WIZARD TROUBLE
by Paul Collins
Copyright © Paul Collins, September 2001
Cover art by Jenny
Dixon
ISBN 1-58608-219-1
Gemstar Edition ISBN 1-58608-347-3
New
Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, Georgia
31636
http://www.newconceptspublishing.com
Other NCP books available by Paul Collins:
Wizard Trouble
Gilbon the dragon was the last of his kind. His black and grey mottled
hide testified to a great age; his once sharp teeth were now blunted instruments
with which he ground his greens; his silvery wings were now somewhat tarnished
since he hadn't used them much for eons; his once taut body had run to fat. He
had two broken and blackened horns that vaguely resembled the spinal mounds that
ran the length of his back. Tall as a stone hut and twice as long, he might at
first glance seem a formidable foe.
He stretched languorously beneath a
towering singsong tree. Its funnel fronds whistled myriad tunes as a gentle
breeze combed their hair-thin antennae.
The dragon heaved a sigh of
contentment. Retirement wasn't all that bad, he mused. Water gurgled from an
underground stream to his left, and the heat from the rising sun warmed his
thick hide that, in old age, sometimes seized on him in bouts of cold weather.
Brightly colored birds cavorted in the branches above his head and at that
moment he truly believed himself to be in dragon heaven.
Gilbon allowed his
heavy lidded eyes to close. While he snoozed he fantasised of better times -
when, in his youth, he had traipsed about the world challenging knights,
kidnapping maidens in distress, and acquiring himself the title of King
Dragon.
Of course, he admitted as his sleepy head began to droop, he was too
old for all that gallivanting hero stuff now. He'd been forced to assault the
Dark Lord Perdurabo's Tower a short while ago, to rescue a kidnapped youth who
had slept for two hundred years. Never, but never, again did he expect to put
himself under such duress.
Then something nudged him.
With a start, the
aged dragon opened his rheumy eyes. In a flurry of movement, he sat up onto his
hind legs.
"I say," he grumbled, "watch what you're doing with that
toothpick!" He ducked another jab from a lance.
Beneath Gilbon stood a young
knight. Whoever she was, her assortment of armor was rusty and ill-fitting.
"What on earth do you think you're playing at!" demanded Gilbon. A faint waft of
vapour spat from his nostrils.
"I'm a knight and I've been sent forth to slay
you!" the knight cried through a face grill.
"A girl knight?" Gilbon scoffed.
"Sorriest excuse for a knight I've ever seen! The couters on your arms are over
large, and your pauldron's too small for your shoulders. In fact, your entire
assemblage seems to be made up from bits and pieces," he said. "Even your
steed's accoutered the same: his chamfrain's too wide for his head, and the
crinet's too long for his neck; the petrel's hanging slackly around his chest,
the flanchard's too tight around his - NOW STOP THAT!" he roared as the knight
lunged forward. Gilbon swayed to one side to avoid the battered tip.
Having
missed her target, the young knight staggered to remain upright. Then, with a
crash of metal, she fell in a heap. Her armored visor rolled across the ground
like a kicked bucket.
Gilbon lifted one ponderous foot and smashed the
knight's lance to kindling. "You're making a thorough nuisance of yourself,
girl, and dragons must have their peace, you know." Defenseless, the knight
scrambled for the nearest boulder and hid behind it.
Gilbon sighed heavily.
"Come out from there," he called irritably.
"I'd die first!" the knight said
defiantly.
"That can be arranged!" Gilbon threatened. He took several deep
breaths and heaved out from the pit of his stomach. A black, scorching flame
leapt forth and charred the boulder black.
"Your position is untenable!"
Gilbon challenged her. "Your horse has fled, you're unarmed and you face a
superior foe. Prepare to die!" he bluffed.
"I surrender!" the knight
wailed.
Looking despondent, the young girl came out from behind the boulder.
She held her hands high in the air.
"What's your name?" Gilbon
demanded.
"Jackie," she said.
"Gilbon," said Gilbon. "Now what's all this
about? I can't have my snooze being interrupted every time a foolish knight
needs to prove her womanhood!"
"You wouldn't understand," Jackie
said.
"Try me," Gilbon goaded cunningly.
Jackie swallowed hard. "You won't
like it."
"I've still got both barrels loaded," Gilbon threatened. To
emphasize his threat, he pushed two tendrils of flame from his seared
nostrils.
"Voices have told me that only the brain of a dragon can save my
father from his ailment."
Gilbon opened his mouth, closed it, opened it
again. "Leave my brain out of it!" he ordered.
Jackie felt as good as cooked
already. She raised her hands higher.
"I've never heard such poppycock in all
my born natural!" Gilbon said. "A dragon's brain you say?"
"That's what the
Voice told me," Jackie admitted despondently.
"Well I never," Gilbon said,
stunned. "Let me tell you something, Jackie my girl. Your Voice is out of touch
with reality. It - "
Suddenly silence swept the glade. Gilbon craned his
bullneck and looked about. The birds had taken flight; the cascading water that
usually gurgled its way south did so quietly; the singsong tree only whispered
maudlin tunes. It was as though a death sentence had been placed upon
them.
It made Gilbon feel chilled somehow. And whenever dragons feel chilled,
they move on. Which is just what Gilbon suggested they do.
"I'll take you to
see a wizard friend of mine. Perhaps he'll be of friendly disposition to assist
you."
Gilbon shook his head with mirth. "A dragon brain!" he chuckled.
"Whatever next?"
***
Deep within a limestone mountain the wizard Shantele
clenched his teeth with anger. The obese magician took a deep breath to calm his
taut nerves, but it helped not. "Can't you do anything right?" he growled at his
apprentice. He watched dust motes crawl lazily through the air. "I gave you the
simplest of jobs and you even botched that!"
Winston croaked in bewilderment.
"I did wash the floor, Master. Look, the floor's still wet!"
"Then what's all
this dust?" Shantele flapped his hand in frustration.
"It's clean dust!"
Winston countered.
Shantele sneezed heavily. "I give in!"
"You mustn't
work yourself up," Winston said earnestly.
"It's useless!" the aged wizard
grumbled. "I'm tired of the constant struggle! Tired of all things
magical.
"When I retire," Shantele continued, "you shall become it. Master of
the Manor, local doctor to ailing creatures such as trolls, ghouls, peasants and
all manner of unthinkable things."
"Oh," Winston said, then lapsed into
abrupt silence, his eyes wide and solemn. He fingered the metallic talisman that
hung from his neck.
"Is that all you can say?" Shantele blurted.
"Oh?"
"W-e-l-l," Winston said slowly.
"Hmph! Let me tell you, it's a
passion akin to being a god, I shouldn't wonder - give or take a little
responsibility."
Winston swallowed hard. "A god?"
"Indeed!" the wizard
told him. "But before you attain this heady height, you must prove your mettle.
The time is nigh, Winston. The time is nigh!"
The aged wizard fossicked
around his gloomy cavern. "I need an army and I need it now! I told you to find
me a knight, and you turn up a girl not yet weaned from her mother's -"
A
faint voice from near the mouth of the cave interrupted the wizard's
tirade.
"Visitors!" Shantele made the word sound like bad weather.
"I'll
see who it is," Winston said, relieved.
"I'm out," Shantele snapped. "Hunting
dragons or something like that - anything to make them go away whilst I try to
remedy this mess you've gotten us into."
Winston smiled sickly when he saw
Gilbon. The dragon's huge frame blocked all light from outside. Beside Gilbon
stood a young girl in a lobster outfit. Winston's smile faded.
"Well," Gilbon
said, "lost your manners or something? Haven't you ever seen a girl in
stovepiping? And it's cold out here, don't you know. Speak up man!"
"The
master's out hunting dragons," Winston said. He wished he were someplace
else.
"Probably looking for me," Gilbon said, goodnaturedly. But then his
eyes narrowed and suspicion stole over his face.
Shantele groaned as a
preternatural cold wind swept in from the darkening cliff. Of all the chelas he
could have employed, he had chosen Winston. Damn the boy's mother! He'd been
positively coaxed into apprenticing Winston. The young fool had the knack of
saying and doing everything wrong!
"Shut that confounded door!" Shantele
screeched maniacally. "Can't you tell a stalking wind when you see
one?"
Winston winced. He hurriedly beckoned the pair in and slammed the great
oaken door shut. He grimaced as a hissing noise fled under the door.
Shantele
rolled his eyes when he saw Gilbon and the knight. "Gilbon, you old rascal," he
said jovially enough; yet he directed a withering glare at Winston.
"This is
Jackie," Gilbon said.
Shantele scrutinized the girl. Rather a pretty thing,
he thought: blue antelope eyes and upturned nose dominating a round face cropped
with ragged coal-black hair. There was a certain fierce quality about her that
was usually attributed to fanatics. She wasn't exactly what he'd expected,
but... a girl driven by desperation could work wonders, he mentally
concluded.
"As I was saying," Gilbon said, annoyed at Shantele's overt
observation of his guest, "Jackie's got this minor problem." And he went on to
explain about Jackie's father being ill and some spooky Voice that talked utter
nonsense.
"So if you can throw a get well spell over Jackie's father," Gilbon
said innocently, "we'll be on our way."
"Throw a spell over Jackie's father?"
Shantele cried theatrically. "What do you think this is, 'Make A
Wish'?"
Gilbon's jaw dropped. "That's very uncharitable, Shanny! I know! The
Wizards' Guild is after you again," he genuinely commiserated. "After all you
did for them against that Perdurabo and his hordes!"
"They'll hound me to the
very ends of the earth I shouldn't wonder!" Shantele complained. "Such is their
desire to see me ruined!"
"Ruined?" Gilbon gasped. "No!"
"It appears the
wretches believe I have some powerful new weapon at my disposal and even as we
speak plans are underway to stamp me underfoot!"
"You do look a little
pale," Gilbon sympathized.
Suddenly the wizard swiped at the air and clapped
his hands three times consecutively. There was a loud bang, followed by a sudden
silence.
"A loose spell," Shantele said as though to prove the point. "The
Wizards' Guild send them my way every now and then hoping to catch me
napping."
"Well perhaps we'd best be off," Gilbon said a little too
hurriedly.
"Gilbon could huff and puff and scorch the Wizards' Guild," Jackie
suggested naively.
Shantele raised an eyebrow. "Huff and puff, yes - but
scorch?" he smiled coldly.
"We must be off!" Gilbon said emphatically. He
fixed Jackie with an icy stare as he trundled to the door.
"But what about
my father's cure?" Jackie said querulously. She stood her ground with stolid
determination.
"Heavens above," Shantele muttered. "Stand aside, young woman.
Winston, assist if you will!"
In the flickering candle-light, Jackie watched
the mage and his chela sprinkle scented herbs from leaden coffers, read occult
symbols from dried parchment, tinker with thingummyjigs and thingummybobs.
All the while Gilbon kept an eye out for loose spells; he didn't have the
faintest idea what they looked like, although suspected they came from under
doors.
At length, Shantele cried, "Aha! Just the thing for your father. You
realize of course," he said shrewdly, facing Jackie, "that the Voice requires
the brain for other, more arcane purposes? I mean, your father's ailment is no
doubt induced by the Voice as a means to obtain a brain?"
"No," Jackie said
slowly. "I didn't know that."
"The ways of Voices are many and varied,"
Shantele pontificated. "And must be obeyed!" he added, ushering Jackie to the
door, where Gilbon was waiting impatiently. "Simply give this dragon brain - or
rather, imitation brain - "
"I say," Gilbon interrupted. He shuffled forward
and squinted down his snout. "The Voice'll never believe that's a dragon brain.
It's far too small!"
"Oh?" Shantele observed Gilbon's head and then compared
it with the jar's contents.
"You can be so callous," Gilbon said caustically.
"Come, Jackie. We must away. Darkness gathers!"
Jackie stopped at the
doorway. "If there's anything I can do to repay the favour Master Wizard..." she
said.
Shantele beamed at the thought. "Indeed, indeed!"
"See you,
Shanny!"
"Yes, yes," Shantele said and slammed the door shut. He turned to
Winston and a wicked gleam shone from his eyes. "I do believe I've created the
maggot that will eat the worm!"
"So the knight I found is going to work out?"
Winston asked.
"With much fine tuning, mayhap, mayhap!" the wizard sang as he
bustled off to the back of his ornate cave, whereupon he commenced work amidst
gales of laughter.
Outside, deep inside the encroaching night, Gilbon and
Jackie wove their way down the perilous gravel track.
"Did you hear that?"
Jackie asked, full of awe.
"I do believe it was Shanny having a laugh," he
said nervously.
***
The moon had traveled right across the sky by the time
Jackie and Gilbon reached a thatch cottage squatting on a lonely hillside.
"I say," Gilbon said uncomfortably. "It looks terribly deserted. Somewhat
like a picked bone, don't you think?"
"DAD?" Jackie screamed and ran up the
craggy slope.
"Wait up, Jackie!" Gilbon called after her and with great
pounding strides he tore after the girl.
Gilbon reared up short of the
cottage. A tiny whirlwind was gathering in the doorway. It whizzed and hissed
furiously as it gathered force. Then arrowswift it fled the homestead and zoomed
past Gilbon.
The dragon ducked and cursed. He timidly poked his snout into
the narrow doorway. "Jackie? he called. "What on earth was that?"
"The
Voice," Jackie said despondently.
"Voices aren't real!" Gilbon
snorted.
"That one is," Jackie said gloomily.
"I don't see your father
anywhere," Gilbon said.
"The Voice snatched the brain and said Dad recovered
and fled into the bush. He could be anywhere!" she despaired.
"Oh," Gilbon
said. "Well let's go find him, girl." He draped a fatherly paw across her
heaving shoulder. "I think we'd better go now. There's something about this
place that I don't like." He looked about nervously. "Something...
supernatural," he added with a shiver.
***
Shantele pulled back from his
scrying glass and smiled. "All coming along perfectly," he gloated, rubbing his
podgy hands.
Winston eyed the jar next to Shantele's workbench. "But why did
you give Jackie the sheep brain if you wanted your sprite to get it
back?"
"Winston, Winston, Winston," Shantele said in a tired voice. "I worry
about you, I really do. There was nothing the matter with Jackie's father that a
simple ill-lock spell didn't fix. Common enough spell really. Used mostly by the
Wizards' Guild to keep the peasants down. The brain was merely a prop, which is
the basis of all conjuring tricks!" He thumbed his temples in contemplation.
"Now that Jackie and Gilbon are adventuring in pursuit of Jackie's father, I may
well have provided the ball impetus to roll!"
"I see," Winston said slowly.
But he didn't. Not at all.
***
West of Gallah Flats, there stretched the
vast desert tract known to most as the Barrenlands. Traversing its bleak
undulating scape, were two wind-blown vehicles.
The land schooner cut across
the coarse sand leaving in its wake a plume of red, broiling dust.
Not too
far distant, a slower moving catamaran was the object of their pursuit. "Prepare
to grapple!" screamed a solid pirate by the name of Jute.
His companions,
Hyiat and Bonnie, scuttled about the schooner in readiness to board their prey.
However, so busy were they in their eagerness to plunder, none witnessed a
shadow appear where no natural shadow could possibly exist.
The darkness grew
despite the overhead sun that cast other shadows away. Cat-like, the
shadow-thing reached forth and touched both Hyiat and Jute on their
temples.
Wondrous delights betook each of the pirates.
Jute, having often
complained about the low returns from their pirating, suddenly saw himself a
king and bejeweled in all manner of gems. He'd had his fill of plundering the
impoverished desert nomads. He craved the more bountiful caravans that plied the
inland tracts and mountains.
Hyiat, the smaller of the pirates, was easily
swayed also. Long had he given up his childhood dreams of commanding a fleet of
land schooners and being the scourge of all the Barrenlands. He now saw himself
a man of leisure, being waited on hand and foot by countless slaves.
The
shadow then leapt panther-like for Bonnie's temple but shrank back as though
confronted by a darker, more potent force.
This darker force however was in
part Bonnie's complete happiness at being a desert pirate. Not for her any other
life than that which she had carved for herself.
The shadow hesitated with
indecision. It probed the woman's defenses with expert thrusts of dark ether,
yet no matter how it pushed and cajoled, its jabs shot wide of their mark like
blind sword thrusts. Something protected its intended victim. With disgust it
winked out of existence.
So it was with utter disbelief that Bonnie
witnessed her two companions suddenly drop their grappling hooks and attend the
sails that dramatically altered their direction.
Bonnie watched their prey
veer off and smothered a profanity when a cheer erupted from the fleeing
catamaran. She clasped Jute by the arm as he bustled past her on the
quarterdeck. "What do you think the pair of you are doing, Jute-boy?"
Jute's
glazed eyes darkened for a moment. "Something we should have done a long time
ago," he said firmly.
The wind-driven vessel was making swift time toward the
pencil line of green vegetation known as 'shore' to the desert dwelling
pirates.
"Land ahoy!" bellowed Jute. The wind blew his auburn mane far behind
his head so that it trailed like a scarf. Battle scarred and weary, Jute saw the
encroaching vegetation as a blessing in disguise.
Bonnie shadowed him as he
climbed up from the catwalk to the forecastle. Braced against the rail, she
watched the bush as they sped toward it. "So why this sudden change of heart,
Jute-boy?" she demanded again in her broad accent. She looked aft to the
quarterdeck where their other companion, Hyiat, was pulling hard on the tiller.
"What plan has your besotted brain concocted this time?" she wondered.
Jute
shrugged his broad shoulders. His tanned face creased in a scowl. "A sudden urge
to stand on my two feet without having to balance myself all the time," he said
doubtfully. "Who knows what the gods decree?"
After a moment's pause, Bonnie
pursed her lips. "Much the same as Hyiat's reply," she said curiously. She left
the brooding giant and retired to the poop where their life's belongings were
stashed. True, she had to admit, their lives abroad the desert had been fraught
with danger for little gain. Their meager returns from their latest sojourn
across the Barrenlands had yielded them little more than a food supply and a
handful of copper. But desert piracy was a way of life. She had no great desire
to change her ways simply on a hunch from the gods!
The Whispering Ghost, for
such was their vessel's name, trundled to a halt against a sandbar. Its
infrastructure heaved loudly before springing several boards. It lurched to one
side, and canted creakingly as its chassis collapsed.
The pirates tottered
about like bowled tenpins.
"Praise the gods," Jute said, and crossed himself.
"If we'd been Out There," he added, nodding toward the brazen horizon, "we'd
have perished."
"Is that what you think?" Bonnie snapped, jumping down to
examine the damage. It was as bad as she'd feared. "If we'd been Out There, this
wouldn't have happened, you great big clod."
"But it did," Hyiat said behind
her. He cinched his scabbard tightly about his waist. The wind ruffled his
silken shirt as he pulled on his sleeveless leather vest. "The gods work in
mysterious ways," he said absently. "Farewell, girl," he said, blowing a kiss to
the forsaken Whispering Ghost.
The trio gathered their belongings and entered
the jungle with Bonnie cleaving a way through the dense foliage.
The forest
was full of sweet scents and brilliant colors at this time of year. There were
climbers that stroked the runnelled bark of trees and decorative blossoms
hanging in profusion from the tallest branches.
They hadn't been hacking
through the jungle long before Bonnie put a finger to her mouth for silence.
Jute and Hyiat withdrew their broadswords carefully.
Gilbon and Jackie would
have walked straight past the pirates had Bonnie not stepped out in front of
them and cried, "Hold!"
"Ohmigod!" Gilbon exclaimed.
Jackie's face
blanched when Jute and Hyiat moved out from the bushes and stood to either side
of Bonnie.
"As luck would have it," Jute began, "we've waylaid the remnants
of a traveling circus."
Bonnie shook her head. "Jute, you can have the
dragon. No doubt you'll fetch a few coppers for him as a curiosity piece." She
glared at Hyiat. "You can have the maiden's tinware."
"What would I do with
that?" Hyiat asked.
"You'd sell it to the idiot who would buy a
dragon."
Gilbon reared at this last comment. "I'll have you know you're
showing your ignorance! Cease this nonsense or I'll broil the three of you!"
Bonnie arched her eyebrows. "Broil us?" she said slowly. "An old has-been
like you?" She indicated her companions and smiled. "I'll have the big one rare
and the small one well done."
"Such impertinence!" Gilbon fumed. He flapped
his massive wings and flared his nostrils. Smoldering fumes oozed from his nose.
He stamped his heavy feet so the very ground thundered.
But the three pirates
were not swayed.
Exhausted after his demonstration of dragonly anger, Gilbon
let his wings crash to his flanks; with a surprised look on his face, he fell
back to his haunches and groaned inwardly.
Bonnie brushed wafting debris
aside with a bandanna. "Prickly fellow," she commented and promptly
sneezed.
"Never mind all that," Hyiat said. He advanced upon Jackie with his
broadsword poised menacingly.
Jackie crouched in a defensive
stance.
"Treasure!" Gilbon croaked the word. "Plenty of it... for the man -
or woman! - who finds Jackie's father."
Jute rested a hand on Hyiat's
shoulder. "There's treasure everywhere for the taking, dragon," Jute
said.
"And take you shall," Gilbon advised, warming to a plan. "But first, we
must find the girl's father. The gods look favorably upon those who give aid in
such matters."
"Not mine," Bonnie said.
"Nor mine," Jute growled.
"Mine
neither," Hyiat added.
"Some gods do," Gilbon said, and quickly added, "but
don't ask me which ones."
"We're wasting time," Bonnie said. She rested her
hand upon the pommel of her sword as though wondering whether to draw it or not.
"Slay them or leave them. Make up your mind, Jute."
"A dragon's treasure,"
Hyiat said, who now restrained Jute from advancing further. "Is the maiden's
father ensorcelled?"
"Ensorcelled?" Gilbon rocked with mirth. "I should say
not. He's just lost his memory and wandered off someplace, as mortals do. Gone
walkabout," he said simply. "Pure and simple."
Jackie took a step forward
then. She held before her the remains of her lance. "And I'm definitely not a
maiden."
"You look like one," Hyiat observed, yet stood back from the
lethally pointed lance. "Anyway, upon locating the... knight's father, you'll
reward us for our troubles?"
"And there's no magic involved?" Jute pressed
Gilbon.
"I don't believe you're even contemplating helping Fangs here find
the kid's missing father," Bonnie said incredulously. "What is it with you two
anyway?"
Jute grinned wolfishly. "The trouble with you, Bonnie lass, is that
you lack compassion."
"Can't you see how distraught the girl is?" Hyiat added
righteously.
Bonnie glanced at the disheveled Jackie. "Yeah," she admitted,
"she looks a right mess."
"It's settled then," Jute decided. "Bonnie, you go
point, I'll flank and, Hyiat, you follow up the rear."
"I say," Gilbon said.
"It's ever so kind - "
"Just get going," Bonnie said tightly. "I don't
believe this!"
***
A quick spark suddenly blazed like a nova within
Shantele's firelit cave. The sizzling ball coalesced with white heat then
simmered as a portal materialized. From beyond its mirage-like frame walked
Shantele.
In awe, Winston could only gape wide-mouthed. He knew his master
had been beyond the mortal realm to that shadowy world where time stood still
compared with 'real' time.
Outside the sorcerer's cave, the wind became a
banshee screech that lashed the mountain face. Such was the wind's force,
several candles spluttered out. Shadows darkened and a chill stole at Shantele's
back.
The mage quickly reached up and, as though pulling curtains across a
window, he hurriedly closed the portal.
"Argh, but time displacement drains
me so!" he complained as he slumped into his ermine throne.
"Surely you must
be one of the All Greats!" Winston fawned.
"'One' of the All Greats?"
Shantele said, fixing his apprentice with a dreadful stare. "I am the All
Great!"
"How goes your plan, Master?" Winston hurried on.
Shantele pursed
his thin lips. "As well as could be expected with what tools we have, lad," he
said at length. "To put it another way, two out of three ain't bad. The accursed
woman was protected. But by whom or what?" he pondered darkly.
"Therefore we
need further assistance. Someone with magic?" He waited patiently for Winston to
pick up on his theme.
"The Wizards' Guild would rather curse their own gods
than - "
"Someone not associated with the damnable Guild," Shantele said
testily.
"I can't think - "
"That's your problem, Winston!" Shantele
fumed. "How about your mother? And her mother." He held his finger up sternly.
"Both potent witches, lad! Fine women!"
"But they wouldn't help you unless I
-"
"Exactly!" Shantele said. "Unless you were in danger!" He directed a
finger at Winston and uttered a quick incantation in a foreign tongue.
Winston had but a moment to complain before a rich tapestried carpet swept
beneath his feet. He fell flat on his back.
Shantele wheezed loudly. "But
my, this is taxing work. I wonder why I bother sometimes." He stepped onto the
carpet and clicked his fingers.
***
Not far distant, in the bustling
township of Gallah Flats, two women who preached modest earth magic trembled
with sudden knowledge. They questioned not its substance, nor its source, yet
both women knew they had been called by higher, more arcane powers.
"Gran?"
called the youngest of the two.
"Aye," the aged adept said. She wiped her
hands on an apron. "'Tis the wizard again."
"Up to his old tricks I'll
warrant," Molly told her mother.
Through squinting eyes Gran scanned the
western horizon. It was a molten cauldron of pinks, mauves and reds. "It's
Winston," she said, and touched her forehead.
The pair then clasped one
another's hands and a transformation took place. Their human forms shrank and
from arms sprouted vast wings like sails, from feet came talons
shaped like
grappling hooks and mouths molded into beaks like curved scimitars. No ordinary
crows these, then.
They took flight the moment they had shed their mortal
personae.
***
Winston's stomach turned over slowly and his face blanched.
Heights had never been his strong point, and air travel particularly had its own
awful effects upon him.
As though sensing Winston's discomfort, Shantele
said, "Not long now, lad. In fact, here we go - I've spotted our
quarry!"
Shantele muttered a rune and the carpet took a nose-dive. As it sped
downward, it became a whirling tornado, spinning violently in ever-increasing
circles until it was revolving so rapidly that it actually resembled a force of
nature. So fast did it spin that it sliced through anything in its path,
creating havoc in its wake.
Then, in mid air, and seemingly with a mind all
its own, it angled down across the Beagle River and came to a skidding
halt.
Having accomplished its master's whim, the carpet's frayed edges
unwound and lay in a tangled heap at their feet.
Winston staggered from the
mound of wool, and toppled to the ground. There he stayed until the world
stopped spinning.
Shantele cocked an inquisitive eye. In sudden realization,
he said, "Winston, you poor soul! I forgot to stabilize you!"
Winston watched
all four Shanteles spin before his eyes. He smiled a lop-sided grin.
"Should
have known it would be you," Gilbon said suspiciously.
The others rumbled
dissension, for in fact, they had been mightily frightened when the wizard had
landed in their midst.
"At your service," Shantele said and bowed most
royally. He then turned to the three armed pirates. "You can put your weapons
away," he said mockingly. "They'll do you no good."
"A fat wizard and his
apprentice," Bonnie said dubiously.
"Enough of that!" Shantele said
darkly.
But before another word could be exchanged, a more menacing voice
entered the arena:
"You-um all surrender!"
They turned as one and saw on
the other bank the largest ghoul any of them had ever seen. The ghastly creature
was a head taller than Jute, but was not quite so bulky, yet big strapping arms
and thick thighs made him look horrific to behold. The parts of his body that
were not armored and grossly painted with lurid colors were pale and hairless.
His gaunt and aggressive face sat upon well defined shoulders.
The ghoul's
plump mouth twitched several times as though trying to force more words out, but
in the end he simply grunted.
"Let me handle this," Shantele said. "Ghouls
are categorically so stupid that you can talk your way around them, and this one
looks more gullible than most."
Shantele strode casually over to the bubbling
river. "My dear good ghoul, it is indeed a beautiful river that etches the
scenery behind your magnificent body. Ah, don't move a muscle while I stamp
clear in my mind's eye this wondrous picture so that I might immortalize you on
canvas..."
"You-um not move closer!" the ghoul said with stilted fervor. More
ghouls emerged from the undergrowth.
Shantele had no intention of getting
wet. He smiled broadly. "Do you know that the Beagle River goes down fifteen
fathoms on a regular cycle, and that rumor has it that certain gods drink from
it, thus emptying it - so therefore the cycle continues. Fascinating stuff,
isn't it?"
The ghoul twisted its ugly face as though downwind from a
foul-smelling sewer.
"Yes, I thought you'd find that particularly
interesting," Shantele said, edging away from the riverbank. "Well, must be on
our way!" he said and quickened his pace.
The ghoul raised his spear - a
vicious looking thing with barbs twined around the point.
Then suddenly the
water at the ghoul's feet shrank back a little as though a tide were pulling it
away. The blood-red river shrank down with alarming speed until it resembled a
minor tributary.
A loud Burp! thundered from somewhere down the river and
Shantele wasted no time in joining the others. "A god taking a sip," he
explained.
The ghouls at this point began yelling out war cries and hefting
their cudgels, spears and wicked axes.
"I say," Gilbon said, "shall I
dispatch the horrid creatures or shall we stand in queue?"
More ghouls surged
from the forest. Amassed there on the muddy banks of the river stood some thirty
ghouls. They were edging themselves on, and making a great fuss about
it.
Hyiat withdrew his broadsword. He glanced at Jute and Bonnie. "When in
doubt, do the unexpected," he said for all three of them.
They ran
helter-skelter toward the gesturing ghouls.
The head ghoul was taken back by
the pirates' charge. He hesitantly raised his hand and threw it forward,
indicating his army to meet the opposition.
They clashed mid-stream.
"I
say," Gilbon said, feeling panic rise from the pit of his stomach. "Can't you do
something, Shanny?"
But Shantele and Winston were having difficulties of
their own. A shimmering force-field of blue light had encapsulated them, and
despite their valiant efforts to shred the unnatural force, it held them
firm.
"Stand back, Jackie!" Gilbon roared. "I'll show these - wuh?"
A
swishing noise zapped past Gilbon's ear, and as the hiss diminished, a barbed
tail flicked its razor-sharp point which flayed a deep gash into Gilbon's hide.
"Yipes!" he yelped.
"Take to the air!" Jackie warned. "You'll never make
cover!"
"I hate flying!" Gilbon groaned. He heaved himself skyward. Airborne,
he caught sight of his adversary. It was a mammoth stingray; its wings spanned a
good slice of sky and blocked out a considerable slab of daylight.
The
stingray added a quick burst of energy, rose, then spiraled so that it now faced
its prey. With its mouth gaping wide it swooped in for the kill.
Gilbon
gunned his wings but it was useless. Panic, more than ability, moved him.
The
stingray swished past the floundering dragon, missing him by a good hairsbreadth
for it had expected the dragon to move a lot quicker. It veered away but within
seconds its marauding black shape was detaching itself from sinister clouds and
was again diving for Gilbon.
Anger welled up in Jackie. She watched the two
colossal figures merge into one as they collided in mid air. Impotent rage
filled her. She watched the hapless wizard and his apprentice conjuring counter
spells, and down there in the blood-bath she could see Jute, Hyiat and Bonnie
hacking their way through the berserker ghouls. Tears welled up in her horrified
eyes as she saw Bonnie fall.
With a scream of rage she rushed down into the
melee. Two crows hovered cautiously above the raging battle. To the human ear
they were squawking at one another, but to more supernaturally-attuned ears they
were conversing.
"The magic is strong," the youngest of the crows warned. Its
companion, an old wizened crow, indicated they should land quickly.
The two
black specks landed unsteadily as a black power flux strained to drag them from
the sky. No sooner had the birds returned to their former selves, Mollie ran to
Winston's side.
"Winston!" she cried. She had seen the wraith-like capsules
at work in her youth. They sapped a victim's strength the more they resisted its
power, and the less they resisted the more it took over their body.
"Hold
hands, mother," Mollie said urgently. "We'll need everything we have left to
free the boy!"
United, a shimmering life force sprang from Mollie's
fingertips. Five tendrils of feather-fine energy probed Winston's opaque prison.
They curled about it as though caressing its surface, then with cat-like
tenacity, they squeezed around it until it bulged and buckled.
Like a burst
balloon it snapped with a loud bang. Winston was lifted off the ground with its
force. He shook his head to clear it and realized with a start where he was.
Groggily he saw his mother and grandmother sinking to the ground and knew it was
they who had freed him, but in doing so had drained themselves.
"The others,"
Mollie said through parched lips.
Winston tore his gaze away from his master
who right now was fighting a losing battle with his prison. He could see the
others being driven backwards by sheer numbers. And in the sky, he saw Gilbon
and a massive bird of prey grappling one another as they strove to maintain
altitude.
"Quickly!" Mollie said before finally slumping
unconscious.
Winston felt old. His skin had become flaccid in those few
minutes he had been battling the prison. But summoning all his strength he
lifted his head, wove his fingers in the air, and directed a spell toward Jackie
and the pirates. He repeated the procedure and flung his arm toward Gilbon who
was suddenly plummeting to earth.
Winston heaved once, twice, and a searing
flash exploded from his fingertips. He jerked as though he had received a shock
and collapsed into a coma. As he slid down into sleep he snapped one final burst
of power toward Shantele.
Jute and Hyiat suddenly found their strength
doubled. Jute felt the crawling pain of an old wound grind its way into him,
then suddenly it faded to a pin-prick, giving him full use of his sword arm.
Other parts of his anatomy responded to the magical therapy and he felt young
again - the strongest he had been in decades!
Hyiat too, although bloodied
from many gashes to both his arms and torso, suddenly felt refreshed. The stings
he had received merely invigorated him, and in fact reminded him of when he had
lost his beloved to the army of Brugg the Ogre. He growled angrily and lopped
off the head of the nearest ghoul.
Jackie suddenly discovered a well of
energy she never knew existed. It rose up in her like a volcano and erupted with
the fire-power of a dozen warriors. She blocked a hurtling ax, twisted it from a
ghoul's tight grip and ran him through with her lance.
Bonnie had floated
free of the melee. Left for dead, her body had become snagged by tree roots. She
woke from unconsciousness and coughed up water. She heaved for several seconds
as she strove to gain breath. Her eyesight cleared at the sound of the pitched
battle.
She shook her head free of mud and with a maniacal cry sprang to her
companions' aid.
Thus smitten with magical power, the four drove back the
ghouls until they were well clear of the river.
That same unfathomable light
had shot skywards, circled the falling Gilbon, who immediately felt a surge of
adrenaline. He could see clearer than he had for years, and his wings felt
invigoratingly alive.
The stingray had now gauged the dragon's reflexes to be
dismally slow. It came daringly close with not a care in the world for it would
sting this dragon to death at its leisure with careless flicks of its
tail.
Effortlessly, Gilbon did a somersault in the air. "Argh!" he let out,
and a "Whooops!" as he tested his new found ability.
Somewhere deep within
their citadel, the Wizards' Guild became aware of other, unexpected power. Their
concentration faltered and suddenly the stingray's mind became its own. It
screeched its anguish and swerved away for it knew it had been
possessed.
Fire that had long since been dormant in Gilbon's nostrils, lashed
out and slid over the fleeing stingray. The latter promptly jerked its barbed
tail to avoid the heat.
Gilbon rocketed after his prey.
The black shape
swerved away, caught an updraft, then disappeared over a small island. Gilbon
thought he heard a terrific splash, but the chase was on him and he pushed the
thought away.
"I have you now!" Gilbon crowed triumphantly. He kept the
stingray's course, caught a similar updraft, hedge-clipped the island then
banked down emulating the stingray's descent.
And like the stingray, Gilbon
crashed into a rock face.
Bonnie dispatched a ghoul and in a moment of
lucidity, realized there was only one left.
Jute now confronted Omph the
Horrible. The latter wiped his bloodied lips and smirked as he hefted a huge
club. The latter he promptly dropped and fled into the dense scrub.
The three
pirates charged forward but came to an abrupt halt when they heard Jackie scream
a warning. They whirled recklessly, now fully accustomed to their renewed
strength, but in that moment, old aches and pains exploded in their bodies.
"Slowly," Bonnie cautioned. She indicated the far bank.
A lone horseman
sat astride a magnificent black horse. The latter flared its nostrils and
snorted. That single figure drove something like fear in the five as they
struggled up the muddy bank.
Jute and Hyiat drew their swords. "Ho, Jute,"
Hyiat said with mock bravo. "A solitary foe to join in battle."
"We need our
youth back, Winston-boy," Bonnie demanded. She knelt beside him. Then something
intangible flowed between them. The others stood back mesmerized by a crackling
flame that formed two thirds of a circle.
Winston shook his head slowly. A
frond of green light snuck out from their united fingertips and attached itself
to the waning light surrounding Shantele. It sliced a hole in the oscillating
sphere and the bubble split open like a sliced melon.
Unfamiliar with such
power, Bonnie pulled back in fright. She looked skyward but apart from a few
foreboding black clouds, it was empty.
"I'm bewitched!" she gasped. She
pulled at an amulet and ripped it from around her neck. "That accursed piece of
metal I won from you at two-up!" Bonnie accused Jute. She threw it to the ground
and the mortals stepped back hurriedly.
At that moment Shantele burst from
his prison. The opaque shell dispersed like so much mist before a wind.
"Master!" Winston cried and crawled groggily beneath the sorcerer's shoulder
to lend support.
"Enough of that!" Shantele said, a little disconcerted. Then
his eyes fastened on the shark-grey metal amulet that Bonnie had discarded.
"There’s evil afoot!" Bonnie warned. "We have no time for - "
Shantele
gestured for silence. "Two pieces of a puzzle..." he mused. He looked at
Winston's amulet. Already he could feel the power emanating from the amulets.
"FATHER!" Jackie screamed and all bar Shantele looked up.
The horseman
came forward then.
Jackie ran out to meet him. She flung herself at the man
who hefted her up into the saddle and the pair of them clung to one
another.
The sound of crashing foliage made them all spin about. Then
Gilbon's huge frame lumbered into the clearing. "There you guys are," Gilbon
said. "I say, Shanny, that wasn't half a good spell you concocted. Any more
where that came from?"
"So you survived, you old buzzard," Shantele said with
restrained relief.
"Whatever happened, old bean?" Gilbon asked. "One minute
the stingray wanted my blood, the next it wanted no part of it."
"The same
went for us," Bonnie put in. "The last ghouls lost heart. The gods can drink
their blood when next they sip the Beagle River."
"Well put, if ill advised,"
Shantele said quickly. "I should imagine the Guild could only maintain such an
extensive drain on their power for so long. Then, one by one, members of the
Guild collapsed through sheer exhaustion. Thus their power base
collapsed."
Shantele ran a gnarled hand through his hair. "Be all that as it
may, I'm yet to fathom the Guild's interest - "
"Then let us be of
assistance," Mollie said. She and Gran stepped forward.
"Good ladies!"
Shantele said, delivering a brilliant recovery. "I should have known we had
assistance in our little fray."
Mollie smiled thinly. "'Tis more the amulet
segments that gave assistance," Mollie said. "When the two parts become whole,
their power is most potent. When the third part is found, you shall have within
your power all that was Lord Cabal's."
"Cabal, history's most potent
sorceror..." Shantele managed to look perplexed. "Indeed?" He pocketed Bonnie's
amulet within the dark folds of his cloak. "Then there is much to be done! It's
time Winston and I took our leave. Come on lad," he said, beckoning the
apprentice.
"Take care," Mollie said ominously.
The wizard and his
apprentice gathered up the mound of magic-impregnated wool from their carpet and
hurried off into the scrub.
Mollie and Gran seemingly vanished within a heart
beat. One minute they were standing there, the next, both waved their black
velvet cloaks and seemed to blend into nothingness.
"I say," Gilbon
said.
"You've said enough," Jute growled. "Where are we, you fat
lizard?"
"How come we're here?" Hyiat wondered.
"It's good to see you've
become your old selves," Bonnie said. "It's off to the Barrenlands we be! But
first - where's the treasure?"
"Aye," Jute said. He withdrew his sword and
advanced on Gilbon. "We've delivered our end of the bargain. Now where's your
end?"
"Here," Jackie said from behind them.
They turned slowly. Jackie
threw each of them a leather purse. Her father stood beside her. "It's enough
recompense for finding a girl's father," he said.
The pirates weighed the
purses in their hands and the odds against bargaining for more.
"It's
suitable," Bonnie agreed. "Hyiat-boy?"
"It'll be enough to re-deck Whispering
Ghost," Hyiat asserted.
"And enough to take us far away from witches, wizards
and dragons," Jute put in. "This accursed forest harbors all three in vast
quantities!
"I say," Gilbon began, but the pirates sheathed their swords and
daring him to say another word, took their leave.
Jackie went over to Gilbon
then and flung her arms partially around his stomach. "Come adventuring with
us," she pleaded, looking up into the dragon's watery eyes.
"Not likely!"
Gilbon said. "I'm retired I tell you. I crave the melodic whisperings of the
singsong tree, the rippling waters of mountain spring water - all that sort of
stuff.
"And long may you enjoy your retirement," Jackie's father said. "Come
on, Jackie. We'll need to make camp for the night. And it's best that we put as
much distance between us and this place as possible."
Gilbon watched Jackie
and her father blend with the scrub. He sat there a while contemplating his
earlier aerial aerobics and the temptation to fly home came upon
him.
Nonetheless, his withered wings had not the power to get him airborne,
so he began his weary journey home on foot.
Elsewhere, the Wizards' Guild met
in solemn conference.
The damnable wizard Shantele had somehow routed their
army of ghouls and obtained the second segment to the world's most powerful
amulet.
Storm clouds gathered over the wizard's mountain residence and spoke
in thunderous tones.
Shantele pensively tugged at his beard. To Winston he
said, "The clouds reflect my various moods, you know."
To which Winston said
nothing of import; for it is rumored he was miles away, seeking the third
segment of Lord Cabal's amulet...