else. In all the pain and all the many trials
young Roger had ever known, he had been able to hold on to his somewhat
childish Roger-centric view of the world.
Now,
suddenly, that pedestal had been kicked out from under him. He had killed a
man.
He
had killed a man!
Without
conscious choice, Roger was sitting in the grass. Desperately, his rational
side battled against his conscience. True, he had killed a man, but what choice
had the man given him? The monk was a killer, pure and simple. The monk had
killed Connor right before his own eyes, brutally, evilly. The monk had
murdered Abbot Dobrinion!
But
even those truths did little to assuage Roger's sudden sense of guilt. Whatever
the justifications, and in spite of the fact that he had not intentionally
killed Brother Justice, the man was dead, and the blood was on his hands.
He
put his head down, laboring hard for breath. He craved all those things that
had been torn from him at too young an age: family warmth and the reasonable,
comforting words of adults he could look up to. With that thought, he looked
over his shoulder to his three friends, to the ranger who had so bluntly told
him of his crime and then left him alone.
For
a moment Roger hated Elbryan for that. But it could not hold; soon enough he
understood that the ranger had told him out of respect for him, out of
confidence in him, and had then left him alone because an adult—and he was an
adult now—had to work through such pain, at least in part, alone.
Pony
came for him soon after, saying nothing of the monk's death, but only informing
him they were going to gather up the fallen monk and then go south to retrieve
Connor's body.
Silently,
Roger fell into line, purposefully averting his eyes from the spectacle of
Brother Justice, slung over Greystone's back. The horse was walking better now,
for Juraviel had shaved its hoof to level, but still the pace was slow. Night
fell in full, and still they walked, determined to get to Connor's body before
he was torn apart by some scavenging creature.
With
some difficulty, for the night was quite dark, they at last found the man.
Pony
went to him first, and gently closed his eyes. Then she walked away, far away.
"Go
to her," Juraviel said to Elbryan.
"You
know what to do with him," the ranger replied, and the elf nodded. Then,
to Roger, Elbryan added, "Be strong and be sure. Your role is perhaps the
most important of all now."
And
then he walked away, leaving Roger staring at Juraviel for an explanation.
"You
are to take Connor, the monk, and the horse and head straight out to
Palmaris," the elf explained.
Roger
inadvertently glanced at the dead monk, at the image that so shook his
self-perception.
"Go
to the Baron, not the abbey," the elf explained. "Tell him what has
happened. Tell him of Connor's belief that these monks, and not any powrie,
murdered Abbot Dobrinion, and that they chased Connor out of Palmaris, for he,
too, had unwittingly become an enemy of the wicked Church leaders."
"And
then what for me?" the young man asked, wondering if this was the last
time he would see these three.
Juraviel
glanced around. "We could use another horse—another two," he added,
"if you plan to ride with us."
"Does
he want me to?" Roger asked, nodding toward the distant Elbryan.
"Would
he have told you the truth if he did not?" Juraviel replied.
"And
what of you, then?" Roger quickly asked. "Why did you lie to me? Do
you think me a foolish young boy, unable to take responsibility?"
"I
think you a man who has grown much in the last weeks," the elf replied
honestly. "I did not tell you because I was not sure of what Nightbird—and do not
doubt that he is the leader of this group—had planned for you. If we meant to
leave you in Palmaris, in safety with Tomas and Belster, if we had determined
that your role in this fight was at its end, then what good would it have done
you to let you know that you had the blood of a dead man on your hands?"
"Is the truth not absolute?" Roger asked. "Do you play God, elf?"
"If
the truth is not in any way constructive, then it can wait for a better
time," Juraviel replied. "But since your course is yours to determine,
then you needed to know now. Our road will be dark, my young friend, and I do
not doubt that we will find other Brother Justices in our path, perhaps for
years to come."
"And
each successive kill gets easier?" Roger asked sarcastically.
"Pray
that is not the case," Juraviel replied in a severe tone, eyeing Roger
unblinkingly.
That
demeanor set the young man back on his heels.
"Nightbird
thought that you were emotionally strong enough to know the truth," the
elf added. "Take it as a compliment."
Juraviel
started to walk away.
"I
do not know if he was right," Roger admitted suddenly.
The
elf turned about to see Roger, head down, shoulders bobbing in sobs. He went
to stand beside him, put his hand on the small of Roger's back. "The other
monk was only the second man Nightbird ever killed," he said. "He did
not cry this time because he shed all those tears after killing the first, the
first Brother Justice."
The
notion that this stoic and powerful ranger had been equally shaken hit Roger
profoundly. He wiped his eyes and stood straight, looked to Juraviel and nodded
grimly.
Then
Roger was on the road south, too agitated to sit and wait out the remainder of
the night. He had to move quite slowly, for the injured Greystone carried both
bodies, but he was determined to speak with Baron Bildeborough before the
midday meal.
As
I learned more about the Church that Avelyn served—the Church
of my parents and of every fellow human I have ever known—and as I met
more of the Abellican monks, I began to recognize just how subtle the nature of
evil might be. I had never spent time considering this before, but is the evil
man inherently evil? Is he even aware that his actions are evil? Does he
believe them to be, or has he tainted his perspective so that he believes
himself to be in the right?
In
these times, when the dactyl awoke and the world knew chaos, many, it seems,
have come to question the very essence of evil. Who am I, or who is anyone,
they might say, to judge which man might be considered evil and which good?
When I ask, is the evil man inherently evil, I am supposing an absolute
distinction that many people refuse to acknowledge. Their concept of morality
is relative, and while I'll admit that the moral implications of many actions
might be dependent upon a certain situation, the overall moral distinction is
not.
For
within that truth, I know a larger one. I know that there is indeed an absolute
difference between good and evil, with individual perspective and justification
notwithstanding. To the Touel'alfar, the common good is the measuring stick—putting the
good of the elven folk first, but considering the good of all others, as well.
Though the elves desire little contact with humans, they have for centuries
taken humans under their tutelage and trained them as rangers, not for any
gains to Andur'Blough Inninness, for
that place is beyond the influence of the rangers, but for the betterment of
the world at large. The elven folk are not aggressors, never that. They fight
when they must, in defense and against imperialism. Had the goblins not come to
Dundalis, the elves would never have sought them out, for though they have no
love of goblins or powries or giants, and indeed consider the three races to be
a scourge upon the very world, the elves would suffer them to live. To go to
the mountains and attack these monsters, by elven standards, would reduce the
Touel'alfar to the level of that which they despise above all else.
Conversely,
the powries and the goblins have shown themselves to be warring and wicked
creatures. They attack whenever they find advantage, and it is little wonder
that the demon dactyl sought out these races for its minions. I tend to view
the giants a bit differently, and wonder if they are, by nature, evil, or if
they simply look at the world in a different way. A giant may look at a human
and, like a hungry hunting cat, see its next meal. Still, as with powries and
goblins, I feel no remorse in killing giants.
None
at all.
Among
the five races of Corona, then, I consider the humans most shrouded in mystery.
Some of the very best people in all the world—Brother Avelyn, as a prime
example—were human, as were, and possibly are, some of the very worst
tyrants. In general, my own race is a goodly one, but not as predictable and
disciplined as the Touel'alfar, certainly! Still, in temperament and general
beliefs, we are much closer to the elves than to the other three races.
But
those shades of gray...
Perhaps
nowhere is the confusing concept of evil more evident than in the ranks of the
Abellican Church, the accepted moral leader of the majority of humankind.
Likely it is because this body has been entrusted with so high a standard, no
less than to serve as the vanguard of human souls. An error in perspective
among the Church leaders is a disastrous thing indeed, as Avelyn proved. To
them he was a heretic, though in truth, I doubt there has ever been a man more
godly, more charitable, more generous, more willing to sacrifice everything for
the common good.
Perhaps
the Father Abbot, who sent Brother Justice after Avelyn, can justify his
actions—to
himself, at least—by claiming them to be for the betterment of all. A
master was killed in Avelyn's escape, after all, and Avelyn had no legal claim
to the stones he took
But
the Father Abbot is wrong, I say, for though Avelyn might be technically labeled
a thief, the stones were his on purely moral grounds. Having watched his work,
even before he sacrificed himself to rid the world of the demon dactyl, I have
no doubt of this.
The
capacity of any individual to justify his or her actions will forever amaze me,
I fear.
—elbryan wyndon
By
the time he neared the northern gate of Palmaris city proper, Roger Lockless
and his grim luggage had attracted more than a little attention. Several
farmers and their families, alert to anything moving in the area in these
dangerous times, had noted the man's passage, and many even came out to follow
him, pestering him with questions.
He offered few explanations all the way to the gate, grunting his answers to general questions, such as, "Did you come from the north?" or "Any goblins up there?" The farmers accepted the vague answers without complaint, but the guards at the gate proved much more insistent. As soon as Roger drew near and it became apparent he had two human bodies strapped across his hobbled horse, one of the two great city gates cracked open and a pair of armored soldiers rushed out to intercept him.
Roger
was very much aware of the fact that other guards watching from the walls had
their bows drawn and ready, and aimed at his head.
"Your
doing?" one of the soldiers snapped, moving to inspect the bodies.
"Not
that one," Roger quickly replied as the man lifted Connor's head, his eyes
widening in recognition and horror.
The
other soldier was at Roger's side in an instant, sword drawn and brought level
with the man's neck.
"Do
you think I would walk openly into Palmaris bearing the body of the Baron's
nephew if I had killed the man?" Roger calmly asked, wanting these
soldiers to understand that he knew the identity of the nobleman. "I have
been called many things, but I do not number 'fool' among them. And besides, I
considered Connor Bildeborough a friend. That is why, though I have other
pressing business, I could not leave him on the road for the goblins and buzzards
to pick over his corpse."
"What
about this one?" snapped the soldier standing beside the horse. "He
is from the abbey, is he not?"
"Not
from St. Precious, no," Roger replied. "He is from
St.-Mere-Abelle."
The
two soldiers looked to each other with trepidation; neither of them had been
among those sent to St. Precious when the trouble with the Father Abbot had
begun, but both had heard well the stories, and that put a sinister spin
indeed on their suspicions when viewing the two bodies draped across Roger's
horse.
"You
killed this one?" the soldier asked.
"I
did," Roger replied without pause.
"An
admission of guilt?" the other soldier was quick to interrupt.
"For
if I did not, then he surely would have killed me," Roger finished calmly,
looking the accusing soldier right in the eye. "I should think that, given
the identity of these two, this conversation would be better served in the home
of the Baron."
The
soldiers looked to each other, unsure of how to proceed.
"Unless
you think it better to have the common folk pawing over Connor
Bildeborough," Roger added, a sharp edge to his tone. "Perhaps one
will find proper use for Defender, or it might be that their rumors will reach
the Baron, or the abbot of St. Precious, and who can tell what intrigue that
might bring?"
"Open
the gates," the soldier standing beside the horse called to the guards on
the wall. He motioned to his companion, and the man put his sword away.
"Be gone to your homes," he scolded the excited and whispering
onlookers, and then he and his companion flanked Roger and started toward the
city, grim baggage in tow. They stopped when they got inside the gate, other
guards shutting it behind them. Out of sight of the farmers—for they
weren't sure whether or not this stranger had any allies among those folk—they
grabbed Roger roughly and slammed him up against the wall, frisking every inch
of his body and removing anything that even resembled a weapon.
A
third guard brought out blankets to cover the bodies, then took hold of the
horse's reins and led the beast, while the first two grabbed Roger roughly by
the elbows and half carried, half dragged him through the city streets.
Roger
spent a lot of time alone in Chasewind Manor, the palatial home of Baron
Rochefort Bildeborough. He wasn't physically alone, but the two grim-faced
soldiers assigned to guard him seemed in no mood for conversation. So he sat
and waited, sang songs to himself, even counted the boards of the hardwood
floor three times, as the hours passed.
When
the Baron finally entered, Roger understood the delay. The man's face was
puffy, his eyes sunken, the hollow look of grief all about him. The news of
Connor's death had hit him hard, very hard; apparently Connor had not been
exaggerating when boasting of his standing with his uncle.
"Who
killed my nephew?" Baron Bildeborough asked before he had even taken his
seat in the chair opposite Roger.
"His
killer has been delivered to you," Roger replied.
"The
monk," Baron Bildeborough stated more than asked, as though that fact held
little surprise.
"That
man and one other of St.-Mere-Abelle attacked us," Roger began.
"Us?"
"Connor,
myself, and..." Roger hesitated.
"Go
on with your tale about Connor," Baron Bildeborough said impatiently.
"The details will wait."
"In
the fight, the monk's companion was killed," Roger explained. "And
this monk was captured. Connor and I were taking him to you—we were on the
very outskirts of the city—when he broke free and killed your nephew, a single
thrust of his fingers to the throat."
"My
healer tells me that Connor has been dead longer than your story would
suggest," Baron Bildeborough put in, "if you then killed the monk, on
the outskirts of my city."
"It
did not happen quite that way," Roger stuttered. "Connor was dead
immediately; I could see that, and so, being no match for the monk, I fled,
taking Connor's horse."
"Greystone,"
said Rochefort. "The name of the horse is Greystone."
Roger
nodded. "The monk would not give up his pursuit, and when Greystone threw
a shoe, I knew that I would be caught. But I beat him with wits where my
strength would not, and though I had only meant to capture him, that he might
come back and stand open trial for his crimes, he was killed in the
process."
"I
have been told that you are long on wits, Roger Billingsbury," the Baron
said. "Or do you prefer the name Lockless?"
The
stunned young man had no reply.
"Fear
not," Baron Bildeborough reassured him. "I have spoken with a former
companion of yours, a man who holds you in the highest regard and made no
secret to me of your exploits against the powries in Caer Tinella."
Still
dumbstruck, Roger could only shake his head.
"By
simple coincidence, I employ the daughter of a Mrs. Kelso on my staff,"
Rochefort explained.
Roger
relaxed and even managed a smile. If Baron Bildeborough trusted Mrs. Kelso,
then he had nothing to fear from the man.
"I
warned Connor—what
an impetuous and cocky young man he was!" Rochefort said quietly, lowering
his head. "If the powries could get to Dobrinion, then none of us was
safe, I told him. But this rogue monk," he added, shaking his head.
"How could he have expected such an assassin? It makes no sense to
me."
"No
powries got to Abbot Dobrinion," Roger replied firmly, drawing the man's
attention. "And this monk was no rogue."
The
Baron's expression was caught somewhere between outrage and confusion as he
looked directly at the surprising Roger.
"That
is why Connor and I were coming fast to see you," Roger explained.
"Connor knew that the monks, and no powrie, murdered Abbot Dobrinion.
With the captured monk in tow, he thought he had his proof."
"A
monk of the Abellican Order killed Dobrinion?" Rochefort asked
skeptically.
"This
is much bigger than Abbot Dobrinion," Roger tried to explain. He knew he
had to be careful not to give away too much information about his three
companions. "It is about stolen gemstones and a struggle within the Church
powers. It is all beyond me," he admitted. "All too complicated
concerning areas with which I have little knowledge. But the same two monks who
attacked my friends and me in the northland killed Abbot Dobrinion. Connor was
certain of that."
"What
was he doing in the northland?" Rochefort wanted to know. "Did you
know him before this incident?"
"Not
I, but one of my companions," Roger admitted, and then he took a deep
breath and took a chance. "She was married to Connor once, for a short
time."
"Jilly,"
Rochefort breathed.
"I
can say no more, and please, for her sake, for my sake, for all our sakes, do
not ask," said Roger. "Connor came to warn us, that is all you need
to know. And in saving us, he forfeited his own life."
Baron
Bildeborough sat back in his chair, digesting all that he had heard, weighing
it beside the recent disturbances at St. Precious concerning the Father Abbot
and his fellows of St.-Mere-Abelle. After a long while he looked back to Roger,
then patted an empty chair beside him. "Come and sit with me as a
friend," he said sincerely. "I want to know everything about Connor's
last days. And I want to know all about Roger Billingsbury, that we two might
discern our best course of action."
Roger
tentatively shifted to the chair closer to the Baron, taking more than a little
hope in the fact that Bildeborough had referred to them as a team.
"That
is him," Juraviel insisted, peering down from the hillock with his keen
eyes. "I can tell by the awkward way he sits in the saddle." The elf
gave a snicker. "It amazes me that a human as agile as Roger can appear so
clumsy on a horse."
"He
does not understand the animal," Elbryan explained.
"Because
he chooses not to," the elf replied.
"Not
everyone was trained by the Touel'alfar," the ranger said with a grin.
"Nor
is everyone blessed with a turquoise stone that they might learn the heart of
their mount," Pony added, giving Symphony a gentle stroke on the neck.
The
horse nickered softly.
The
three friends and Symphony went down from the hillock, moving at an angle to
intercept Roger.
"It
went well!" he called excitedly, delighted to have found them. He kicked
his horse into a faster trot and pulled harder on the reins of the horse
trailing behind him, a horse the companions had seen before.
"You
saw Baron Bildeborough," Elbryan reasoned.
"He
gave me the horses," Roger explained. "Including Fielder here,"
he added, patting the horse that had been Rochefort's favorite. It struck
Roger then how generous the Baron had been, almost mentorlike.
"Greystone
is for you," Roger said to Pony, pulling Connor's beautiful palomino
ahead. "Baron Bildeborough insisted that Connor would want you to have
him. And this," he added, taking a sword, Connor's magnificent blade,
Defender, from the side of his saddle.
Pony
turned her wide-eyed expression to Elbryan, who only shrugged and said quietly,
"It seems fitting."
"But
then the Baron knows of us," Juraviel reasoned in less content tones.
"Or of Pony, at least."
"I
did not tell him much," Roger replied. "I promise. But he needed
answers—Connor
was as a son to him, and the sight of Connor dead nearly broke him." He
turned to Elbryan, whom he figured would judge his actions most critically of
all. "I came to like the Baron," he said. "And trust him. I do
not think he is an enemy of ours, especially considering the identity of
Connor's killer."
"It
seems that the Baron came to like Roger Lockless, as well," the ranger
remarked. "And to trust him. These are no small gifts."
"He
understood the message," Roger replied. "And the intent of the
messenger. Baron Bildeborough knows that he is in dire straits when measuring
his own strength against that of the Abellican Church. He needs allies as badly
as we do."
"How
much did you tell him of us?" Juraviel interrupted, his voice still stern.
"He
did not ask very much at all," Roger calmly replied. "He did come to
trust that I was a friend, and an enemy of his enemies. He asked nothing of
your identities, other than what I offered about you," he finished,
motioning to Pony.
"You
did well," Elbryan decided after a few moments. "Where does it all
stand now?"
Roger
shrugged, fearing to face that question. "The Baron will not let the
matter drop, of that I am sure," he said. "He promised me that we
would take it to the King, if need be, though I believe he fears to incite a
war between crown and Church."
"
'We' ?" Pony asked, picking up the cue.
"He
wants me to bear witness," Roger explained. "He bade me to come back to
him presently, that we might plan a journey to Ursal, should his private
conferences with some trusted monks of St. Precious fail to give him
satisfaction.
"Of
course I told him that I could not," Roger added, seeing the curious
expressions.
Now
Roger was confused, as those expressions turned from curious to disapproving.
"We
are on to St.-Mere-Abelle, so I believed," Roger said. "Baron
Bildeborough wants to be in Ursal before the turn of the season, for he has
learned that a College of Abbots is to be assembled in mid-Calember and he is
determined to speak with the King before Abbot Je'howith of St. Honce journeys
north. Yet there is no possible way that I can go all the way to
St.-Mere-Abelle beside you, finish our business there, and then return to Palmaris
in time for the Baron's departure."
Still
their expressions remained doubting.
"You
don't want me to go!" a horrified Roger reasoned.
"Of
course we do," Pony replied.
"But
if the greater good will be served by having you at Baron Bildeborough's side,
then there you should be," Elbryan added, both Pony and Juraviel nodding
their assent.
"I
have earned my place beside you," Roger protested, lapsing back into his
childish nature once again, a prideful mindset which screamed at him that being
left out was an affront. "We have learned to fight well together. It was I
who killed Brother Justice!"
"Everything
you say is true," Pony answered, moving next to the young man and draping
her arm about him. "Everything. You have earned your place, and we are
glad and grateful to have you beside us, and surely we would be the better off
for your particular abilities as we try to make our way into
St.-Mere-Abelle."
"But..
." Roger prompted.
"But
we do not think we can win," Pony answered bluntly, her candor catching Roger
by surprise.
"Yet
still you go."
"They
are our friends," said Elbryan. "We must go. We must try every means
possible to get Bradwarden and the Chilichunks out of the Father Abbot's
clutches."
"Every
means," Juraviel emphasized.
Roger
started to argue, but stopped abruptly, closing both his eyes and his lips
tightly as the point finally came through. "And if you cannot rescue them
by force, then their only chance will come from an intervention by the King, or
by those forces in the Church not under the Father Abbot's wicked
influence," he reasoned.
"You
may come with us if you desire," Elbryan said sincerely. "And we will
be glad to have you along. But only you have spoken with Baron Bildeborough,
and thus only you can decide which course is the most important for Roger
Lockless."
"Only
I can decide which course is the most important for Bradwarden and the
Chilichunks," Roger corrected. He went quiet then, and the others did,
too, allowing him his private thoughts. He wanted to go to St.-Mere-Abelle, to
take part in this grand adventure. Desperately.
But
his reason overruled that desperation. Baron Bildeborough needed him more than
did Elbryan, Pony, and Juraviel. Juraviel could more than fill his niche as
scout, and between Elbryan's sword and Pony's magic, any contributions he might
make should battle find them would be nominal at best.
"Promise
me that you will find your way back to me when you again pass through
Palmaris," the young man said, choking up with every word.
Elbryan
gave a laugh. "Could you doubt that?" he said light-heartedly.
"Juraviel must come through or near to Palmaris on his road home."
"As
will Elbryan and I," Pony added. "For when this is settled, when we
again find peace, we will go back to Dundalis, our home, and Bradwarden's. And
on our way, I must take my family back to Fellowship Way in Palmaris."
Pony offered a quiet smile and hugged the man close, nearly pulling him from
his saddle. "And even if our destination lay the opposite way, we would
not leave Roger Lockless behind." She kissed the man on the cheek, drawing
a deep blush.
"We
each have our duties spread clear before us," Pony went on. "Two
paths to defeat the one enemy. We will win out, and then we will celebrate—together."
Roger
nodded numbly, too overcome to verbally reply. Elbryan came over and patted him
on the shoulder, and he looked past the ranger, to see Juraviel offering a
confirming nod. He didn't want to leave them! How could he go away from the
first real friends—the first friends who had bothered to point out his faults
as well as praise his talents—he had ever known?
And
yet, precisely because of that, because these real friends were in dire trouble
with the powerful Abellican Church, he knew he had to go back to Baron
Bildeborough. Roger had known many trials in his life, but never before had he
been asked by his own conscience to willingly sacrifice so very much. This
time, unlike his jaunt into Caer Tinella behind the raiding Elbryan, his
decision was motivated by altruism, and not jealousy, not fear of being outdone
by the ranger. This time Roger acted out of love for Pony and Elbryan, and for
Juraviel, the most blunt friend of all.
He
said not a word, but took Elbryan's hand in a shake that became a hug, then
took up Fielder's reins and rode away.
"He
has grown," Belli'mar Juraviel observed.
Pony
and Elbryan silently agreed; both were as upset by this farewell as was Roger.
Pony slipped down from Symphony and went to Greystone; the ranger taking
Symphony by the bridle, they walked the horses back to their small camp.
They
packed what few supplies they needed and set out on the road south. Juraviel
wrapped himself in a blanket to hide his wings and weapons, appearing as a
young boy, and took a seat on Greystone behind Pony. They decided to go
straight into Palmaris, through the northern gate, for, with the monsters
retreating, the city had become more open of late, and they didn't believe they
would be denied passage.
There
was little conversation among them as they crossed through the northern
outskirts, past the houses, most empty, but some with family returned. They
actually caught sight of Roger on the road ahead of them several times, but
thought it best to let him go in alone. Given what had just transpired between
Roger and Baron Bildeborough, approaching the gate beside him would cause
unwanted attention.
So
much so that, on Juraviel's advice, they decided to set camp outside the city
that night, to wait a day and let all thoughts of Roger Lockless pass from the
minds of the city guards.
Still,
things were quiet between them, and Elbryan in particular seemed in a somber
mood.
"Is
it Bradwarden?" Pony asked him as they ate supper, a fine stew of coneys
Juraviel had shot.
The
ranger nodded. "I was remembering his days in Dundalis, before you
returned," he admitted. "Or even back before that, when you and I
were on the northern slope awaiting our fathers' return from the hunt, when we
heard the music of the Forest Ghost."
Pony
smiled, recalling that long-past, innocent time. She understood the source of
Elbryan's melancholy to be more than simple nostalgia, though, understood, and
surely empathized with, the pangs of guilt that resonated through her lover's
every word.
Juraviel,
sitting off to the side, recognized it, too, and was quick to jump into the conversation.
"You thought he was dead," the elf remarked.
Both
Pony and Elbryan turned to regard him.
"To
blame yourselves is foolish," Juraviel went on. "The mountain fell
on him, so you believed. What were you to do, begin digging your way back in
with your bare hands? And you, Nightbird, with your arm torn and broken?"
"Of
course we do not blame ourselves," Pony argued, but her words sounded
hollow, even to her.
"Of
course you do!" Juraviel replied with a burst of mocking laughter.
"That is the way with humans—and too often for my taste, their
self-blame is justified. But not this time, and not with you two. You did all
that you could, loyally, valiantly. Even with all you have heard, you doubt
that it could be Bradwarden."
"The
evidence seems solid," Elbryan remarked.
"But
so does the evidence that the centaur was killed," Juraviel replied.
"There is something to this which you do not understand, and rightly so,
for if it is indeed Bradwarden, then some force beyond your comprehension has
kept him alive—or
has brought him back from the dead. True?"
Elbryan
looked to Pony, then both turned back to Juraviel and nodded.
"That
alone should alleviate your guilt," the elf reasoned, catching them in his
logic trap. "If you were so certain that Bradwarden was killed, then how
can you be blamed, by others or by yourselves, for leaving that foul
place?"
"True
again," Elbryan admitted, managing a smile, glad indeed that the wisdom of
the Touel'alfar remained by his side.
"Then
look not to the road behind," Juraviel said. "But to the road ahead.
If it is indeed Bradwarden, if he is indeed alive, then he needs you now. And
when we are done, when the centaur is freed, how much better all the world
shall be."
"And
we can return to Dundalis with him," Pony put in. "And all the
children of those who return to that town to rebuild will know the magic of the
song of the Forest Ghost."
Now
they were at ease. They finished their dinner, speaking of the days they would
know when this dark road was traveled and put well behind them, speaking of
their plans when peace again reigned in Honce-the-Bear, when the Timberlands
were reclaimed, when the Church was put aright.
They
went to sleep early, vowing to make the gates before the break of dawn, and
both Pony and Elbryan slept soundly, their elven friend keeping a watchful
guard.
A frustrated and angry Master Jojonah shuffled down the main hallway in the upper level of St.-Mere-Abelle, the long and grand corridor running along the top of the cliff wall overlooking All Saints Bay. Windows were spaced every few feet to the monk's right, the eastern view, while the left-hand wall was dotted sporadically by wooden doors layered with carvings of intricate detail. Each door told a separate story, one of the fables that formed the basis of the Abellican Church, and usually Jojonah, who had only fully examined a score of the fifty doors in all his decades at St.-Mere-Abelle, would pause and look at a portion of yet another. After an hour of perusal, he might have fully scrutinized a six-inch-square block, reflecting on all of the hidden meanings. This day, though, feeling particularly foul, and in no mood for reflections on his strayed Order, the master just put his head down and rambled on, chewing his lips to keep from mumbling aloud.
He
was taken by complete surprise, then, when a man blocked his path. He jumped
back, startled, then looked up into the smiling face of Brother Braumin Herde.
"Brother
Dellman is doing well," the younger monk informed him. "They believe
he will live, and will walk again, though not smoothly."
Master
Jojonah didn't blink, his expression holding that angry stare and focusing it,
not quite intentionally, on Brother Braumin.
"Is
something wrong?" Braumin asked.
"Why
would I care?" Jojonah blurted before he could consciously formulate a
reply. He silently chastised himself immediately, using the unintentionally
sharp retort as a personal lesson concerning just how angry and out-of-control
he had become. He had erred badly because of that anger and frustration, had
pushed Markwart too far. Of course he cared about Brother Dellman! Of course he
was glad that the sincere young man was healing well. And of course, Master
Jojonah did not want to take his outrage out on Brother Braumin Herde, in
effect, his closest friend. He looked at the hurt and surprised expression on
Braumin's face, and formulated an apology.
Jojonah
quickly bit back that reply, though, conjuring another image of Brother
Braumin, one of the man lying lifeless in a wooden box. That image surely shook
the old man, as painful a thought as a father might have for one of his
children.
"Brother
Braumin, you assume much," Jojonah went on instead, keeping his voice
sharp, and loud.
Braumin
glanced around nervously, fearing they might be overheard, for there were
indeed other monks in the long corridor, though none in the immediate area.
"Brother
Dellman was injured badly," Jojonah elaborated. "Through his own
foolishness, I have been told. Well, men die, Brother Braumin. It is the greatest
truth, the one inescapable fact of our existence. And if Brother Dellman had
died ... well, so be it. Better men than he have gone before."
"What
nonsense is this?" Brother Braumin dared to ask, quietly, calmly.
"The
nonsense of your self-importance," Jojonah snapped right back at him.
"The nonsense to believe that any one man can make a difference, a real
difference, in the course of human events." The master snorted and waved
his hand dismissively and started by. Brother Braumin reached out to grab him,
but Jojonah roughly shoved the arm away.
"Get
on with your life, Brother Braumin," Jojonah scolded. "Find meaning
where you will and secure your own little corner of the too-big world!"
Jojonah
pounded off down the corridor, leaving poor Braumin Herde standing perplexed
and wounded to his heart.
And
Jojonah, too, was hurting. In the midst of his little speech he had almost
succumbed to the despair he was spouting. But it was all for a noble purpose,
he reminded himself now, finding again his inner center of harmony, throwing
out all the bluster and a good deal of his anger in a great mental belch. He
had berated Braumin, loudly, publicly, because he loved the man, because he
wanted the man to keep away from him long enough for him to be far along the
road with Master De'Unnero before Braumin even figured out that he was gone.
That
was the safest course, Jojonah knew, given Markwart's foul mood and increasing
paranoia. Braumin had to lie low for the time being, perhaps for a very long
time. Given the "accident" that befell Brother Dellman, the course
Jojonah had set Braumin on, with his talk of Avelyn and the faults of the
Church and his visit to Avelyn's sacred grave, suddenly appeared to Jojonah as
incredibly selfish. Battered by his own conscience, he had needed Braumin's
support, and thus, in his desperation, had pulled the man into his secret
little war.
What
consequences that might hold for Brother Braumin Herde stung Jojonah profoundly
now. Markwart had won, it seemed, and he had been a fool all along to believe
he could beat the powerful man.
The
blackness of despair crept up around him again. He felt weak and sick, the same
sickness he had known on the road to Ursal, as the strength and righteous
determination ebbed away.
He
doubted he would live to see the great doors of St. Precious.
Master
Jojonah's brutal treatment left Brother Braumin standing stunned in the long
corridor. What could possibly have happened to so turn the master around?
Brother
Braumin's eyes widened; he wondered if that had indeed been Master Jojonah he
had been speaking with, or if, perhaps, Markwart, or even Francis, had taken
control of the man's body.
Braumin
calmed quickly, dismissing the notion. Possession was difficult enough on the
unsuspecting who had never been trained in the use of the stones. Since Jojonah
could use the soul stone, and use it well, he had definitely learned how to
manipulate his spirit in such ways that would prevent such intrusion.
But
what, then, had happened? Why had the master, after all these days, spoken so
angrily and rudely to him? Why had the master practically disavowed all that
the two of them had tried to accomplish, all that they considered Avelyn to
stand for?
Braumin
thought of poor Dellman and the unfortunate "accident." Whispers among
the younger monks hinted that it was no accident at all, but rather a
coordinated maneuver by De'Unnero and the other two monks who had been working
on the wheel with Dellman. And that line of thought led Braumin to only one
answer: perhaps Jojonah was protecting him.
Braumin
Herde was wise enough, and understanding enough of gentle Master Jojonah, to
put aside his hurt and believe that to be the case. But still, it made little
sense to him. Why would Master Jojonah change his mind now? They had already
discussed in length the course this quiet rebellion must take, and that course
was not one of great risk for Brother Braumin.
The
monk was still standing in the long corridor, staring out the window at the
dark waters of the cold bay below, musing over the possibilities, when a sharp
voice from behind startled him. He turned to face Brother Francis, and in
glancing around, had the distinct feeling that the monk had not been far away
all along. Perhaps Jojonah had known of Francis' spying, Braumin hoped.
"Saying
your farewells?" Francis asked, smirking with every word.
Braumin
looked back to the window. "To whom?" he asked. "Or to what? The
world? Did you think I meant to jump out? Or perhaps you were only hoping as
much."
Brother
Francis laughed. "Come now, Brother Braumin," he said. "We
really should not be arguing amongst ourselves. Not when such possibilities
loom before us."
"I
admit that never have I seen you in so fine a mood, Brother Francis,"
Braumin replied. "Has someone died?"
Francis
let the sarcasm slide off his shoulders. "It is likely that you and I will
be working together for many years to come," he said. "We really must
learn more of each other if we are to properly coordinate the training of
first-year students."
"First-year
students?" Braumin echoed. "That is a job for masters, not
immaculates ..." As soon as he heard his own words, Brother Braumin could
see where this all was leading, and he didn't care for the path at all.
"What do you know?" he asked.
"I
know that there will soon be openings for two masters at St.-Mere-Abelle,"
Francis said smugly. "Since few of the present group seems worthy, the
Father Abbot will be left with difficult decisions, perhaps even waiting until
those worthy in my class are promoted to immaculate in the spring. I had
thought that your ascension to master would be assured, given that you are the
highest-ranked immaculate and were chosen as second on the most important
mission to Aida, but truthfully, it seems a bit doubtful." He finished
with another laugh and turned to leave, but Braumin wouldn't let him get away
that easily. He grabbed Francis roughly by the shoulder and spun him about.
"Another
mark against you?" Francis asked, eyeing Braumin's hand on his shoulder.
"What
two masters?" Braumin demanded. He could guess easily enough that one of
the departing masters would be Jojonah.
"Did
not your mentor tell you?" Brother Francis replied. "I did see you
speaking with him, did I not?"
"What
two masters?" Braumin demanded more urgently, rugging hard on Francis'
robe as he spoke.
"Jojonah,"
Francis answered, straightening and pulling away.
"How?"
"He
is to depart on the morrow for St. Precious, to accompany Master De'Unnero, who
will become the new abbot," Francis was all too happy to explain, and he
did indeed enjoy the crestfallen expression on Brother Braumin's face.
"You
lie!" Braumin yelled. He fought hard to hold control, reminding himself
that he should not openly appear distressed by Jojonah's departure. But this
was more than he could bear. "You lie!" he said again, shoving
Francis so hard that the man nearly fell to the floor.
"Ah,
my temperamental Immaculate Brother Braumin," Francis scolded.
"Another mark against your possible promotion, I fear."
Braumin
wasn't even listening. He shoved past Francis and started down the corridor,
first in the direction Jojonah had gone, but then, too hurt and confused to
even think of confronting the man at that time, he spun about and walked
briskly, then broke into an open run, to his private room.
Brother
Francis watched it all with great amusement.
Despite
his protests, Brother Braumin knew that Francis was not lying. The Father Abbot
had struck against Master Jojonah, it seemed, in a way that was at least as
effective as Brother Dellman's accident. With Master Jojonah far away in St.
Precious, an abbey whose stature had been greatly diminished by the death of
revered Abbot Dobrinion, and under the watchful eye of wicked De'Unnero,
Father Abbot Markwart had all but neutralized the man.
Now
Braumin better understood the treatment Master Jojonah had given him in the
corridor, the abrupt dismissal and disclaimer of all they had hoped to achieve.
Braumin realized that the man was defeated and despairing, and so he put aside
his own hurt and anger and sought out Jojonah, going to the master's private
room.
"I
find it difficult to believe that you would be stupid enough to come
here," Jojonah greeted him coldly.
"I
should desert my friends when they need me most?" Brother Braumin asked
skeptically.
"Need
you?" echoed an incredulous Jojonah.
"Blackness
has come to your heart and spirit," Braumin pressed. "I see your pain
clearly on your face, for I, above all others, know that face."
"You
know nothing, and babble like a fool," Jojonah scolded, and truly it hurt
him to speak so to Braumin. He reminded himself that it was in the young
monk's own interest, and so he pressed on. "Now be gone, back to your
duties, before I report you to the Father Abbot and he pushes you even further
down the list of promotions."
Brother
Braumin paused and considered the words carefully, and then he came to a new
understanding. Jojonah talked of the list of promotions and his place on it,
and relating that to their last discussion before they had met in the
corridor, Brother Braumin could then see another course that the older man was
following.
"I
had thought that despair had defeated you," he said quietly. "I came
to you only because of that."
His
change in tone profoundly affected Jojonah. "Not despair, my friend,"
he said comfortingly. "Only pragmatism. It would seem that my time here is
ended, and that my road to Brother Avelyn has taken an unforeseen twist. That
bend may make my journey longer, but I'll not stop walking. However, it would
seem that our time of walking together has reached its end."
"Then
what am I to do?" Braumin asked.
"Nothing,"
Master Jojonah replied somberly, but without hesitation, for he had thought
through this situation quite carefully.
Brother
Braumin gave an incredulous, even derisive, snort.
"The
situation has changed," Master Jojonah explained. "Ah, Braumin, my
friend, I blame myself. When I learned of the plight of the Father Abbot's
unfortunate prisoners, I could not keep away."
"You
went to them?"
"I
tried to go to them, but was stopped, and roughly so," Jojonah explained.
"I underestimated the Father Abbot's reaction. In my foolhardiness, I
overstepped the bounds of good sense, and have pushed Markwart too, too
far."
"Never
could compassion be called foolhardy," Brother Braumin was quick to put
in.
"But
still, my actions have forced Markwart to act," Jojonah replied. "The
Father Abbot is too strong and too entrenched. I have not lost my heart or my
way, I assure you, and I will go against Markwart openly when I deem the time
is right, but you must promise me here and now that you will take no part in
that battle."
"How
could I ever make such a promise?" Brother Braumin firmly replied.
"If
you ever loved me, you will find the way," Master Jojonah replied.
"If you believe in what Avelyn says to us from his grave, you will find a
way. Because if you cannot make that promise, then know that my road has
reached its end, know that I will not follow the course of opposing Markwart. I
must be alone in this; I must know that no one else will suffer for my actions."
There
came a long pause, and finally Brother Braumin nodded. "I will not
interfere, though I feel that your request is ridiculous."
"Not
ridiculous, my friend, but practical," Master Jojonah replied. "I
will go against Markwart, but I cannot win. I know that, and so do you, if you
can put your bravado aside and be honest with yourself."
"If
you cannot win, then why raise the fight?"
Jojonah
gave a chuckle. "Because it will weaken Markwart," he explained,
"and publicly raise issues which may find a root of truth in the hearts of
many in the Order. Think of me as Brother Allabarnet, planting seeds in the
hope that, in days when I am no more, they will live on and bear fruit for
those who follow my footsteps. Think of me as one of the original craftsmen at
St.-Mere-Abelle, who knew that they could not live long enough to see their
vision of the abbey fulfilled, but who went to their dedicated labors anyway,
some spending their entire lives working on the intricate carvings of a single
door, or cutting the stone for the original foundation of this magnificent
structure."
The
poetic words struck Braumin deeply but could not push him past his desire not
only to wage battle, but to win. "If we truly believe in Brother Avelyn's
message, then we cannot stand alone," he said. "We must take the
fight—"
"We
do believe and we will, in the end, win out," Master Jojonah interrupted,
seeing where this was going and knowing it to be a fool's ending. "I must
hold faith in that. But for both of us to go against Markwart now would set our
cause far, far back, perhaps beyond retrieval. I am an old man, and feeling
older by the day, I assure you. I will begin the war against Markwart, and
against the current way of the Church itself, and that will perhaps entice some
of the Order to begin looking at our routines, our supposed traditions, in a
new light."
"And
what is my place in this hopeless war?" Brother Braumin asked, trying to
keep the sarcasm out of his tone.
"You
are a young man, and will almost certainly outlive Dalebert Markwart,"
Master Jojonah calmly explained. "That is, forgoing any unfortunate
accidents!" He didn't have to speak the name of Dellman to conjure the
unpleasant images into Brother Braumin's mind.
"And
then?" Braumin asked, his tone growing more composed.
"You
will quietly spread the word," Master Jojonah replied. "To Viscenti
Marlboro, to Brother Dellman, to all who will listen. Building on the little I
will accomplish, you will find allies where you will, but take great care to
make no enemies. And above all," Jojonah said, moving to a corner of the
rug beside his desk, then pulling it back to reveal a secret compartment in the
floor, "you will protect this." He took the ancient text out of the
compartment and handed it to a wide-eyed Braumin.
"What
is it?" the young monk asked breathlessly, understanding that he was
holding something of great importance, that this old book was part of the
reason for Master Jojonah's surprising decisions.
"It
is the answer," Jojonah replied cryptically. "Read it quietly, secretly,
and then hide it safely away and put it out of your thoughts. But not out of
your heart," he added, patting Braumin's strong shoulder. "Play along
with Father Abbot Markwart's games if you must, even to the extent of ambitious
Brother Francis."
Braumin's
face screwed up with incredulity.
"I
am counting on you to become a master of St.-Mere-Abelle," Jojonah firmly
answered that look. "And soon—perhaps even as my replacement. It is
not out of the question, because Markwart wants to give open signs that he is
waging no private battle against me, and our friendship is widely known. You
must find your way to that spot and spend your years in ways that will place
you in line for a position as abbot of one of the other abbeys, or perhaps even
in line for the position of Father Abbot itself. Aim high, my young friend,
because the stakes are so tragically high. Your reputation remains impeccable
and impressive beyond Markwart's inner circle. When you have attained the
pinnacle of your power, however high that might be, then secure your friends
and decide how to continue the holy war that Brother Avelyn began. That might
mean passing the book and the dreams
along to a younger, trusted ally, and following a course similar to mine. Or
the situation might call for you and your allies to openly wage the battle
within the Church. Only you will know."
"You
ask much."
"No
more than I have asked of myself," Jojonah said with a self-deprecating
chuckle. "And I believe that you are a finer man than ever was
Jojonah!"
Brother
Braumin scoffed at that remark, but Jojonah shook his head and would not back
down. "It took me six decades to learn what you already have placed firmly
in your heart," the old master explained.
"But
I had a better teacher," Brother Braumin replied with a grin.
That
brought a smile to beleaguered Jojonah's sagging face.
Braumin
turned his attention to the book, holding it higher between himself and the
master. "Tell me more," he insisted. "What is in here?"
"Brother
Avelyn's heart," Jojonah replied. "And the truth of what once
was."
Braumin
eased the book back down in front of him and tucked it under his voluminous
robes, close to his heart.
"Remember
all that I told you of the fate of the Windrunner, and hold that in
comparison to the former ways of our Order," Jojonah explained.
Braumin
hugged the book even tighter, giving a solemn nod. "Fare well, my friend,
my teacher," he said to Jojonah, fearing he would never see the man again.
"Fear
not for me," Master Jojonah replied. "For if I were to die today, I
would die contented. I have found my heart and the truth, and have passed that
truth on to able hands. We will win out, in the end."
Brother
Braumin came forward suddenly and wrapped the large man in a great hug, holding
it for a long, long time. Then he turned abruptly, not wanting Master Jojonah
to see the moisture that had gathered in his eyes, and rushed out of the room.
Jojonah
wiped his own eyes and quietly closed the door behind the man. Later that day,
he, De'Unnero, and a score and five young escorts set out from the great gate
of St.-Mere-Abelle. It was a formidable force accompanying the would-be abbot,
Jojonah noted, twenty-five monks—fourth- and fifth-year students, he recognized—wearing heavy leather protection and
well-armed with sword and heavy crossbow. The old master sighed at the sight;
he knew that this group was more to ensure De'Unnero's immediate and absolute
dominance at St. Precious than to protect the would-be abbot on the road.
But
what did it matter? Jojonah did not feel as though he had much fight in him;
the road to St. Precious seemed imposing enough.
He
hesitated as the gates of the abbey swung closed behind him, wondering if he
should go back in and confront Markwart openly, should make his last stand here
and now and be done with it, because he felt very mortal this day, as though
he was running out of time.
But
he felt weak and sick, as well, and did not turn about to go and find Markwart.
He
lowered his head, in shame and out of sheer weariness, and gradually tuned in
to the speech that sharp-tongued De'Unnero was giving to all the group, himself
included. The man barked commands about how they would proceed, a marching
order, protocol for the road, and he insisted from one and all, particularly
from Jojonah, for he moved right up to stand before the man, that from this
moment forward he be addressed as Abbot De'Unnero.
The
title assaulted Master Jojonah's every sensibility. "You are not an abbot
yet," he reminded the man.
"But
perhaps some of you need practice with assigning me the title," De'Unnero
retorted.
Jojonah
held his ground as the man crowded forward.
"This
comes from the Father Abbot himself," De'Unnero stated, unrolling a
parchment with a snap of his arm. On it was written Markwart's latest edict,
proclaiming that henceforth, Brother Marcalo De'Unnero would be known as Abbot
De'Unnero. "Have you anything else to argue, Master Jojonah?" the
man asked smugly.
"No."
"Just
no?"
Master
Jojonah didn't back down, and didn't blink, his gaze boring holes into the
accursed document.
"Master
Jojonah?" De'Unnero prompted, and his tone explained what he was waiting
for.
Jojonah
looked up to see that wicked smile, to see that De'Unnero was, in fact,
putting him on trial in front of the younger monks. "No, Abbot
De'Unnero," he said, hating every word, but realizing that this was not
the fight he wanted.
With
Jojonah put in his place, De'Unnero motioned for the procession to begin, and
so they marched, in precise order, to the west.
It
seemed to Master Jojonah that the road had just become much longer.
"They are gone?" Father Abbot Markwart asked Brother Francis later that same afternoon, the old man remaining in his private room for most of the day, not wanting any confrontations with Master Jojonah, whom he suspected was on the very edge of explosiveness. He had pushed Jojonah right to that edge purposely, and then pushed him out of the way, for Markwart feared that the old master had some fight left in him, a public brawl Markwart did not want. Let Jojonah go to Palmaris and do battle with De'Unnero!
"Master...
Abbot De'Unnero led them away," Brother Francis explained.
"Now
the interrogation of the prisoners might commence in full," Markwart said,
with such coldness that Brother Francis felt a shiver run along his spine.
"Have you the enchanted armband that was taken from the centaur?"
Brother
Francis reached into a pocket and produced the elvish item.
"Good,"
Markwart said with a nod. "He will need it to survive this day." He
started for the door, Francis scurrying to keep up.
"I
fear that the other prisoners will need it more," the young monk
explained. "The woman, in particular, is looking gravely ill."
"They
need it, but we do not need them," Markwart said ferociously, turning on
the younger man.
"Perhaps
someone could tend them with the soul stone, then," Francis stuttered.
Markwart's
laugh pierced him to the heart. "Did you not hear me?" he asked.
"We do not need them."
"Yet
we'll not let them go," Brother Francis reasoned.
"Indeed
we will," Markwart corrected, and before the smile could widen on the
younger man's face, he added, "We'll let them go to face the wrath of God.
Leave them alone in their dark holes."
"But
Father Abbot—"
Markwart's
stare silenced him. "You worry about individuals when all the Church is at
stake," the old man scolded.
"If
we do not need them, then why keep them imprisoned?"
"Because
if the woman we seek thinks we have them, she may walk right into our
grasp," Markwart replied. "It matters little whether they are alive
or dead, as long as she thinks they are alive."
"Then
why not keep them that way?"
"Because
they can bear witness!" the Father Abbot growled, moving his wrinkled old
visage right up to Brother Francis, nose-to-nose. "How might their tale be
received? Will those listening understand the greater good served by their
suffering? And what of the fate of the woman's son? Would you desire to answer
to those charges?"
Brother
Francis took a deep breath and steadied himself, reminded once again of the
depth of the old Father Abbot's obsession, and of his own deep involvement.
Again the young monk found himself at a crossroads, for in his heart, despite
what his obedience to the Father Abbot and the Church might be telling him, he
knew that this torture of the Chilichunks and the centaur was a wicked thing.
Yet he, too, was inescapably a part of that wicked thing, and unless Markwart
prevailed, his complicity would be revealed for all the world to see. The
woman was sickly because her heart had broken on the road when her son had
died.
"The
woman's perception is everything," Markwart went on. "It matters not
whether her parents are truly alive or dead."
"Whether
they are alive or have been killed," Francis corrected aloud, though
muttering it under his breath too low for the Father Abbot, who was stalking
toward the stairs once more, to hear. The young monk took another deep breath,
but when he blew it out, the flickering flame of compassion in his heart went
dark yet again. This was a tasteless, nasty business, he decided, but it was
all for the good, and he was following the edicts of the Father Abbot of the
Abellican Church, the man closest to God in all the world.
Brother
Francis picked up his pace, rushing past Markwart to open the doors to the
stairwell.
"Pettibwa?
Oh, Pettibwa, why don't ye answer?" Graevis Chilichunk called repeatedly.
The night before, he had been talking to his wife through the walls of their
adjoining cells, and though he couldn't see her, for the darkness was absolute,
the sound of her voice had been comforting indeed.
Not
that Pettibwa had offered much comfort with the content of her words. Grady's
death had grown like a canker in the woman's heart and soul, Graevis knew, and
though he had taken the brunt of the punishment, was battered and half starved,
his old bones protesting his every movement—and with more than a few of them
broken, he was sure—his wife was in worse shape by far.
He
called out again and again, pleading with her.
Pettibwa
couldn't hear him, for her thoughts and all her sensibilities were turned
inward, were locked in the image of a long tunnel and a bright light at its
end, in the image of Grady standing at the exit of that tunnel, holding his
hand out to her.
"I
see him!" she cried. " 'Tis Grady, me boy."
"Pettibwa?"
came Graevis' call.
"He's
showing me the way!" Pettibwa exclaimed, with more strength than she had
shown in many, many days.
Graevis
understood what was happening here, and his eyes widened in panic. Pettibwa was
dying, was willingly leaving him and all this horrid world! His first instinct
was to scream out to her, to bring her back to him, to plead with her not to
leave him.
He
remained silent; he caught himself in time to realize how selfish such a course
would be. Pettibwa was ready to go, and so she should, for surely the next life
would be a better place than this.
"Go
to him, Pettibwa," the old man called with a trembling voice, tears
streaming from his dull eyes. "Go to Grady and hug him, and tell him that
I love him, too."
He
went quiet then, all the world seemed to hush, so much so that Graevis could
hear the rhythmic breathing of the woman in the adjoining cell.
"Grady," she muttered once or twice, and then there came a great
sigh, and then...
Silence.
Sobs
shook the old man's broken body. He pulled against his chains with all his
strength until one of his wrists popped out of joint and waves of pain made him
lean back against the wall. He brought one hand in close to wipe the tears and
snot from his face, and then, with strength that he didn't believe he still
possessed, Graevis stood straight and tall. This would be his last act of
defiance, he understood.
Concentrating,
conjuring images of his dead wife to bolster his courage, Graevis tugged with
all his might against the shackle holding that injured hand. He ignored the
pain, pulling the hand tight into the shackle, and then on some more. He didn't
even hear the crack of bone, but just pulled on, like a wild animal, tearing
his skin, crushing his hand into the shackle.
Finally,
after minutes of agony, the hand pulled free and Graevis' legs went weak
beneath him.
"No
ye don't," he scolded, lifting himself straight and turning for the
remaining length of chain. In one movement Graevis leaped up over his extended
hand, twisted and turned and threw that shackled arm up over his head so that
when he came back down, the chain was looped about his neck. He was up on his
tiptoes and could relieve the choking pressure.
But
not for long, he knew as his legs began to weaken and his body slumped, the
chain pulling tight about his throat.
He
wanted to find that tunnel, wanted to see Pettibwa and Grady beckoning to him.
"I
told you he was evil!" Father Abbot Markwart roared at Brother Francis
when they came upon the hanging man. "But even I did not understand the depth
of it, apparently. To take his own life! What cowardice!"
Brother
Francis wanted to agree wholeheartedly, but a nagging part of his conscience
would not let him dismiss it that easily. They had found the woman, Pettibwa,
in the adjoining cell, dead, and not by her own hand. Francis could only assume
that Graevis knew she had died, and that had been the final burden, the one
that pushed the battered old man past all sanity.
"It
does not matter," Markwart said dismissively, calming somewhat now that
the shock of it all had worn off a bit. Hadn't he and Francis just discussed
this very probability? "As I explained to you upstairs, neither of them
had anything valuable left to tell us."
"How
can you be certain?" Francis dared to ask.
"Because
they were weak," Markwart snapped at him. "As this—" He
waved his hand at the limp form hanging against the wall. "—only proves. Weak, and if they had
anything else to tell us, they would have broken under the strain of our
questioning long ago."
"And
now they are dead, all three, the family the woman Pony once knew,"
Brother Francis said somberly.
"But
as long as she does not know they are dead, they remain useful to us," the
Father Abbot said callously. "You will tell no one of their demise."
"No
one?" Francis echoed skeptically. "Am I to bury them alone? As I did
with Grady on the road?"
"Grady
Chilichunk was your responsibility by your own actions," Markwart snapped
at him.
Brother
Francis stuttered, searching for a reply but finding none.
"Leave
them where they are," Markwart added, after he believed that the younger
monk had squirmed long enough. "The worms can eat them in here as well as
if they are buried in the ground."
Francis
started to argue, tentatively this time, to point out the problem of the
stench, but he stopped short as he considered his surroundings. In these
untended dungeons the smell of a couple of rotting corpses would hardly be
noticeable, and would certainly not change the nasty aura of the place. Still,
to leave these two unburied without proper ceremony, particularly the woman,
who had done nothing to facilitate her death, struck Francis hard.
But
he, too, was no longer on that holy pedestal, Francis reminded himself. His
hands were not clean, and so, like all the other inconsistencies that assaulted
the man who would be Markwart's protege, Brother Francis shrugged it away, put
it completely out of mind, blew out the candle of compassion yet again.
Markwart
motioned to the door, and Francis noted the nervous edge of the movement. They
had come to the Chilichunks first, and had yet to establish whether or not
Bradwarden, who by Markwart's estimation was the more important prisoner, was
still alive. Francis hustled out of the cell and down the smoky dirt and stone
corridor, fumbling with his keys as he led the way to Bradwarden's cell.
"Be
gone, ye dog! I got nothing to tell ye!" came the defiant call from inside
as Francis, a very relieved Francis, put the key in the lock.
"We
shall see, centaur," Markwart muttered quietly, wickedly. Then of Francis
he asked, "Did you bring the armband?"
Francis
started to pull the item from his pocket, then hesitated.
But
too late, for Markwart saw the movement and reached over and took the armband.
"Let us go to our duty," the Father Abbot said, seeming quite amused.
His
lighthearted tone sent a shudder along the spine of Brother Francis, for he
knew that with the enchanted band secured about his arm, the centaur was in for
a long and terrible episode.
The
wind was brisk across the wide waters of the Masur Delaval as Elbryan, Pony,
and the disguised Juraviel boarded the ferry in Palmaris, with Juraviel
getting more than a few curious looks. Pony held him close, though, pretending
he was her son—her
ailing son, and since disease was a too common and much feared event in
Honce-the-Bear, no one dared move too close.
In
truth, Juraviel's moans held more than a little touch of realism, for the
heavy blanket wrapped about him was sorely bending his wings.
The huge sails unfurled and the square-decked ship eased out of Palmaris harbor, wood creaking and waves snapping sharply against her low sides. There were more than fifty passengers standing about the wide and flat deck, with the crew of seven working methodically, lazily, having made this passage twice every day, when the weather permitted, for years.
"They
say the ferry is a good place to gather information," Juraviel whispered
to Elbryan and Pony. "People crossing the river are often afraid, and
frightened people often echo aloud their own fears in the hope that another
will speak comfort."
"I
will move among them," Elbryan offered, and he slipped away from his
"family."
"Yer
boy sick?" came a question almost immediately when the ranger moved near a
group of five adults, three men and two women, fishermen, by the looks of them.
"We
have been in the north," the ranger explained. "Our home was sacked,
as was our entire village. For a month and more we have been dodging powries
and goblins, scraping for food where we might, going hungry more often than
not. My boy, Belli... Belli ate something foul, a mushroom, I would guess, and
has not yet recovered, nor may he ever."
That
brought some sympathetic nods, particularly from the women.
"And
where are ye going?" the same man asked.
"East,"
Elbryan answered cryptically. "And you?" he asked quickly, before the
man could press the point.
"Just
to Amvoy," the man replied, referring to the city across the water, the
destination of the ferry.
"We
all live in Amvoy," one of the women put in.
"Just
visiting friends in Palmaris, now that it's all calmed down," the man
added.
Elbryan
nodded and looked away, out to the wide waters, the docks of Palmaris fast
receding as the lumbering ship found some favorable and strong winds.
"Take
care if ye're going beyond Amvoy," the woman offered.
"We
are."
"To
St.-Mere-Abelle," the fisherman reasoned.
Elbryan
snapped an incredulous stare over the man, but was wise enough to hide it
quickly, not wanting to give anything definite away.
"That's
where I'd go if I had a sick boy," the man went on, and neither he nor his
companions caught the expression on the ranger's face. "They say them
monks got cures for anything, though they're not quick in giving them
out!"
That
brought a laugh from his companions, except from the woman who had been
talking, who looked at the ranger earnestly. "Ye take care if ye're to go
east of Amvoy," she said again, more deliberately. "There've been
reports o' powrie bands roving the land. And them monsters're not to care for
yer sick boy, don't ye doubt."
"And
one nasty band o' goblins," the man added. "Rumor says they were left
on their own by the powries, and now they're running scared."
"Nothing
more dangerous than scared goblins," another man put in.
The
ranger gave her a grateful smile. "I assure you," he said, "I am
no novice in dealing with powries, or goblins." With that, he bowed and
moved about the deck. He heard again people expressing concerns about roving
bands in the east, but garnered nothing truly valuable.
He
made his way around, coming back to Pony and Juraviel. The elf reclined
with his blanket tightly wrapping him, while Pony was at work tending the
horses, for Greystone, in particular, had grown quite uncomfortable with the
ferry rolling in the rough water. The horse stamped his foot repeatedly,
snorting and whinnying, and sweat was beginning to glisten about his muscled
neck.
Elbryan
went to him and took a firm hold on his bridle. He gave a powerful tug,
straight down, and that steadied the horse momentarily. Soon enough, though,
Greystone was right back to stamping and tossing his head.
Symphony,
meanwhile, had calmed considerably, and when Elbryan found the moment to
consider the stallion, and Pony bent low against Symphony's neck, her cheek to
the magical turquoise, he understood. Pony had found communication with
Symphony, an understanding, and managed to impress upon the spirited stallion
the need for calm.
Greystone
gave a tug that nearly launched Elbryan away. The horse tried to rear up, but
the ranger dug in and pulled all the harder.
Several
other people, a pair of crewmen among them, came over then, trying to help
steady the beast, for a nervous horse on an open ship deck could be a dangerous
companion indeed.
But
then Symphony took control of the situation, pushing past Elbryan and laying
his head across the top of Greystone's neck. Both horses snorted and neighed,
Greystone stamped the deck again and tried to rear, but Symphony would have
none of that, pressing down harder, even lifting one front leg over the smaller
stallion's back, holding Greystone in place.
Then,
to the amazement of all the onlookers, Elbryan and Pony included, Symphony came
down from Greystone's back and nuzzled up to the horse, snorting and shaking
his head. Greystone issued a few more protests, but they sounded halfhearted.
And
then both horses were calm.
"Good
horse," one man muttered to Elbryan as he started away.
Another
asked if Elbryan wanted to sell Symphony.
"Avelyn's
stone proves itself useful now and then," Pony remarked when the three friends
were alone with the horses again.
"I
understand the communication between yourself and Symphony, for we have each
done that before," the ranger said. "But am I wrong in believing that
Symphony actually conveyed your message to Greystone?"
"Something
of that nature, so it would seem," Pony replied, shaking her head, for she
had no practical answers.
"How
full of arrogance you humans are," Juraviel remarked, drawing looks from
both of them. "Does it so surprise you that horses can communicate with
each other, at least in a rudimentary way? How would they have survived all
these centuries if they could not?"
Elbryan
and Pony, defeated by the simple logic, just laughed and let it go at that. The
ranger's expression, though, changed quickly, back to serious.
"There
is talk of powrie bands roving the eastern reaches of the kingdom," he
explained. "And of one band of particularly troublesome goblins."
"Could
we have expected any less?" Juraviel replied.
"From
what I could gather, it would seem that our enemies east of the river are in
similar disarray," the ranger went on. "The powries deserted the
goblins, so say the rumors, and the goblins are on a rampage as much out of
fear as out of their generally wicked nature."
Juraviel
nodded, but Pony quickly added, "You mean that it would seem as though some
of our enemies are in disarray. And by my estimation, neither goblins nor
powries rank as our worst enemy at this time."
That
painful reminder of their destination and the potential disaster they faced at
the place quieted them all and cast a somber pall over the group. They spent
the next, and last, hour of the voyage in relative silence, tending to the
horses, and all were glad when the ferry at last docked in the small city of
Amvoy.
The
ship's captain, standing beside the entrance to the gangplank, reiterated
warnings about goblins and powries to all the passengers as they disembarked,
bidding them all take great care if they traveled out of the city.
Needing
no supplies, the friends cut right through the walled city to the eastern gate,
where again they were warned about potential dangers in the open lands beyond.
Their passage was not hindered, though, and so they rode out from Amvoy that
very afternoon, the two horses quickly putting miles behind them.
The
terrain here was far less wooded than that north of Palmaris.
The
land was more cultivated, crisscrossed by wide roads, some covered in
cobblestones—not
that any were really needed, for the grassy fields were easily crossed.
Paralleling the road from a safe distance, the group passed another town that
same day, and though it wasn't walled, they could see that its defenses—archers
on rooftops, even a catapult in the town square—were securely in place.
Farmers
stoically working the fields paused to note their passing, a few even giving a
friendly wave or calling to them an offer of a free meal. But the friends
pushed on, and as the sun moved low in the sky, they came in sight of yet
another town, this one much smaller than the previous, as the land was more
sparsely populated the farther they moved from the great river.
They
swung around to the east of the settlement and camped with the black
silhouettes of the buildings visible in the distance, deciding to keep a watch
for the townsfolk that night.
"How
far do we have to go?" Juraviel asked as they sat around a low fire,
eating their supper.
Elbryan
looked to Pony, who had spent years in this area.
"A
couple of days," she replied. "No more." She took a stick from
the fire and scratched a crude map in the dirt, marking the Masur Delaval and
All Saints Bay. "St.-Mere-Abelle is no more than a hundred miles from the
river, if I remember correctly," she explained, and then she drew out the
land farther to the east, marking Macomber Village and, finally, Pireth Tulme.
"I was here, in Pireth Tulme, but after I met up with Avelyn, we went back
to the river—not
near to St.-Mere-Abelle, but along a course to the south of the abbey."
"Two
days," Elbryan mumbled. "Perhaps three. We should begin to formulate
our plans."
"There
is little to decide," Juraviel said with cavalier flair. "We will
walk up to the doors of the abbey and demand our friends be returned. And if
they are not, and promptly, we will knock the place down!"
The
attempt at humor brought grins, but nothing more, for all of them, Juraviel
included, began to recognize how daunting this quest really was.
St.-Mere-Abelle was home to hundreds of monks, they knew, many of them
proficient in the use of the magical gemstones. If Elbryan, or particularly
Pony, was discovered and recognized, the quest would be over, and quickly.
"You
should not bring the gemstones into the abbey," Elbryan remarked.
Pony
looked at him wide-eyed; her use of the stones was among their most potent
weapons, and a valuable scouting and infiltrating tool, as well.
"They
might detect any use," the ranger explained. "They might be able to
sense the presence of the stones even if you are not using them."
"A
surprise strike is our only chance," Juraviel agreed.
Pony
nodded her agreement, not wanting to get into that debate just yet.
"And
if we are discovered," the ranger went on in grim tones, aiming his remark
directly at Pony, "you and I must surrender ourselves, loudly and
publicly, calling for an exchange."
"The
two of us for the release of the Chilichunks and Bradwarden," Pony
reasoned.
"And
then Juraviel will retrieve Avelyn's stones and go with them to the west, and
then with Bradwarden back to Dundalis," Elbryan continued. "Then you
take the stones back to Andur'Blough Inninness," he explained to the elf,
"and bid your Lady Dasslerond to hold them forever safe."
Juraviel
was shaking his head before Elbryan finished. "The Touel'alfar will not be
involved in the matter of the stones," he said.
"You
already are involved!" Pony insisted.
"Not
so," said Juraviel. "I am helping friends, repaying debts, and
nothing more."
"Then
help us in this matter," Pony continued, but Elbryan, with his better
understanding of the aloof elves, had already given up the fight.
"You
ask for political involvement," Juraviel explained. "That we cannot
do."
"I
ask for you to uphold the memory of Avelyn," Pony argued.
"This
is a matter for the Church to settle," Juraviel was quick to answer.
"They, and not the Touel'alfar, must decide their own course."
"This
is a matter for the humans to settle," Elbryan agreed, putting his hand on
Pony's arm to quiet her. She looked him square in the eye, and he shook his
head slowly, deliberately, conveying the hopelessness of such an argument.
"I
would ask that you retrieve the stones and give them to Bradwarden," the
ranger said to the elf. "Let him take them far away and bury them
deep."
Juraviel
nodded his agreement.
"And
return Greystone to Roger," Pony went on. "And Symphony to the
forest beyond Dundalis, his home."
Again
the elf nodded and a long moment of silence ensued, broken only when Juraviel
began to laugh suddenly.
"Ah,
but a hopeful group we have become!" the elf said. "We are planning
our defeat, not our victory. Is that as you were trained, Nightbird?"
Elbryan's
smile widened across his face, shadowed with the stubble of a three-day-old
beard. "I was trained to win," he said. "And we will find a way
into St.-Mere-Abelle, and be out of the place with Bradwarden and the
Chilichunks before the monks can ever know we were there."
They
toasted that thought with raised food and drink. Then they finished their meal
and went about organizing the camp and its defense, Juraviel going out to
scout the night, leaving Elbryan and Pony alone.
"I
fear this," Pony admitted. "I feel as though it is the end of the
long road I began when first I met Avelyn Desbris."
Despite
his earlier bravado, Elbryan could not disagree.
Pony
moved close to him then, and he put his arms around her. She looked up into his
eyes, slid up to her tiptoes and gently kissed him. Then she moved back,
locking his stare with her own, the tension building. She came back and kissed
him again, more urgently, and he returned the kiss, brushing his lips against
her, feeling her strong back under the press of his arms, his hands massaging
the muscles.
"What
of our pact?" he started to ask, but Pony put her finger across his lips,
silencing him, then kissed him again, and again, pulling him down to the ground
beside her.
It
seemed to Elbryan that they two were alone in the wide world, under the
sparkling stars and with the gentle summer breeze blowing across their bodies,
licking their exposed skin, tickling them, cooling them.
They
were on the road early the next day, running their horses hard, as dawn
pinkened the eastern sky before them. Any discussions of how they might get
into St.-Mere-Abelle secretly fell apart before they really began, for they
would have no practical understanding of the place until they had glimpsed it
and seen its fortifications and its state of readiness. Were the doors opened
wide for refugees from any nearby towns, or were they sealed shut, with dozens
of armed guards patrolling the monastery's walls?
They
could not know, and so, putting their discussion off until it could produce
something tangible, they heightened their pace, determined to make the abbey
by the next morning.
But
then they saw the smoke, rising like demon fingers above a ridge lined with
trees. All three had seen such plumes before, and knew it was from no campfire
or hearth.
Despite
the urgency of their mission, despite the high stakes, no one questioned their
course. Elbryan and Pony together turned their mounts to the south, riding hard
for the ridge, then up the grassy slope to the tree line. Juraviel, bow in
hand, fluttered away from Greystone as soon as they made those trees, the elf
climbing high to better scout out the area.
Elbryan
and Pony slowed and dismounted, then walked over the lip of the ridge
cautiously. Spread below them, along the main road in a bowl-shaped valley, was
a caravan of wagons, laden with goods and turned into a defensive, roughly
circular formation. Several wagons were burning, and Elbryan and Pony could
hear the shouts from the men below, calling for water, or for preparation of
the defenses. The pair could see, too, that many people were down, and the
agonized screams of the wounded rolled up out of the bowl.
"Merchants,"
the ranger remarked.
"We
should go down to them," Pony said. "Or at the least, I should,
bringing the soul stone."
Elbryan
looked at her skeptically, not wanting to use that stone, or any other, so near
to St.-Mere-Abelle. "Wait for Juraviel's return," he bade her.
"I see no dead monsters about the ring, and so it seems likely that this
battle has just begun."
Pony
nodded her agreement, though the wails of the wounded pained her greatly.
Juraviel
was back soon enough, fluttering to a tree limb just above their heads.
"The scene is both good and bad," the elf explained. "First and
most importantly, the attackers were goblins, and not powries, a lesser foe by
far. But they are four score in number, and preparing a second strike." He
pointed across the dell, to the southern ridge. "Beyond the trees."
Elbryan,
ever the tactician, and understanding goblins' ways, surveyed the area.
"They are confident?" he asked Juraviel.
The
elf nodded. "I saw few wounded, and none in argument of further
attack."
"Then
they will come in right over that ridge," the ranger reasoned,
"using the down slope to speed their run at the merchants. Goblins never
concern themselves about their own dead. They'll not expend the time or the
effort to coordinate a more comprehensive attack."
"Nor
will they have to," Juraviel added, looking down at the wagons and the
pitiful attempt at defense. "The merchants and their guards cannot hope to
hold them off."
"Unless
we help them," Pony was quick to put in, and her hand subconsciously
slipped to the pouch of gemstones, a motion Elbryan did not miss.
He
looked Pony in the eye and shook his head. "Do not use the gems unless we
absolutely need them," he instructed.
"Four
score," Juraviel remarked.
"But
they are only goblins," said the ranger. "If we can kill one of four,
the rest will likely flee. Let us prepare the battlefield."
"I
will go and watch the goblins," the elf said, and he disappeared from
sight so quickly that both Elbryan and Pony blinked in disbelief.
The
two led the horses around the dell, moving down across the road, out of sight
of the merchant wagons, then up the southern slope to the tree line. "They
are hungry and frightened," Elbryan noted.
"The
merchants or the goblins?"
"Likely
both," the ranger replied. "But I speak of the goblins. They are
hungry and frightened and desperate, and that makes them doubly
dangerous."
"So
if we kill one in four, they will not run?" Pony asked.
The
ranger shrugged. "They are too far from home, with no prospects of getting
back. I suspect the rumors are true, that the powries deserted them out here,
in a land filled with enemies."
Pony
gave him a sidelong glance. "Do you intend to offer mercy?" she
asked.
The
ranger chuckled at the thought. "Not for goblins," he said firmly.
"Not after Dundalis. I pray they do not flee, for then they will live to
cause more sadness. Let four score come over the hill, and let four score die
at our hands."
They
were up to the top of the ridge by then, and the goblins were in sight, huddled
on the side of a ridge half a mile to the south.
There
weren't many trees between the two positions and the goblins, but both Pony
and Elbryan quickly discounted any ideas of spotting Juraviel as he made his
way down to them. They turned instead to the tree line, to see what surprises
they could put together for the oncoming horde. Pony moved to the underbrush,
looking for young trees suitable for snares, while the ranger focused on one
large and dead elm, precariously perched on the very edge of the ridge.
"If
we could drop this in their midst, it would cause more than a little
confusion," the ranger remarked when Pony moved to join him.
"If
we had a team of plow horses, we might indeed," Pony replied
sarcastically, for the dead tree was indeed huge.
But
Elbryan had an answer to that. He reached into a pouch and took out a packet of
red gel. "A gift of the elves," he explained. "And I think this
trunk might be rotted enough for it to work."
Pony
nodded. She had seen Elbryan use that same gel in Aida, to weaken a metal bar
so completely that a single swipe of his sword had cut right through it.
"I've already set one snare, and I can see possibilities for several
more," she said. "Also, a few sharpened sticks in the underbrush
might cause some havoc."
The
ranger nodded absently, too immersed in his own work to even notice as Pony
went back to hers.
Elbryan
found the weakest point along the trunk and tested its width and give. He was
convinced that with several mighty swings of Tempest, he could fell the tree,
but that would not be good enough, for he would never find the time in the
midst of a horde of goblins. But if he could properly prepare it now...
He
took up his sword and gave a light chop, then fell back cautiously as he heard
the responding crackles of buckling wood. Again he found the proper place and
cut into the tree, and then again. He went to the packet next and tore it open,
then smeared a line of the reddish substance—a mixture the elves used to weaken
items—across the critical point, putting it in line with a pair of trees
farther down the slope.
As
he finished, Pony came back to him, riding Greystone. "We should tell
them," she said, motioning toward the merchant caravan.
"They
know that someone is up here already," the ranger replied.
"But
they should know of our plans to help," Pony reasoned, "that they
might properly prepare a complementary defense. We cannot hope to stop all the
goblins, no matter how effective our traps and swords." She pointed down
the slope to a stump barely visible above the tip of the tall grass. "The
descent is steep there, and the lead goblins will be at full speed and in range
of any bows the merchants might have," she explained. "That could be
a critical point. If I can string a trip rope, we could slow the goblins'
progress and allow the merchants many more shots."
"Three
hundred feet," Elbryan replied, surveying the distance from the stomp to
the nearest cover.
"The
merchants likely have that length of rope and more to spare," said Pony.
She waited for his nod, then turned Greystone about and moved cautiously down
the slope. Two-thirds of the way, less than fifty yards from the caravan and
wide open in the grass, she noted the many bows leveled at her, though more and
more were dipping low as the archers recognized that she was no goblin.
"My
greetings," she said, moving right up to the wagons and addressing a
heavy man wearing clothing of the finest fabrics, who seemed, by his posture,
to be one of the leaders of the embattled band. "I am no enemy, but an
ally."
The
man nodded cautiously, offering no response.
"The
goblins have not gone far, and are preparing to come back," Pony said, and
she turned and pointed back up the slope. "From there," she
explained. "My friend and I are preparing a few tricks for them, but we'll
not stop them fully, I fear."
"When
did this become your fight?" the merchant asked suspiciously.
"We
always make battles against goblins our own," she replied without
hesitation. "Unless you would prefer that we do not help, and let the
four-score goblins swarm over you."
That
took away a good measure of the man's bluster. "How can you know they will
come from the south?" he asked.
"We
know goblins," was Pony's reply. "We know their tactics, or lack
thereof. They are gathered in the south, and have not the patience to swing
about and coordinate an attack from several different directions. Not when
they think they have their prey cornered and defeated."
"We'll
give 'em a fight!" one archer declared, shaking his bow in the air, a
movement followed only halfheartedly by the other ten or so holding bows. All
told, the caravan could offer less than forty able-bodied fighters, Pony
surmised, and a single score of bows, likely wielded by inexperienced and
untrained archers, would hardly dent the goblin onslaught before hand-to-hand
combat was joined about the wagons. Elbryan could fight goblins three against
one, even four to one, with a reasonable expectation of victory, but to the
average man or woman, a single goblin could prove too difficult a foe.
Pony
knew that, and so, apparently, did the merchant, for his shoulders sagged.
"What do you offer?" he asked.
"Have
you any rope?"
The
merchant nodded to a man nearby, and he ran to a wagon and pulled aside the
tarp, revealing loops and loops of fine cord, thin and strong. Pony motioned
for him to bring it. "We will try to even the odds," she explained.
"And I will slow their charge there, along the line of that stump, well
within range of your bows. Shoot well."
She
took the rope from the man, then placed it on the saddle behind her and turned
Greystone away.
"What
is your name, woman?" the merchant asked.
"There
will be time for such discussions later," she replied, kicking the horse
into a fast canter to the stump.
Up
on top of the hill Elbryan was putting the last touches on his array of traps.
He made a lasso and tossed it high into the branches of the dead tree, looping
it expertly out to the side, then tying it off on the horn of Symphony's
saddle. Then he guided the horse to a thick copse far to the side and went
about disguising the rope, not wanting to tip off the goblins.
"More
company," he heard from above, Juraviel's voice, as he was just finishing.
The
ranger looked up, peering intently, finally discerning the lithe form of the
elf.
"To
the east," Juraviel explained. "A band of monks, a dozen perhaps,
approaching cautiously."
"Will
they be here in time for the battle?"
Juraviel
glanced to the south. "The goblins are already moving," he explained.
"Perhaps the monks could get here in time if they hurried, but I saw no
sign of that. They cannot have missed the smoke, but I do not know how anxious
they are to join in the fray."
Elbryan
chuckled, somehow not surprised. "Go and tell Pony," he instructed.
"Tell her to keep the stones secure and unused."
"If
the situation demands, she will not hold back the magic," Juraviel
reasoned. "Nor should she."
"But
if she does use them, I suspect we will be fighting a dozen monks soon after
the goblins are dispatched," the ranger replied grimly.
The
elf worked his way quickly along the edge of the ridge, taking care to stay out
of sight of the men at the circled wagons below. He relayed the message to
Pony, then rushed back into position, half flying, half climbing—for his small
and fragile wings were getting sorely tired—into a tree even as the
front-running goblins approached. With some relief, but not much surprise, Juraviel
noted their helter-skelter formation, no more than a mob rushing into battle.
As the three friends had hoped, the goblins did not pause as they crested the
ridge, just rambled over the top and began their charge down the other side,
not even taking the time to scout out the defenses of their intended prey.
And
hardly noticing the misfortunes of some of their fellows, the elf realized, as
a goblin tripped into one of Pony's snares, loosing the bent sapling. The
creature shrieked, but it was hardly heard above the battle cries of its
companions, and was flipped head over heels and sent spinning into the air, to
hang helplessly a few feet from the ground.
Several
goblins ran right past their caught companion, paying it no heed, other than to
laugh at its misfortune.
To
the other side another goblin shrieked in startlement and sudden pain as it
plunged into one of the small, nasty trenches Pony had quickly dug and
disguised. The creature's leg straightened violently, then bent too far
forward, snapping the bone right below the kneecap. The goblin fell back,
clutching its throbbing leg and howling, but again its comrades had no time for
it
And
then a third went down, roaring in agony, its foot punctured by a carefully
concealed spike.
Taking
confidence in the goblins' inattentiveness, Juraviel took up his small bow and
started picking out his shots. One unfortunate goblin stopped right at the base
of the elf's tree, leaning on the trunk as it caught its breath. Juraviel's
arrow plowed right into the top of its skull, stunning it, then dropping it to
its knees, one hand still braced against the tree trunk. It died in that
position.
For
all the effort, though, only one in twenty of the goblins had been thus slowed,
and the leading runners continued to charge down the grassy slope. Juraviel got
another shot, hamstringing a goblin as it broke clear of the tree line, and
then he looked out to the west, a bit farther down the hill, to the pair of
trees where Nightbird prepared the largest surprise of all.
The
ranger was down on one knee, behind the shield of trees, bow leveled
horizontally between the trunks. He let the lead goblins get past the trap,
trying to hit the main group. In addition to causing the most damage, this
would bring the goblins in at the merchants in an even more scattered manner, a
few at a time, he hoped.
A
dozen goblins came through the trees at the same time, a dozen more right
behind them.
Nightbird
let fly, but his shot, true to the mark, was intercepted at the last moment by
an unsuspecting goblin, the creature taking it in the side. Undaunted, even
anticipating that something like that might happen, Nightbird had the second
arrow away immediately, this one slipping through the press to drive hard into
the prepared trunk.
At
that same moment, the ranger gave a whistle to his trusted horse and Symphony
lurched forward, pulling the rope taut.
The
dead tree gave a series of tremendous cracking noises in protest, and many
goblins froze in place, suddenly afraid.
And
then it came sweeping down amongst them, tons of wood, dozens of long and wide
sharp-ended branches.
Goblins
dove left and right, screamed and scrambled, but the ranger's timing had been
perfect. Three were killed outright, and many more, a dozen and four, were
seriously gashed by splintering pieces, or slammed hard to the ground, or
trapped under grabbing branches. About a quarter of the goblins had already
gone beyond the area of the trap, and they kept up their run for the wagons. Of
those caught in or behind the fallen tree, most simply scrambled on over the
newest obstacle, too hungry for human blood to even consider the possibility
that this might be an ambush, while others, confused and wary, milled about or
searched for cover. That confusion, that breaking of any cohesive ranks, was
exactly the outcome Nightbird had hoped for.
Not
about to miss the opportunity, the ranger took up Hawkwing again, driving an
arrow into a goblin that had wandered a bit too close, and then firing again,
taking out a goblin as it tried to extract itself from the prickly branches.
Up
the hill, Symphony tugged and pulled, breaking free the piece of the tree that
was bound by the rope. One goblin moved near the heavy brush that concealed the
great stallion, inspecting the commotion, but Nightbird promptly shot it down.
Symphony
broke free of the copse, several goblins spotting him and giving a howl. Down
the hill Symphony pounded, rushing to the ranger.
Nightbird,
Tempest in hand, ran out to meet the horse, reaching around and cutting the
rope with a single swipe of the magical blade. He pulled himself into the
saddle, laying Tempest across his lap and readying Hawkwing yet again, fitting
an arrow as he settled into his seat.
And
how those closest goblins scrambled when they saw that bow come up their way!
Nightbird
blew one down, and with a roar of defiance, he kicked Symphony into a short
burst that brought them right into the open, the ranger letting fly another
arrow—and
scoring another hit—as they went.
The
closest goblins skidded to an abrupt halt, some of them hurling spears, but
Nightbird was too quick for that, spinning Hawkwing in his hands, then swiping
it about like a club, parrying the missiles harmlessly aside.
Up
came the bow in a quick circuit, left hand gripping it solidly in the middle as
the right fitted yet another arrow. A split second later another goblin went
squirming into the dirt.
On
the ranger charged. He got one more shot, then set Hawkwing across the saddle
horn and took up Tempest, bearing down on a group of three. He turned Symphony
hard to the side at the very last second and leaped from the saddle, landing in
a roll, coming up in a short run and using the sheer momentum of his charge to
drive his slashing sword right through a goblin's blocking club, and halfway
through the creature's head, as well.
A
snap of his wrist sent the goblin flying away, sent Tempest in a sudden spin
back over Nightbird's hand. As the blade came around, he stabbed straight
ahead, scoring his second kill, and he tore Tempest free and brought it about
in time to block the downward-slicing sword of the third.
One
against one, the goblin was no match for Nightbird. The ranger parried another
blow, then a third, and this time he hit the goblin's sword so hard that it
went up high. Nightbird stepped forward, inside the opening, and, still using
Tempest to brace the goblin's sword above its head, he clamped his free hand
about the creature's skinny neck.
The
ranger drove on, bending the goblin over backward, the tremendous muscles in
his arm bulging and cording. With a grunt and a sudden, vicious burst, Nightbird
snapped the creature's neck, and dropped it dead to the ground.
More
goblins were coming in about him; the ranger welcomed them.
The
lead group of goblins heard the fighting but never bothered to look back, too
intent on the apparently easy prey of the merchant caravan. Down the slope they
ran, full speed, hooting wildly, hungrily. Arrows came out at them—one even went
down—but that hardly slowed the fierce charge.
But
then, suddenly, those in the lead were sprawling, flying headlong to the ground.
More and more tumbled, the whole group becoming entangled and bogged down.
Off
to the side, in the brush, Pony urged Greystone ahead, keeping the rope taut
as goblin after goblin tripped across it. She had tied one end securely to the
stump, then had strewn it across the grass to these trees, carefully noting the
angle so that when the horse pulled, the rope would come up at the right
height, just under a goblin's knee. Before she tied off the other end to her
mount, she had looped it under an exposed root to prevent the jerking of the
tripping goblins from affecting Greystone directly. Now the powerful stallion,
straining forward, kept the rope taut.
From
below, the two-score archers at the caravan had more time to pick their shots,
at relatively stationary targets, and their next barrage was far more
effective. Even worse for the goblins, those that got back up had lost their
momentum, had to begin their rush anew from a standstill barely forty yards
from the bowmen.
The
merchants and their guards, though not true warriors, were not fools, and
several were not firing arrows, but were holding their shots for whatever
goblin ventured too near. The monsters came at the wagons in random order, one
or two at a time, and without the panic-inspiring confusion of a rushing mob.
Thus the archers were able to focus clearly and most of their shots rang true.
Pony
knew that her job here was done. She reached back with her sword and cut
Greystone free, then turned the horse about, thinking at first to charge out
into the midst of those goblins still pulling themselves up from the grass. But
then she looked back up the hill and saw her love in the midst of yet another
group. Resisting the urge to take out her magical gems, she drove her heels
hard into Greystone's flanks and the horse leaped away, thundering up the hill.
With
the bulk of the goblin horde moving beyond the ridge, leaving the few dead and
wounded behind, Juraviel could more freely pick his shots. At first he
concentrated on those creatures battling the ranger, but as the extent of the
disaster began to sink in to the goblins, several turned about and tried to
flee, running back up over the hill, passing right below the elf's position
with no intention of stopping, or even slowing.
Juraviel's
bow hummed continuously, arrow after arrow stinging the frightened and fleeing
monsters. He shot every goblin he could see, and had nearly emptied his quiver
when one creature skidded to a stop at the base of his tree, hopping excitedly
and pointing up at him.
Juraviel
promptly drove an arrow into its ugly face, dropping it right beside its dead
and kneeling companion. Then the elf shot two more of the creatures, who had
come to see what the goblin was yelling about.
Juraviel
reached back methodically for his quiver, to find that he had only one arrow
remaining. With a shrug, he shot yet another, then hooked the bow over a jut in
the limb, drew out his slender sword and moved lower in the tree, looking for
the proper moment to strike hard.
He
realized, though, that this fight was already nearing its end, for more than a
score of goblins lay dead on the hill, another score were fast dying down by
the merchant caravan, several had gone back over the ridge, and another
substantial group were running full out down the slope, but angling to the
east. The sight brought great hope to Juraviel, for these were the goblins of
old, the cowardly, easily confused enemy that could not hold formation in the
face of unexpected resistance. These were the goblins that, though much more
numerous than the humans and elves of Corona, had never posed any organized
threat of domination.
The
goblins' eagerness to get at the exposed warrior waned fast as one after
another fell dead at the end of Nightbird's glowing sword.
Fully
surrounded by five, the ranger came ahead powerfully, then, seeing those before
him falling back and knowing that those behind would be pressing forward, he
quickly reversed his direction, spinning about with a powerful slash of his
sword, knocking aside a swinging club and a stabbing spear. With the perfect
balance of years of bi'nelle dasada, the ranger's feet shuffled fast,
before those goblins now behind him could come in at his back, and with these
two taken by surprise with his sudden shift, he scored a solid stab in the
club-wielder's chest.
As
that creature fell away, clutching its wound in a futile attempt to hold in its
spouting lifeblood, its companion retracted its spear and let fly.
The
throw was true, right for the ranger's head, but a subtle twist and duck, and
Tempest flashing up diagonally, deflected it harmlessly over his shoulder—harmless for
Nightbird, that is, for the missile's continuing flight caused those goblins
behind the ranger to dodge aside frantically, slowing their progress, giving
the ranger more time to press his newest attack.
The
now unarmed goblin threw up its arms in a feeble defense. Tempest flashed three
times repeatedly, the first slashing one arm aside, the second stabbing the
other shoulder, dropping that defense, and the third going straight for the
throat.
Nightbird
spun about in time to defeat the charge of the remaining three, and was back
in a low and balanced defensive crouch as two more replaced their fallen
comrades, again surrounding the ranger, but this time seeming less eager to
make the first attack.
Nightbird
continued to turn about, ready to defend from every angle. Every so often he
let Tempest out in a measured thrust, not to score a hit, but to entice those
goblins behind the strike to come in. He thought to play on their mistakes, to
let them lead and, inevitably, err, but then he came to a different
understanding, a confident smile, so unsettling to the goblins, widening on his
face.
They
understood his contentment a moment later when Greystone thundered into their
midst, plowing them aside, Pony's slashing sword chopping one and then another
to the ground. At first the woman moved to rush right beside her love, even
freeing up her hand so she could reach down and help him onto the horse behind
her.
But
the ranger was motioning for her to come down and join in the fun.
Pony
threw her leg over the saddle, quickly reversing her feet so her closest foot
was in the lone stirrup. She waited for two more goblins to dive aside in the
face of Greystone's mighty charge, then she leaped free, slapping the horse to
continue its run, and hitting the ground in a fierce charge.
One
goblin stood between her and Nightbird, its sword out straight.
Pony's
rush was too fast. She went down low and came up hard, her sword lifting the
goblin's blade up high, sending it, along with a couple of goblin fingers,
flying away. She continued her run, right beside the creature, turning the
angle of her blade so it drove right through the goblin's chest as she passed.
The
goblin squealed and got yanked about, Pony tearing the sword free, leading her
charge with her bloody blade slashing wildly.
Nightbird
had not been idle, moving with a ferocity that stunned his enemies, opening the
way and positioning himself so Pony could get in to join him. In the span of a
few seconds the lovers were standing back-to-back.
"I
thought you would stay low on the hill to check on the merchants,"
Nightbird said, seeming not too pleased that Pony was with him in this
dangerous situation.
"And
I thought it was past time that I tried out this sword-dance you have been
teaching me," she casually replied.
"Do
you have the stones ready?"
"We
will not need them."
The
determination in her voice bolstered the ranger, even brought a smile to his
face.
The
goblins circled, trying to get a measure of these two. Their many dead
companions lying about them vividly reminded them of the consequences of any
foolhardy attacks. Still, they outnumbered Pony and Nightbird by more than
five to one.
One
creature hooted and rushed ahead, launching a spear at Pony. Up flashed her
sword, at the last moment, deflecting the weapon high, over her shoulder, and
taking most of its momentum. Pony hadn't cried out at all, but she didn't have
to, for Nightbird, feeling her muscles against his back, recognized the
movement as clearly as if he had made it. He half turned as the spear rebounded
over Pony's shoulder, and a quick snap of his hand snared it. In the same fluid
movement, the ranger brought the goblin spear past him and heaved it hard right
into the chest of another goblin that had ventured too close.
"How
did you do that?" Pony asked, though she had never even glanced back to
see the movement.
Nightbird
only shook his head, and Pony sensed it and went quiet, as well, the two of
them settling more comfortably into their defensive stance. They felt an
amazing symbiosis growing between them, as though they were communicating
through their very muscles as clearly as if using open speech. Pony anticipated
every twitch, every bend, of Nightbird's stance.
The
ranger felt it, too, and was surely amazed by the intimacy. Despite his logical
fears, Elbryan knew enough to trust in this strange extension of bi'nelle
dasada. He did pause and wonder if the elves even knew that the sword-dance
could be taken to this extreme. But his musing lasted only an instant, for the
goblins were getting edgy, some skittering closer, another readying a spear as
if to throw it—though
the goblins across the way, having witnessed the first disastrous attempt,
weren't pleased by that prospect.
Pony
understood that Nightbird wanted her to go out to the left. A quick glance that
way told her the reason: a particularly bold goblin needed to learn a swift and
painful lesson. She look a deep breath, eliminating all doubts from her
thoughts, for she knew that doubt would bring hesitation, and hesitation would
bring disaster. This was the real meaning of their morning ritual, she
realized, a dance as intimate as lovemaking, and now was the real test of their
trust. Her love wanted her to go out to the left.
Nightbird
felt the tension in her back, then the sudden lunge, and as she moved, he
moved, rolling around, off her back foot, a complete pivot that took the two
goblins rushing in at the apparent opening completely by surprise. The closest
goblin was prodding out at Pony with its spear when Tempest slashed down,
taking both its arms at the elbows.
The
second goblin at least managed to get its club in the way, though the ranger
merely slapped the blocking weapon aside and stabbed the creature hard in the
belly.
Now
Pony was moving, rolling over Nightbird's trailing foot, as he had gone over
hers. And again, those goblins coming in at the apparent opening Nightbird's
movement had caused were caught by surprise, and by Pony's slashing sword. One
fell to the ground, grasping at its torn throat, while two others leaped into a
short and hasty retreat.
And
Pony and Nightbird were back-to-back again, crouched, in perfect defense and
perfect harmony.
*
* *
From
the tree line, Belli'mar Juraviel watched in satisfaction as Symphony ushered
the riderless Greystone to safety. Many times the elf had witnessed the
intelligence of Symphony, but every time, as now, he was thrilled and awed by
the display.
Even
more awesome was the spectacle that Juraviel witnessed when he glanced back
down to his human companions and saw the harmony of their movements, Pony and
Nightbird complementing each other with absolute perfection. To the
Touel'alfar, bi'nelle dasada was a personal dance, a private meditation
of a warrior, but now, watching this, Juraviel soon understood why Nightbird
had taught it to Pony, and why they danced together.
Indeed,
at that moment on the grassy slope—a slope fast turning red with spilled
goblin blood—Pony and Nightbird were as one, a single warrior.
Juraviel
realized that his bow should not be idle, that he should be helping out his
friends. They hardly seemed to need it, though, playing off each other's
movements so fluidly that the goblin circle was widening, not closing, and was
thinning, the creatures giving more and more ground.
Juraviel
did finally blink away his awe long enough to retrieve a single arrow, and his
shot took a goblin in the back of the neck, just under the skull.
The
line around Nightbird and Pony thinned considerably, with more goblins turning
and running away than falling to the pair's harmonious dance. Pony scored a
kill, and the ranger cut down a goblin stupidly going for her back again as she
turned, but then it all seemed to come to a standstill, with no monsters
venturing near enough for any attacks.
Nightbird
sensed the mounting fear and tension, saw the goblins looking as much behind
them now as ahead. They wanted to break and run off, every one, and the battle
was about to enter its most critical stage. He started to explain as much to
Pony, but she cut him short before he had hardly begun, saying simply, "I
know."
And
she did know, Nightbird recognized, from the subtle movements of her muscles
as she dug herself in, finding balance and positioning her legs for a fast
shift.
The
spears came in at them in no coordinated fashion; the first goblin let fly,
turned and fled, and a shower of missiles followed, the creatures using the
barrage to cover their flight.
Nightbird
and Pony spun and dove, came up with swords slashing, deflecting and dodging.
There was no pause on the part of the ranger or his companion as they came
through the volley unscathed, each rushing out at the closest goblins, cutting
them down and running on to the next in line. No longer did the two work in
concert, but neither did any of the goblins, so every fight became an
individual contest. Pony worked her sword marvelously, weaving circles about
her opponent until she found an opening, and then striking true, a measured
thrust, her second or third hit usually finishing the task.
Nightbird,
stronger and more skilled, was less finesse and more sheer power. As goblins
raised their weapons to block, he merely smashed through the defense, and
usually through the goblin in the same deadly strike. He darted back and forth,
rushed ahead and turned completely about, whatever was needed to bring him to
his next kill. The goblins should have calmed and organized a coordinated
resistance, but they were stupid creatures, and frightened.
They
died quickly.
Those
few who managed to get up the hill to the tree line ahead of the ranger found
yet another foe, a lithe little creature, hardly as tall as a goblin, wielding
a sword so slender that it seemed more fitted to a dinner table than a
battleground.
The
leading goblin swerved to meet this newest foe, thinking it to be a human
child, thinking to score a quick kill.
Juraviel's
sword smacked against the tip of the goblin's blade, once, and then three more
times, so rapidly that the creature had no time to react. And each time, the
elf inched ahead, so that when the fourth parry rang out, Juraviel was only a
foot from the surprised goblin.
The
elf's sword flashed again in rapid succession, once, twice, thrice, driving
three holes into the goblin's chest.
Out
charged Juraviel, meeting the next, this one unarmed, having thrown its spear
at the ranger. The goblin held up its hands.
Belli'mar
Juraviel of the Touel'alfar had no mercy for goblins.
The
rout on the slope ended at about the same time as the rout at the wagons. The
lead group of goblins, the ones Pony had tripped up, fell dead to the last
without ever getting into the ring.
There
remained one more substantial group, though, running down the road to the east,
out of the dale.
Pony
spotted Juraviel first, sitting calmly on a low branch up the hill, wiping the
blood off his sword with a rag of goblin clothing.
"I
counted four who passed beyond me," he called down to his friends.
"Taking full flight down the back side of the ridge."
Nightbird
whistled, but Symphony was moving to him before he made a sound.
"Are
none to get away to carry on the legend of the Nightbird?" Pony teased him
as he reached for the saddle. In the northland war, Nightbird had often let one
or two monsters run away, to whisper his name in fear.
"These
goblins will only cause more mischief," the ranger explained, swinging
himself up. "There are too many innocents around whom they might
harm."
Pony
looked at him quizzically, then to Greystone, wondering if she should join him.
"Keep
watch on the merchants," the ranger explained. "They will likely need
your talents at healing."
"If
I see one close to death, I will use the soul stone," Pony explained.
The
ranger conceded the point.
"And
what of them?" Pony asked, pointing to the band fleeing to the east. There
had to be at least a score of the creatures, maybe thirty or more.
The
ranger considered their course and gave a chuckle. "It would seem that the
monks may yet be involved," he said. "If not, we will hunt that band
down when we are finished here. Our road is east anyway."
He
was off before Pony even nodded her assent, thundering Symphony up the ridge
and down the back side, preparing Hawkwing as he went. He spotted the first of
the goblins running through the grass and closed the distance quickly, meaning
to go right past the creature and use his sword. Then he caught sight of the
second, running in a completely different direction; the group had scattered.
No
time for Tempest, the ranger decided, and up came his bow.
Only
three remained.
"If we join in prayer, a single stroke of God's lightning hand will destroy them all," offered one young monk, who had also been on the expedition to Aida, including the battle outside the Alpinadoran village.
Master
De'Unnero's sharp eyes narrowed as he considered the monk and the assenting
nods of those nearby, men who had heard the tale of the great victory in the
northland, the tale of sparking fingers reaching down from the line of monks
to utterly vanquish their enemies.
There
was something else inspiring them, too, De'Unnero recognized. Fear. They
wanted a clean and quick blow against the approaching goblin force because
they were afraid of engaging these relatively unknown creatures in melee. The
would-be abbot strode powerfully up to the speaker, his gaze setting the man
back on his heels, draining the blood from his face. "Master Jojonah alone
will use the magic," he snapped, his head jerking side to side so that all
could see his expression, so that none would dare question him. "He is too
old and infirm to fight."
Looking
at the wretched man, Jojonah had an almost irresistible urge to rush over and
prove him wrong.
"As
for the rest of us," De'Unnero went on, barking the words, "let us
consider this an exercise of valuable training. We may yet see battle in our
new home in Palmaris."
"This
'training' could be deadly," Master Jojonah piped in, and the measure of
calm in his quiet voice only added to the sarcasm.
"All
the more valuable, then," De'Unnero said without hesitation, and when he
saw Jojonah shaking his head, he stormed over to stand before him, crossing his
strong arms defiantly over his chiseled chest.
Not
now, Master Jojonah reminded himself quietly, not wanting to embarrass the man,
for that would only make De'Unnero dig in all the more. "I beg of you to
be done with this approaching band efficiently and cleanly," he said.
"Let us blast them away, a single, combined stroke of lightning, and go
see to whoever is beyond that rise." He pointed behind De'Unnero as he
finished, to the plume of black smoke still drifting lazily into the air.
In
response, De'Unnero handed him a piece of graphite, a single stone. "Use
it well, brother," he said. "But not too well, for I wish to have my
new attendants properly trained in the pleasures of battle."
"Pleasures
of battle?" Jojonah echoed, but under his breath, as De'Unnero spun away,
calling to the brothers to ready their crossbows. The old master could only
shake his head in disbelief. He rubbed the graphite about his palm, thinking to
hit the goblin troupe hard and fast, to kill them or scatter them, that few, if
any, of the younger monks would see any real battle. His rubbing became more
urgent when the forward scout signaled back that the goblins were approaching,
for Jojonah could not feel the power of the stone.
The
master fell within himself, seeking that special place of magic—in his mind,
that special place of God. He dismissed thoughts of De'Unnero, believing that
such negativity might be having an adverse effect. And he rubbed the graphite
about his fingers, felt its every groove.
But
not its magic. Jojonah opened his eyes to find he was alone in the road. Near
panic, he glanced around, and then relaxed somewhat, seeing that De'Unnero had
positioned the others in the brush to the side. The lead goblins were in sight
now, running hard around a bend in the road. Jojonah looked down at the
graphite, incredulous, feeling betrayed.
The
goblins came on, their rush changing from one of retreat to a hungry charge.
Jojonah
lifted his arm and closed his eyes, calling to the stone.
Nothing,
no lightning, came forth, not even a sparkle, and the goblins were closer now.
Jojonah tried again, but found no source of magic within that graphite. Then he
understood the truth of it, that this stone was not enchanted, was just an
ordinary rock. Fear gripped Jojonah; he thought that De'Unnero had set him up
to die, here on the road. He was an old man and had no weapon, and could not
possibly do battle! He gave a cry and turned about, hobbling as fast as his
thick legs would take him.
He
heard the goblins howling, closing. He expected a spear to take him in the back
at any moment
But
then De'Unnero and the brothers struck hard at the goblin mob, monks leaping up
from the brush at the sides of the road, firing heavy crossbows designed to
take down powries, or even giants, point-blank. Thick bolts tore through
goblin flesh, blasting holes in the diminutive creatures, and sometimes even in
goblins behind the first victim. The goblin mob was leaping, spinning, falling,
and the goblin cries of attack turned fast to screams of surprise and agony.
Jojonah
dared to slow and glance back, to see that half the goblins were already down,
some squirming, others dead, and that Master De'Unnero had leaped out onto the
road in the midst of the rest. De'Unnero was a perfect killing machine now,
leaping and twisting. Out snapped his extended fingers, hand rigid, driving
through a goblin throat. He turned as another tried to club him on the head. Up
came De'Unnero's arms in a stiff cross above his head, catching the downswing
between his forearms. Thrusting the arms out wide, he tore the club from the
startled goblin's grasp, caught it while it spun about, then snapped it hard
across the creature's face, and then again, even more forcefully, with a
powerful backhand.
De'Unnero
kept running, using the club to knock aside a spear thrust, then around again
to smash the first goblin a third time— though it was already nearly
unconscious on its feet—laying it out in the dirt.
Around
he came, launching the club at the spear-wielder, then following the weapon's
flight with a quick rush, moving inside the tip of the spear and pushing it
aside, while his free hand rained heavy blows about the creature's face and
throat.
Other
monks were on the road now, overwhelming the goblins, breaking them apart. A
few monsters scampered out to the side, whining, but De'Unnero had left several
of his warriors in place, and they had their powerful crossbows ready by that time.
And
then, with the goblin horde already falling apart, came perhaps the worst blow
of all, as brutal De'Unnero fell into his signature gemstone, the tiger's paw,
as his arms, already deadly, transformed into the mighty limbs of a tiger and
began raking apart those nearest goblins.
It
was over before Master Jojonah could even get back to his companions.
When
he did return, huffing and puffing, he found De'Unnero in an excited, almost
frantic state, the man rushing all about the line of young monks, clapping them
hard on the back, verily snarling at their great victory.
Only
a few monks were down, and the worst injured of the group had been hit by a
crossbow quarrel from across the road, the firing monk not taking care with the
angle of his shot. Several goblins on the road were still alive, but in no
condition to continue any fight, and several more had escaped, running fast
across the fields to the sides of the road.
De'Unnero
seemed not to care. The man even found a wide smile for Jojonah.
"It
could not have been quicker even with the use of magic," the would-be
abbot said.
"Something
you obviously never intended, other than your personal stone," Jojonah
replied sharply, tossing back the useless stone. "I do not like being a
pawn, Master De'Unnero," Jojonah went on.
De'Unnero
glanced around at the young monks, and Jojonah did not miss the sly grin on his
face. "You played a necessary role," De'Unnero argued, not bothering
to scold the man for referring to him as merely a master.
"With
a true gemstone, I could have been more useful."
"Not
so," said De'Unnero. "Your lightning stroke may have killed a few,
but the rest would have scattered, making our task all the more
difficult."
"Several
did get away," Jojonah reminded him.
De'Unnero
waved the thought away. "Not enough to cause any real mischief."
"So
you needed me frightened and running."
"To
lure them in," De'Unnero replied.
"Me?
A master of St.-Mere-Abelle?" Jojonah pressed, for he understood the more
subtle reasoning of Marcalo De'Unnero. The man had humiliated him in front of
the younger monks, thus securing his own standing among them; while Jojonah
had run like a frightened child, De'Unnero had leaped into the midst of the
enemy and personally killed at least a handful.
"Forgive
me, my brother," De'Unnero said insincerely. "You are the only one
appearing infirm enough to so lure the goblins. The whole troupe of them might
have fled from a younger, sturdier man, like myself."
Jojonah
went quiet, staring hard at this man, his nemesis.
Such
an action, such a deception upon an Abellican master, could be brought before
higher authorities, with the likely result that De'Unnero would be severely
punished for his presumption and for so embarrassing him. But to what higher
authorities might he appeal? Master Jojonah wondered. To Father Abbot Markwart?
Hardly.
De'Unnero
had won this day, Jojonah accepted, but he also determined then and there that
this personal fight would be a long, long battle.
"The
hematite, if you please," he said to De'Unnero. "We have wounded in
need of assistance."
De'Unnero
glanced around, seemed less than impressed by the severity of any wounds, then
tossed the stone to Jojonah. "Again you prove that you have some
value," he said.
Jojonah
just turned away.
"You
taught her," Juraviel, sitting in a tree, stated accusingly when Elbryan
came back to the ridge, his hunting successfully completed.
The
ranger didn't have to ask what the elf was talking about, for he knew that
Juraviel had watched his dance with Pony, and that no two humans could ever
find that level of grace and harmony without bi'nelle dasada. Without
retort, Elbryan ignored the accusation. He looked down to the circled wagons,
to see Pony moving among the merchants, helping out.
Juraviel
gave a great sigh and rested back against the trunk. "You cannot even
admit it?" he asked.
Now
the ranger did snap a glare over the elf. "Admit it?" he echoed
incredulously. "You speak as though it was a crime."
"And
is it not?"
"Is
she not worthy?" Elbryan shot right back, waving his arm out toward the
wagons and Pony.
That
somewhat deflated the elf's anger, but still he pressed on. "And is
Elbryan to be the judge of who is worthy and who is not?" he argued.
"Is Elbryan, then, to become the instructor in place of the Touel'alfar,
who perfected bi'nelle dasada when the world itself was young?"
"No,"
the ranger said grimly. "Not Elbryan, but Nightbird."
"You
presume much," said Juraviel.
"You
gave me the title."
"We
gave you your life and more," the elf retorted. "Take care that you
do not abuse the gifts, Nightbird. Lady Dasslerond would never suffer such an
insult."
"Insult?"
the ranger echoed, as though the whole notion was ridiculous. "Consider
the situation that I, that we, were put in. Pony and I had just destroyed the
dactyl, and now had to fight our way through hordes of monsters, and that just
to reach Dundalis. And so, yes, I shared my gift with her, for both our sakes,
as she shared the gift that Avelyn had given to her, for both our sakes."
"She
taught you to use the stones," Juraviel reasoned.
"I
am nowhere near her level of power with them," the ranger admitted.
"Nor
is she near to your fighting prowess," said the elf.
Elbryan
was about to offer a stinging retort, for he wouldn't suffer such an insult to
Pony, especially one so obviously ridiculous, but Juraviel kept on talking.
"And
yet, a human who can move with such grace, who can complement one trained by
the Touel'alfar so very beautifully, is a rare find indeed," the elf went
on. "Jilseponie dances as though she had spent years in Caer'alfar."
That
brought a smile to Elbryan's face. "She was trained by the master,"
he said with a grin.
Juraviel
didn't even challenge the joking boast. "You did well," the elf
decided. "And yes, Jilseponie is worthy of the dance, as worthy as any human
has ever been."
Satisfied
with that, the ranger looked down the dale and out to the east. "A large
group went out that way," he remarked.
"Likely
they ran right into the approaching monks."
"Unless
the monks chose to hide and let the goblins pass," Elbryan said.
Juraviel
understood his cue. "Go to your companion and see to the merchants,"
he offered. "I will scout to the east and find out what has become of our
goblin friends."
The
ranger walked Symphony down the slope to the wagons. One frightened man raised
a weapon as if to fend the newcomer away, but another nearby boxed him on the
ear.
"Ye
fool!" the second man said. "He's just saved yer stinking life.
Killed half the goblins by himself!"
The
other man dropped his weapon to the ground and began dipping a series of
ridiculous bows. Elbryan only smiled and walked Symphony past, right into the
ring, He spotted Pony at once and slipped down from the horse, handing the
reins to a young woman, barely more than a girl, who rushed over to help him.
"They
have many sorely wounded," Pony explained, and indeed at the time she was
tending to one man who it seemed would not survive. "From the earlier
fight, not the last one."
Elbryan
looked up, turning his nervous gaze to the east. "The monks are not far, I
fear," he said quietly. When he looked back down, he found Pony staring up
at him, chewing her thick upper lip, her blue eyes wide, questioning. He knew
what she meant to do, whether he argued against it or not, and realized she was
only waiting for him to explain where he stood on the issue.
"Be
quiet with the soul stone," he bade her. "Wrap the wound as though
you were tending it more conventionally. And use the gem only—" He
stopped, seeing the transformation in Pony's expression. She had wanted his
opinion, out of respect, but she did not need his commandments. The ranger went
silent then, nodding to show that he trusted her judgment.
He
watched as she drew out the gray stone from her pouch, clutching it close and
bending over the man. Elbryan, too, went down low, taking a bandage and
beginning to wrap it about the man's wound, a slash in the right side of his
chest, through the ribs and quite deep, perhaps even through a lung. The ranger
wrapped the wound, and tightly—he didn't want to bring the man any more pain, but he
needed him to cry out a bit to cover Pony's secret work.
The
man gasped, Elbryan offered words of comfort, and then, in mere seconds, the
man relaxed, looking up at the ranger quizzically. "How?" he asked
breathlessly.
"Your
wound was not nearly as bad as it looked," Elbryan lied. "The blade
did not get past your rib bone."
The
man's look was doubtful, but he let it go at that, just relieved that the pain
was gone now, or nearly so, and that his breath was coming to him easily once
more.
Elbryan
and Pony made their way about the camp then, searching out any too injured for
conventional methods. They found only one more, an older woman who had been hit
in the head, whose eyes stared vacantly across the way, drool running freely
from her mouth.
"Senseless,"
a man attending her said. "I seen it before. The goblin club breaked her
head. She'll die tonight, in her sleep."
Pony
bent low, examining the wound. "Not so," she replied. "Not if
she's properly wrapped."
"What?"
the man asked skeptically, but fell silent as Elbryan and Pony went to work,
the ranger putting bandages about the old woman's head, while Pony, the soul
stone tucked under one palm, put her hands near the wound as if to hold the
head together while it was being wrapped.
Pony
closed her eyes and fell into the stone, sent the healing magic through her
fingers. She felt stings of pain, the tenderness and swelling, but she had
tended far worse in the battles of the northland.
She
came out of her trance a moment later, the wound reduced so as to not be
life-threatening, to the cries of "Approach! From the east!"
"Goblins!"
one frightened merchant yelled.
"No!"
another cried. "Brothers! St.-Mere-Abelle has come to our aid!"
Elbryan
cast a nervous glance at Pony, who quickly pocketed the gemstone.
"I
don't know how ye did it, but ye suren saved Timmy's life," said a woman,
rushing up behind Elbryan. Both Elbryan and Pony followed her gaze across the
way, to the man with the chest wound, who was standing now and talking easily,
even managing a laugh.
"It
was not so bad," Pony offered.
"It
was to the lung," the woman insisted. "Checked it meself, and thought
he'd be dead afore the dinner bell."
"You
were nervous and shaken," Pony offered. "And rushed, for you knew
that the goblins were coming back."
The
woman's face brightened with a disarming grin. She was older than the two,
perhaps in her mid-thirties, with the worn but pleasant demeanor of an honest
worker who had known a hard but satisfying life. She glanced by the pair, to
the wounded old woman sitting on the ground, her eyes already showing signs of
life once more.
"Not
so shaken," she said softly. "I seen much in the battles these last
weeks, and lost a son, though me other five children are safe, God be praised.
They only asked me along on the caravan to Amvoy because of me reputation for
putting broken people back together."
The
ranger and Pony exchanged a serious look, something the woman didn't miss.
"I'm
not knowing what ye're hiding," she said quietly. "But I'm not for
talking. I seen ye up on the hill, fighting for us, though ye know not a one in
the group, from what I'm hearing. I'll not betray ye." She finished with a
wink and turned away to join the commotion as the procession of monks
approached along the eastern road.
"Where
is our son?" Pony asked Elbryan with a smirk.
The
ranger looked around, though of course Juraviel was nowhere in sight.
"Probably behind the monks," he answered dryly. "Or under one of
their robes."
Pony,
nervous that her use of the stones might have drawn these brothers in and that
the quest might soon be over, appreciated the levity. She hooked her arm inside
her lover's and led him toward the gathering.
"I
am Abbot De'Unnero, departing St.-Mere-Abelle for St. Precious," they
heard the lead monk, a man full of so much energy that his eyes verily glowed.
"Who is the leader here?" Before anyone could answer, De'Unnero's
discerning eye settled on the pair, Elbryan and Pony. Their stride and the
weapons they carried distinguished them.
The
would-be abbot walked up to them, looking hard.
"We
are as new to the group as are you, good friar," the ranger said humbly.
"And
you happened upon them by mere chance?" De'Unnero asked suspiciously.
"We
saw the smoke rising, as you must have in the east," Pony answered, her
tone sharp and showing clearly that she was not intimidated. "And being
folk of goodly heart, we rushed to see if we might help. When we arrived, the
second fight was brewing, so we made it our own."
De'Unnero's
dark eyes flashed, and it seemed to both Elbryan and Pony that he wanted to
strike out at her for the implied accusation. She had, for all intents and
purposes, just asked the monk why he and his fellows had not hustled to join
in.
"Nesk
Reaches," came a call from a heavy man in bright clothing, the same man
Pony had spoken with when she had first approached the caravan before the
fight. The merchant hustled forward, extending his left hand, for his right
was bandaged. "Nesk Reaches of Dillaman Township," he said, "
'Tis my caravan, and glad we are to see you."
De'Unnero
ignored the man's offered hand, his sharp gaze still scrutinizing Elbryan and
Pony.
"Master
De'Unnero," a portly old friar interrupted, moving forward to stand beside
the forceful man. "They have wounded. Pray give me the soul stone that I
might tend them."
Elbryan
and Pony didn't miss the flash of outrage crossing De'Unnero's angular face,
the man obviously not pleased that this other monk had so openly offered help,
and magical help at that. Still, he had been put on the spot, in front of all
the merchants and all his own procession, and so De'Unnero reached into his
pouch and produced a hematite, handing it over.
"Abbot
De'Unnero," he corrected.
The
portly monk bowed and walked past him, offering a glance and a smile at Elbryan
and Pony as he moved into the group.
Predictably
to Pony, for she had already made an accurate assessment of the man, Nesk
Reaches started for the portly friar, holding up his slightly injured hand,
playing the wound for all it was worth.
De'Unnero
wouldn't let the merchant leader go that easily, though. The monk grabbed
Reaches roughly by the shoulder and turned him about. "You admit that this
is your caravan?" he asked.
The
merchant humbly nodded.
"What
fool are you to be bringing people out in this danger?" De'Unnero scolded.
"Monsters are thick in the region, and are hungry and hunting. The warning
has been given across the land, yet here you are, out alone and hardly
guarded."
"Please,
good friar," Nesk Reaches stammered. "We were in need of provisions.
We had little choice."
"In
need of good profits, more likely," De'Unnero snapped. "Thinking to
turn a few pieces of gold at a time when few caravans are running and goods are
more valuable."
Grumbles
from the crowd told Elbryan and Pony, and De'Unnero, that the reasoning was
sound.
De'Unnero
let Nesk Reaches go then, and called out to the portly monk. "Be quick
about it! We have been delayed too long already." To Reaches, he added,
"Where are you headed?"
"Amvoy,"
the thoroughly intimidated merchant stammered.
"I
will soon be sanctified as abbot of St. Precious," De'Unnero explained
loudly.
"St.
Precious?" Nesk Reaches echoed. "But Abbot Dobrinion—"
"Abbot
Dobrinion is dead," De'Unnero callously stated. "And I will replace
him. And, merchant Reaches, I expect that you and your caravan, owing a debt to
me, will attend the ceremony. In fact, I insist upon it. And I remind you that
you would be wise to be generous in your offerings."
He
turned away then to his procession, motioning the monks out of the wagon
circle. "Be quick," he called to Master Jojonah, spinning about.
"I'll not waste our entire day at this business."
Elbryan
used the distraction to slip away to the horses, remembering that Symphony
carried a gemstone in his breast which might be quite significant and telling
to monks of St.-Mere-Abelle.
Pony,
meanwhile, kept her eyes on the portly monk tenderly attending the many
wounded. When De'Unnero's group was safely away, she went up to the man,
offering to help with conventional healing, tearing bandages and the like.
The
monk looked at her sword, at the blood spattered on her pants and boots.
"Perhaps you should rest," he said. "You and your companion have
done quite enough this day, from what I have heard."
"I
am not tired," Pony said with a smile, taking as much of an initial liking
to this man as she had a disliking to the other, De'Unnero. She couldn't help
but measure that man against Abbot Dobrinion, whom he would apparently
replace, and the contrast sent a shudder along her spine. This monk, though, so
sincerely at work to relieve the suffering, seemed more like the former abbot
of St. Precious, whom Pony had met on a couple of occasions. She bent low and
held the hand of the man the friar was attending, applying pressure in just the
right spot to slow the bleeding of his torn hand.
She
noticed then that the monk was not looking at her, or at the wounded man, but
had settled his gaze on Elbryan and the horses.
"What
is your name?" he asked Pony, his eyes drifting to study her.
"Carralee,"
Pony lied, using the name of her infant cousin who had been killed in the first
goblin raid on Dundalis.
"I
am Master Jojonah," the monk replied. "Well met, I would say, and
fortunate for these poor folk that we—particularly you and your
companion—came along when we did!"
Pony
hardly heard the last few words. She stared hard at the portly man. Jojonah.
She knew that name, the name of the one master of whom Avelyn had spoken
fondly, the one man at St.-Mere-Abelle, Avelyn had believed, who had understood
him. Avelyn hadn't talked much with Pony about his colleagues during his days
at the abbey, but he made it a point one night after too many "potions of
courage," as Avelyn called his liquor, to tell her about Jojonah. That
fact alone relayed to the woman just how dear this old man had been to Avelyn.
"Your
work is truly amazing, Father," she remarked as Master Jojonah put a soul
stone to use on the injured man. In truth, Pony soon realized that she was more
powerful with the gemstones than this master of the abbey, a fact that
pointedly reminded her of just how powerful Avelyn Desbris had been.
"It
is a minor thing," Master Jojonah replied when the man's gash was mended.
"Not
minor to me," the man said, and gave a laugh that sounded more like a
cough.
"But
what a good man you are to do such work," Pony said enthusiastically. She
was acting purely on instinct now, following her heart, though her thoughts,
were screaming at her to be cautious and shut up. She gave one nervous glance
around, to make sure that no other monks had wandered back into the wagon
circle, then continued quietly, "I once met another of your Church—St.-Mere-Abelle,
is it not?"
"Indeed
it is," Master Jojonah replied absently, looking around for any others who
might need his healing talents.
"A
good man was he," Pony continued. "Oh, such a good man."
Master
Jojonah smiled politely, but started to walk off.
"His
name was Aberly, I believe," Pony said.
The
monk stopped abruptly and turned on her, his expression shifting from polite
tolerance to sincere intrigue.
"No,
Avenbrook," Pony bluffed. "Oh, I cannot remember his name quite
right, I fear. It was years ago, you see. And though I cannot remember the
name, I'll never forget the monk. I came upon him when he was helping a poor
street beggar in Palmaris, much as you just helped that man. And when the poor
man offered to pay him, fishing a few coins out of his raggedy pocket, Aberly,
or Avenbrook, or whatever his name might have been, accepted graciously, but
then arranged for the coins, along with more than a few of his own, to be
returned to the poor man inconspicuously."
"Indeed,"
Jojonah muttered, nodding his head with her every word.
"I
asked him why he did that—with the coins, I mean," Pony went on. "He could
have just refused them, after all. He told me that it was just as important to
protect the poor man's sense of pride as his health." She finished with a
broad smile. The story was true, though it had happened in a tiny village far
to the south and not in Palmaris.
"Are
you sure you cannot remember the brother's name?" Jojonah prompted.
"Aberly,
Aberlyn, something like that," Pony replied, shaking her head.
"Avelyn?"
Jojonah asked.
"That
might be it, Father," Pony replied, still trying not to give too much
away. She was encouraged, though, by the warm expression on Master Jojonah's
face.
"I
said be quick!" came a shout from outside the wagon circle, the harsh bark
of St. Precious' new abbot.
"Avelyn,"
Master Jojonah said again to Pony. "It was Avelyn. Never forget that
name." He patted her shoulder as he walked past.
Pony
watched him go, and for some reason that she had not yet discerned, she felt a
bit better about the world. She moved to Elbryan then, the ranger still
standing right against Symphony, hiding the telltale turquoise.
"May
we leave now?" he asked her impatiently.
Pony
nodded and climbed up on Greystone, and with a wave to the merchant entourage,
the pair trotted their mounts out of the wagon circle, going back to the south,
up the slope and away from the monks, who were back on the road, heading to the
west. Just over the ridge, Elbryan and Pony met up with Juraviel again, and
they were quickly heading east, putting as much ground between themselves and
the monks as possible.
De'Unnero
began scolding Master Jojonah as soon as the older man rejoined the monk
procession. His tirade went on and on, long after the group exited the valley.
Jojonah
tuned it out almost immediately, his thoughts still with the woman who had
helped tend the wounded. He felt warm inside, calm and hopeful that Avelyn's
message had indeed been heard. The woman's tale had touched him deeply, had
reinforced his positive feelings toward Avelyn, had reminded him once again of
all that was—or
all that could be—right with his Church.
His
smile as he pondered the tale only infuriated De'Unnero even more, of course,
but Jojonah could hardly have cared less. At least in this tirade—on the edge of
insanity, it seemed—De'Unnero was showing his temperament honestly to the
younger, impressionable monks. They might be in awe of the man's fighting
prowess—even Jojonah was amazed by that—but his verbal lashing of an old,
impassive man would likely sour more than a few stomachs.
Finally
realizing that Jojonah's serenity was too entrenched to be shaken, the volatile
master backed off and the procession went on its way, with Master Jojonah
falling into position at the end of the line absently, trying to conjure images
of Brother Avelyn's work with the poor and sick. He thought of the woman again,
and was glad, but as he pondered her tale, as he considered her and her
companion's obviously mighty role in the battle, his contentment fast shifted
to curiosity. It made little sense to him that a man and a woman, obviously
powerful warriors, would be making their way to the east from Palmaris—and not in
position as guard of one of the few, precious caravans that were trying to get
through. Most heroes, after all, were making their name and reputation in the
north, where the battle lines were more obvious. It occurred to Master Jojonah
that this situation needed more investigating.
"The
stone!" Abbot De'Unnero snapped at him from the front of the procession.
The
man was hardly paying him any heed, so Jojonah bent low and quietly gathered
another stone of similar size, then dropped it into the pouch in place of the
hematite. Then he rushed over to De'Unnero, seeming obedient, and handed the
pouch over. He breathed easier when the vicious master, no lover of magic other
than his signature tiger's paw, tucked the pouch away without a look.
They
marched until the sun went down, putting several miles behind them before
setting camp. A single tent was propped for De'Unnero, who went inside right
after his meal with parchment and ink to further plan the grand ceremony of his
appointment as abbot.
Master
Jojonah said little to his companions, just moved off by himself quietly and
settled amidst several thick blankets. He waited until all the camp had
quieted, until several of the brothers were snoring contentedly, and then he
took the hematite from his pocket. With one last glance around to make sure no
one was taking any notice, he fell into the stone, connecting his spirit to its
magic and then using that magic to let his spirit walk free of his body.
Without
the corporeal bonds of his aged and too-heavy frame, the master set out at
great pace, covering the miles in mere minutes. He passed by the merchant
caravan, which was still circled in the valley.
The
woman and her companion were not there, and so Jojonah's spirit did not stay,
but rather drifted up high, into the air, above the hilltops. He spotted a pair
of campfires, one to the north and another in the east, and by sheer luck
chose to investigate the eastern glow first.
Perfectly
silent and invisible, the spirit glided in. He soon saw the two horses, the
great black stallion and the muscled golden palomino, and then, beyond them,
huddled about the fire, the two warriors talking to a third figure he did not
know. He drifted closer cautiously, giving them all due respect, moving in a
circuit about the perimeter of the camp to get a better look at this third
member of the band.
If
he had been in his corporeal form, Jojonah's gasp would have been audible
indeed when he saw the lithe figure, the angular features, the translucent
wings!
An
elf! Touel'alfar! Jojonah had seen statues and drawings of the diminutive
beings at St.-Mere-Abelle, but even at the abbey the writing on the Touel'alfar
was indecisive as to whether there really were such beings, or whether they
were merely legend. After encountering powries and goblins and hearing the
tales of fomorian giants, Jojonah was not logically surprised to learn that
there really were Touel'alfar, but the sight of one still startled him
profoundly. He spent a long time hovering about that camp, his gaze never
leaving Juraviel while he listened to the conversation.
They
were speaking of St.-Mere-Abelle, of the prisoners Markwart had taken,
particularly the centaur.
"The
man was proficient with the hematite," the woman was saying.
"Could
you defeat him in a battle of magics?" the strong man asked.
Jojonah
had to swallow his pride when the woman nodded confidently, but any anger he
might have felt washed away as soon as she explained.
"Avelyn
taught me well, better than I had understood before," she said. "The
man was a master, indeed the one that Avelyn had called his mentor, the one man
that Avelyn had loved at St.-Mere-Abelle. Avelyn always spoke highly of Master
Jojonah, but in truth, the man's work with the stones was not so strong, not
compared to Avelyn, and not compared to my own."
She
had not said it in any boastful way, but merely matter-of-factly, and so
Jojonah took no further offense. Instead he considered the deeper, richer
implications of it all. She had been trained by Avelyn! And under his tutelage,
this woman, who did not look as though she was near her thirtieth birthday, was
stronger than a master of St.-Mere-Abelle. That notion, and he found from her
tone that he believed her words, served to reinforce Jojonah's continually
mounting respect for Avelyn.
He
wanted to stay near and continue his eavesdropping, but realized then that
time was short and that he would have to cover quite a bit of ground before the
dawn. His spirit soared back to his waiting body, and when he was again corporeal,
he breathed easier to learn that his out-of-body flight had not been noticed.
All the camp was quiet.
Jojonah
looked at the soul stone, wondering how to proceed. He might need this, he
realized, but if he took it, then De'Unnero would likely make hunting him down
a priority even above the journey to St. Precious. On the other hand, if he
left the soul stone, then it might be used, much as he had used it this night,
to search for him.
Jojonah
found a third option. From inside the folds of his voluminous robes he
produced parchment and ink, then set about writing a short note explaining that
he was going to return to the merchant caravan and escort them to Palmaris. He
would take the soul stone, he explained, because the merchants were far more
likely to need it than were the monks, especially—and Jojonah took great care to
play this part up—since the monks had Master De'Unnero, perhaps the greatest
fighter ever to come out of St.-Mere-Abelle, at their head. Also, Jojonah
assured De'Unnero that he would make sure that the merchants, and any
compatriots they could muster, would attend the ceremony at St. Precious,
bearing expensive gifts.
"My
conscience will not allow me to leave these people out here all alone,"
the note finished. "It is the duty of the Church to help those in need,
and by so helping, we bring willing contributors into the flock."
He
hoped that the emphasis on wealth and power would calm De'Unnero's expectedly
vicious response. But he couldn't really worry about that now, not with these three
people, so potentially important to everything that he held dear, so very near.
Carrying only the soul stone and a small knife, he crept out of the camp,
taking care not to be noticed, and set out as fast as his old frame would carry
him, back to the east.
His
first destination was the valley where the merchants had settled, so he could
get his bearings, and also from an honest desire to check in on the battered
caravan. When he drew near the place, he found another potential gain.
Improvising, Master Jojonah cut a piece of his robe, not a difficult thing to
do since the material had grown threadbare from his many days of traveling. He
broke a few low branches and scuffled his feet about to make it seem as if a
fight had occurred, then cut his own finger, carefully soaking the ripped
material in blood and dripping some more about the area.
He
quickly sealed the wound with the hematite, then moved over the ridge to the
slope above the valley. The camp seemed peaceful enough, a couple of fires
burning, several figures moving about calmly, so the monk took a moment to
gauge his position, then set out.
He
came in sight of the low-burning campfire before the dawn, and crept up. He
didn't want to startle these people, certainly not to alarm them, but he
figured that his best chance was to get close enough for the woman to recognize
him.
He
was soon in the bushes about the small campsite, the fire clearly in sight. He
thought that he had been silent, and was glad to see the two bedrolls bulging
with forms. How to wake them, he wondered, without frightening them into
action?
He
decided to wait until the dawn, to let them wake up on their own, but even as
he started to settle down for perhaps an hour's wait, he sensed that he was
being watched.
Master
Jojonah spun about as the large form crashed in. Though Jojonah, like all the
monks of St.-Mere-Abelle, was a trained fighter, in the blink of an eye he was
on his back, the edge of a very fine sword pressed against his throat, the
strong man on top of him, pinning him helplessly.
Jojonah
made no move to resist, and the man, upon recognizing him, backed off slightly.
"No
others in the area," came a melodic voice—the elf, Jojonah presumed.
"Master
Jojonah!" the woman said, coming into view. She rushed over and put a hand
on the strong ranger's shoulder, and with a look and a nod, Elbryan got up from
the monk and offered his hand.
Jojonah
took it and was pulled to his feet with such ease that the man's strength, like
his incredible agility, stunned him.
"Why
are you here?" the woman asked.
Jojonah
looked right into her eyes, their beauty and depth not diminished in the least
by the dim light. "Why are you?" he asked, and his tone, one that
showed such understanding, gave both Pony and Elbryan pause.
"Brother
Talumus," Baron Bildeborough went on slowly, calmly, his tone a futile
attempt to hide the agitation that bubbled just beneath the surface,
"tell me again of Connor's visit here, of every stop he made, of
everything he inspected."
The young monk, thoroughly flustered, for it was obvious he wasn't giving the Baron what he wanted, started talking so fast and in so many different directions that his words came out as a jumble. Prompted by the Baron's patting hand, the man stopped and took a deep and steadying breath.
"The
abbot's room first," Talumus said slowly. "He was not pleased that we
had cleaned it up, but what were we to do?" As he finished the sentence,
his voice rose up again with excitement. "The abbot must be in public
state—tradition
demands it! And if we were to have guests at the abbey—oh, and streams of
them!— then we could not leave the room all gory and torn up."
"Of
course not. Of course not," Baron Bildeborough said repeatedly, trying to
keep the monk calm.
Roger
watched his new mentor closely, impressed by the man's patience, by how he was
keeping this blubbering monk somewhat on track. Still, Roger could see the
underlying tension on Rochefort's face, for the man now understood, as did
Roger, that they would get few answers and little satisfaction here. St.
Precious, with no ranking masters behind Abbot Dobrinion, was in absolute
disarray, with monks running every which way, and discussion of this or that
rumor taking the place of even the prayer times. One confirmed bit of news had
proven especially unnerving to Roger and Rochefort: St. Precious would soon get
a new abbot, a master from St.-Mere-Abelle.
To
Roger and to Rochefort, that fact seemed to lend even more credence to Connor's
suspicions that the Father Abbot himself had been behind the murder.
"We
left the powrie, though," Brother Talumus went on, "at least until
after Master Connor had departed."
"And
then Connor went to the kitchen?" Rochefort inquired gently.
"To
Keleigh Leigh, yes," replied Talumus. "Poor girl."
"And
she was not injured other than the drowning?" Roger dared to put in,
looking directly at Rochefort as he spoke, though the question was obviously
for Talumus. Roger had previously explained to Rochefort that Keleigh Leigh's
lack of cuts—for
dipping berets—had been a primary clue to Connor that the powrie had not
committed these crimes.
"No,"
replied Talumus.
"None
of her blood was spilled?"
"No."
"Go
and find me the person who first discovered her body," Baron Bildeborough
instructed. "And be quick."
Brother
Talumus scrambled to his feet, saluted and bowed, then ran from the room.
"The
monk who found her will likely have little to tell us," Roger remarked,
surprised by the Baron's request.
"Forget
the monk," Rochefort explained. "I only sent Brother Talumus that we
might find a few minutes alone. We must decide upon our course, my friend, and
quickly."
"We
should not tell them of Connor's suspicions, or of his demise," Roger said
after a few seconds' pause. Baron Bildeborough was nodding as he went on.
"They are helpless in the face of this. Not a single monk here, if Talumus
is the highest-ranking remaining, could possibly stand against the coming
master of St.-Mere-Abelle."
"It
does seem that Abbot Dobrinion was lax in developing any talents in his
lessers," Rochefort agreed. He gave a snort. "Though I might enjoy
the sheer tumult of telling Talumus and all the others that St.-Mere-Abelle
murdered their beloved abbot."
"Not
much of a fight," Roger put in dryly. "From all that Connor told me
of the Church, St.-Mere-Abelle would quickly dismantle the order at St.
Precious, and then the Father Abbot would be even more entrenched in Palmaris
than he will be when the new abbot arrives."
"True
enough," Baron Bildeborough admitted with a sigh. He brightened his
expression immediately for the sake of the two jittery monks entering the
room, Talumus and the first witness. On with the questioning, he decided, but
only for appearances—both he and Roger knew they would learn nothing more from
this man or any other at St. Precious.
The
two were back at Chasewind Manor soon after, Rochefort pacing the floor while
Roger sat upon the man's favorite stuffed chair.
"Ursal
is a long ride," Rochefort was saying. "Of course, I will want you
with me."
"Will
we actually meet the King?" Roger asked, a bit overwhelmed by that
possibility.
"Oh,
but King Danube Brock Ursal is a good friend, Roger," replied the Baron.
"A good friend. He will grant me audience and will believe me, do not
doubt. Whether or not he will be able to take any overt action given the lack
of evidence—"
"I
was a witness!" Roger protested. "I saw the monk kill Connor."
"Perhaps
you bear false witness."
"You
do not believe me?"
"Of
course I do!" the Baron replied, again giving that customary pat in the air
with his plump hand. "Indeed, boy, else why would I have gone to so much
trouble? Why would I have given you Greystone and Defender? If I didn't trust
you, boy, you would be in chains, and tortured until I was convinced that you
were speaking truly."
The
Baron paused and looked at Roger more closely. "Where is that sword?"
he asked.
Roger
shifted uncomfortably. Had he just compromised that trust? he wondered.
"Both sword and horse have been put to good use," he explained.
"By
whom?" the Baron demanded.
"By
Jilly," Roger was quick to reply. "Her road is darker still, and
fraught with battle, I fear. I gave them over to her, for I am no rider, nor
much of a swordsman."
"Both
can be taught," the Baron grumbled.
"But
we've not the time," Roger replied. "And Jilly can put them to good
use at once. Do not doubt her prowess ..." Roger paused, trying to gauge
the great man's reaction.
"Again
I trust in your judgment," the Baron said at length. "So we'll not
speak of this again. Now back to our primary business. I believe you—of course I
do. But Danube Brock Ursal will be more cautious in his acceptance, do not
doubt. Do you realize the implications of our claims? If King Danube accepted
them as truth and spoke of them publicly, he might well begin a war between Church
and state, a bloodbath that neither side desires."
"But
one that the Father Abbot of St.-Mere-Abelle began," Roger reminded.
A
cloud passed over Baron Rochefort Bildeborough's face then, and he seemed to
Roger so very old and tired indeed. "And so we must go south, it would
seem," he said.
A
knock on the door cut short Roger's response.
"My
Baron," said an attendant, entering, "word has just come to us that
the new abbot of St. Precious has arrived. Master De'Unnero, by name."
"Do
you know of him?" the Baron asked Roger, who only shook his head.
"He
has already requested your audience," the attendant went on. "At St.
Precious this very afternoon at high tea."
Bildeborough
nodded and the attendant left the room.
"I
must hurry, it would seem," the Baron remarked, glancing out the window at
the westering sun.
"I
will accompany you," Roger said, rising from the stuffed chair.
"No,"
Bildeborough replied. "Though I would indeed welcome your impressions of
this man. But if the depth of this heinous conspiracy is as far-reaching as we
fear, then better that I go alone. Let the name and face of Roger Billingsbury
remain unknown to Abbot De'Unnero."
Roger
wanted to argue, but he knew that the man was right, and knew, too, that
Bildeborough's answer for not taking him was only half of the reason. Roger
understood that he was still young and very inexperienced in matters politic,
and Bildeborough feared— and Roger could not honestly dismiss those fears as
folly—that this new abbot might glean a bit too much information from their
high tea.
So
Roger sat and waited at Chasewind Manor for the rest of that afternoon.
Mid-Calember
was not so far away. Not when Father Abbot Markwart considered the preparations
he must make for the momentous proclamations he intended. The old and wrinkled
man paced his office at St.-Mere-Abelle, pausing every time he passed the
window to view the summer foliage. The events of the last few weeks,
particularly the discovery at the Barbacan and the trouble in Palmaris, had
forced Markwart to change his thinking on many matters, or at least to
accelerate his maneuvers toward his long-term goals.
With
Dobrinion gone, the makeup of the College of Abbots had changed dramatically.
Though he would be a new abbot, De'Unnero, by the mere fact that he presided
over St. Precious, would be granted a strong voice at the College, possibly
even third behind only Markwart and Je'howith of St. Honce. That would give
Markwart great power to strike hard.
The
old cleric smiled wickedly as he fantasized about that meeting. At the College
of Abbots he would forever discredit Avelyn Desbris, would brand the man
indelibly as a heretic. Yes, that was important, Markwart realized, for if he
did not pass such sanctions against Avelyn, then the man's actions would remain
open for interpretation. As long as the brand of heretic had not been
formalized, all of the monks, even first-year brothers, remained free to
discuss the events of Avelyn's departure, and that was a dangerous thing. Would
some be sympathetic to the man? Might the word "escape" wriggle into
such discussions in place of the commonly described murder and theft?
Yes,
the sooner he made the declaration of heresy and it was approved by the Church
leaders, the better. Once the brand was formalized, no discussion of Avelyn
Desbris in any positive light would be tolerated at any abbey or chapel. Once
Avelyn was declared a heretic, his entry into the annals of Church history
would be complete, and ultimately damning.
Markwart
blew a long sigh as he considered the road to that coveted goal. He would be
opposed, he suspected, by stubborn Master Jojonah—if the man lived that long.
Markwart
dismissed the possibility of yet another assassination; if all of his known
enemies began dying, then probing eyes would likely turn his way. And besides,
he knew that Jojonah was not alone in his beliefs. He could not strike out that
hard. Not yet.
But
he had to be prepared should the fight come to pass. He had to be able to prove
his point about Avelyn's heresy, for the devastation at the Barbacan was
certainly open to interpretation. It was true, and indisputable, that Siherton
had been killed on the night of Avelyn's flight from St.-Mere-Abelle, but in
that, too, Jojonah might be able to find some argument. Intent, and not mere action,
determined sin, and only true sin could brand a man a heretic.
Thus
Markwart knew he would have to prove more than his interpretation of the
events on the night when Avelyn absconded with the stones. To get the complete
confirmation of that brand—a brand the Church had never been quick to hand out—he
would have to prove that Avelyn subsequently used those stones for ill, that
the man's degeneration to the dark side of human nature was complete. But he
would never quiet Jojonah, Markwart realized. The man would fight him
concerning Avelyn Desbris, would deny his plans to the last. Yes, he saw that
now; Jojonah would return with the College of Abbots and would fight him. They
were long overdue for that confrontation. Thus Markwart decided that he would
have to destroy the master, and not just the man's argument.
Markwart
knew exactly where he could find allies to that cause, a preemptive strike
against Jojonah. Abbot Je'howith of St. Honce held a position as a close
adviser to the King, and could access that power, in the form of the fanatical
Allheart Brigade. All that he had to do, Markwart thought, was prep Je'howith
properly, have him bring along a few of those merciless warriors...
Satisfied,
the Father Abbot turned his thoughts to the issue of Avelyn. He did have one
remaining witness to Avelyn's actions, Bradwarden, but from his interrogations
of the centaur, both verbal and with the soul stone, he had a fair measure of
the beast's considerable willpower and feared that Bradwarden would not break,
no matter how brutally they tortured him.
With
that in mind, the Father Abbot moved to his desk and made a note to Brother
Francis that he should work ceaselessly with the centaur until the College
convened. If they couldn't trust that Bradwarden had indeed broken and would
say whatever they told him to say, then the centaur would be killed before the
distinguished guests arrived.
Markwart
realized yet another problem as he penned that note. Francis was a ninth-year
brother, yet only immaculates and abbots would be allowed to attend the
College. Markwart wanted Francis there; the man had his limitations, but he was
loyal enough.
The
Father Abbot ripped a corner of the parchment and noted a reminder,
"IBF," to himself, then tucked it away. As he had broken protocol,
due to the emergency of the war, in appointing De'Unnero as abbot of St.
Precious and in sending Jojonah to the Palmaris abbey to serve as De'Unnero's
second, so he would promote Brother Francis to the rank of immaculate.
Immaculate
Brother Francis.
Markwart
liked the sound of that, liked the notion of increasing the power of those who
obeyed him without question. His explanation for the premature appointment
would be simple, and surely accepted: with two masters sent to bolster St.
Precious, St.-Mere-Abelle had been left weak at the top echelons. Though the
abbey boasted scores of immaculates, few had attained the credentials necessary
for promotion to the rank of master, few even continued to strive for such a
rank, and Francis, given his vital work with the caravan to the Barbacan,
would strengthen that stable considerably.
Yes,
the Father Abbot mused. He would promote Francis before the College, and then
again, soon after, to the rank of master, to replace...
...
Jojonah, he decided, instead of De'Unnero. For De'Unnero's replacement he
would look among the scores of immaculates, perhaps even to Braumin Herde, who
was deserving even if his choice of mentors had left a great deal to be
desired. Still, with Jojonah so far away and unlikely to ever return—except for the
three weeks of the College—Markwart figured that he might be able to bring
Braumin Herde tighter into the fold by tempting him with the coveted rank.
The
Father Abbot's step lightened as he waded through these problems, as solutions
became all too apparent. This new insight he had found, this new level of inner
guidance, seemed nothing short of miraculous. Every layer of intrigue seemed to
fall away, leaving him with answers crystal clear.
Except
for the problem of branding Avelyn quickly, he reminded himself, and he slapped
his hand against his desk in frustration. No, Bradwarden would not break, would
remain defiant until the bitter end. Markwart, for the first time, lamented the
loss of the Chilichunks, for they, he knew, would have been so much easier to
control.
An
image came to him then, of the small library wherein Jojonah had been digging
for information about Brother Allabarnet. Markwart saw the room clearly in his
mind, and couldn't understand why—until one area of the back corner, a
distant, unused shelf, came clear in the image.
Markwart
followed his instincts, followed the inner guidance, first to his desk to
retrieve some gemstones, then down from his office, down the damp and dark
stairs that led to the ancient library. No guards were posted now, for Jojonah
was supposedly far away, and Markwart, glowing diamond in hand, entered
cautiously. He went past the shelves of books to the back corner, to the books
which the Church had long ago banned. He knew logically that even he, the
Father Abbot, should not be perusing these, but that inner voice promised him
answers to his dilemma.
He
studied the shelf for a few minutes, glancing at every tome, at the labels of
every rolled parchment, then closed his eyes and replayed those images.
His
eyes stayed closed, but he lifted his hand, trusting that it was being guided
to the book he needed. Grasping gently but firmly, Markwart tucked the prize
under his arm and shuffled away, and was back in the privacy of his office
before he even inspected the work, The Incantations Sorcerous.
Roger
expected that the Baron would be gone late into the evening, and was rather
surprised when the man returned long before the sun had even touched the
horizon. He went to meet Bildeborough full of hope that all had gone well, but
those hopes were deflated as soon as he saw the huge man, huffing and puffing,
his face red from explosive rage.
"In
all my years, I have never met a more unpleasant man, let alone a supposed holy
man!" Rochefort Bildeborough fumed, storming out of the foyer and into his
audience room.
Roger,
following quickly, thought he might have to take a second choice of seat this
time, for the Baron plopped into his stuffed chair. But then the huge man was
right back to his feet, pacing anxiously, and so Roger slipped in behind him to
take what was fast becoming his customary seat.
"He
warned me!" Baron Bildeborough fumed. "Me! The Baron of Palmaris,
friend of Danube Brock Ursal himself!"
"What
did he say?"
"Oh,
it started well enough," Bildeborough explained, slapping his hands
together. "All polite, with this De'Unnero creature hopeful that the
transition would be smooth as he took his place in St. Precious. He said that
we might work together—" Bildeborough paused and Roger sucked in his breath,
recognizing that some important declaration was forthcoming. "—despite the
apparent shortcomings and criminal behavior of my nephew!" the Baron exploded, Stomping his feet and punching at the air.
The exertion overwhelmed him almost immediately, and Roger was quick to his
side, helping him into the comfortable chair.
"The
dog!" Bildeborough went on. "He does not know of Connor's death, I am
sure, though he will certainly learn of it soon. He offered to pardon Connor,
on my word that Connor would be more careful of his behavior in the future.
Pardon him!"
Roger
worked hard to keep the man calm then, fearing that he would simply die of his
rage. His face was puffy and bloodred, his eyes wide.
"The
best thing that we can do is to go to the King," Roger calmly said.
"We have allies that the new abbot cannot overcome. We can clear Connor's
name—indeed,
we can put all the blame for these troubles where it rightly belongs."
The
reminder did calm the Baron considerably. "Off we go," he said.
"To the south, with all speed. Tell my attendants to prepare my
coach."
De'Unnero
had not underestimated Baron Bildeborough in the least. His forceful demeanor
at their meeting had been purposefully designed to garner both information
from the man and understanding of the Baron's political leaning, and in
De'Unnero's sharp eyes, their conversation had been extremely successful on
both counts. Bildeborough's outrage showed that he, too, might prove an open
enemy of the Church, more troublesome than either his nephew or Abbot
Dobrinion.
And
De'Unnero was smart enough to understand the true culprit behind the removal of
those troubles.
For,
despite his words at the meeting, De'Unnero did indeed know of the death of
Connor Bildeborough, and he knew, too, that a young man had brought the body
back to Palmaris, along with the body of a man dressed in the robes of an
Abellican monk. Again the angry abbot lamented that Father Abbot Markwart had
erred in not sending him on the most important mission to retrieve the stones. Had
he gone in search of Avelyn, this issue would have been settled long ago, with
the gemstones returned and Avelyn and all of his friends dead. How much less a
problem Bildeborough would be to him, and to the Church!
For
now Markwart and the Church had a problem, a big one, De'Unnero believed.
According to those monks of St. Precious whom De'Unnero had already
interviewed, and those of St.-Mere-Abelle who had witnessed the near battle in
St. Precious' courtyard, Baron Bildeborough had thought of Connor as a son.
The accusation of murder had no doubt been laid at the Church's door, and
Bildeborough, whose influence went out far from Palmaris, would not be silent
on this matter.
The
new abbot was not surprised, then, when one of his flock, a fellow monk who had
made the journey with De'Unnero from St.-Mere-Abelle, returned from his
assigned scouting post to report that a carriage had left Chasewind Manor,
riding south, right out of Palmaris, along the river road.
The
new abbot's other spies soon returned, confirming the story, one of them
insisting that Baron Bildeborough himself was in that coach.
De'Unnero
did not betray his emotions, remained calm and went through the few remaining
evening rituals as though nothing was amiss. He went to his room early, explaining
that he was weary from the ride, a perfectly plausible excuse.
"This
is where I hold advantage even over you, Father Abbot," the abbot of St.
Precious remarked as he looked out his window to the Palmaris night. "I
need no lackeys for my dark business."
He
pulled off his telltale robes and dressed in a loose-fitting suit of black
material, then pushed open the grate on the window and climbed out,
disappearing into the shadows. Moments later he crouched in an alleyway, his
favorite gemstone in hand.
De'Unnero
fell into the stone, felt the exquisite pain as the bones in his hands and arms
began to reshape and twist. And then, spurred by the sheer excitement of the
coming hunt, the sheer ecstasy that he could finally act, he fell deeper, and
quickly kicked off his shoes as his legs and feet, too, transformed into the
hind legs and paws of a tiger. He felt as if he was losing himself in the
magic, becoming one with the stone. All his body jerked and spasmed. He raked a
paw across his chest, tearing wide his clothing.
Then
he was on all fours, and when he tried to protest, a great growl came out of
his feline maw.
Never
had he gone this far!
But
it was wonderful!
The
power, oh, the power! He was the hunting tiger now, in body, and all of that
sheer power was under his absolute control. Soon he was running swiftly and
silently on padded feet, bounding over the high Palmaris wall with ease and
charging off down the southern road.
*
* *
On
the very first pages, the general description of the tome, the Father Abbot
understood. Only a few months before, Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart would have
been horrified at the thought.
But
that was before he had found the "inner guidance" of Bestesbulzibar.
He
reverently placed the book away in the lowest drawer of his desk, locking it
tight.
"First
business at hand," he said aloud, drawing clean parchment and a vial of
black ink from another drawer. He unrolled the parchment and secured its ends
with weights, then stared at it for a long time, trying to determine the best
manner of wording. With a nod, he titled the paper:
Promotion
of Brother Francis Dellacourt to Immaculate Brother
Markwart
spent a long time preparing that important document, though the final draft was
no more than three hundred words. By the time he finished, the day was nearing
its end, the other monks gathering for dinner. Markwart swept out of his
office, to the wing of St.-Mere-Abelle serving as residence for the newest
students. He found the three he wanted and called them off to a private room.
"You
will each provide me with five copies of this document," he explained. One
of the young brothers shifted nervously.
"Speak
your mind," Markwart demanded of him.
"I
am not well-versed, nor very skilled, in illumination, Father Abbot," the
man stuttered, head bowed. In truth, all three were overwhelmed by the demand.
St.-Mere-Abelle boasted of many of the finest scribes in all the world. Most of
the immaculates who would never attain the rank of master had chosen the vocation
of scribener.
"I
did not ask if you were skilled," Markwart replied to the man, to them
all. "You can read and write?"
"Of
course, Father Abbot," all three confirmed.
"Then
do as I asked," the old man said. "Without question."
"Yes,
Father Abbot."
Markwart
let his dangerous stare linger on each of them individually, then, after what
seemed like minutes of silence, threatened, "If any of you speak a word of
this, if any of you give anyone else even a hint of the contents of this paper,
you will, all three, be burned at the stake."
Again
came the silence, Markwart studying the young monks intently. He had decided to
use first-year students, and these three in particular, because he was certain
that such a threat would carry great influence. He left them, then, confident
that they would not dare fail the commandment of their Father Abbot.
Markwart's
next stop was the room of Brother Francis. The man had already gone to dinner,
but the old monk wasn't deterred, sliding his instructions concerning
Bradwarden under the door.
Soon
after, back in his private quarters, in a little-used room to the side of his
bedroom, the Father Abbot set about his next preparation. First he removed all
items, even furniture, from the room. Then, with the ancient book, a knife, and
colored candles in hand, he went back in and began tracing a very specific
pattern, described in great detail in the tome, in the wooden floor.
The
forest seemed a quiet place to Roger, full of peace and calm. Something about
the very air was different here than in the northland, some serenity, as though
all the woodland animals, all the trees and flowers, knew that no monsters were
about.
Roger
had come out from the small camp beside the wagon to relieve himself, but had
stayed out as the minutes passed, alone with his thoughts and with the starry
canopy. He tried not to think of his coming meeting with King Danube; he had
rehearsed his speech many times already. He tried not to worry for his friends,
though he suspected they would likely be approaching St.-Mere-Abelle by now,
perhaps had already battled with the Church over the prisoners. For now, Roger
wanted only rest, the calm peace of a summer's night.
How
many times had he reclined on a branch in the forest near Caer Tinella, alone
in the quiet night? Most, if the weather was agreeable. Mrs. Kelso would see
him for dinner, and then again for breakfast, and though the mothering woman
believed him to be comfortably curled up in her barn, he was more often in the
forest.
Try
as he may, Roger couldn't find that level of calm now, couldn't find that deep,
introspective serenity. Too many worries crept into the corners of his
consciousness; he had seen and experienced too much.
He
leaned heavily against a tree, staring up at the stars, lamenting his loss of
innocence. All during his time with Elbryan, Pony, and Juraviel, they had
applauded him for maturing, had nodded approvingly as his decisions became
more based in responsibility. But accepting those responsibilities had taken a
toll, Roger understood now, for the stars did not twinkle so brightly, for his
heart was surely heavier.
He
sighed again and told himself that things would get better, that King Danube
would put the world aright, that the monsters would be driven far away and he
could return to his home and his previous life in Caer Tinella.
But
he didn't believe it. With a shrug, he started back for the wagon, back for
discussions of important matters, back for responsibility.
He
paused, though, before he got near the campsite, the hairs on the back of his
neck tingling.
The
forest had gone strangely, eerily, quiet.
Then
came a low, resonating growl, the likes of which Roger had never before heard.
The young man froze in place, listening intently, trying to discern the
direction, though the low roar seemed to fill all the air, as though it was
coming from everywhere at once. Roger didn't move, didn't breathe.
He
heard the draw of sword, another roar, this one more emphatic, and then the
screams, sudden and horrible. Now he was moving, running blindly, stumbling on
roots, taking more than one branch in the face. He saw the firelight from the
camp, silhouettes darting back and forth before it.
And
the screams continued, cries of fear, and now of agony.
Roger
came in sight of the camp to see the guards, all three, lying about the fire,
torn and broken. He hardly took note of them, though, for the Baron was halfway
inside the carriage, struggling mightily to get all the way in that he might
close the door.
But
even if he could have done so, Roger knew that the door would prove a meager
barrier against the creature, a gigantic orange-and-black-striped cat that had
a claw hooked about his boot.
The
Baron spun over and kicked out, and the tiger let go long enough for the man to
get inside. But the man never got close to shutting the carriage door, for the
cat had only let go that it might settle back on its haunches, and before
Bildeborough had even cleared the line of the door, the tiger sprang into the
carriage, atop him, claws raking.
The
carriage rocked violently, the Baron screamed, and Roger stared helplessly. He
did have a weapon, a small sword, barely more than a dagger, but he knew that
he couldn't possibly get to Bildeborough in time to save the man, and in any
case couldn't possibly defeat, or even seriously injure, the great cat.
He
turned and ran, tears streaming down his face, his breath coming in labored,
forced gasps. It had happened again! Just like the incident with Connor! Again
he was no more than a helpless bystander, a witness to the death of a friend.
He ran on blindly, stumbling, brush and limbs battering him as the minutes
became an hour. He ran until he dropped from exhaustion, and even then he
dragged himself on, too frightened to even look back to see if there was any
pursuit.
Backlit by the rising sun, swathed in a veil of morning fog, the great fortress of St.-Mere-Abelle loomed in the distance, stretching far along the clifftop overlooking All Saints Bay. Only then, viewing the sheer size and ancient strength of the place, did Elbryan, Pony, and Juraviel truly come to appreciate the power of their enemies and the scope of their task. They had informed Jojonah of their course soon after he arrived at their campsite.
And
then he had told Pony of her brother's demise.
The
news hit her hard, for though she and Grady were never close friends, she had
spent years beside him. She didn't sleep well the rest of that night, but was
more than ready for the road before the dawn, a road that had led them here, to
this seemingly indestructible fortress that now served as prison to her
parents and her centaur friend.
The
great gates were closed tight, the walls high and thick.
"How
many live here?" Pony asked Jojonah breathlessly.
"The
brothers alone number more than seven hundred," he replied. "And even
the newest class, brought in last spring, have been trained to fight. You would
not get into St.-Mere-Abelle through use of force, if the King's army stood
behind you. In calmer times, you might find your way in posing as peasants, or
as workers, perhaps, but now, that is not possible."
"What
do you plan?" the ranger asked, for it seemed obvious to all that if
Master Jojonah could not get them in, their quest was hopeless. After their
meeting in the wood, Jojonah had promised to do just that, assuring them that
he was no enemy, but a very valuable ally. The four of them had started off
together the very next morning, Jojonah leading the way to the east, to this
place he had known as his home for many decades.
"Any
structure this size has less noticeable ways to enter," Jojonah replied.
"I know of one."
The
monk led them to the north then, a circuitous route that took them far around
the northern tip of the great structure, then down a winding, rocky trail to
the narrow beach. The water was right up to the rocks, waves licking against
the base of the stone, a dance that had continued for centuries untold. Still,
the beach was certainly passable, so the ranger plunked one foot in, testing
the water.
"Not
now," the monk explained. "The tide is coming in, and though we'll
get through before the water is too high, I doubt that we'll find the time to
return. When the tide recedes later this day, we will be able to make our way
along the shore to the dock area of the abbey, a place little used and little
guarded."
"Until
then?" the elf asked.
Jojonah
motioned back up the trail, toward a hollow they had passed, and all agreed
they could use the rest after their long day and night of hard travel. They set
a small camp, sheltered from the chill sea breeze, and Juraviel prepared a
meal, their first in many hours.
The
conversation was light at this time, with Pony doing most of the talking,
telling the eager master of her travels with Avelyn, retelling parts over and
over again at Jojonah's bidding. It seemed he couldn't get enough of her
stories, that he hung on every little detail, probing the woman repeatedly to
go into more depth, to add her feelings to her observations, to tell him
everything about Avelyn Desbris. When Pony at last got to the point where she
and Avelyn had met up with Elbryan, the ranger joined in with his own
observations, and then Juraviel, too, found much to add as they detailed their
efforts against the monsters in Dundalis, and the beginning of the trip to the
Barbacan.
Jojonah
shuddered when the elf described his encounter with Bestesbulzibar, and then
again when Pony and Elbryan told him of the battle outside Mount Aida, of the
fall of Tuntun and the final, brutal confrontation with the dactyl demon.
Then
it was Jojonah's turn to speak—between bites, for the elf had prepared a wonderful meal.
He told of the discovery of Bradwarden, of the centaur's pitiful condition, but
one that healed remarkably under the influence of the elven armband.
"Even
I, even Lady Dasslerond, I suspect, did not know the true depth of the item's
powers," Juraviel admitted. "It is a rare bit of magic, else we would
all wear one."
"Like
this?" Elbryan said, smiling, and turning his body so his left arm was
showcased, the green elven band tight about his muscles.
Juraviel
only smiled in reply.
"There
is one thing which I have not yet seen," Jojonah interrupted, dropping
his gaze over Pony. "Avelyn befriended you?"
"As
I have told you," she replied.
"And
at his demise, you took the gemstones?"
Pony
shifted uncomfortably and looked at Elbryan.
"I
know that the stones were taken from Avelyn," the monk went on. "When
I searched his body—"
"You
exhumed him?" Elbryan asked in horror.
"Never
that!" Jojonah answered. "I searched with the soul stone, and with
garnet."
"To
detect his magic," Pony reasoned.
"And
there was little about him," Jojonah said, "though I am certain—even more so
from your descriptions of the journey— that he went to the place with a
considerable cache. I know why his hand was extended upward, and I know who was
first to find him."
Again
Pony looked over at Elbryan, and his expression was no less unsure than her
own.
"I
would like to see them," Jojonah stated flatly. "Perhaps to wield
them in the coming fight, if there is to be one. I have considerable talents
with the gemstones and will put them to good use, I assure you."
"Not
so good as Pony," Elbryan remarked, drawing a surprised look from the
monk.
Despite
that, Pony reached to her pouch and took the small satchel from it, opening it
wide.
Jojonah's
eyes sparkled at the sight of the stones, the ruby, the graphite, garnet—taken from
Brother Youseff—and serpentine, and all
the others. He extended his arm toward them, but Pony shifted her hand away,
out of his reach.
"Avelyn
gave these to me, and so they are my burden," the woman explained.
"And
if I might better use them in the coming fight?"
"You
cannot," Pony said calmly. "I have been trained by Avelyn
himself."
"I
spent years—"
Jojonah started to protest.
"I
saw your work with the merchant caravan," Pony reminded him. "The
wounds were minor, yet they took you tremendous effort to bind. I have
measured your strength, Master Jojonah, and I speak now with no intent to
insult, or to brag. But I am the stronger with the stones, do not doubt, for
Avelyn and I found a connection, a joining of our spirits, and in that bond I
came to understand."
"Pony's
use of magic has saved me and so many others time and time again," Elbryan
added. "She does not boast, but merely speaks the truth."
Jojonah
looked from one to the other, then to Juraviel, who was also nodding.
"I
did not use them in the fight for the merchant caravan because we knew that
monks were in the area, and I feared we would be detected," Pony
explained.
Jojonah
put his hand up in front of him, a signal that no further explanation was
needed; he had heard this same story before when he was spiritually scouting
out the three. "Very well," he agreed. "But I do not believe
that you should bring them into St.-Mere-Abelle—not all of them, at
least."
Pony
looked to Elbryan again, and he shrugged and then nodded, thinking that the
monk's reasoning, offering the same argument that he and Juraviel had made to
Pony earlier, might be sound.
"We
do not know if we will get back out," Juraviel reasoned. "But is it
better," he asked Jojonah, "that the stones be hidden out here
instead of back in the hands of the monks of your abbey?"
Jojonah
didn't even have to think about that one. "Yes," he said firmly.
"Better that the stones are cast into the sea than to be given into the
hands of Father Abbot Markwart. So I beg that you leave them out here, as we
will leave these fine horses."
"We
shall see" was all that Pony would promise.
The
discussion then turned to more practical matters at hand, with the ranger
asking what they might expect in the way of guards at this seaside door.
"I
doubt that any will be down there," Jojonah replied with confidence. He
went on to describe the massive door, backed by the huge portcullis, backed by
yet another massive door, though that inner one was likely left open.
"That
sounds little like any entrance for us," Juraviel remarked.
"There
may be smaller entrances nearby," Jojonah replied. "For that is a
very ancient section of the abbey, and at one time the docks were used
extensively. The great doors are fairly new, no more than two centuries old,
but there once were many other ways into the structure from the docks."
"And
you hope to find one of these in the dark night," the elf said doubtfully.
"It
is possible that I could open the great doors with the gemstones," Jojonah
said, glancing at Pony as he spoke. "St.-Mere-Abelle takes few precautions
against magical attacks. If they are expecting a ship, the portcullis, the only
obstacle against successful stone use, might be open."
Pony
didn't reply.
"Our
bellies are full, our fire warm," the ranger remarked. "Let us find
some rest now, until the time is right."
Jojonah
looked up at Sheila, the bright moon, and tried to recall the latest he had
heard concerning the tides. He rose and bade the ranger to accompany him back
to the waterfront, and when they got down there, they saw that the water was
much calmer and almost back down to the base of the rocks.
"Two
hours," Jojonah reasoned. "And then we will have the time we need to
get into St.-Mere-Abelle and complete our task."
He
made it all sound so easy, Elbryan noted.
"You
should not come here," Markwart told Brother Francis when the man arrived
at the Father Abbot's private quarters, a place he had frequented often in the
last few weeks. "Not yet."
Brother
Francis held his arms out wide, truly perplexed by the hostile attitude.
"We
must turn our attention wholly to the College of Abbots," Markwart
explained. "You will be there, and so will the centaur, if we are
successful."
Brother
Francis' face screwed up even more with confusion.
"I?"
he asked. "But I am not worthy, Father Abbot. I am not even an immaculate,
and will not attain that title until next spring, when all of the abbots are
back in their respective abbeys."
The
grin that splayed across the Father Abbot's wrinkled and withered face nearly
took in his ears.
"What
is it?" Brother Francis asked, his tone edging on frantic.
"You
will be there," Markwart said again. "Immaculate Brother Francis will
stand beside me."
"But—But—"
Francis stuttered, too overwhelmed. "But I have not reached my ten years.
My preparations for promotion to immaculate brother are in order, I assure
you, but the rank cannot be attained by one who has not yet spent a full
decade—"
"As
Master De'Unnero became the youngest abbot in the modern Church, so you will
become the youngest immaculate brother," Markwart said matter-of-factly.
"These are dangerous times, and sometimes the rules must be bent to
accommodate the immediate needs of the Church."
"What
of the others of my class?" Francis asked. "What of Brother
Viscenti?"
Markwart
laughed at the notion. "Many will attain their new rank in the spring, as
scheduled. As for Brother Viscenti ..." He paused and grinned even wider.
"Well, let us just say that the company he keeps could well determine his
future.
"But
for you," the Father Abbot went on, "there can be no delays. I must
promote you to immaculate before I can then move you into the position of
master. Church doctrine is unbending on that point, regardless of
situation."
Francis
teetered and felt faint. Of course, he had predicted as much to Braumin Herde
that day in the seawall corridor, but had no idea that his mentor would move so
quickly. And now that he had heard the proclamation out loud, had heard
firsthand that Father Abbot Markwart did indeed mean to promote him to one of
the two vacant master positions, he was surely overwhelmed.
Brother
Francis felt as if he was rebuilding the pedestal of self-righteousness he had
broken by killing Grady Chilichunk, as if, by mere fact of his ascension in the
Order, he was redeeming himself, or even that he needed no redemption, that it
had been, after all, merely an unfortunate accident.
"But
you must stay far from me until the promotion is finalized," Markwart
explained. "Better for protocol. I do have a most important job for you,
in any case—that
of breaking Bradwarden. The centaur will
speak for us, against Avelyn and against this woman who now holds the
gemstones."
Brother
Francis shook his head. "He thinks of them as kin," he dared to
disagree.
Markwart
brushed the notion away. "Every man, every beast, has a breaking
point," he insisted. "With the magical armband, you can inflict upon
Bradwarden such horrors that he will beg for death, and that he will give up
his friends as enemies of the Church merely on your promise to kill him
quickly. Be inventive, immaculate brother!"
The
title was indeed inviting, but Francis' face soured anyway at the thought of
the distasteful job.
"Do
not fail me in this," Markwart said sternly. "That wretched beast may
be the keystone of our declaration against Avelyn, and do not doubt that that
declaration is vital to the survival of the Abellican Church."
Francis
bit his lip, his emotions obviously torn.
"Without
the centaur's confirmation against Avelyn, Master Jojonah and others will stand
against us, and the very best we might hope for is that the labeling of Avelyn
Desbris as a heretic will be taken under consideration," Markwart
explained. "Such a 'consideration' process will take years to
complete."
"But
if he truly was a heretic—and he was," Francis quickly added, seeing the Father
Abbot's eyes going wide with rage, "then time is our ally. Avelyn's own
actions will damn him, in the eyes of God and in the eyes of the Church."
"Fool!"
Markwart snapped at him, and the Father Abbot spun away, as if he couldn't
stand the sight of Francis, a gesture that profoundly stung the younger monk.
"Each passing day will count against us, against me, if the gemstones are
not recovered. And if Avelyn is not openly declared a heretic, then the general
populace and the King's army will not aid in our quest to find the woman and
bring her to justice."
Francis
followed that reasoning; anyone officially deemed a heretic became an outlaw
not only of the Church, but of the kingdom as well.
"And
I will have those gemstones!" Markwart went on. "I am not a young
man. Would you have me go to my grave with this issue unresolved? Would you
have my presidency over St.-Mere-Abelle be marred by this black mark?"
"Of
course not, Father Abbot," Francis replied.
"Then
go to the centaur," Markwart said so coldly that the hairs on the back of
Francis' neck stood up. "Enlist him."
Brother
Francis staggered out of the room, as shaken as if Markwart had physically
struck him. He ran his hand through his hair and started for the lower
dungeons, determined that he would not fail his Father Abbot.
Markwart
moved to the door and shut it, and locked it, scolding himself silently for
allowing his office to be so open, given the secret and telling floor design
in the adjoining room. He went to that room then, admiring his work. The
pentagram was perfect, exactly as it had appeared in the book, scratched into
the floor and with the grooves filled by multicolored wax.
The
Father Abbot had not slept in more than a day, too engrossed in his work and in
the mysteries the strange tome was showing him. Perhaps the Chilichunks would
also attend the College of Abbots. Markwart could bring spirits up to reinhabit
their bodies, and with hematite he could all but eliminate the natural decay.
It
was a risky move, he knew, but it was not without precedence. The
Incantations Sorcerous clearly spelled out a similar ruse, used against the
second abbess of St. Gwendolyn. Two of St. Gwendolyn's masters had turned
against the abbess, arguing that no woman should hold such a position of power—indeed, other
than the abbey of St. Gwendolyn, women played only a minor role in all the
Church. When one of those masters found that the other had died, merely of old
age, he understood his predicament, for he knew that he could not battle the
abbess alone. But through prudent use of The Incantations Sorcerous, the
master had not been alone. He had summoned a minor malevolent spirit to inhabit
his friend's corpse, and together they waged war on the abbess for nearly a
year to come.
Markwart
moved back to his desk, needing to sit and consider his course. The Chilichunk
imposters would only have to be in front of the College for a short while. It
was possible that the deception would succeed, for only he and Francis knew
with certainty that the couple had died, and then he would have two strong witnesses
against the woman.
But
what might be the cost of failure? Markwart had to wonder, and the
possibilities seemed grim indeed.
"But
I'll not know until I see the animations," he said aloud, nodding. He
decided to follow the course. He would bring the Chilichunks—their bodies,
at least—under his control, and see how
fine the deception appeared. Then he could decide, while watching the progress
of Bradwarden's bending, whether or not to present them before the College.
Smiling,
rubbing his hands with anticipation, Markwart took up the black book and a pair
of candles and went into the prepared room. He placed the candles in the
appropriate positions and lit them, then used diamond magic to pervert their
glow, having them give off a black light instead of yellow. Then he sat between
them, within the pentagram, legs crossed.
Soul
stone in one hand, The Incantations Sorcerous in the other, Markwart
walked free of his body.
The
room took on strange dimensions, seemed to warp and twist before his spiritual
eyes. He saw the physical exit, and then another, a portal in the floor with a
long, sloping passageway behind it.
He
took this darker route, his soul going down, down.
Sheila
was directly above the abbey, and the water was far, far out when Jojonah led
the ranger and his companions to the wharves and the lower door. Symphony and
Greystone had been left far behind, as had many of the gemstones, Pony taking
only those she thought might prove necessary. She now held a malachite, the
stone of levitation and telekinesis, and a lodestone.
Jojonah
led the way to the great doors in front of the wharves, then inspected them
closely, even taking the ranger's sword and sliding it under one worn area. As
he moved the blade back and forth he felt the barriers—the portcullis
was down.
"We
should search south along the cliff face," Jojonah reasoned, speaking in a
whisper and motioning that there might be guards atop the wall—though that
wall was several hundred feet above the companions. "That is the most
likely place for us to find a more accessible door."
"Do
you suspect that any guards will be posted within this portal?" Pony
asked.
"At
this time of night, I doubt there are any below the second level of the
abbey," Jojonah replied with confidence. "Except perhaps for guards
Markwart has posted near the prisoners."
"Then
let us try these," Pony replied.
"The
portcullis is down," Jojonah explained, trying hard, but futilely, to
keep the edge of hope in his voice.
Pony
held up the malachite, but the monk wore a doubtful expression.
"Too
large," he explained. "Perhaps three thousand pounds. That is why
this gate is hardly guarded. The front doors swing in, but they cannot open
while the portcullis is down. And of course that portcullis is inaccessible to
any lever we might construct while the solid doors are closed."
"Not
inaccessible to magic," Pony argued. Before the master could protest, she
fished out the soul stone and was soon out of body, slipping through the crack
between the front doors to view the portcullis. She went back to her physical
coil quickly, not wanting to expend too much energy. "This is the way,"
she announced. "The inner doors are not closed, nor did I see any sign of
guards in the hallway beyond."
Jojonah
didn't doubt her; he had done enough spirit-walking to know its potential, and
to understand that even in the darkened tunnels, the woman would have been able
to "see" clearly enough.
"The
front doors are barred, as well as blocked by the portcullis," Pony
explained. "Prepare a torch and go and listen carefully, for the lifting
portcullis and then the bar. When you hear it rise, go quickly, for I know not
how long I can offer you."
"You
cannot lift—"
Jojonah started to protest, but Pony had already raised her hand with the
malachite, had already fallen into the depths of the greenish stone.
Elbryan
moved near the master and dropped a hand on his shoulder, bidding him to be
quiet and watch.
"I
hear the portcullis rising," Juraviel whispered after a few moments, the
elf standing with his ear pressed against the large doors. Elbryan and a
stunned Jojonah rushed to join him, and despite the monk's protests that it was
impossible, he did indeed hear the grating sound of the great gate lifting into
the ceiling.
Pony
felt the tremendous strain. She had lifted giants before, but nothing of this
magnitude. She focused on her image of that portcullis and fell deep, deep
within the power of the stone, channeling its energy. The portcullis was up
high enough, she believed, above the top of the doors, but then she had to
reach even deeper, to grab the locking bar as well and somehow try to lift it.
She
trembled violently; sweat beaded on her forehead and her eyes blinked rapidly.
She pictured the bar, found it in her mental image, and grabbed at it with all
her remaining strength.
Juraviel
pressed his ear closer, could hear the bar shifting, one end going up.
"Now, Nightbird!" he said, and the ranger put his shoulder to the
great doors and heaved with all his strength. The bar fell free, the doors
swung open, and Elbryan slipped down to one knee in the passageway, quickly
moving to light his torch.
"The
locking mechanism is in a cubby down to the right," the monk said to the
elf as Juraviel ran past Elbryan.
A
moment later the torch came up and the elf announced that the portcullis was
secured. Jojonah, back at Pony's side, shook the woman roughly, drawing her
from her trance. She came out of it and stumbled, nearly falling over for lack
of strength.
"I
have seen but one other with such power," Jojonah remarked to her as he
led her into the passage.
"He
is with me," Pony replied calmly.
The
master smiled, not doubting her claim and taking great comfort in the
possibility. He quietly closed the inner doors then, explaining that the draft
would be felt deep into the abbey if the corridor were left open to the sea.
"Where
do we go?" the ranger asked.
Jojonah
thought on it for a moment. "I can get us to the dungeons," he said,
"but only by going up several levels, then coming back down at another
point."
"Lead
on," said Elbryan.
But
the monk was shaking his head. "I do not like the possibilities," he
explained. "If we encounter any brothers, the alarm will be sounded."
The notion that they might indeed meet up with some of St.-Mere-Abelle's flock
brought a wave of panic over Jojonah, not for this powerful trio and their
mission, but for the unfortunate brothers they might encounter.
"I
beg you not to kill any," he blurted suddenly.
Elbryan
and Pony exchanged curious glances.
"Brothers,
I mean," Jojonah explained. "Most are unwitting pawns for Markwart,
at worst, and not deserving of—"
"We
did not come in here to kill anyone," Elbryan interrupted. "And so we
shall not, on my word."
Pony
nodded her agreement, and so did Juraviel, though the elf wasn't so sure that
the ranger had spoken wisely.
"There
may be a better way to the dungeons," Jojonah said. "There are old
tunnels off to the side, just a hundred feet in. Most are blocked, but we can
pass those barriers."
"And
you will know your way along them?" the ranger asked.
"No,"
Jojonah admitted. "But they all tie together—the oldest parts of the abbey—and I am certain that any course will
lead us soon enough to a place I can recognize."
Elbryan
looked to his friends for confirmation, and they both nodded, preferring a trek
down unused passageways to a course that would likely put them in contact with
other monks. First, on Juraviel's reasoning, they also closed the portcullis,
preferring to leave no sign that the abbey's security had been breached.
They
found the old passageway soon after, and, as Jojonah predicted, had no trouble
in getting through the barrier the monks had constructed. Soon they were
walking along the most ancient corridors and rooms of St.-Mere-Abelle,
sections that had not been used in centuries. The floors and walls were all
broken, the uneven angles of stone casting ominous lengthened shadows in the
torchlight. Water stood calf-deep in many places, and small lizards ran on
padded feet along the walls and ceiling. At one point Elbryan had to draw out
Tempest just to cut his way through a myriad of thick webs.
They
were intruders here, as any person would be, for these regions had been left
for the lizards and the spiders, for the damp and the greatest adversary, time.
But the companions plodded on through the often narrow, always twisting
corridors, spurred by thoughts of Bradwarden and the Chilichunks.
The
tunnel was dark and without detail, just a swirling mass of gray and black. Fog
drifted up about the spirit of wandering Markwart, and though his form was
noncorporeal, in this place he felt the cold touch of that mist.
For
the first time in a long, long while, Markwart considered his course and
wondered if he was wandering too far from the light. He recalled that time when
he was a young man, first entering St.-Mere-Abelle half a century before. He
had been so full of idealism and faith, and those qualities had pushed him up
through the ranks, attaining immaculate on the tenth anniversary of his
entrance to the Order, and master only three short years later. Unlike so many
of the previous Father Abbots, Markwart had never left St.-Mere-Abelle to serve
as abbot of another abbey, had spent all of his years in the presence of the
gemstones, in the most sacred of Abellican houses.
And
now, he reasoned, the gemstones had shown him a new and greater path. He was
beyond the limits of his predecessors, wandering into regions unexplored and
unexploited. And so, after only a moment of doubt, it was with great pride,
bolstered by his unwavering confidence in himself, that Markwart continued the
descent along the dark and cold tunnel. He understood the perils here, but was
certain he would be able to take whatever evils he found and twist them for the
sake of good, the end justifying the means.
The
tunnel widened to a black plane of swirling gray fog, and among its rolling
mounds and stinking mists Markwart saw the huddled forms, blacker shadows among
the darkness, hunched and twisted.
Several
nearby sensed his spirit and approached hungrily, clawed hands extended.
Markwart
held up his hand and ordered them back, and to his satisfaction, they did
indeed retreat, forming a semicircle about him, red-glowing eyes staring at him
hungrily.
"Would
you like to see again the world of the living?" the spirit asked of the
two closest.
They
leaped forward, cold hands grasping Markwart's ghostly wrists.
A
sense of elation filled the Father Abbot's spirit. So very easy! He turned and
started back up the tunnel, the demon spirits in tow. He opened his eyes then,
his physical eyes, blinking in the sudden candlelight, the twin flames
flickering wildly. They were still burning black, but not for long, for they
flared red and huge suddenly, great fires spouting up from the meager candles,
swaying, dancing, filling all the room with their red-hued light, stinging
Markwart's eyes.
But
he did not, could not, look away, mesmerized by the black shapes forming within
those fires, humanoid shapes, hunched and twisted.
Out
they stepped, side by side, the two hideous forms, their hungry, red-glowing
eyes boring into the seated Father Abbot. Beside them the candles flared one
last time and returned to normal, and all the room was hushed.
Markwart
sensed that these demon creatures could spring upon him and rend him to pieces,
but he was not afraid.
"Come,"
he bade them, "I will show you to your new hosts." He fell into the
hematite and his spirit walked free of his body once more.
The
ranger carefully marked the walls at every intersection, and there were many in
this maze of ancient and unused corridors. The four wandered for more than an
hour, at one point chopping their way through a door and dismantling a bricked
barrier before finally happening upon an area that seemed familiar to Jojonah.
"We are near the center of the abbey," the monk explained. "To the south is the quarry, and the ancient crypts and libraries; to the north, the corridors that used to serve as living quarters for the brothers, but now serve Markwart as dungeon cells." Without any prompting, the master led the way, moving carefully and quietly.
Soon
after, Elbryan doused the torch, for the flickering of firelight could be seen
up ahead.
"Some
of the cells are there," Jojonah explained.
"Guarded?"
asked the ranger.
"Possibly,"
the monk replied. "And it could be that the Father Abbot himself, or one
of his powerful lackeys, is nearby, interrogating the prisoners."
Elbryan
motioned for Juraviel to take up the point. The elf moved far ahead, returning
a few moments later to report that two young men were indeed standing a calm
guard in the area of torchlight.
"They
are not wary," Juraviel explained.
"They
would expect no trouble down here," Master Jojonah said with confidence.
"You
stay here," Elbryan said to the monk. "It would not be wise for you
to be seen. Pony and I will clear the way."
Jojonah
dropped an anxious hand on the ranger's forearm.
"We'll
not kill them," Elbryan promised.
"They
are trained fighters," Jojonah warned, but the ranger hardly seemed to be
listening, already moving ahead, Pony and Juraviel by his side.
As
they neared the area, Elbryan moved in front, then went down low to one knee,
peering around an earthen bend.
There
stood the two young monks, one stretching and yawning, the other leaning
heavily against the wall, half asleep.
Suddenly
the ranger was between them, elbow lashing out at the leaning monk, slamming
him hard into the wall. Up snapped Elbryan's backhand the other way, dropping
the yawning monk even as he opened wide his eyes and started to protest. The
ranger turned back to the one now slumping even lower against the wall,
wrapping the man, spinning him over and putting him facedown to the floor,
while Pony and Juraviel came in on the other, who was too dazed from the heavy
hit to offer any resistance. Using fine elven twine, they bound the men, and
gagged them and blindfolded them using their own monk robes, and the ranger
dragged them down a dark side passage.
By
the time he returned, Jojonah was back with the group, and Pony was standing
outside a wooden door, staring hard at it. As soon as Jojonah had identified it
as Pettibwa's cell, Pony started toward it as if she meant to burst right in.
But now she could not.
The
stench told her the truth, the same smell she had known in sacked Dundalis
those many years before.
Elbryan
was beside her in an instant, steadying her as she finally lifted the latch and
pushed open the door.
The
torchlight splayed into the filthy room, and there, amidst her own waste, lay
Pettibwa, the skin on her thick arms slack and hanging, her face so very pale
and hugely bloated. Pony stumbled to her, fell to her knees beside the woman and
moved to cradle Pettibwa's head, but the body would not bend, and so the woman
lowered her head to Pettibwa instead, her shoulders bobbing with sobs.
She
had known nothing but love for this foster mother, the woman who had seen her
into adulthood, who had taught her so much about life and love, and about
generosity, for in those years long past, Pettibwa had no practical reason to
take in the orphaned Pony. Yet she had accepted Pony into her family fully,
shown the girl as much love and support as she gave to her own son, and that
was considerable indeed.
And
now she was dead, and in no small part because of that loving generosity.
Pettibwa was dead because she had been kind to an orphaned child, because she
had served as mother to the woman who became an outlaw of the Church.
Elbryan
held Pony close and tried to hold together her emotions—so many whirling emotions: guilt and grief, sheer
sadness and a great emptiness.
"I
need to talk to her," Pony said repeatedly, her words coming out over
sobbing gasps. "I need—"
Elbryan
tried to comfort her, tried to hold her steady, and grabbed her arm when she
reached for the soul stone.
"She
has been gone too long," the ranger said.
"I
can find her spirit and say good-bye," Pony reasoned.
"Not
here, not now," Elbryan softly replied.
Pony
started to protest, but finally, with trembling hand, replaced the gem in her
pouch—though
she kept her hand close to it.
"I
need to talk to her," she said more firmly, and turned from her lover to
the corpse once more, bending low and whispering farewells to her second
mother.
Jojonah
and Juraviel watched from the doorway, the monk horrified, though surely not
surprised that the woman had not survived the wrath of Markwart. He was
embarrassed as well that one of his Order, indeed the very leader of his Order,
had done this to the innocent woman.
"Where
is the other human?" Juraviel asked.
Jojonah
nodded to the next cell in line, and they both went quickly—only to find
Graevis hanging dead, the chain still wrapped about his neck.
"He
escaped the only way he could," Jojonah said somberly.
Juraviel
went right to the corpse, carefully turning it out of the chain choker.
Graevis' stiff form contorted weirdly as it fell to the length of the single
shackle, but better for Pony to see him like that, the elf reasoned, than in
his death pose.
"She
needs to be alone," Elbryan said to them, joining Jojonah in the doorway.
"A
bitter blow," Juraviel agreed.
"Where
is Bradwarden?" the ranger asked Jojonah, his tone stern, forcing the
guilt-ridden monk to retreat a step. Elbryan recognized Jojonah's horror at
once, though, and so he put a comforting hand on the monk's broad shoulder.
"It is a difficult time for us all," he offered.
"The
centaur is farther along the corridor," Jojonah explained.
"If
he lives," Juraviel put in.
"We
will go to him," the ranger said to the elf, motioning for Jojonah to lead
on. "You stay close to Pony. Protect her from enemies and from her own
turmoil."
Juraviel
nodded and came out of the cell as Elbryan and Jojonah made their quiet way
along the corridor. Juraviel went back to Pony then, telling her gently that
Graevis, too, was dead, then embracing her as sobs of grief washed over her.
Jojonah
followed the ranger farther down the low corridor, guiding Elbryan past intersections
with soft whispers. They moved around a final bend into another shadowy,
torchlit area, where they saw two doors, one on the left-hand wall and another
at the very end of the corridor.
"You
think this is ended, but it has only begun!" they heard a man cry,
followed closely by the crack of a whip and a low, feral growl.
"Brother
Francis," Jojonah explained. "A lackey of the Father Abbot."
The
ranger started ahead, but stopped fast, and Jojonah faded into the shadows, as
the door began to open.
The
monk, a man of about the same years as Elbryan, stepped out, whip in hand and a
very sour expression on his face. He froze in place, eyes going wide as he took
note of Elbryan, this stranger standing impassively, sword still in its
scabbard.
"Where
are the guards?" the monk asked. "And who are you?"
"A
friend of Avelyn Desbris," Elbryan replied grimly, and loudly. "And a
friend of Bradwarden."
"Oh,
by the gods, good show!" came a cry from within the cell, and it surely
did Elbryan's heart good to hear the booming voice of his centaur friend again.
"Oh, but ye're to get yer due, Francis the fool!"
"Silence!"
Francis commanded the centaur. He rubbed his hands together and eased the whip
out to its length as Elbryan advanced a step—though the ranger still did not
bother to draw his sword.
Francis
lifted the whip threateningly. "Your friendships alone show you to be an
outlaw," he said, a nervous edge to his voice despite his best efforts to
appear calm.
The
ranger recognized those efforts, but hardly cared whether this man was
confident or not. Bradwarden's voice and the realization that this man had
just used that whip on his centaur friend assaulted the ranger's
sensibilities, sent him spiraling into that warrior mentality. He continued his
advance.
Francis
pumped his arm but didn't snap the whip. He shifted uncomfortably and glanced
over his shoulder as often as forward.
On
came Nightbird, Tempest still sheathed at his hip.
Now
the panicking Francis did try to snap the whip, but Nightbird quick-stepped
forward, inside its rolling length, and pushed it aside. The monk threw the
weapon at him, turned and sprinted for the door at the end of the corridor. He
grabbed at the handle and yanked hard, and the door opened about a foot before
Nightbird's hand was against it, stopping its momentum.
With
frightening strength the ranger slammed the door closed.
Sensing
an opening in the ranger's defenses, Francis spun about and launched a straight
right punch for the man's exposed ribs.
But
even as his right hand pushed the door, Nightbird stiffened his left hand,
holding it fingers up and perpendicular to his body, a foot in front of him. A
simple, slight shift, perfectly timed, brushed Francis' hand out wide, and then
Francis' successive left was turned harmlessly under the ranger's upraised
right arm.
Francis
tried yet another fast right, and again the ranger picked it off, brushing it
out wide with the same blocking hand, only this time he followed it out,
keeping the back of his fingers in contact with Francis' arm. It all seemed too
slow to Francis, and too easy, but suddenly the tempo changed, Nightbird
rolling his hand fast over Francis' forearm, grabbing hard and yanking back
across his body. He caught Francis' fist, covering it with his right hand and
pulling hard, again with the frightful, undeniable strength.
Francis
lurched to the side, his arm drawn right across his body and down, and his
breath was blasted away by a short, straight left jab to his side, a punch
incredibly jarring, given the mere five inches the ranger's fist traveled.
Francis bounced hard against the door and tried to recover, but Nightbird,
holding fast the monk's fist, drove his arm up and under Francis', and the
sudden movement at so strange an angle brought a loud, bone-jarring pop from
Francis' elbow. Waves of pain washed over him. His broken arm was thrown up
high as he fell back squarely against the door, and the large ranger waded in,
hitting him with a right to the stomach that doubled him over, followed by a
left uppercut to the chest that lifted his feet right off the ground.
A
devastating flurry followed, left and right in rapid succession, hammering
away, jolting Francis against the door or up into the air.
It
ended as abruptly as it had started, with Nightbird moving back a step, leaving
Francis bent forward from the door, one hand holding his belly, the other
hanging limply. He looked up at the ranger just in time to see the roundhouse
left hook. It caught him on the side of the jaw, snapped his head violently to
the side, and flipped him right over to land on his back on the hard floor.
All
the world was spinning into blackness for Francis as the large form moved over
him. "Do not kill him!" he heard from far, far away.
Nightbird
hushed Jojonah immediately, not wanting his voice to be recognized. He relaxed
when he looked closer at his victim, to see that Francis was unconscious.
Moving quickly, the ranger dropped a sack over the monk's head and bade Jojonah
to bind him, then went charging into Bradwarden's cell.
"Taked
ye long enough to find me," the centaur said cheerily.
Elbryan
was overcome by the sight, and thrilled, for Bradwarden was indeed very much
alive, and looking healthier than the ranger could ever have hoped.
"The
armband," the centaur explained. "What a good bit o' magic!"
Elbryan
ran over and embraced his friend, then, remembering that time was not their
ally, went right for the large shackles and chains.
"I'm
hopin' ye found a key," the centaur remarked. "Ye're not for breaking
them!"
Elbryan
reached into his pouch and produced the packet of red gel, the same substance
he had used on the tree against the raiding goblins. He unfolded the packet,
then smeared the reddish gel onto the four chains holding the centaur.
"Ah,
but ye got more o' the same stuff ye used in Aida," the centaur said
delightedly.
"We
must be quick," Jojonah remarked, coming into the room. The sight of him
put Bradwarden into a fit, but Elbryan was quick to explain that this was no
enemy.
"He
was with them that took me from Aida," Bradwarden explained. "With
them that put me in chains."
"And
with them that mean to get you out of these chains," the ranger was quick
to add.
Bradwarden's
visage softened. "Ah, true enough," he surrendered. "And he did
give me me pipes on the long road."
"I
am no enemy of yours, noble Bradwarden," Jojonah said with a bow.
The
centaur nodded, then turned his head and blinked curiously as his right arm
came down from the wall. There stood Elbryan, Tempest in hand, readying to
strike at the chain that held the centaur's right hind leg.
"Good
sword," Bradwarden remarked, and then, with a single swing, his leg, too,
was free.
"Go
see to Elbryan," Pony said. She was still kneeling beside the body of
Pettibwa, but she resolutely straightened her back.
"I
doubt that he needs any assistance," the elf replied.
Pony
took a deep breath. "Nor do I," she said, and Juraviel understood
that she wanted to be alone. He noted that her hand was again clutched about a
stone in the pouch, and that was surely alarming, but in the end he knew that
he had to trust in Pony. He kissed her gently on the top of the head, then
moved back from her, out the door of the cell but no farther, keeping quiet
guard in the torchlit corridor.
Pony
tried hard to hold control. She put her hand to Pettibwa's bloated cheek and
stroked it gently, lovingly, and it seemed to her as if the dead woman settled
easier, as if the pallid color of death was not so obvious.
Pony
felt something then, a sensation, a rush, a tickle. Confused, wondering if, in
her longing to reach out to Pettibwa, she had unintentionally slipped under
the power of the soul stone she once more held tight in her hand. Following
that course, Pony closed her eyes and tried to concentrate. Then she saw them,
or thought she did, a trio of spirits, one an old man, rushing through the
room.
Three
spirits: Pettibwa, Graevis, and Grady?
The
notion startled Pony as much as it intrigued her, but still not understanding,
she became afraid and wisely broke all connection to the soul stone. She
opened her eyes and looked down at Pettibwa—to see the woman looking back at her!
"What
magic might this be?" Pony muttered aloud. Had she subconsciously reached
out so powerfully with the soul stone that she had grabbed Pettibwa's
disembodied spirit? Was such resurrection even possible?
She
got her terrifying answer as Pettibwa's eyes flared red with demonic flames and
the woman's face contorted, a guttural snarl coming from her opened mouth.
Pony
rocked back, too confused, too overwhelmed, to immediately react, and her
horror only grew as the corpse's teeth elongated into pointed fangs. Up came
the corpse to a sitting position, too suddenly, plump arms shooting out and
clamping hard, with superhuman strength, about Pony's throat. The horrified
young woman thrashed violently, turning her hands into every possible angle to
gain leverage but making no headway in dislodging the demon's powerful grip.
But
then Juraviel was there, his slender sword slashing hard against Pettibwa's
bloated forearm, opening it wide that the pus and gore could spill out.
Elbryan
was just about to sever the last of Bradwarden's chains when Pony's cry reached
his ears. He slashed hard with Tempest, spinning on his heel and taking several
steps before the chain even fell to the floor, Jojonah close behind. He came
around the bend in full speed, heard a tumult within the cell that held the
body of Graevis, and kicked open the door.
And
then he stopped, stunned, for the animated corpse had bitten right through its
one chained wrist and now came toward him, its eyes flaring with red fires, its
stump arm leading the way with a spray of blood.
Elbryan
wanted to go to Pony—above all else, he wanted to get by her side—but he could
not rush off, and took some comfort when Jojonah thundered past behind him on
his way to Pettibwa's cell. Out came Tempest and in charged the ranger, meeting
the demon creature head-on, ignoring the spray of the bloody stump and slashing
away viciously at the reaching arms.
"My
mum," Pony said repeatedly, falling back against the wall as Juraviel
battled the creature. The woman knew rationally that she should go to
Juraviel's side, or that she should use the gemstones now, perhaps the soul
stone to force this evil spirit from Pettibwa's body. But she could not act,
could not get past the horror at seeing Pettibwa, her adopted mother, in this
state!
She
forced herself to find a level of calm, told herself repeatedly that if she
could get into the soul stone, she might learn the truth of this creature.
Before she could begin the move, though, Juraviel thrust ahead powerfully,
right between the reaching arms, stabbing his sword deep into the corpse's
heart, a sight that froze Pony in place.
The
demon laughed wildly and batted the elf's hand from the sword hilt, then
swatted Juraviel with a backhand that launched him head over heels.
The
elf accepted the blow, and was moving with it before it ever connected,
diminishing much of the shock. Aflutter of his wings, a perfect twist in
midair, landed him squarely on his feet, facing the demon creature—which still
had the sword sticking from its chest.
Then
another form came charging into the small cell, rushing past the elf. Without
slowing, Jojonah slammed hard into the demon, burying it under his tremendous
weight, taking it heavily into the back wall.
And
then Bradwarden entered, and the cell was packed full of bodies!
"What
is it about?" the centaur gasped.
With
an unearthly roar, the demon launched Jojonah away, but Bradwarden found his
answers quickly, and as the creature rushed forward, the centaur spun about and
hit it with a double-kick that sent it careening back into the wall. Bradwarden
moved right in on the creature, front hooves smashing away, fists pounding
hard, a sudden and brutal beating that would not allow the demon to find any
time to go on the offensive.
"Get
her out of here," Juraviel instructed Jojonah. As the monk scooped Pony
into his arms, the elf leveled his bow and waited for an opening.
All
the months of Bradwarden's frustration came pouring out in the next seconds as
the centaur rained blow after blow on the demon creature, battering it, tearing
bloated flesh, smashing bone into pulp. Still, if he was truly harming the
creature, it didn't show it, just kept trying to find some way to grab at him.
But
then an arrow popped into one of those red-glowing eyes, and how the demon
howled!
"Oh,
but ye didn't like that one!" the centaur said, using the opportunity to
spin about and drive his rear legs right into the demon face. With the head
already pressed against the stone wall, the skull exploded in a shower of gore,
but still the body fought on, arms flailing wildly.
Jojonah
ushered Pony into the hall and set her down against the wall.
"Damned
thing, lie down and die!" came Elbryan's voice from the next cell.
The
monk charged away to the door and then looked back, a disgusted expression on
his face, waving for Pony to stay back.
Inside
the cell, Elbryan slashed hard with Tempest, abandoning his normal thrusting
style, for he had stabbed the creature several times, driving his sword tip
deep into flesh and organs, with little effect. So he had gone to a more
conventional style, taking up the mighty sword in both hands and swinging it in
devastating, slashing motions. One of the demon's arms was severed at the elbow,
and a downstroke of Tempest took the other, right at the shoulder.
Still
the creature came on, but a straight-across cut of Tempest stopped its momentum
and gave the ranger time to level and line up his backswing.
Jojonah
looked away, understanding, as the great sword flashed across, lopping the head
off. When the monk looked back, his revulsion was even greater, for that head,
lying to the side against the wall, was still biting at the air, fires still
burning in the eyes! And the body continued to press the attack.
Elbryan
punched out with his fist and knocked the body back, then took up Tempest in
both hands, did a complete pivot, coming around with the sword low, taking off
one leg. The corpse tumbled to the side, one stump thrashing, one leg kicking,
and with the head, just a few inches away, snapping futilely at the air.
The
fires in the eyes were diminishing, though, and Elbryan soon realized that the
fight was over. He rushed back into the hall, past Jojonah, past Bradwarden and
Juraviel as they exited the first cell, to grab up the hysterical Pony in his
arms.
"Still
kicking," Bradwarden explained to Jojonah when the monk saw that
Pettibwa's body, the gory remains of its head flapping about its shoulders,
was still flailing against the wall, tearing at the stone.
"But
not for knowing which way to turn," the centaur added, closing the door.
Jojonah
went to the ranger and the woman. Amazingly, Pony was fast composing herself.
"Demon
spirits," the monk explained, looking Pony right in the eye. "Those
were not the souls of Graevis and Pettibwa."
"I
saw them," Pony stuttered, gasping for breath, her teeth trembling.
"I saw them come in, but there were three."
"Three?"
"Two
shadows and an old man," she explained. "I thought it was Graevis,
though I could not see clearly."
"Markwart,"
Jojonah breathed. "He brought them here. And if you saw them—"
"Then
he saw you," Elbryan reasoned.
"We
must be gone from this place, and quickly," Jojonah cried. "Markwart
is on his way, do not doubt, and with an army of brothers behind him!"
"Run
on," said Elbryan, pushing Jojonah toward the same ancient corridors that
had brought them to this cursed place. He glanced back once at the side passage
where they had put the guards, then took up the rear of the line, with Pony
beside him. They moved as swiftly as the often tight and twisting corridors
would allow, and soon came upon the dock doors of the abbey, closed and with
the portcullis down, as they had left them.
Master
Jojonah started for the crank, but Pony, steadier now and with a grim
determination set upon her face, held him back. She took out the malachite once
more and fell into its magic, and though she was weary and emotionally
battered, she brought up a wall of rage and channeled it into the stone. With
hardly an effort, it seemed, the portcullis slid up into the ceiling holes.
Elbryan
went right to the great doors, lifting the locking bar and pulling one open. He
moved to put the bar aside, but again Pony, still in the throes of the
levitational magic, intervened.
"Hold
the bar above the locking latch," she instructed. "Quickly."
They
could hear the terrific strain in her voice, so Bradwarden ushered Jojonah out
the open door, while Juraviel went behind Pony and gently eased her along, as
well. As she passed the open door and Elbryan, Pony put her other hand, holding
the magnetite, against the outside of the metallic door and fell into that
magic as well.
The
portcullis shifted dangerously over Elbryan's head, but Jojonah, understanding
what the clever woman meant to do, was at Pony's side, easing the magnetite
from her hand and strengthening the magnetic pull, through the door and onto
the metal locking bar. Pony fell fully into the malachite once more, steadying
the portcullis as Elbryan, too, came outside.
The
ranger pulled the door closed, and Jojonah released his magnetic magic, then
gave a satisfied sigh as the locking bar fell into place across the latches of
the two doors. Then Pony gradually let go of her magic, easing the portcullis
down, making it look as if these doors had not been breached.
She
turned about and blinked in the glare, as did the others, the morning sun low
in the sky before her, cutting shafts of light through the thick fog lifting
from All Saints Bay. The tide was not in, but it was on the way, and so they
set off immediately and at a swift pace, back down the beach and along the
trail to their horses.
Snarling
with rage, and despite the pretests of the two dozen brothers rushing about
him, the Father Abbot was the first to crash through the doors to the dungeon
area on the lower level.
There
was the battered Francis, the hood still tight about his head, struggling to
stand, being helped by one of the other guards Elbryan had overpowered. Farther
along the corridor, just inside the doors of their cells, lay the destroyed
bodies of the Chilichunks, Pettibwa's still thrashing at the floor as the demon
spirit struggled to the end.
Markwart
was not surprised, of course, since he had seen the intruder, the woman
kneeling over Pettibwa, on his escort of the demons, but the other monks could
not have expected this grisly scene. Some cried and fell away, others fell to
their knees in prayer.
"Our
enemies brought demons against us," Markwart cried, waving a hand at the
plump woman's body. "Well fought, Brother Francis!"
With
some help from another young brother, Francis finally escaped the hood and his
bonds. He started to explain that he had done little fighting, but stopped in
the face of Markwart's glare. Francis wasn't certain what was going on here,
hadn't seen the Chilichunks' animated corpses, and wasn't sure exactly who had
destroyed the demons. He had a fair idea, though, and that notion sent many
things careening through his thoughts.
Elbryan
grew ill at ease, even frightened, as he watched Pony make her way along the
trails. Her grunts were not of weariness, though she surely must have been
exhausted after her magical feats, but of anger, a primal rage. The ranger
stayed close to her, put his hand on her whenever the trail allowed, but she
hardly looked at him, just continually blinked away any hint of tears, her jaw
set firmly, her gaze locked ahead.
At
the horses, Pony methodically retrieved the rest of her gemstones.
Jojonah
offered to use healing hematite on Bradwarden, if the woman would loan him one,
but the centaur brushed away that idea before Pony could begin to answer.
"I'm just needing a bit o' food," he insisted, and truly, he did look
healthy enough, though quite a bit skinnier than the last time the others had
seen him. He patted his arm, the red elven armband securely in place.
"Good gift ye gave to me," he said to Elbryan with a wink.
"Our
road will be long and fast," the ranger warned, but Bradwarden only
patted his less than ample belly and laughed. "I'm running all the faster
for me lack o' belly," he said cheerily.
"Then
let us go," said the ranger. "At once. Before the monks come out of
their abbey to search for us. And let us deliver Master Jojonah to St. Precious
on time."
"Ride
Greystone," Pony bade the monk, handing him the reins.
Jojonah
accepted them without protest, for it made sense that the lighter woman, and
not he, should climb on the back of the centaur.
But
Pony caught them all by surprise, turning not for Bradwarden, but back toward
St.-Mere-Abelle, running full out, gemstones in hand.
Elbryan
caught up to her twenty yards away and had to tackle her to stop her progress.
Now she was indeed crying, shoulders bobbing with sobs, but she fought against
him furiously, trying to get free, trying to get back to the abbey to exact
some revenge.
"You
cannot defeat them," the ranger said to her, holding her tightly.
"They are too many and too strong. Not now."
Pony
continued to fight, even unintentionally clawed Elbryan's face.
"You
cannot dishonor Avelyn like this," Elbryan said to her, and that gave her
pause. Gasping, tears streaming down her face, she looked at him skeptically.
"He
gave you the stones to keep them safe," Elbryan explained. "Yet if
you go back to the abbey now, you will be defeated and the gemstones will fall
into the hands of our—of Avelyn's—enemies. They will be taken by the same one who
brought such turmoil and pain to the Chilichunks. Would you give him
that?"
All
strength seemed to fall away from the woman then, and she slumped into her
lover's arms, burying her face in his chest. He led her gently back to the
others and put her in place atop Bradwarden, with Juraviel behind her to keep
her steady.
"Give
me the sunstone," he bade her, and when she did, he took it to Jojonah,
explaining that they should put up some blocking magic to defeat any magical
attempts to find them. Jojonah assured him that such a feat would be easy
enough, so the ranger went to Symphony and took the lead as the group thundered
away at full gallop, putting St.-Mere-Abelle far, far behind them before the
sun climbed high in the eastern sky.
"Find
them!" the Father Abbot fumed. "Search every passage and every room.
All doors barred and guarded! Now! Now!"
The
other monks scrambled, some heading back the way they had come to alert the rest
of the library.
When
the reports filtered back to Markwart that the back dock doors had apparently
not been opened, the search within the library intensified, and by mid-morning
nearly every corner of the great structure had been scoured. The outraged
Markwart set up a central reporting area in the abbey's huge chapel, surrounded
by the masters, each in command of a number of searching monks.
"They
had to come in, and depart, through the dock doors," one of the masters
reasoned, a sentiment backed by many. His scouting leader had just returned to
him to report that no other door in the abbey showed any sign of entry.
"But
the doors were closed and barred, an impossible feat from outside the
abbey," another master reasoned.
"Unless
they used magic," someone offered.
"Or
unless someone within the abbey was there to meet them, to open the doors for
them, to close the doors behind them," Markwart reasoned, and that
thought drew an uncomfortable shift from every man in the room.
Soon
after, when it was obvious that the enemies were indeed long gone from the
abbey, Markwart ordered half the monks out in searching parties and another two
dozen out magically, using quartz and hematite.
He
knew the futility, though, for the Father Abbot was finally getting a true
appreciation of the cunning and power of his real enemies. With that
hopelessness came a pit of rage deeper than Markwart had ever known, one that
he honestly believed would overwhelm him forever.
He
found relief later that afternoon, though, when he interviewed Francis and the
two monks who had been on guard near the cells, when he learned more about
these intruders who had come to St.-Mere-Abelle, including one who was no
stranger to the place.
Perhaps
he wouldn't need the centaur and the Chilichunks after all. Perhaps he could
shift the blame, even of the original theft of the gemstones by Avelyn, by
theorizing about a larger conspiracy within the Order. Now, he understood. Now,
he had a scapegoat.
And
Je'howith would be bringing a contingent of Allheart soldiers.
Markwart
stood in his private quarters that night, staring out the window. "We
shall see," he said, a hint of a grin spreading on his face. "We
shall see."
"You're
not even to ask for the stones?" Pony said, standing on the streets of
Palmaris with Elbryan and Master Jojonah. The group had landed earlier that
morning north of the city, traveling across the great river on Captain
Al'u'met's Saudi Jacintha, which, fortunately, had still been docked in
Amvoy. Al'u'met had agreed to Jojonah's request for help without question and
without payment, and with a promise that not a word of the impromptu ferry
would be spoken to anyone.
Juraviel
and Bradwarden were still in the north, while Elbryan, Pony, and Jojonah
entered Palmaris, the monk to return to St. Precious, the other two to check
on old friends.
"The
sacred gems were given into fine care," Jojonah replied with a sincere
smile. "My Church owes you much, but I fear that you will get no just
rewards from the likes of Father Abbot Markwart."
"And
you?" Elbryan asked.
"I
go to deal with one less cunning, but equally wicked," Jojonah explained.
"Pity all the monks of St. Precious, to have lost Abbot Dobrinion to Abbot
De'Unnero."
They
parted then as friends, with Jojonah retiring to the abbey and the other two
moving along the streets of the city, trying to find some information. Pure
luck brought them in the path of Belster O'Comely soon after, the man howling
with glee to see them both alive.
"What
information about Roger?" the ranger asked.
"He
went south with the Baron," Belster explained. "To the King, so I've
heard."
That
bit of news pleased them immensely and filled them with hope, for word of the
Baron's demise had not yet reached the common folk of Palmaris.
With
Belster in tow, and Pony leading, they went next to Fellowship Way, the tavern
that had been Pony's home for those difficult years after the first sacking of
Dundalis. Profound pain assaulted Pony as she looked upon the place, and she
could not stay, pleading with Elbryan to get her out of the city, back to the
northland where they both belonged.
The
ranger agreed, but first turned to Belster. "Go into the Way," he
bade the innkeeper. "You have been looking to remain in Palmaris, so you
told me. They will need help in there to keep the business open and running
smoothly. I can think of none better suited for the job than you."
Before
the innkeeper denied the request, he paused long enough to study the ranger and
to follow Elbryan's gaze to Pony.
Then
he understood.
"The
finest tavern in all of Palmaris, so I've been told," he said.
"It
was," Pony added grimly.
"And
so it shall be again!" Belster said enthusiastically. He patted Elbryan on
the shoulder, gave Pony a great hug, then started for the tavern, a noticeable
spring in his step.
Pony
watched him, even managed a smile, then looked up to Elbryan. "I love
you," she said quietly.
The
ranger returned her smile and kissed her gently on the forehead.
"Come," he said, "we have friends waiting for us on the road to
Caer Tinella."
The
morning was brisk, despite the brilliant sunlight streaming in from the east.
The breeze was not stiff, but Pony felt it keenly across every inch of her bare
skin as she danced bi'nelle dasada among the falling many-colored
leaves. She was not with Elbryan this morning, nor had she been for many days,
preferring to dance alone now, for a time, as she used these moments of deep
meditation as an escape from her grief and her guilt.
She
saw Pettibwa and Graevis, even Grady, as she twirled about the piles of leaves.
She remembered those days of her youth, faced them squarely and used them to
put the events that had come after into a proper context. For, despite the very
heavy burden of guilt, Pony rationally understood that she had done nothing wrong,
that she had taken no road which, given the option once more, she would not now
take.
And
so she danced, every morning, and she cried, and when the grief finally began
to lift and her common sense began to take the edge from her guilt, she was
left with only...
Rage.
The
leader of the Abellican Church was her enemy, had started a war from which Pony
had no intention of running. Avelyn had given her the gemstones, and through
that act of faith she felt well-armed.
She
pivoted and turned in perfect balance, throwing a pile of leaves high with her
fast-stepping feet. The meditation was deep and strong, a similar sensation as
when she fell deep within the embrace of the gemstones. She was getting
stronger.
She
did not mean to maneuver around that wall of rage; she meant to smash right
through it.
Winter
came early that year, and by mid-Calember the ponds north of Caer Tinella
already showed the shine of ice, and mornings were often greeted by a thin
white coating of snow.
Farther
to the south, the clouds hung heavy over All Saints Bay, the winter gales
beginning to threaten. The water loomed darker, with the whitecaps rolling in
against the cliffs contrasting starkly. Only two of the thirty abbots convening
for the College at St.-Mere-Abelle—Olin of St. Bondabruce of Entel, and
Abbess Delenia of St. Gwendolyn—had come by sea, and they both planned to stay
as Markwart's guests throughout the winter, for few ships would brave such
perilous waters at that time of year.
Despite
the gathering of so many Church dignitaries, and reports that the war was all
but over, the mood at the abbey was somber, as gloomy as the season. Many of
the abbots had been personal friends of Abbot Dobrinion. Also, there was the
general feeling, spurred by many whispers, that this College would prove
eventful, even pivotal, to the future of the Church. Father Abbot Markwart's
appointment of Marcalo De'Unnero to head St. Precious, and the recent news that
a ninth-year brother had been promoted to Immaculate, were not matters without
debate or opposition.
And
everyone knew that other "guests" would be hovering about the
College, a contingent of soldiers from Ursal, men of the fierce Allheart
Brigade, by all accounts, on loan from the King to Abbot Je'howith of St.
Honce. Such an accompanying force was certainly not without precedent in the
Church, but it almost always signaled that some serious trouble was afoot.
Tradition
dictated that the College would convene after vespers on the fifteenth day of
the month, with all the participants, abbots and masters, spending the whole of
the day quietly in reflection, preparing themselves mentally for the coming
trials. Master Jojonah took this duty particularly to heart, closing himself
in the small room afforded him, kneeling by his bed in prayer in the hopes that
he would find some divine guidance. He had been quiet and impassive in his
months under De'Unnero at St. Precious, taking no action to anger the new
abbot or to even hint of the subversion that was in his heart. Of course, he
had been scolded for leaving De'Unnero on the road, but after one brutal
confrontation, nothing more had been said of the matter—to Jojonah, at
least.
Now
was his chance, he knew, perhaps his last chance, but could he find the courage
to speak out openly against Markwart? He had heard little concerning the agenda
of the College, but he strongly suspected—especially considering the companions
the abbot of St. Honce had brought—that Markwart would use this opportunity to
get a formal brand against Avelyn.
Markwart
apparently had allies in this matter, powerful allies, but still, Jojonah knew
what course his conscience dictated should Markwart's declaration against
Avelyn come to pass.
But
what if it did not?
Jojonah's
midday meal was delivered outside his door, with only a single signaling knock,
as he had instructed. He went to retrieve the food, and was surprised indeed
when he opened the door to see Francis standing in the hall, holding his tray.
"So
the rumors are true," Jojonah said distastefully. "Congratulations,
immaculate brother. How unexpected." Jojonah took the tray, but held the
door with his free hand, as if he meant to close it in Francis' face.
"I
heard you," Francis said quietly.
Jojonah
cocked his head, not understanding.
"In
the dungeons," Francis remarked.
"Truly
brother, I know not of what you speak," Jojonah said politely, falling
back a step. He started to close the door, but Francis slipped into the room
quickly.
"Shut
the door," Francis said quietly.
Jojonah's
first instinct was to lash out verbally at the upstart young man, but he could
not ignore Francis' claim, and so he gently closed the door and moved to his
bed, placing the tray on the small table.
"I
know that it was you who betrayed us to the raiders," Francis said
bluntly. "I have not yet determined who opened the wharf doors for you—and then
closed them behind you—for I have witnesses as to the whereabouts of Brother
Braumin Herde."
"Perhaps
it was God who let them in," Jojonah said dryly.
Francis
turned on him and didn't seem to much appreciate the wit.
"Who
let you in, you mean," he stated firmly. "I heard you before I lost
consciousness, and I assure you that I recognize your voice."
The
smile left Jojonah's face, replaced by a determined stare.
"Perhaps
you should have let the man kill me," Francis stated.
"Then
I would be just like you," Jojonah quietly replied. "And that I fear
worse than any punishment, worse than death itself."
"How
could you know?" Francis demanded, trembling with rage and advancing a
step, as if he meant to strike out at Jojonah.
"Know?"
the master echoed.
"That
I killed him!" Francis blurted, falling back and breathing hard.
"Grady Chilichunk. How could you know that it was I who killed him on the
road?"
"I
did not know," a disgusted, and surprised, Jojonah replied.
"But
you just said—"
Francis started to argue.
"I
was speaking of your demeanor, and no specific actions," Jojonah
interrupted. He paused to study Francis, and saw that the man was torn apart.
"It
does not matter," Francis remarked, waving his hand. "It was an
accident. I could not know."
The
immaculate didn't believe those words for a moment, Jojonah understood, and so
he did not press the point as Francis staggered out of the room.
Jojonah
didn't even bother to eat his meal then, too consumed by Francis' words. He
knew what was to come now, and so he went back to his bedside and prayed, as
much the confession of a doomed man as any request for guidance.
That
night, the College began with long and uneventful introductions of the
different abbots and their escorting masters, all pomp and ceremony that was
expected to last through the dawn. This was the only event to which all the
monks of the host abbey were invited, and so more than seven hundred had
gathered in the great hall, along with the soldiers of the Allheart Brigade who
had accompanied Abbot Je'howith.
Jojonah
watched it from the back rows of seating, near the exit. He tried to keep an
eye on Markwart, who, after the initial prayer and greeting, had retired to the
shadows at the edge of the room. On and on it went, and Jojonah even considered
running away on more than one occasion. How long might he be gone before
Markwart and the others even realized that he had left? he wondered.
Truly
that would have been the easier course.
He
expected that the night would prove uneventful, and anticipated another long
day in his private room, praying, but then held his breath when, just before
the dawn, Father Abbot Markwart again took center stage.
"There
is one matter which should be breached before the break," the Father Abbot
began. "One which all the younger brothers should hear openly addressed
before they are dismissed from the College."
Jojonah
was on the move, swinging around the back of the seats and down the outside
row, moving toward the central area. He took the course because it would bring
him right past Braumin Herde.
"Listen
carefully," he instructed the immaculate, bending low as he passed.
"Record every word in your memory."
"It
is no secret to you all that a most important matter, a most important crime,
has plagued St.-Mere-Abelle and all of our Order for several years now, a crime
that showed the true depth of its wickedness in the rising of the demon dactyl
and the terrible war that has brought so much misery and suffering to our
lands," Markwart went on, his tone loud and dramatic.
Jojonah
continued his slow walk toward the front of the hall. Many heads turned to
regard him, many whispered conversations began in his wake, and he was not
surprised, for he understood that his sympathies toward Avelyn were not secret,
even beyond the walls of St.-Mere-Abelle.
And
he saw Je'howith's soldiers, Markwart's stooges, gathered at the side and
seeming eager.
"It
is the most important declaration possible of this College of Abbots," the
Father Abbot finished powerfully, "that the man, Avelyn Desbris by name,
be branded openly and formally as a criminal against the Church and
state."
"A
call for heresy, Father Abbot?" asked Abbot Je'howith of St. Honce,
sitting in the front row.
"Nothing
less," Markwart confirmed.
Murmurs
erupted from every corner of the hall; heads shook and heads nodded, abbots and
masters bending low in private conversations.
Jojonah
swallowed hard, recognizing that his next step would lead him to a cliff face.
"Is this not the same Avelyn Desbris who was once given the highest honor
in all the Abellican Church?" he asked loudly, drawing the attention of
all, particularly of Brother Braumin Herde. "Was it not Father Abbot
Dalebert Markwart himself who named Avelyn Desbris as a Preparer of the sacred
stones?"
"Another
time," Markwart replied, keeping his cool and calm tone. "More the
pity, then, and farther the fall."
"Farther
the fall indeed," Jojonah retorted, moving powerfully to the center stage
to face his nemesis. "But it was not Avelyn who fell from grace."
In
the back of the room Braumin Herde dared to smile and nod his head; from the
whispers and reactions of those nearby, it seemed to him as if Jojonah was
doing quite well.
"Not
only Avelyn, you mean!" Markwart said suddenly, ferociously.
Simple
startlement made Jojonah pause, and that gave Markwart the opening he needed
to sweep his proclamations back out to the entire audience. "Be it known
here and now that the security of St.-Mere-Abelle was again breached this very
summer," the Father Abbot cried. "The prisoners I had secured to
speak to you against Avelyn were stolen from my very grasp."
More
gasps than whispers came from the audience now.
"I
introduce now Immaculate Brother Francis," Markwart explained, a name
that was not unfamiliar to the gathering—indeed, one of the points of
contention that was expected to be raised later in the College concerned the
man's premature promotion.
Braumin
Herde chewed hard on his lip as he recognized the pain on Jojonah's face. He
remembered his promise to his beloved Jojonah, though, pointedly telling
himself again and again that this was exactly the scenario Jojonah had
predicted. Out of love and respect for Jojonah, he had to remain silent,
though if he had gotten one hint that this College might be swayed Jojonah's
way, he would have run down to stand beside the man.
That
hint never materialized. Markwart's questions were quick and to the point as he
prodded Francis for information concerning the escape of the prisoners. Francis
described Elbryan in great detail, and went on to confirm that demons had
apparently inhabited the bodies of the Chilichunk couple.
And
then he looked Jojonah right in the eye.
And
then he fell silent.
Jojonah
could hardly believe that the man had not betrayed him!
But
Markwart still clung to his superior edge as he thanked and dismissed the
brother, for he had only used Francis to set up his next witness, one of the
guards Elbryan had overpowered, one who had crept up a bit along the side
passage to get a glimpse of the intruders, and who could, and did indeed,
identify Master Jojonah as a conspirator.
Jojonah
fell silent; he knew that he would not be heard at that time no matter how loud
his protests.
Abbot
De'Unnero came next, detailing the events on the road that had allowed Jojonah
to sneak away, opening a timetable during which the master could indeed have
gone to St.-Mere-Abelle. "And I spoke with the merchant, Nesk
Reaches," De'Unnero insisted, "and confirmed that Master Jojonah had
not returned to their encampment."
A
strange sense of calm began to wash over Jojonah, an acceptance that this
indeed was a fight he could not win. Markwart had come here well-prepared.
He
looked over at the fanatical Allheart soldiers and smiled.
Next
Markwart called for one of Jojonah's companions on the road to Aida, a monk who
would no doubt explain to the gathering how Jojonah had manipulated the group
away from Avelyn's body.
Every
piece seemed to be falling in place against him.
"Enough!"
Jojonah cried, breaking the momentum. "Enough. I was indeed in your
dungeons, evil Markwart."
The
gasps came louder, accompanied by more than a few shouts of anger.
"Freeing
those imprisoned unlawfully and immorally," Jojonah asserted. "I have
seen too much of your wickedness. I watched it exact a toll upon gentle—yes, gentle
and godly!—Avelyn. I saw it most keenly in the fate of the Windrunner."
Master
Jojonah paused with that last statement and even laughed aloud. Every abbot,
master, and immaculate in this room understood, and approved of, the fate of
the Windrunner, every leader in this room was complicit in the murders.
Jojonah
knew he was doomed. He wanted to rail out against Markwart, to show the ancient
texts that described the previous method of collecting stones, to scream out that
Brother Pellimar, who had been on that journey to collect the stones, had also
been murdered by this supposedly holy Church.
But
there was no practical point to it, and he did not want to give everything
away. He looked to Brother Braumin Herde then, the man who would take up his
torch, and he smiled.
Markwart
screamed again for a declaration of Avelyn as a heretic, then added that
Jojonah, by his own admission, was a traitor to the Church.
And
then Abbot Je'howith, the second most powerful man in the Order, rose tall and
seconded the motion, and with a confirming nod from Markwart, motioned to his
soldiers.
"By
your own words you have committed treason against the Church and the
King," Je'howith proclaimed as the soldiers surrounded Jojonah.
"Have you any offering of defense?" He turned about to face the
congregation. "Will any others speak for this man?"
Jojonah
stared up at the gathering, at Braumin Herde, and the man dutifully remained
silent.
The
Allheart soldiers swarmed over the master, and with Markwart and Je'howith's
blessings, so did many monks, beating him, dragging him away. As he was ushered
out the door, he saw Brother Francis standing quietly, taking no part, seeming
distressed and helpless.
"I
forgive you," Jojonah said to the man. "As does Avelyn, as does
God." He almost added the forgiveness of Brother Braumin, but could not go
that far in trusting Francis.
And
then he was gone, dragged from the room as the mob gained momentum.
Many
were still in their seats, sitting quiet and stunned, including Brother
Braumin. He caught sight of Francis staring up at him, but had only a glare to
offer in return.
Later
that same cold Calember day, Master Jojonah, stripped naked and placed in an
open cage on the back of a wagon, was taken through the streets of
St.-Mere-Abelle village, his porters crying out his sins and crimes to the
nervous townsfolk.
Insults
became spit, became stones hurled Jojonah's way. One man ran up to the cart
with a sharpened stick, stabbing the monk hard in the belly, opening a vicious
wound.
Brothers
Herde, Viscenti, and Dellman, and all the other monks of St.-Mere-Abelle, and
all the visiting abbots and masters, watched it solemnly, some with horror,
some with satisfaction.
For
more than an hour Jojonah was carted about the streets, and he was a battered
and broken man, hardly conscious, when the Allheart soldiers at last dragged
him from the cart and lashed him to a stake.
"You
are damned by your actions," Markwart proclaimed above the frenzy of the
excited crowd. "May God show you mercy."
And
the pyre was lit beneath Jojonah's feet.
He
felt the flames biting at his skin, felt his blood boiling, his lungs charring
with every breath. But only for a moment, for then he closed his eyes and he
saw...
Brother
Avelyn, reaching for him with outstretched arms...
Jojonah
never screamed, never cried out at all.
It
was, to Markwart, the biggest disappointment of the day.
Braumin
Herde watched the whole of the execution as the flames climbed higher,
engulfing his dearest friend. Beside him, both Viscenti and Dellman turned to
leave, but Herde grabbed them and would not let them go.
"Bear
witness," he said, and they were the last three monks to leave the awful
scene.
"Come,"
Braumin Herde bade them when at last it was over, when the flames had died
away. "I have a book you must see."
In
the crowd of villagers, Roger Lockless also watched. He had learned much since
his flight from the road south of Palmaris, from the monster that had destroyed
Baron Bildeborough. In the last few hours alone, he had learned of Jojonah and
the freeing of the half-man, half-horse prisoner, and while the news had given
him hope, this sight had brought only despair and disgust.
But
he watched, and understood then that the Father Abbot of the Abellican Order
was indeed his enemy.
Far
from that place, in the lands north of Palmaris, Elbryan held Pony close on an
empty hillock, watching the rise of Sheila. The war with the monsters was over,
but the war with the greater enemy, they both knew, was only beginning.